summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/75926-0.txt
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-04-21 01:21:05 -0700
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-04-21 01:21:05 -0700
commitaf06ffba1345f3ab794f34cb3c503d0051959bf5 (patch)
treee6503b3b50466a0cfcfb196f5c135d94cc9d5668 /75926-0.txt
Initial commitHEADmain
Diffstat (limited to '75926-0.txt')
-rw-r--r--75926-0.txt17181
1 files changed, 17181 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/75926-0.txt b/75926-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8e85994
--- /dev/null
+++ b/75926-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,17181 @@
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75926 ***
+
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ Transcriber’s Note:
+
+This version of the text cannot represent certain typographical effects.
+Italics are delimited with the ‘_’ character as _italic_.
+
+Footnotes have been moved to follow the paragraphs in which they are
+referenced.
+
+Minor errors, attributable to the printer, have been corrected. Please
+see the transcriber’s note at the end of this text for details regarding
+the handling of any textual issues encountered during its preparation.
+
+ THROUGH THE DARK CONTINENT.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ _After Walery._] _Frontispiece._
+ H. M. STANLEY.
+]
+
+
+ THROUGH THE
+ DARK CONTINENT
+
+ OR
+
+ THE SOURCES OF THE NILE
+ AROUND THE GREAT LAKES OF EQUATORIAL AFRICA
+ AND DOWN THE LIVINGSTONE RIVER
+ TO THE ATLANTIC OCEAN
+
+ BY
+
+ HENRY M. STANLEY
+
+ AUTHOR OF “IN DARKEST AFRICA,” “HOW I FOUND LIVINGSTONE,”
+ “MY KALULU,” ETC.
+
+ MAP AND ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ WITH A NEW PREFACE BY THE AUTHOR, WRITTEN FOR THIS EDITION.
+
+
+ VOL. I.
+
+ LONDON: GEORGE NEWNES, LIMITED
+ SOUTHAMPTON STREET, STRAND
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ 1899
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ _RE-ISSUE
+ BY ARRANGEMENT WITH MESSRS. SAMPSON LOW,
+ MARSTON AND COMPANY, LTD._
+
+
+
+
+ =Dedication.=
+
+ -------
+
+ THE HEARTY ENCOURAGEMENT AND LIBERAL MEANS WHICH ENABLED ME
+ TO PERFORM THE MISSION ENTRUSTED TO ME,
+ OF EXPLORING THE DARK CONTINENT OF AFRICA AND SOLVING MANY INTERESTING
+ GEOGRAPHICAL PROBLEMS,
+ AND TO FITTINGLY REWARD THE FAITHFUL SURVIVORS,
+ INDUCE ME TO MAKE PUBLIC MY DEEP PERSONAL ACKNOWLEDGMENTS,
+ BY DEDICATING THIS WORK, WHICH RECORDS ITS RESULTS, TO THE
+ PROMOTERS OF THE ENTERPRISE,
+
+ MR. J. M. LEVY AND Mr. EDWARD L. LAWSON,
+
+ _Proprietors of the ‘Daily Telegraph,’_
+
+ AND
+
+ MR. JAMES GORDON BENNETT,
+
+ _Proprietor of the ‘New York Herald,’_
+
+ AND IN CONSEQUENCE OF THE GREAT AND CONSTANT INTEREST MANIFESTED
+ BY HIM IN THE SUCCESS OF THE UNDERTAKING, I MUST
+ BE PERMITTED TO ADD THE NAME OF
+
+ MR. EDWIN ARNOLD, C.S.I., AND F.R.G.S.
+
+ WITHOUT THE PATRONAGE, FULL CONFIDENCE, AND CORDIAL SYMPATHY OF
+ THESE GENTLEMEN I SHOULD HAVE BEEN UNABLE TO ACCOMPLISH
+ THE TASK NOW HAPPILY COMPLETED.
+
+ H. M. STANLEY.
+
+
+
+
+ ORIGINAL PREFACE.
+
+
+Before these volumes pass irrevocably out of the Author’s hands, I take
+this, the last, opportunity of addressing my readers. In the first
+place, I have to express my most humble thanks to Divine Providence for
+the gracious protection vouchsafed to myself and my surviving followers
+during our late perilous labours in Africa.
+
+In the second place, I have to convey to many friends my thanks for
+their welcome services and graceful congratulations, notably to Messrs.
+Motta Viega and J. W. Harrison, the gentlemen of Boma who, by their
+timely supplies of food, electrified the Expedition into new life; to
+the sympathizing society of Loanda, who did their best to spoil us with
+flattering kindness; to the kindly community of the Cape of Good Hope,
+who so royally entertained the homeward-bound strangers; to the
+directorates of the B. I. S. N. and the P. and O. Companies, and
+especially to Mr. W. Mackinnon of the former, and Mr. H. Bayley and
+Captain Thomas H. Black of the latter, for their generous assistance
+both on my setting out and on my returning; to the British Admiralty,
+and, personally, to Captain Purvis, senior officer on the West Coast
+Station, for placing at my disposal H.M.S. _Industry_, and to Commodore
+Sullivan, for continuing the great favour from the Cape to Zanzibar; to
+the officers and sailors of H.M.S. _Industry_, for the great patience
+and kindness which they showed to the wearied Africans; and to my
+friends at Zanzibar, especially to Mr. A. Sparhawk, for their kindly
+welcome and cordial help.
+
+In the next place, to the illustrious individuals and Societies who have
+intimated to me their appreciation of the services I have been enabled
+to render to Science, I have to convey the very respectful expression of
+my sense of the honours thus conferred upon me—to his Majesty King
+Humbert of Italy, for the portrait of himself, enriched with the
+splendid compliment of his personal approbation of my services,[1] which
+with the gold medal received from his royal father, King Victor Emanuel,
+will for ever be treasured with pride—to H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, for
+the distinguished honour shown me by his personal recognition of my
+work—to H.H. the Khedive of Egypt, for the high distinction of the Grand
+Commandership of the Order of the Medjidie, with the Star and Collar—to
+the Royal Geographical Society of London for its hearty public reception
+of me on my return, and for the highly valued diploma of an Honorary
+Corresponding Member subsequently received—to the Geographical Societies
+and Chambers of Commerce of Paris, Italy, and Marseilles, for the great
+honour of the Medals awarded to me[2]—to the Geographical Societies of
+Antwerp, Berlin, Bordeaux, Bremen, Hamburg, Lyons, Marseilles,
+Montpellier, and Vienna, and to the Society of Arts of London, for the
+privilege of Honorary Membership to which I have been admitted—to the
+very numerous distinguished gentlemen who have lent the influence of
+their authority in the worlds of Science, Letters, and Society to the
+public favour so liberally extended to me—to all these do I wish to
+convey my keen appreciation of the honours and favours of which I have
+been the recipient. And for yet another honour I have to express my
+thanks—one which I may be pardoned for regarding as more precious,
+perhaps, than even all the rest. The Government of the United States has
+crowned my success with its official approval, and the unanimous vote of
+thanks passed in both Houses of the Legislature has made me proud for
+life of the Expedition and its achievements.
+
+Alas! that to share this pride and these honours there are left to me
+none of those gallant young Englishmen who started from this country to
+cross the Dark Continent, and who endeared themselves to me by their
+fidelity and affection: alas! that to enjoy the exceeding pleasure of
+rest among friends, after months of fighting for dear life among
+cannibals and cataracts, there are left so few of those brave Africans
+to whom, as the willing hands and the loyal hearts of the Expedition, so
+much of its success was due.
+
+That the rule of my conduct in Africa has not been understood by all, I
+know to my bitter cost; but with my conscience at ease, and the simple
+record of my daily actions, which I now publish, to speak for me, this
+misunderstanding on the part of a few presents itself to me only as one
+more harsh experience of life. And those who read my book will know that
+I have indeed had “a sharp apprehension and keen intelligence” of many
+such experiences.
+
+With reference to the illustrations, I should mention that I carried a
+photographic apparatus with me across the Continent, and so long as my
+dry plates held out I never lost an opportunity of obtaining a good
+view, and when my plates were used up I found the reflection of the
+scenes on the ground glass of my camera an invaluable aid to my
+unpractised pencil.
+
+In conclusion, I have to thank Mr. Phil. Robinson, the author of ‘In my
+Indian Garden,’ for assisting me in the revision of my work. My
+acknowledgments are also due to Lieut. S. Schofield Sugden, R.N., for
+the perseverance and enthusiasm with which he recalculated all my
+observations, making even the irksome compilations of maps a pleasant
+task. In their drawing and engraving work, Mr. E. Weller and Mr. E.
+Stanford, and in the intelligent reproduction of my pictures, Mr. J. D.
+Cooper, have earned my thanks, and in no less a degree Messrs. William
+Clowes and Sons, for the care and despatch with which these volumes have
+been prepared for the public.
+
+ H. M. S.
+
+LONDON, _Nov. 15, 1879_.
+
+
+
+
+ PREFACE TO THE EDITION OF 1899.
+
+ ---
+
+‘THROUGH THE DARK CONTINENT’ was first published in June, 1878, and now
+that, after an interval of twenty years, another fully illustrated
+edition is to be issued, it has been thought desirable by the publishers
+that I should employ the opportunity of reviewing a few of the amazing
+changes that have taken place in the regions described in the book.
+
+Public speakers, I observe, when they have occasion to refer to the
+remarkable progress made of late years in Equatorial Africa, vaguely
+date it as having begun some twenty-five or thirty years ago. In
+reality, however, the first glimmerings of the dawn only appeared in the
+latter part of 1875, which was soon after the publication of my appeal
+for missionaries to Uganda. Although the appeal was almost immediately
+responded to by the Church Missionary Society, and a sum of £24,000 was
+collected, the missionaries did not leave England until April, 1876, and
+it was the 30th June, 1877, before two of the band landed in Uganda.
+
+These two pioneer missionaries, and a third, who had been left behind at
+the south end of Lake Victoria, were, with myself, the sole Europeans in
+all Equatorial Africa on that date. I happened to be then about two
+hundred miles from the west coast, laboriously working my way down the
+cataracts of the Congo, to put the finishing touch to my exploration of
+the course of that river, while over two thousand miles eastward of me
+my two fellow-countrymen were preparing for the great work of converting
+Uganda to Christianity.
+
+But, after all, the arrival of the missionaries, though an important
+event, and one that has had large consequences, was but a sign of the
+dawn. Scepticism as to any good resulting from the bold missionary
+venture was very general in England, and the publications of the C. M.
+Society prove that, for some years afterwards, no great hope of success
+was entertained, and, as if to add to the public disbelief in the
+efficacy of missionary effort among negro pagans, there came, almost
+simultaneously with my return from Africa early in the following year,
+the sad news that two out of the three missionaries had been massacred.
+Thus, at the beginning of that year, 1878, the surviving missionary in
+Uganda was the sole white man in all the regions bordering the African
+equator.
+
+The publication of this book in the following June excited unusual,
+indeed, I may truly say extraordinary, interest throughout Europe. It
+was translated into many languages, and the aggregate sales were
+prodigious. In this country, in France, Germany, Belgium, and Italy, it
+was discussed from every point of view. It led to much controversy,
+personal and general, but the British public did not take kindly to the
+suggestions for immediate action in Africa contained in it. England lost
+the opportunity of selecting unquestioned her field for enterprise, and
+so long was she indifferent to the Continent, and the splendid
+possibilities that awaited her, that Equatorial Africa was well-nigh
+closed to her altogether.
+
+It happened that there was one person on the Continent who manifested
+much more than an abstract interest in Africa, and had, indeed,
+solicited my services for the development of the Dark Continent—within a
+few minutes of my return to Europe—but had generously admitted that the
+people in whose interest I had made my explorations should have the
+first claim on them. This person was King Leopold II., whose wonderful
+character and extraordinary ability were then unknown to the world. No
+Englishman living, not even the geographical expert, paid such close
+attention to my letters in the _Daily Telegraph_, my book and speeches
+on African subjects, as did the King, and no man shared my zeal and
+hopes for Africa as did His Majesty. I waited from January to November,
+1878, to see if on this side of the Channel any serious notice was
+likely to be taken of my suggestions; but finding public feeling
+impossible to be aroused here, I then crossed the Channel, and accepted
+the post of chief agent to the _Comité des Etudes du Haut Congo_, of
+which King Leopold was President.
+
+As an illustration of the general indifference in this country to what
+had been written and spoken about Africa during 1878, I quote what took
+place between two members of the Royal Geographical Council and myself
+on a certain date of June of that year.
+
+These two gentlemen called at my rooms, and, seeing my original map of
+the Congo hanging up, one of them, after a perusal of some of the notes
+written along the course, turned to me and asked—
+
+“How long do you think it will be before a white man revisits Stanley
+Falls?”
+
+“Two or three years, I suppose,” I replied.
+
+“Two or three years!” he exclaimed. “I expected you were going to say
+fifty years.”
+
+“Fifty years!” I cried. “Why, I will venture to wager that, before
+twenty years are over, there will not be a hundred square mile tract
+left to be explored in the entire Continent.”
+
+“Oh, come,” said the other gentleman, “that is too sanguine a view
+altogether. I will take your bet—shall we say £10?—and book it.”
+
+We booked it there and then. The twenty years have lately expired, but
+though I cannot claim to have won the wager, it must be admitted that my
+hasty prediction has closely approached fact.
+
+About the same time, Sir Rutherford Alcock, then President of the Royal
+Geographical Society, remarked, in his Annual Address, that I had told
+him that, with money enough, Africa could not only be explored, but
+civilised and converted into orderly states. It did not seem to me that
+there was anything surprising in that, but to Sir Rutherford it appeared
+worthy of public notice. It is of value here only as an indication of
+the general ignorance that then prevailed in all circles as regards
+Africa.
+
+Seven years later, after seeing the establishment of one of the African
+states that promised to be civilised some day, I was introduced by a
+Canon of Westminster Abbey to a well-known Bishop as one who had “done
+good work on the Congo.”
+
+“Oh, indeed!” said his Lordship, smilingly, “how very interesting; but,”
+he added, hesitatingly, “I am really not sure that I know where the
+Congo is.”
+
+As may be imagined, I was a picture of wide-eyed surprise. For every
+newspaper in the country had been for months daily publishing something
+or other about the Congo Conference, and I thought that surely one of
+the princes of the Church must have caught sight of the name; but such
+had been the Bishop’s culpable inattention to great events in Africa,
+that the name even had not attracted his notice.
+
+Resuming my proper subject, I became chief agent on the Congo. Every now
+and then during the six years that I occupied that position, directing
+the advance into the Congo basin, reports of our doings frequently
+reached England in one form or another, and still the trend of events
+seemed unperceived there, though there was considerable stir in Germany,
+France, Portugal, and Belgium.
+
+Neither, apparently, were the actions of the Germans on the borders of
+Cape Colony in 1883-84 of a character to excite alarm, suspicion, or
+even intelligent alertness in the British mind. Lord Derby was not in
+the least disturbed by the curious inquisitive tone of Bismarck’s
+despatches relating to South Africa, and Lord Granville failed to
+comprehend the drift of Bismarck’s anxiety about the German settlement
+at Angra Pequena, or that the presence of a German warship in South
+African waters signified anything.
+
+When it was too late, however, to prevent the seizure of a large
+territory neighbouring Cape Colony, the British rubbed their eyes, and
+found that a European Power, which might make itself unpleasant some day
+to our South African colonists, had wilfully planted itself in close
+proximity to the Boer states, with which we had already more than once
+grave misunderstandings. It was then inferred that a similar move, a
+little further inland, by either the Boers or Germans, would perpetually
+confine British South Africa to within the narrow limits of Cape Colony,
+and a suspicious manœuvre of a German ship of war in Eastern South
+Africa confirmed the British Government that longer delay would be
+disastrous to British interests, and the Warren Expedition, which
+secured to us Bechuanaland, and an open way to the Zambesi, was the
+result. But before the Berlin Conference of 1884-5 was held, Germany had
+become the owner of important possessions at various places in
+Occidental Africa, and was projecting other surprises of a similar kind.
+
+During the sittings of the Conference, which had met to decide the
+future of the Congo, the words and acts of the assembled
+Plenipotentiaries received due attention from every journal of
+importance in the United Kingdom, but they did not appear to impress the
+public mind as closely affecting British interests. Yet much was
+happening that, had the warning which was sounded occasionally by
+experts been taken properly to heart, the significance of the Conference
+would have been easily recognised.
+
+On the Continent, however, the diplomatic discussions had a most
+stimulating effect. The people of every state now studied their African
+maps with a different purpose from the acquisition of mere geographical
+knowledge. Societies, miscalled “commercial, geographical, or
+scientific,” sprang into existence like mushrooms throughout France,
+Germany, Italy, Belgium, and Sweden, and in a short time numerous
+expeditions, disguised by innocent titles, were prepared for Africa.
+
+Within two days after the signing of the General Act of the Conference,
+the German Emperor proclaimed a protectorate in East Africa over
+countries whose names were even unknown until the appearance of this
+book. Our Foreign Secretary was in such dread of Prince Bismarck that he
+not only acquiesced in this bold act, but obsequiously hastened to
+instruct our representative at Zanzibar to use his undeniable influence
+in promoting German interests, and lessen his zeal for our own.
+
+To-day, living as we do under a powerful Unionist Government, which has
+just triumphed over the Mahdi’s successor, and recovered nearly all that
+the Government of that period had lost, these events may appear
+incredible, but 1884-85 was a singularly disastrous period for British
+prestige. The aged statesman who then presided over England’s affairs
+was fast declining in power and ability; but as his influence still
+continued supreme, the nation was powerless to avert the blunders and
+misfortunes that so repeatedly shocked us. However, not to dwell upon
+this painful subject, let me say that when Lord Granville signified to
+Prince Bismarck that England would oppose no obstacles to German designs
+in Africa, it naturally followed that the Prince would interpret this as
+meaning that England would surrender all claims to territory that the
+Germans might think desirable, and accordingly the East African
+Protectorate expanded in a marvellously brief time from the coast to the
+Tanganika, and threatened to absorb the whole of East Africa from
+Mozambique to the Gulf of Aden. Though priority of discovery and
+exploration may not under all circumstances constitute a full title to
+territory, it is certainly aggrieving to find another nation rudely
+thrusting itself into the field and forcibly seizing upon it.
+
+Fortunately, however, a Company had been formed in 1885 to take over a
+small concession obtained by Mr. H. H. Johnston at Taveta in East
+Africa, and as the Germans encroached upon it, Lord Rosebery, who had
+become Foreign Secretary, took the opportunity of making a firm protest
+against it, which served to arrest the wholesale absorption that had
+been meditated, and gave the necessary time for a fuller development of
+the British project. A delimitation of territory was determined upon to
+define that which was claimed by Great Britain, Germany, and Zanzibar,
+and meanwhile the operations of the British Company were suspended to
+avoid a clashing of interests, and through Lord Rosebery’s protest the
+Germans likewise agreed to prevent their agents from making any new
+acquisitions in the debatable zone.
+
+In November, 1886, an understanding was arrived at which recognised the
+sovereignty of Zanzibar as existing over Zanzibar and Pemba, and the
+smaller islands, within a radius of twelve sea miles of them, as also
+over those of Lamu and Mafia, and a strip of the mainland ten sea miles
+in depth.
+
+East Africa was delimited into two spheres of influence, divided by the
+mouth of the Umbe River, the northern base of Kilimanjaro Mountain, and
+thence by a line stretching to the eastern shore of the Victoria Nyanza
+at the 1st degree of south latitude.
+
+On the 25th May, 1887, the Sultan of Zanzibar signed a fifty years’
+concession of all his rights remaining to him, after the lease he had
+given to Germany on the 4th December previous, to the British East
+African Association. In April of the following year the Association,
+having through its agents concluded treaties with the native tribes to a
+distance of two hundred miles inland, became the Imperial British East
+African Company with the nominal capital of £2,000,000, for the purpose
+of administering the Zanzibar Concession, acquiring territory, and to
+undertake trading operations.
+
+Meantime, early in 1887, four months previous to the formation of the
+British East African Association, I had started on my fourth expedition
+into the Dark Continent, with the object of carrying relief to Emin
+Pasha, to whom had been entrusted the government of the Egyptian
+provinces near the Equator, by the late General Gordon. Few persons at
+the time knew that Emin Pasha was only another name for a Dr. Edouard
+Schnitzer, and that he was a German Israelite by birth. The fund for the
+relief was contributed to equally by the Egyptian Government and Sir
+William Mackinnon’s personal friends.
+
+The story of the march to Emin’s relief and his arrival at the Zanzibar
+coast with my expedition, has been related in detail in ‘Darkest
+Africa,’ and there is no necessity to give even a summary of it here.
+
+During the journey through the Aruwimi Forest and thence to Zanzibar,
+we were able to add considerably to our knowledge of the Equatorial
+regions. That of the great forest itself, with its pigmies and
+cannibals, was no mean addition, but our march eastward led to the
+discovery of the snowy range called Ruwenzori, the interesting Semliki
+Valley and its river, which by following upward brought us in view of
+the Albert Edward Nyanza, and enabled me to identify it as the lake
+I had first seen in January, 1876. The topography of the intra-lake
+region became also much better known; and a little later the outline of
+the Victoria Nyanza received enlargement by the finding of an unknown
+south-western bay of important dimensions.
+
+These discoveries were, however, unimportant compared to the effects
+following our return home and the publication of our experiences. The
+Brussels Conference of 1890 was preparing to sit, and it was not
+difficult to impress the Plenipotentiaries with the immediate
+necessities of the Dark Continent, such as railways, prohibition of
+importing fire-arms, the suppression of slave-raiding, etc., etc. On the
+Congo State authorities our revelations had a still more marked effect.
+Preparations were then commenced to deal with the slave-raiders of the
+Congo, and the despatch of Vankherkhovin’s Expedition to the Upper
+Welle, that of Captain Stairs to Katanga, and for the definite
+construction of the railway to Stanley Pool. The spirit of annexation
+was once more roused, and there was what might be called a race for the
+possession of the undelimited region west of Lake Victoria. The British
+East African Company’s troops were pushed into Uganda, and the
+expeditions under Mr. Jackson, Captain Lugard, Major Eric Smith, and Mr.
+Piggott, performed excellent service in their various explorations.
+
+One of the most important effects of this renewed _furore_ was the
+conclusion in July of a Treaty between Great Britain and Germany, which
+nullified the efforts of Emin Pasha and of Dr. Peters to seize upon
+Uganda and the lake regions west of it. The German Government agreed to
+surrender all the territory it occupied or claimed north of the British
+sphere, and the protectorate of Witu and the coast up to Kismayu was
+transferred to England. This Treaty not only extended the British
+possessions to the Abyssinian frontier, thus excluding any European
+competitor for influence on the Upper Nile, but established a British
+Protectorate over the Sultanate of Zanzibar. In return for the claims
+surrendered by Germany, England ceded Heligoland, and for the sum of
+£200,000 Germany received the sovereignty and revenue of the African
+coast between the Rovuma and the Umbe Rivers.
+
+From the following list of African explorers who have crossed Africa
+since this book was issued, it will be recognised at a glance how rapid
+has been the increase of geographical knowledge:—
+
+ 1. Serpa Pinto From Benguella to Durban 1877-1879.
+
+ 2. Herman von Wissman ” Mossamedes to Quilimane 1881-1882.
+
+ 3. Arnot the Missionary ” Durban to Benguella 1881-1884.
+
+ 4. Capello and Ivens ” Mossamedes to Quilimane 1884-1885.
+
+ 5. Gleerup ” Banana Pt. to Bagamoyo 1883-1886.
+
+ 6. Dr. Lenz ” Banana Pt. to Quilimane 1885-1887.
+
+ 7. Herman von Wissman ” Banana Pt. to Quilimane 1886-1887.
+ (2nd journey)
+
+ 8. Mons. Trivier ” Loango to Quilimane 1888-1889.
+
+ 9. Stanley’s second journey ” Banana Pt. to Bagamoyo 1887-1889.
+
+ 10. Dr. Johnston ” Benguella to Zambezi Mouth 1891-1892.
+
+ 11. Count von Gotzen ” Pangani to Banana Pt. 1893-1894.
+
+ 12. M. Moray ” Bagamoyo to Banana Pt. 1892-1895.
+
+ 13. E. I. Glave ” Zambezi Mouth to Lower 1893-1895.
+ Congo
+
+ 14. Mons. Miot ” Zambezi Mouth to Lower 1893-1896.
+ Congo
+
+ 15. Mons. Versepuy ” Bagamoyo to Kabinda 1895-1896.
+
+ 16. M. Descamps et Chargois ” Zambezi Mouth to Kabinda 1893-1896.
+
+ 17. M. Foa ” Zambezi Mouth to Banana 1896-1898.
+
+ 18. Mr. Lloyd ” Mombasa to Banana 1897-1898.
+
+While previous to the book, since the beginning of the century, there
+had only been three trans-African explorations:—
+
+ 1. Livingstone From St. Paul da Loanda to 1854-1856.
+ Quilimane
+
+ 2. Lieut. Cameron, R.N. ” Bagamoyo to Benguella 1873-1875.
+
+ 3. Stanley’s first journey ” Bagamoyo to Mouth of the 1874-1877.
+ Congo
+
+With regard to the numerous other expeditions which took place since
+1878, there is no space for mention, but Joseph Thomson’s travels, _viâ_
+Nyassa, to the Tanganika, and his brilliant journey through Masai Land;
+Count Teleki and Von Hohnel’s travels in Eastern Africa, which resulted
+in the discovery of Lakes Rudolf and Stephanie; Captain Bottego’s
+journey through Somali Land, and Dr. Donaldson Smith’s exploration of
+Somali and Galla Lands were of the first importance. It has, however,
+required the services of some hundreds of travellers since 1878 to fill
+up the sum of our present knowledge of the Continent.
+
+In 1878 there was not one European-built boat in all Equatorial Africa.
+By 1881 there were five, but by December 31st, 1898, there were
+seventy-two steamers and one hundred and sixty-four steel boats or
+barges, while there is a very large addition to the African flotillas
+either on its way, or in process of construction. It may be imagined
+how much these vessels have expedited exploration when I say that out
+of the seventeen trans-African explorers no less than thirteen of them
+were transported with their followers and effects some hundreds of
+miles on their way.
+
+Even as late as 1890 the construction of railways in Equatorial Africa
+had not been begun, though years of zealous efforts had been made by
+myself and others to induce capitalists to undertake them, knowing as we
+did that they were the best instruments that civilisation could employ
+for the moral, material, and social elevation of the dark peoples. But
+just as it took years upon years of publications and speeches to
+dissipate the unreasoning terror of Africa in the European mind, it
+required years of preaching and encouraging to induce railway
+constructors to try Africa as the theatre of their operations. Soon
+after the conclusion of the Emin Expedition the Congo Railway was
+commenced, and to-day it is fully employed in traffic, and the 500-franc
+shares are worth 1700 francs per share, which may be taken as a proof
+that the shareholders’ faith has been munificently rewarded. By the
+latest news from East Africa we learn that two hundred and forty miles
+of the Mombasa and Nyanza Railway have been laid, and it is predicted
+that by May next the locomotive will reach the half-way point to Lake
+Victoria. In German East Africa thirty miles of railway have been in
+operation for some time, but there are serious railway projects under
+consideration, and, it may be, an attempt will shortly be made at
+construction on an important scale. Meantime, however, the coloured
+troops are being employed in making a road suitable for wheeled traffic
+between the port of Dar-es-Salaam and Ujiji, _viâ_ Kilossa and Tabora,
+and thus far mules have been used with great success.
+
+But though there are not yet five hundred miles of railway open for
+traffic in Equatorial Africa, considerable extensions are under
+construction, or being meditated. The British East Africa Railway will,
+of course, be continued as far as Lake Victoria, as Parliament has
+provided the necessary money. The Congo State having successfully
+completed the railway connecting the lower with the upper river, is
+carrying out surveys for other railways on the Upper Congo. The Zambezi
+will also in a short time be connected by rail with Lake Nyassa, and we
+learn that the Bulawayo Railway is to be extended to the Tanganika Lake.
+My predictions in regard to Africa have so singularly approached
+realisation thus far that I am tempted on a safer prophecy, which is,
+that by 1918, there will be five thousand miles of iron roads where
+there are now not five hundred.
+
+When my letters, calling attention to the spiritual and material needs
+of Africa, used to appear in the columns of the _Daily Telegraph_ in
+1874-77, there was neither mission, school, church, nor any legitimate
+trade started in the regions near the African Equator. But since 1877
+wonderful changes in this respect have taken place. The statistics we
+have received from the Uganda Protectorate alone tell a remarkable tale
+of progress. According to these there have been 372 churches and
+missions established, at which there are 97,575 Christian converts.
+About 100 Europeans are living in the Protectorate, and the first
+official report (for 1897) announced that trade to the value of £30,000
+had been begun. It will be remembered, perhaps, that it was for long a
+debatable question whether we should retain Uganda or abandon it.
+
+The country of which the first few chapters of this book treat is now
+mainly German East Africa. What a change has come over it! No one could
+have foreseen or dreamed at the time of my march through it that Germany
+could ever have become the controller of its destiny. I dreamed visions
+of the future often in the wilds, such as that described in Chapter X.,
+but I saw no Teuton in my dreams. However, it may be all for the best
+that Germany has annexed it, and England owes too much to Germany for
+waking her out of her somnolence to begrudge what Bismarck obtained so
+boldly. The white population of this colony at the end of last year
+numbered 922, of whom 678 are Germans, and the trade amounted in value
+to £600,000. It will, no doubt, be a long time before the Arab coast
+towns undergo any external change, but within their character and scenes
+are altogether altered. German militarism, which as we know is of the
+strictest kind, bears no resemblance to Arab supineness and neglect or
+to Arab customs. The small boys have taken kindly to the dominant
+spirit, and practise the forms in vogue among the military. There are
+custom-houses at every port, and permits for travel and sport inland can
+only be obtained through the goodwill of the Governor. The drastic
+measures of Von Wissman have long ago suppressed the slave-trade, and
+the slave-market is now only a memory.
+
+The coast towns are connected by telegraph with each other, and there
+is cable communication, _viâ_ Zanzibar, with Europe. Ujiji, the port
+on Lake Tanganika where I met Livingstone in 1871, possesses now quite
+a civilised appearance. Its Government buildings are of stone and
+two-storied, and a long wide street, shaded by mangoes and other fruit
+trees, runs through the centre of the town. German capital, to the
+value of £697,000, has been invested in tobacco, coffee, cocoa, tea,
+cardamom, and vanilla plantations; and I am glad to learn that the Game
+Laws are strict and effective.
+
+The change in Equatorial Africa is nowhere more conspicuous than in that
+part described in Chapters XXI.-XXXIV. It may be imagined from the fact
+that a Brussels statistician has collected the titles of 3800 printed
+works which have been published since 1878 and refer to this part, and
+in his chronological table he records forty-eight separate explorations
+of the region.
+
+The progress of trade in the Congo basin can be best represented by the
+following brief table of imports and exports:—
+
+ ──────────┬──────────┬──────────┬──────────┬──────────┬──────────
+ │ Years. │ Imports. │ Exports. │ Total. │
+ ──────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────
+ │ │ £ │ £ │ £ │
+ │ 1893 │ 367,004│ 300,592│ 667,596│
+ │ 1894 │ 447,789│ 441,268│ 889,057│
+ │ 1895 │ 427,434│ 485,426│ 912,860│
+ │ 1896 │ 609,111│ 603,645│ 1,212,756│
+ │ 1897 │ 887,258│ 698,284│ 1,585,542│
+ ──────────┴──────────┴──────────┴──────────┴──────────┴──────────
+
+The average value of the annual exports during each of the five
+preceding years (1888-92) amounted to only £207,921.
+
+From the inception of the Congo State in 1879 to the year 1890 the King
+of the Belgians personally defrayed all the expenditure; but on July
+3rd, 1890, the Belgian Government came to His Majesty’s assistance with
+a lump sum of £200,000, and an annual subsidy, to last ten years, of
+£80,000 per annum. This amount, with the King’s personal subsidy, was
+for some years later the main support of the State; but in 1898 the
+revenue from all sources is estimated to amount to £590,608, while the
+expenditure is £99,477 in excess.
+
+This excess of expenditure some unkindly critics in this country
+attribute to extravagance, ambition, and what not; but the King
+justifies his policy by comparing himself to one who had come to a great
+but wholly undeveloped estate, which was bound to remain unproductive
+unless a liberal expenditure was incurred for such improvements as would
+expose its resources and make all parts of it accessible. Now what the
+Congo State was in 1879 can best be seen by Chapters XXIV.-XXIX. To the
+ordinary white man it was what may well be termed impenetrable, except
+at constant peril of his life. It was ravaged by cannibals, fierce
+warlike tribes, and slave-raiders, and destructive influences of every
+kind tended to maintain its humanity in an eternal struggle for life and
+liberty. There were no roads, or means by which the country could be
+explored. Every tribe barred the ingress of the traveller; and its
+frontiers on all sides lay exposed to any white stranger who took the
+trouble to plant a flag; and finally it was made incumbent on every
+Power owning African possessions to make its occupation effective. Such
+primary necessities of the State involved large and endless expenses,
+and few men other than King Leopold would have so long sustained the
+great undertaking from his private purse. From 1879 to 1890 His Majesty
+spent about £900,000, and since then the total expenditure of the State
+has been nearly £3,000,000. To meet this His Majesty’s subsidies,
+amounting to £360,000, the aid from Belgium, £200,000, the Belgian
+annual subsidies, £720,000, customs duties and taxes, £1,900,000, make a
+total revenue of £3,180,000, and prove a deficit of £720,000.
+
+As an offset against the deficit, the State possesses nineteen steamers
+and forty steel barges of the value of £100,000; Government
+establishments, which we may estimate at £500,000; arms, ammunition,
+goods, coal, and lumber, at £100,000; investments in the railway,
+telegraph, and commercial societies, and plantations, to the value of
+about £400,000—the whole of which aggregate £1,100,000. To these, which
+may be rightly taken as assets of the State, should be added the
+increment of the land which at present in some places sells at £80 the
+hectare, for factories and commercial purposes at £4 the hectare, and
+for agriculture at 8s. the hectare. If the State were offered for sale
+the value of the land made accessible to market by railway and steam
+communication would have to be considered. Beyond what has been
+specified as the State assets, consideration must be given to the now
+assured growth of the revenue. To-day, exclusive of the subsidies, it
+amounts to £470,602. When the State reaps the results of its generous
+aid to the planters of coffee, tea, cocoa, etc., to the railway, now
+completed, and to the commercial companies, who are now not restricted
+in their transport of goods and produce, there must necessarily be a
+material increase each year in the revenue. From all of which summary it
+does not appear to me that the position of the State is financially
+unsound; indeed, I am inclined to think it to be otherwise.
+
+His Majesty’s policy has been to start the State on lines that must end
+in prosperity, without regard to personal labour or personal cost, and
+by his munificent pecuniary advances to the railway, commercial
+societies, planters, timber merchants, and agriculturists, the result
+has been that capital to the amount of several millions sterling has
+gravitated to the Congo. Personally, he may never recover a penny of the
+£900,000 he devoted to the creation of the State, but to that he is
+indifferent. Whatever surplus the revenue may furnish will certainly be
+devoted to assist new enterprises, new railways, increase of shipping,
+telegraph lines—to anything, in short, that promises expansion of the
+resources of the State, and enhances the value of the legacy he proposes
+to bequeath to the people of whom he is King and loyal servant.
+
+An honourable friend of mine has lately delivered a lecture before the
+Statistical Society with a view to prove that the Congo State was
+financially a failure. It would be useless, in this place, to do more
+than present the balance sheet of four African territories, and ask him
+and those who agree with him to give it a fair consideration.
+
+ ════════════════════════╤═══════════╤═══════════╤════════════╤══════════
+ Name of State │ Years. │ Receipts.│Expenditure.│ Deficits.
+ or Territory. │ │ │ │
+ ────────────────────────┼───────────┼───────────┼────────────┼──────────
+ │ │ £ │ £ │ £
+ {│ 1891 │ 182,197│ 182,197│ —
+ {│ 1892 │ 192,035│ 189,279│ —
+ {│ 1893 │ 266,580│ 217,627│ —
+ {│ 1894 │ 310,181│ 295,342│ —
+ {│ 1895 │ 324,650│ 294,837│ —
+ Congo State {│ 1896 │ 414,396│ 329,452│ —
+ {│ 1897 │ 374,770│ 405,675│ 30,905
+ {│ 1898 │ 590,602│ 690,079│ 99,477
+ _The first year_ } {│(estimated)│} 798,660│ 786,918│ —
+ _of the railway._ } {│ 1899 │} │ │
+ │───────────│───────────│────────────│───────────
+ British East Africa │ 1897 │ 32,670│ 134,346│ 101,676
+ German East Africa │ 1897 │ 218,495│ 298,260│ 79,765
+ German Cameroons │ 1897 │ 58,328│ 69,170│ 10,842
+ ════════════════════════╧═══════════╧═══════════╧════════════╧══════════
+
+The Uganda Protectorate, having been established but lately, would
+naturally present a still more unsatisfactory balance sheet than any of
+the four territories above mentioned, but it is not derogatory to either
+British or German Africa that their deficits are so large, for the
+Congo, during the state of undevelopment, had absolutely no receipts at
+all, except King Leopold’s subsidy, to meet the expenditure. There is no
+necessity to labour this matter, but I think it is sufficiently proved
+that my honourable friend has been mistaken in his views about the
+financial condition of the Congo State.
+
+As a fitting conclusion to this preface, I here append a table which
+will exhibit at a glance the advance of Equatorial Africa during the
+last twenty years.
+
+ ────────────────────┬────────┬──────┬─────────┬─────────┬─────────┬──────────
+ │ │ │ │ │ │
+ State or Territory. │ White │Miles │ No. of │ No. of │Value of │Revenues,
+ │ Popul- │ of │Missions,│Christian│ Imports │including
+ │ ation. │Rail- │ Schools │Converts.│ and │Subsidies.
+ │ │ way. │ or │ │Exports. │
+ │ │ │Churches.│ │ │
+ ────────────────────┼────────┼──────┼─────────┼─────────┼─────────┼──────────
+ Congo State │ 1,678│ 250│ 67│ 10,000│1,585,542│ 590,602
+ Uganda Protectorate │ 100│ ..│ 372│ 97,575│ 28,400│ 142,000
+ British E. Africa │ 101│ 237│ 6│ 600│ 218,800│ 102,670
+ British Cent. Africa│ 300│ ..│ 55│ 5,000│ 116,264│ 30,000
+ French Congo │ 300│ ..│ 25│ 2,500│ 452,282│ 123,622
+ German E. Africa │ 922│ 30│ 15│ 2,500│ 638,000│ 218,495
+ German Cameroons │ 253│ ..│ 5│ 900│ 465,000│ 58,328
+ ────────────────────┼────────┼──────┼─────────┼─────────┼─────────┼──────────
+ Totals │ 3,651│ 517│ 545│ 119,075│3,504,288│ 1,265,717
+ ────────────────────┴────────┴──────┴─────────┴─────────┴─────────┴──────────
+
+Remarkable as has been the progress of the above territories hitherto,
+my most sincere wish is that there may be still greater acceleration of
+it during the next twenty years.
+
+ HENRY M. STANLEY.
+
+_January 1st, 1899._
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS.
+
+ ---
+
+ EXPLANATION.
+
+ PAGE
+
+ PART I.—My new mission—_The Daily Telegraph_—“_Yes; Bennett_”—
+ The _Lady Alice_—My European staff—Disappointed applicants and
+ thoughtful friends—My departure for Africa. PART II.—The
+ Sources of the Nile—Herodotus on the Nile—Burton on the Nile
+ basin—Lake Tanganika—Lake Victoria—Speke, Grant, and Cameron—
+ The Livingstone River—The work before me 1
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+
+ Arrival at Zanzibar Island—Life at Zanzibar—The town of
+ Zanzibar, its roadstead and buildings—The One Cocoa-nut Tree
+ and the red cliffs—Selection and purchase of goods for the
+ journey—Residence of Prince Barghash—Busy mornings—Pleasant
+ rides and quiet evenings 22
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+
+ Seyyid Barghash—His prohibition of slavery, character, and
+ reforms—Treaty with British Government by Sir Bartle Frere—
+ Tramways the need of Africa—Arabs in the interior—Arabs in
+ Zanzibar—Mtuma or Mgwana?—The Wangwana, their vices and
+ virtues—A Mgwana’s highest ambition—The Wanyamwezi “the coming
+ race” 31
+
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+
+ Organization of the Expedition—The _shauri_—“Poli-poli”—Msenna’s
+ successful imposture—Black sheep in the flock—The _Lady Alice_
+ remodelled—Sewing a British flag—Tarya Topan, the millionaire—
+ Signing the covenants—“On the word of a white man”—Saying
+ good-bye—Loading the dhows—Vale!—Towards the Dark Continent 43
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+ Bagamoyo—Taming the dark brother—Bagamoyo in a ferment—An
+ exciting scene—The disturbance quelled—The Universities
+ Mission, its origin, history, decline and present condition—
+ The Rev. Edward Steere—Notre Dame de Bagamoyo—Westward ho!—In
+ marching order—_Sub Jove fervido_—Crossing the Kingani—The
+ stolen women 55
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+
+ On the march—Congorido to Rubuti—The hunting-grounds of
+ Kitangeh—Shooting zebra—“Jack’s” first prize—Interviewed by
+ lions—Geology of Mpwapwa—Dudoma—“The flood-gates of heaven”
+ opened—Dismal reflections—The Salina—A conspiracy discovered—
+ Desertions—The path lost—Starvation and deaths—Trouble
+ imminent—Grain huts plundered—Situation deplorable—Sickness in
+ the camp—Edward Pocock taken ill—His death and funeral 70
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+ From Chiwyu to Vinyata—Kaif Halleck murdered—The magic doctor—
+ Giving away the heart—Deeds of blood—“The white men are only
+ women”—A three days’ fight—Punishment of the Wanyaturu—The
+ ubiquitous Mirambo—The plain of the Luwamberri—In a land of
+ plenty—Through the open country—“I have seen the lake. Sir,
+ and it is grand!”—Welcomed at Kagehyi 93
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+ A burzah held—Paying off recruits—Kagehyi becomes a great
+ trading centre—A Central African “toper”—Prince Kaduma—Hopes
+ of assistance from him relinquished—The boat ready for sea—No
+ volunteers—Selecting my crew—The start for the
+ circumnavigation of Lake Victoria 116
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+ Afloat on the lake—We catch a guide—Saramba’s terror—The
+ Shimeeyu—Pyramid Point—The island of Ukerewé—In the haunts of
+ crocodiles—Shizu Island—The hippopotami—Ururi—The headlands of
+ Goshi—Bridge Islands—Volcanoes—U-go-weh—The inebriates of
+ Ugamba—Treachery at Maheta—Primitive man—The art of pleasing—A
+ night at Uvuma—Mobbed by Wavuma—Barmecide fare—Message from
+ Mtesa—“In the Kabaka’s name”—Camp on Soweh Island 123
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+ An extraordinary monarch—I am examined—African “chaff”—Mtesa,
+ Emperor of Uganda—Description of Mtesa—A naval review—Arrival
+ at the Imperial capital—Mtesa’s palace—Fascination of the
+ country—I meet a white man—Col. Linant de Bellefonds—The
+ process of conversion—A grand mission field—A pleasant day
+ with Col. de Bellefonds—Starting for my camp 147
+
+
+ CHAPTER X.
+
+
+ Parting with Colonel Linant—Magassa’s vanity and disloyalty—The
+ sailors’ island—Jumba’s Cove—Uganda—Dumo—The Alexandra Nile—
+ Lupassi Point—In danger at Mkongo—Alone with Nature—Insect
+ life—Dreams of a happier future—A dark secret—Murabo and the
+ fish—Alice Island—A night never to be forgotten—The treachery
+ of Bumbireh—Saved!—Refuge Island—Wiru—“Go and die in the
+ Nyanza!”—Back in camp—Sad news 166
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+ Barker’s illness and death—Other deaths—Traitors in the camp—
+ Rest!—Sickness—Rwoma blocks our passage by land—Magassa fails
+ us by water—A serious dilemma—Lukongeh comes to the rescue—
+ History of Ukerewé—Educated amphibians—Leaving Kagehyi with
+ half the Expedition—The foundering canoes—All saved—Ito
+ conciliates us—Arrival at Refuge Island with half the
+ Expedition—I return for the rest—A murderous outbreak in camp—
+ Final departure from Kagehyi—All encamped on Refuge Island—We
+ ally ourselves with Komeh—A dance of kings—Mahyiga Island (in
+ the Bumbireh group)—Interviewed by Iroba canoes—Our friendship
+ scorned—The king of Bumbireh a hostage—The massacre of the
+ Kytawa chief and his crew—The punishment of the murderers—Its
+ salutary effect upon their neighbours—We arrive in Uganda 190
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+ We find Mtesa at war—“Jack’s Mount”—Meeting with Mtesa—The
+ Waganda army in camp and on the march—The imperial harem—In
+ sight of the enemy—The Waganda fleet—Preliminary skirmishing—
+ The causeway—The massacre of Mtesa’s peace party—“What do you
+ know of angels?”—Mtesa’s education proceeds in the intervals
+ of war—Translating the Bible—Jesus or Mohammed?—Mtesa’s
+ decision—The royal proselyte 233
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+
+
+ The war-drum beaten—The wizards play their part—In full
+ war-paint—Bullets against spears—The Wavuma baulked—Mtesa’s
+ fury—Victory or the stake!—Hard fighting—The captive chief:
+ a struggle between the pagan and the Christian—A floating
+ mystery—“Return, O spirit! the war is ended!”—The camp on
+ fire: a race for life 256
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+ The legend of the Blameless Priest—The heroes of Uganda: Chwa;
+ Kimera, the giant; Nakivingi; Kibaga, the flying warrior;
+ Ma’anda; Wakinguru, the champion; Kamanya, the conqueror of
+ the Wakedi; Suna, the cruel; his massacre of the Wasoga;
+ Namujurilwa, the Achilles of Uganda; Setuba and his lions;
+ Kasindula the hero, peasant, and premier—Mtesa the mild-eyed 270
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV.
+
+
+ Life and manners in Uganda—The Peasant—The Chief—The Emperor—The
+ Land 299
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+ TO MUTA NZIGÉ AND BACK TO UGANDA.
+
+
+ The ladies of Mtesa’s family—Sambuzi ordered to take me to Muta
+ Nzigé—My last evening with Mtesa—_En route_ for Muta Nzigé—
+ Sambuzi suffers from the “big head”—We come to an
+ understanding—The white people of Gambaragara—War music—Through
+ a deserted country—Sinister auguries—A cowards’ council of
+ war—Panic in the camp—Sambuzi announces his intention of
+ deserting me—The flight when none pursued—The “Spoiler” eaten
+ up—Mtesa tries to persuade me to return—At Kafurro 326
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+
+
+ Kafurro and its magnates—Lake Windermere—Rumanika, the gentle
+ king of Karagwé—His country—The Ingezi—Among the mosquitoes—
+ Ihema Island—The triple cones of Ufumbiro—Double-horned
+ rhinoceros—The hot springs of Mtagata—The Geographical Society
+ of Karagwé—The philosophy of noses—Rumanika’s thesauron—Some
+ new facts about the rhinoceros and elephant—Uhimba—Paganus,
+ var. esuriens—Retrospect 356
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+
+ The twin rivers—Mankorongo baulked of his loot—Poor Bull!
+ True to the death—Msenna breaks out again—The Terror of
+ Africa appears on the scene—Mars at peace—“Dig potatoes,
+ potatoes, potatoes”—Mirambo, the bandit chief, and I make
+ blood-brotherhood—Little kings with “big heads”—Practical
+ conversion of the chief of Ubagwé—The Watuta, the Ishmaelites
+ of Africa—Their history—African nomenclature—From Msené across
+ the Malagarazi to Ujiji—Sad memories 379
+
+
+ LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+ ---
+
+
+ FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+ NO. PAGE
+
+ 1. H. M. STANLEY. (_After Walery_) _Frontispiece_
+
+ 2. VIEW FROM THE ROOF OF MR. AUGUSTUS _To face page_ 32
+ SPARHAWK’S HOUSE. (_From a photograph_)
+
+ 3. BURYING OUR DEAD IN HOSTILE TURU: VIEW OF ” 92
+ OUR CAMP
+
+ 4. RECEPTION BY KING MTESA’S BODY-GUARD AT ” 148
+ USAVARA
+
+ 5. MTESA, THE EMPEROR OF UGANDA. (_From a ” 152
+ photograph_)
+
+ 6. RECEPTION AT BUMBIREH ISLAND, VICTORIA ” 174
+ NYANZA
+
+ 7. THE STRANGE GRANITE ROCKS OF WEZI ISLAND, ” 194
+ MIDWAY BETWEEN USUKUMA AND UKEREWÉ. (_From
+ a photograph_)
+
+ 8. VIEW OF THE BAY LEADING TO RUGEDZI CHANNEL ” 202
+ FROM KIGOMA, NEAR KISORYA, SOUTH SIDE OF
+ UKEREWÉ, COAST OF SPEKE GULF. (_From a
+ photograph_)
+
+ 9. VIEW OF RIPON FALLS FROM THE UGANDA SIDE. ” 234
+ (_From a photograph_)
+
+ 10. THE OUTFALL OF THE VICTORIA NYANZA; RIPON ” 236
+ FALLS, WHICH GIVE BIRTH TO THE VICTORIA
+ NILE. CAMP OF REAR GUARD ON HILL. (_From a
+ photograph_)
+
+ 11. THE VICTORIA NILE, NORTH OF RIPON FALLS, ” 240
+ RUSHING TOWARDS UNYORO, FROM THE USOGA
+ SIDE OF THE FALLS. (_From a photograph_)
+
+ 12. ONE OF THE GREAT NAVAL BATTLES BETWEEN THE ” 260
+ WAGANDA AND THE WAVUMA, IN THE CHANNEL
+ BETWEEN INGIRA ISLAND AND CAPE NAKARANGA
+
+ 13. THE NAPOLEON CHANNEL, LAKE VICTORIA, FROM ” 268
+ THE HEIGHTS ABOVE THE RIPON FALLS.
+ FLOTILLA OF THE EMPEROR OF UGANDA CROSSING
+ FROM USOGA TO UGANDA. (_From a photograph
+ by the Author_)
+
+ 14. RUBAGA, THE NEW CAPITAL OF THE EMPEROR MTESA ” 308
+
+ 15. MTESA’S AMAZONS. (_From a photograph by the ” 314
+ Author_)
+
+ 16. MARCHING THROUGH UNYORO: MOUNT GORDON-BENNETT ” 336
+ IN THE DISTANCE
+
+ ---------------------
+
+ SMALLER ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+ 17. THE ‘LADY ALICE’ IN SECTIONS 4
+
+ 18. VIEW OF A PORTION OF THE SEA-FRONT OF ZANZIBAR FROM THE 22
+ WATER BATTERY TO SHANGANI POINT. (_From a photograph_)
+
+ 19. RED CLIFFS BEHIND UNIVERSITIES MISSION 28
+
+ 20. A HOUSE AT ZANZIBAR 31
+
+ 21. SEYYID BARGHASH 32
+
+ 22. COXSWAIN ULEDI, AND MANWA SERA, CHIEF CAPTAIN. (_From a 39
+ photograph_)
+
+ 23. NEW CHURCH ON SITE OF OLD SLAVE MARKET, ZANZIBAR 42
+
+ 24. TARYA TOPAN 50
+
+ 25. “TOWARDS THE DARK CONTINENT” 54
+
+ 26. UNIVERSITIES MISSION AT KANGANI, ZANZIBAR. (_From a 61
+ photograph_)
+
+ 27. WIFE OF MANWA SERA. (_From a photograph_) 65
+
+ 28. THE EXPEDITION AT ROSAKO. (_From a photograph_) 70
+
+ 29. VIEW FROM THE VILLAGE OF MAMBOYA 73
+
+ 30. OUR CAMP AT MPWAPWA. (_From a photograph_) 76
+
+ 31. “IN MEMORIAM.” EDWARD POCOCK, DIED JANUARY 17, 1875 92
+
+ 32. MNYAMWEZI PAGAZI 111
+
+ 33. VIEW OF KAGEHYI FROM THE EDGE OF THE LAKE. (_From a 113
+ photograph_)
+
+ 34. FRANK POCOCK. (_From a photograph_) 114
+
+ 35. BRIDGE ISLAND 131
+
+ 36. CAIRN ERECTED TO THE MEMORY OF FREDERICK BARKER: MAJITA 189
+ AND URURI MOUNTAINS IN THE DISTANCE, ACROSS SPEKE GULF.
+ (_From a photograph_)
+
+ 37. AT THE LANDING-PLACE OF MSOSSI; VIEW OF KITARI HILL TO THE 197
+ LEFT; MAJITA MOUNTAIN TO THE RIGHT. (_From a
+ photograph_)
+
+ 38. NATIVES, UTENSILS, &C. OF UKEREWÉ 199
+
+ 39. SKETCH MAP: CAPE NAKARANGA 244
+
+ 40. THE FLOATING FORTLET MOVING TOWARDS INGIRA ISLAND 265
+
+ 41. FISH FOUND IN LAKE VICTORIA 269
+
+ 42. HUTS OF EAST CENTRAL AFRICA 303
+
+ 43. AUDIENCE HALL OF THE PALACE 309
+
+ 44. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 323
+
+ 45. NGOGO FISH 325
+
+ 46. IMPLEMENTS AND WEAPONS OF CENTRAL AFRICA 327
+
+ 47. MOUNT EDWIN ARNOLD 339
+
+ 48. HOUSE AND WOODEN UTENSILS OF UZIMBA AND ANKORI 343
+
+ 49. CANOES AND PADDLES OF AFRICA 354
+
+ 50. RUMANIKA’S TREASURE-HOUSE 360
+
+ 51. A NATIVE OF UHHA 363
+
+ 52. VIEW OF UFUMBIRO MOUNTAINS FROM MOUNT NEAR MTAGATA HOT 365
+ SPRINGS
+
+ 53. GROUND PLAN OF KING’S HOUSE 372
+
+ 54. TREASURE-HOUSE, ARMS, AND TREASURES OF RUMANIKA 373
+
+ 55. “BULL.” (_From a photograph_) 381
+
+ 56. SEROMBO HUTS 383
+
+ 57. A “RUGA-RUGA,” ONE OF MIRAMBO’S PATRIOTS 385
+
+ 58. ONE OF THE WATUTA 393
+
+ ---------------------
+
+ MAPS.
+
+ EQUATORIAL AFRICA (SEGUNDO O MAPPA DE DAPPER), _To face page_ 10
+ 1676
+
+ MAPPA DE KRAPE, REBMANN, LIVINGSTONE & ERHARDT, ” 12
+ 1849-56
+
+ LIVINGSTONE, BURTON AND SPEKE, SPEKE & GRANT AND ” 14
+ VON DER DECKEN, 1856-1863
+
+ SCHWEINFURTH, BAKER, LIVINGSTONE, STANLEY & ” 18
+ CAMERON, 1866-75
+
+ STANLEY, 1874-77 ” 20
+
+ A MAP OF THE ROUTE OF STANLEY “THROUGH THE DARK ” 49
+ CONTINENT,” 1874-1877, AS WELL AS OF THE EMIN
+ PASHA RELIEF EXPEDITION THROUGH AFRICA
+
+ SKETCH MAP; CAPE NAKARANGA ” 244
+
+
+
+
+ THROUGH THE DARK CONTINENT.
+
+ ---
+
+ EXPLANATION.
+ PART I.
+
+My new mission—The _Daily Telegraph_—“_Yes; Bennett_”—The _Lady Alice_—
+ My European staff—Disappointed applicants and thoughtful friends—My
+ departure for Africa. PART II. The sources of the Nile—Herodotus on
+ the Nile—Burton on the Nile basin—Lake Tanganika—Lake Victoria—Speke,
+ Grant, and Cameron—The Livingstone River—The work before me.
+
+
+While returning to England in April 1874 from the Ashantee War, the news
+reached me that Livingstone was dead—that his body was on its way to
+England!
+
+Livingstone had then fallen! He was dead! He had died by the shores of
+Lake Bemba, on the threshold of the dark region he had wished to
+explore! The work he had promised me to perform was only begun when
+death overtook him!
+
+The effect which this news had upon me, after the first shock had passed
+away, was to fire me with a resolution to complete his work, to be, if
+God willed it, the next martyr to geographical science, or, if my life
+was to be spared, to clear up not only the secrets of the Great River
+throughout its course, but also all that remained still problematic and
+incomplete of the discoveries of Burton and Speke, and Speke and Grant.
+
+The solemn day of the burial of the body of my great friend arrived. I
+was one of the pall-bearers in Westminster Abbey, and when I had seen
+the coffin lowered into the grave, and had heard the first handful of
+earth thrown over it, I walked away sorrowing over the fate of David
+Livingstone.
+
+I laboured night and day over my book, ‘Coomassie and Magdala,’ for I
+was in a fever to begin that to which I now had vowed to devote myself.
+Within three weeks the literary work was over, and I was free.
+
+Soon after this I was passing by an old book-shop, and observed a volume
+bearing the singular title of ‘How to Observe.’ Upon opening it, I
+perceived it contained tolerably clear instructions of ‘How and what to
+observe.’ It was very interesting, and it whetted my desire to know
+more; it led me to purchase quite an extensive library of books upon
+Africa, its geography, geology, botany, and ethnology. I thus became
+possessed of over one hundred and thirty books upon Africa, which I
+studied with the zeal of one who had a living interest in the subject,
+and with the understanding of one who had been already four times on the
+continent. I knew what had been accomplished by African Explorers, and I
+knew how much of the dark interior was still unknown to the world. Until
+late hours I sat up, inventing and planning, sketching out routes,
+laying out lengthy lines of possible exploration, noting many
+suggestions which the continued study of my project created. I also drew
+up lists of instruments and other paraphernalia that would be required
+to map, lay out, and describe the new regions to be traversed.
+
+I had strolled over one day to the office of the _Daily Telegraph_, full
+of the subject. While I was discussing journalistic enterprise in
+general with one of the staff, the Editor entered. We spoke of
+Livingstone and the unfinished task remaining behind him. In reply to an
+eager remark which I made, he asked:—
+
+“Could you, and would you, complete the work? And what is there to do?”
+
+I answered:
+
+“The outlet of Lake Tanganika is undiscovered. We know nothing scarcely—
+except what Speke has sketched out—of Lake Victoria; we do not even know
+whether it consists of one or many lakes, and therefore the sources of
+the Nile are still unknown. Moreover, the western half of the African
+continent is still a white blank.”
+
+“Do you think you can settle all this, if we commission you?”
+
+“While I live, there will be something done. If I survive the time
+required to perform all the work, all shall be done.”
+
+The matter was for the moment suspended, because Mr. James Gordon
+Bennett, of the _New York Herald_, had prior claims on my services.
+
+A telegram was despatched to New York to him: “Would he join the _Daily
+Telegraph_ in sending Stanley out to Africa, to complete the discoveries
+of Speke, Burton, and Livingstone?” and, within twenty-four hours, my
+“new mission” to Africa was determined on as a joint expedition, by the
+laconic answer which the cable flashed under the Atlantic: “Yes;
+Bennett.”
+
+A few days before I departed for Africa, the _Daily Telegraph_ announced
+in a leading article that its proprietors had united with Mr. James
+Gordon Bennett in organizing an expedition of African discovery, under
+the command of Mr. Henry M. Stanley. “The purpose of the enterprise,” it
+said, “is to complete the work left unfinished by the lamented death of
+Dr. Livingstone; to solve, if possible, the remaining problems of the
+geography of Central Africa; and to investigate and report upon the
+haunts of the slave-traders.” * * * * “He will represent the two nations
+whose common interest in the regeneration of Africa was so well
+illustrated when the lost English explorer was rediscovered by the
+energetic American correspondent. In that memorable journey, Mr. Stanley
+displayed the best qualities of an African traveller; and with no
+inconsiderable resources at his disposal to reinforce his own complete
+acquaintance with the conditions of African travel, it may be hoped that
+very important results will accrue from this undertaking to the
+advantage of science, humanity, and civilisation.”
+
+Two weeks were allowed me for purchasing boats—a yawl, a gig, and a
+barge—for giving orders for pontoons, and purchasing equipment, guns,
+ammunition, rope, saddles, medical stores, and provisions; for making
+investments in gifts for native chiefs; for obtaining scientific
+instruments, stationery, &c., &c. The barge was an invention of my own.
+
+It was to be 40 feet long, 6 feet beam, and 30 inches deep, of Spanish
+cedar ⅜ inch thick. When finished, it was to be separated into five
+sections, each of which should be 8 feet long. If the sections should be
+over-weight, they were to be again divided into halves for greater
+facility of carriage. The construction of this novel boat was undertaken
+by Mr. James Messenger, boat-builder, of Teddington, near London. The
+pontoons were made by Cording, but though the workmanship was beautiful,
+they were not a success, because the superior efficiency of the boat for
+all purposes rendered them unnecessary. However, they were not wasted.
+Necessity compelled us, while in Africa, to employ them for far
+different purposes from those for which they had originally been
+designed.
+
+There lived a clerk at the Langham Hotel, of the name of Frederick
+Barker, who, smitten with a desire to go to Africa, was not to be
+dissuaded by reports of its unhealthy climate, its dangerous fevers, or
+the uncompromising views of exploring life given to him. “He would go,
+he was determined to go,” he said. To meet the earnest entreaties of
+this young man, I requested him to wait until I should return from the
+United States.
+
+[Illustration: THE ‘LADY ALICE’ IN SECTIONS.]
+
+Mr. Edwin Arnold, of the _Daily Telegraph_, also suggested that I should
+be accompanied by one or more young English boatmen of good character,
+on the ground that their river knowledge would be extremely useful to
+me. He mentioned his wish to a most worthy fisherman, named Henry
+Pocock, of Lower Upnor, Kent, who had kept his yacht for him, and who
+had fine stalwart sons, who bore the reputation of being honest and
+trustworthy. Two of these young men volunteered at once. Both Mr. Arnold
+and myself warned the Pocock family repeatedly that Africa had a cruel
+character, that the sudden change from the daily comforts of English
+life to the rigorous one of an explorer would try the most perfect
+constitution; would most likely be fatal to the uninitiated and
+unacclimatized. But I permitted myself to be overborne by the eager
+courage and devotion of these adventurous lads, and Francis John Pocock
+and Edward Pocock, two very likely-looking young men, were accordingly
+engaged as my assistants.
+
+I crossed over to America, the guest of Mr. Ismay, of the ‘White Star’
+line, to bid farewell to my friends, and after a five days’ stay
+returned in a steamer belonging to the same Company.
+
+Meantime, soon after the announcement of the “New Mission,” applications
+by the score poured into the offices of the _Daily Telegraph_ and _New
+York Herald_ for employment. Before I sailed from England, over 1200
+letters were received from “generals,” “colonels,” “captains,”
+“lieutenants,” “midshipmen,” “engineers,” “commissioners of hotels,”
+mechanics, waiters, cooks, servants, somebodies and nobodies, spiritual
+mediums and magnetizers, &c. &c. They all knew Africa, were perfectly
+acclimatized, were quite sure they would please me, would do important
+services, save me from any number of troubles by their ingenuity and
+resources, take me up in balloons or by flying carriages, make us all
+invisible by their magic arts, or by the “science of magnetism” would
+cause all savages to fall asleep while we might pass anywhere without
+trouble. Indeed I feel sure that, had enough money been at my disposal
+at that time, I might have led 5000 Englishmen, 5000 Americans, 2000
+Frenchmen, 2000 Germans, 500 Italians, 250 Swiss, 200 Belgians, 50
+Spaniards and 5 Greeks, or 15,005 Europeans, to Africa. But the time had
+not arrived to depopulate Europe, and colonize Africa on such a scale,
+and I was compelled to respectfully decline accepting the valuable
+services of the applicants, and to content myself with Francis John and
+Edward Pocock, and Frederick Barker—whose entreaties had been seconded
+by his mother, on my return from America.
+
+I was agreeably surprised also, before departure, at the great number of
+friends I possessed in England, who testified their friendship
+substantially by presenting me with useful “tokens of their regard” in
+the shape of canteens, watches, water-bottles, pipes, pistols, knives,
+pocket companions, manifold writers, cigars, packages of medicine,
+Bibles, prayer-books, English tracts for the dissemination of religious
+knowledge among the black pagans, poems, tiny silk banners, gold rings,
+&c. &c. A lady for whom I have a reverent respect presented me also with
+a magnificent prize mastiff named ‘Castor,’ an English officer presented
+me with another, and at the Dogs’ Home at Battersea I purchased a
+retriever, a bull-dog, and a bull-terrier, called respectively by the
+Pococks, ‘Nero,’ ‘Bull,’ and ‘Jack.’
+
+There were two little farewell dinners only which I accepted before my
+departure from England. One was at the house of the Editor of the _Daily
+Telegraph_, where I met Captain Fred. Burnaby and a few other kind
+friends. Captain Burnaby half promised to meet me at the sources of the
+Nile. The other was a dinner given by the representative of the _New
+York Herald_, at which were present Mr. George Augustus Sala, Mr. W. G.
+Stillman, Mr. George W. Smalley, and three or four other journalists of
+note. It was a kindly quiet good-bye, and that was my last of London.
+
+On the 15th of August, 1874, having shipped the Europeans, boats, and
+dogs, and general property of the expedition—which, through the kindness
+of Mr. Henry Bayley, of the Peninsular and Oriental Company, and Mr.
+William Mackinnon, of the British India Steam Navigation Company, were
+to be taken to Zanzibar at half-fares—I left England for the east coast
+of Africa to begin my explorations.
+
+
+ EXPLANATION.
+ PART II.
+
+ THE SOURCES OF THE NILE.
+
+ “Yet still no views have urged my ardour more
+ Than Nile’s remotest fountains to explore;
+ Then say what source the famous stream supplies,
+ And bids it at revolving periods rise;
+ Show me the head from whence since time begun
+ The long succession of his waves have run;
+ This let me know, and all my toils shall cease,
+ The sword be sheathed, and earth be blessed with peace.”
+ _Pharsalia_ (_Cæsar loq._).
+
+
+In the fifth century, before the Christian era began, Herodotus, the
+first great African traveller, wrote about the Nile and its sources as
+follows:—
+
+“Respecting the nature of this river, the Nile, I was unable to gain any
+information, either from the priests or any one else. I was very
+desirous, however, of learning from them why the Nile, beginning at the
+summer solstice, fills and overflows for a hundred days; and when it has
+nearly completed this number of days, falls short in its stream, and
+retires; so that it continues low all the winter, until the return of
+the summer solstice. Of these particulars I could get no information
+from the Egyptians, though I inquired whether this river has any
+peculiar quality that makes it differ in nature from other rivers. Being
+anxious, then, of knowing what was said about this matter, I made
+inquiries, and also how it comes to pass that this is the only one of
+all rivers that does not send forth breezes from its surface.
+Nevertheless, some of the Greeks, wishing to be distinguished for their
+wisdom, have attempted to account for these inundations in three
+different ways; two of these ways are scarcely worth mentioning, except
+that I wish to show what they are. One of them says that the Etesian
+winds are the cause of the swelling of the river, by preventing the Nile
+from discharging itself into the sea. But frequently the Etesian winds
+have not blown, yet the Nile produces the same effects; besides, if the
+Etesian winds were the cause, all other rivers that flow opposite to the
+same winds must of necessity be equally affected and in the same manner
+as the Nile; and even so much the more, as they are less and have weaker
+currents; yet there are many rivers in Syria, and many in Libya, which
+are not all affected as the Nile is. The second opinion shows still more
+ignorance than the former, but, if I may so say, is more marvellous. It
+says that the Nile, flowing from the ocean, produces this effect; and
+that the ocean flows all round the earth. The third way of resolving
+this difficulty is by far the most specious, but most untrue. For by
+saying that the Nile flows from melted snow, it says nothing, for this
+river flows from Libya through the middle of Ethiopia and discharges
+itself in Egypt; how therefore, since it runs from a very hot to a
+colder region, can it flow from snow? Many reasons will readily occur to
+men of good understanding, to show the improbability of its flowing from
+snow. The first and chief proof is derived from the winds, which blow
+hot from those regions; the second is, that the country, destitute of
+rain, is always free from ice; but after snow has fallen, it must of
+necessity rain within five days; so that if snow fell, it would also
+rain in these regions. In the third place, the inhabitants become black
+from the excessive heat: kites and swallows continue there all the year;
+and the cranes, to avoid the cold of Scythia, migrate to these parts as
+winter quarters: if then ever so little snow fell in this country
+through which the Nile flows, and from which it derives its source, none
+of these things would happen, as necessity proves. But the person who
+speaks about the ocean, since he has referred his account to some
+obscure fable, produces no conviction at all, for I do not know any
+river called the Ocean, but suppose that Homer, or some other ancient
+poet, having invented the name, introduced it into poetry.”
+
+Captain Burton the learned traveller has some excellent paragraphs in
+his ‘Nile Basin,’ and remarks on this topic in connection with Ptolemy:—
+
+“That early geographer places his lake Nilus a little to the south of
+the Equator (about ten degrees), and 5° E. long. from Alexandria—that
+is, in 34° or 35° E. long. by our mode of reckoning. He was led into an
+error in placing these portions of the interior, bearing, as he
+conceived, from certain points in the east. Thus he places Cape Aromatum
+(Cape Asser or Cape Guardafui) in 6° N. lat., which we know to be in 11°
+48′ 50″, being thus, say, 6° out of its true place. He places the lake,
+the source of the western branch of the river, 1° more to the north and
+8° more to the west than the one for the eastern branch; subsequent
+inquiries may show us that these great features of Africa may yet turn
+out to be substantially correct.
+
+“We cannot here enter into any disquisition regarding the discrepancies
+that appear amongst the very ancient authors regarding these parts of
+Africa. We notice only those that are consistent and most valuable, and
+as bearing upon the priority of discovery and geographical knowledge.
+The earliest period we hear of Ethiopia is in the capture of the capital
+thereof by Moses 1400 years before our era, and 90 or 100 years before
+the departure of the Israelites from Egypt. Josephus calls it Saba, and
+states that it was very strong, situated on the River Astosabos, and
+that the name was changed to Meroë, by Cambyses, in honour of his sister
+Meroë. There were known to ancient writers three great tributaries to
+the Nile in Ethiopia, namely, the Astaboras (Tatazze), the Astosabos
+(Blue River), and the Astapus (White River). Herodotus says the source
+of the Nile, Astosabos, was twenty days’ journey to the south of Meroë,
+which will bring it to Lake Dembea or Tzana. According to Ptolemy, the
+position of Meroë was in 16° 25′ N. lat., but the ancient astronomer
+Hipparchus has placed it in 16° 51′, which may be taken as the most
+correct. Caillaud found the vast ruins in 16° 56′. Under Psammeticus,
+the first Egyptian king that reigned after the final expulsion of the
+Ethiopian kings from Egypt, 240,000 emigrants from Egypt settled in an
+island south of the island of Meroë, that is beyond Khartoum, between
+the Blue and the White Rivers, and at eight days’ journey east of the
+Nubæ, or Nubatæ. Subsequently the Roman arms extended to those parts.
+Petronius, the Roman general under Augustus, thirty years before our
+era, took and destroyed Napata, the ancient capital of Tirhaka, situated
+on the great northern bend of the Nile at Mount Barkhall, where vast
+ruins are still found. Meroë certainly, the capital of Queen Candace,
+mentioned in the New Testament (Acts viii. 27), also fell under the
+Roman yoke. Nero, early in his reign, sent a remarkable exploring party,
+under two centurions, with military force, to explore the source of the
+Nile and the countries to the west of the Astapus or White River, at
+that early day considered to be the true Nile. Assisted by an Ethiopian
+sovereign (Candace, no doubt), they went through the district now known
+as Upper Nubia, to a distance of 890 Roman miles from Meroë. In the last
+part of their journey they came to immense marshes, the end of which no
+one seemed to know, amongst which the channels were so narrow that the
+light boat or canoe in use was barely sufficient to carry one man across
+them. Still they continued their course south till they saw the river
+tumbling down or issuing out between the rocks, when they turned back,
+carrying with them a map of the regions through which they had passed:
+for Nero’s guidance and information. This, it may be remarked, is
+exactly the case still. The Dutch ladies told us last year that they
+found the channels amongst these marshes so thick that the lightest
+canoe, made of bulrushes, scarcely fit to carry one man, could not find
+room to pass on them or across them. After this Pliny, Strabo, and other
+Roman authors took notice of this position of Africa, but without giving
+us anything important or new.”
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ EQUATORIAL AFRICA (SEGUNDO O MAPPA DE DAPPER) 1676.
+
+[Illustration: _London, Sampson Low, Marston & Company, Limited._ E.
+Weller, _Litho._]
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+I quote from Captain Burton once more certain passages. “Edrisi, who was
+born in Nubia, but who wrote in Egypt about A.D. 1400, says, in that
+part of Ethiopia south and south-west of Nubia is first seen the
+separation of the two Niles. The one flows from south to north into
+Egypt, and the other part of the Nile flows from east to west; and upon
+that branch of the Nile lie all, or at least the most celebrated
+kingdoms of the Negroes. ‘From the Mountains of the Moon,’ says
+Scheadeddin, ‘the Egyptian Nile takes its rise. It cuts horizontally the
+equator in its course north. Many rivers come from this mountain, and
+unite in a great lake. From this lake comes the Nile, the greatest and
+most beautiful of the rivers of all the earth. Many rivers derived from
+this great river water Nubia,’ &c.
+
+“From the Arabs we may fairly descend to our own times. The early
+Portuguese discoverers obtained a great deal of geographical information
+regarding the interior of Africa, and especially regarding two lakes
+near the Equator, from one of which, the most northern, the Egyptian
+Nile was stated to flow. This information was largely used by the French
+geographer (D’Anville), and the Dutch geographers of that time.
+Subsequently Bruce and others told us about the great disparity in
+magnitude between the Blue and the White Rivers; the latter, they
+asserted, rose far to the south, near to the Equator, and amongst
+mountains covered with eternal snow. Twenty-five years ago, Mohammed
+Ali, the clear-sighted and energetic ruler of Egypt, sent an expedition,
+consisting of several barques well provided with everything necessary,
+and under able naval officers, to explore the White Nile to its source,
+if possible. They did their work so far well, but were forced to turn
+back on the 26th of January, 1840, in lat. 30° 22′ N., for want of
+sufficient depth of water for their vessels. At lat. 3° 30′ they found
+the river 1370 feet broad and say six feet deep. In every day’s work on
+the voyage they gave the width of the river, the depth of the river, the
+force of its current, its temperature, and the miles (geographical) made
+good daily.”
+
+These quotations bring us down to our own times. A few of the principal
+characters, through whose agency the problem of the Sources of the Nile
+has been solved, still live. The old African Association became merged
+in 1831 into the Royal Geographical Society. The change of title seems
+to have evoked greater energies, and the publications of the new
+society, the position of its President, his influence, learning, and
+tact, soon attracted general public attention. In the midst of this,
+Messrs. Krapf and Rebmann and Erhardt, missionaries located at Mombasa,
+on the east coast of Africa, announced that Arab traders and natives
+acquainted with the interior informed them that far inland there was a
+very large lake, or several lakes, which some spoke of under one
+collective title. The information thus obtained was illustrated by a
+sketch map by Mr. Erhardt, and was published in the ‘Proceedings of the
+Royal Geographical Society’ in 1856, “the most striking feature of which
+was a vast lake of a curious shape, extending through 12° of latitude.”
+
+ LAKE TANGANIKA.
+
+The Royal Geographical Society was induced to despatch an expedition to
+East Africa for the exploration of this interesting inland region, the
+command of which it entrusted to Lieutenant Richard Francis Burton, and
+Lieutenant John Hanning Speke, officers of the East Indian Army.
+
+Lieutenant Burton was already distinguished as an enterprising traveller
+by his book, ‘Pilgrimage to Mekka and Medina.’ Speke had, until this
+time, only a local reputation, but bore the character of being a very
+promising officer, and an amiable gentleman with a fondness for natural
+history and botanical studies, besides being an ardent sportsman and an
+indefatigable pedestrian.
+
+Burton and Speke’s expedition landed at Zanzibar on the 20th of
+December, 1856. On the 13th of February, 1858, after a journey of 950
+miles, and at a distance of 540 lineal geographical miles from the point
+of departure on the Indian Ocean, they first sighted and discovered Lake
+Tanganika. How much they explored of the lake is best illustrated by
+their map, which is appended to this present volume. Speke first crossed
+Lake Tanganika to the western side to Kasengé, an island, then returned
+by the same route to Kawelé, the district or quarter occupied at that
+time by the Arabs, in a large straggling village on the shores of the
+lake, in the country of Ujiji.
+
+On the second exploration of the lake, Lieutenant Burton accompanied
+Lieutenant Speke to a cove in Uvira, which is about thirteen miles from
+the north end of the lake. Unable to reach the extremity of the lake,
+they both returned to Ujiji. Lieutenant Speke was most anxious to
+proceed on a third tour of exploration of the lake, but was overruled by
+his chief, Lieutenant Burton. On the 26th of May, 1858, the expedition
+turned homewards, arriving in Unyanyembé on the 20th of June.
+
+ LAKE VICTORIA
+
+While Lieutenant Burton preferred to rest in Unyanyembé to collect the
+copious information about the Lake Regions from the Arabs and natives,
+which we see set forth in a masterly manner in his book, Lieutenant
+Speke, of a more active disposition, mustered a small force of men, and,
+with his superior’s permission, set out northward on July 9, 1858, on an
+exploring tour, and on the 30th of the same month arrived at the south
+end of a lake called by the Wanyamwezi who were with him the N’yanza, or
+the Lake, and by the Arabs, Ukerewé.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ MAPPA DE KRAPF, REBMANN, LIVINGSTONE, & ERHARDT — 1849-56.
+
+[Illustration: _London: Sampson Low, Marston & Company, Limited.
+E. Weller, Litho._]
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+At Muanza, in Usukuma, he took a survey of the body of the water such as
+might be embraced in a view taken from an altitude of 200 feet above the
+lake.
+
+In his reflections on the magnitude of the water expanse before him,
+Speke wrote: “I no longer felt any doubt that the lake at my feet gave
+birth to that interesting river, the source of which has been the
+subject of so much speculation, and the object of so many explorers.”
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+And again: “This is a far more extensive lake than the Tanganika; so
+broad you could not see across it, and so long that nobody knew its
+length.” To this magnificent lake Lieutenant Speke, its discoverer, gave
+the name of Victoria N’yanza.
+
+From this short view of the Victoria Lake, Speke returned to Unyanyembé,
+and announced to Lieutenant Burton that he had discovered the source of
+the White Nile. Lieutenant Burton did not acquiesce in his companion’s
+views of the importance of the discovery, and in his ‘Lake Regions’ and
+‘Nile Basins,’ in lectures, speeches, and essays in magazines, and
+conversations with friends, always vigorously combated the theory.
+
+On the 30th of February, 1859, Burton and Speke’s task of exploration,
+which had occupied twenty-five months, terminated with the arrival of
+the expedition at the little maritime village of Konduchi, on the Indian
+Ocean.
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+On opening John Hanning Speke’s book, ‘Journal of the Discovery of the
+Source of the Nile,’ we are informed on the very first page that his
+second important expedition into Africa, “which was avowedly for the
+purpose of establishing the truth of the assertion that the Victoria
+N’yanza (which he discovered on the 30th of July, 1858) would eventually
+prove to be the source of the Nile, may be said to have commenced on the
+9th of May, 1859, the first day of his return to England from his last
+expedition, when, at the invitation of Sir Roderick Impey Murchison, he
+called at his house to show him his map, for the information of the
+Royal Geographical Society.”
+
+Mr. Speke who was now known as Captain Speke, was intrusted with the
+command of the succeeding expedition which the Royal Geographical
+Society determined to send out for the purpose of verifying the theories
+above stated. He was accompanied this time by an old brother officer in
+India, Captain James Augustus Grant.
+
+The expedition under Speke and Grant set out from Zanzibar on the 25th
+of September, 1860. On the 23rd of January, 1861, it arrived at the
+house occupied by Burton and Speke’s expedition, in Tabora, Unyanyembé,
+having traversed nearly the entire distance along the same route that
+had been adopted formerly. In the middle of May the journey to Karagwé
+began. After a stay full of interest with Rumanika, king of Karagwé,
+they followed a route which did not permit them even a view of Lake
+Victoria, until they caught sight of the great lake near Meruka, on the
+31st of January, 1862. From this point, the expedition, up to its
+arrival at the court of Mtesa, emperor of Uganda, must have caught
+several distant views of the lake, though not travelling near its
+shores. During a little excursion from the Emperor’s capital, they also
+discovered a long broad inlet, which is henceforth known as Murchison
+Bay, on its northern coast.
+
+On the 7th of July, 1862, the two travellers started in a north-easterly
+direction, away from the lake, and Speke states that he arrived at
+Urondogani on the 21st. From this point he marched up the river along
+the left bank, and reached the Ripon Falls at the outlet of Lake
+Victoria on the 20th of July. He thus sums up the result and net value
+of the explorations of himself and companion in the years 1860-62:—
+
+“The Expedition had now performed its functions. I saw that old Father
+Nile without any doubt rises in the Victoria N’yanza, and as I had
+foretold, that Lake is the great source of the holy river which cradled
+the first expounder of our religious belief.... The most remote waters,
+or _top-head of the Nile_, is the southern end of the lake, situated
+close on the 3° lat., which gives to the Nile the surprising length in
+direct measurement, rolling over 34 degrees of latitude, of above 2300
+miles, or more than one-eleventh of the circumference of our globe. Now,
+from the southern point round by the west, to where the great Nile
+stream rises, there is only one feeder of any importance, and that is
+the _Kitangule_ River; while from the southernmost point round by the
+east, to the strait, there are no rivers of any importance.”...
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ LIVINGSTONE, BURTON & SPEKE, SPEKE & GRANT & VON DER DECKEN — 1856-1863.
+
+[Illustration: _London: Sampson Low, Marston & Company, Limited.
+E. Weller, Litho._]
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+He christened the falling effluent, where it drops from the level of the
+lake and escapes northerly into the Victoria Nile, “Ripon Falls,” in
+honour of the Earl of Ripon, who was President of the Royal Geographical
+Society when the expedition was organised, and the arm of the lake from
+which the Victoria Nile issued, Napoleon Channel, as a token of respect
+to the Paris Geographical Society, who had honoured him with a gold
+medal for the discovery of Lake Victoria.
+
+Following this paragraph, Captain Speke makes an important statement, to
+which I beg attention: “One thing seemed at first perplexing, the volume
+of water in the Kitangule (Alexandra Nile) looked as large as the Nile
+(Victoria), but then the one was a slow river, and the other swift, and
+on this account I could form no adequate judgment of their relative
+values.”
+
+On the 4th of June, Captain Speke and Grant embarked at Alexandria,
+Egypt, for England, where they arrived after an absence of 1146 days.
+
+Though one might suppose that the explorers had sufficient grounds for
+supposing that Lake Victoria covered an enormous area, quite as large,
+or, approaching to the 29,000 square miles’ extent Captain Speke boldly
+sketched it, there were not wanting many talented men to dispute each
+point in the assertions he made. One of the boldest who took opposing
+views to Speke was his quondam companion, Captain R. F. Burton, and he
+was supported by very many others, for very plausible reasons, which
+cannot, however, be touched upon here.
+
+Doctor David Livingstone, while on his last expedition, obtained much
+oral information in the interior of Africa from Arab traders, which
+dissected Speke’s Grand Lake into five; and it really seemed as if, from
+the constant assaults made upon it by geographers and cartographers, it
+would in time be erased from the chart altogether, or become a mere
+“rush drain,” like one of those which Speke and Grant found so numerous
+in that region. It was evident, therefore, that a thorough exploration
+of Lake Victoria was absolutely necessary to set at rest, once and for
+ever, one of the great problems that was such a source of trouble and
+dissatisfaction to the geographers of Europe and America.
+
+ LAKE TANGANIKA AGAIN.
+
+The next European to arrive at the shores of Lake Tanganika, after
+Burton and Speke, was Dr. David Livingstone. He first saw it as he stood
+on the verge of the plateau which rises steeply from the surface of the
+Tanganika at its south-west corner, on the 2nd of April, 1867; and on
+the 14th of March, 1869, and after traversing nearly the whole of the
+western shore from the extreme south end of the lake to Kassengé, the
+island which Speke visited in 1858, he crossed over to the east side and
+reached Ujiji.
+
+On the 15th of July, 1869, after camping at Kassengé, when on his way to
+Manyema, he writes in his journal the following opinion of Lake
+Tanganika; “Tanganika narrows at Uvira or Vira, and goes out of sight
+among the mountains; then it appears as a waterfall into the Lake of
+Quando, seen by Banyamwezi.”
+
+In his letters home Dr. Livingstone constantly made mention of two
+lakes, called Upper Tanganika, which Burton discovered, and Lower
+Tanganika, which Sir Samuel Baker discovered, and which formed, as he
+said, the second line of drainage trending to and discharging its waters
+into the Nile.
+
+He makes record in his Journals of the causes which induced him to
+verify his opinions by a personal investigation of the north end of Lake
+Tanganika on the 16th of November, 1871, a few days after my arrival, at
+Ujiji, I being the fourth European who had arrived on the shores of the
+Lake, in this manner:—
+
+“_16th November, 1871._—As Tanganika Explorations are said by Mr.
+Stanley to be an object of interest to Sir Roderick, we go at his
+expense and by his men to the north end of the lake.”
+
+“_24th November._—To Point Kisuka in Mukamba’s country. A Mgwana came to
+us from King Mukamba, and asserted most positively that all the water of
+Tanganika flowed into the River Lusizé, and then on to Ukerewe of Mteza;
+nothing could be more clear than his statements.”
+
+“_25th November._—Our friend of yesterday now declared as positively as
+before, that the water of Lusizé flowed into Tanganika, and not the way
+he said yesterday! Tanganika closes in except at one point N. and by W.
+of us.”
+
+“_26th November._—The end of Tanganika seen clearly, is rounded off
+about 4′ broad from east to west.”
+
+On the 29th of November, Livingstone and I, in a canoe manned by several
+strong rowers, entered into Lusizé, or Rusizi, and discovered that it
+flowed _into_ Lake Tanganika by three mouths with an impetuous current.
+
+The explorations of Livingstone and myself in November 1871 to the north
+end of Lake Tanganika resolved that portion of the problem, but
+described only about thirteen miles of coast unvisited by Burton and
+Speke. On our way back, however, by a southern route to Unyanyembé, we
+added to the knowledge of the Tanganika coast-line, on the eastern side
+from Kabogo Point as far as Urimba, about twenty miles farther than
+Speke had seen.
+
+In August 1872, about five months after I had departed from him
+homewards, he recommenced his last journey. On the 8th of October of the
+same year he saw the Tanganika again about sixty miles south of the
+point where he and I bade farewell to the lake, eight months previously.
+Clinging to the lake, he travelled along the eastern shore, until he
+reached the southernmost end of it.
+
+From this it will appear evident that the only portion of Lake Tanganika
+remaining unvisited was that part of the west-end shore, between Kasengé
+Island and the northernmost point of what Burton and Speke called Ubwari
+Island, and what Livingstone and I called Muzimu Island. Doubtless there
+were many portions of Livingstone’s route overland which rendered the
+coast line somewhat obscure, and in his hurried journey to Ujiji in
+1869, by canoe from Mompara’s to Kasengé, a portion of the Uguha coast
+was left unexplored. But it is Livingstone who was the first to map out
+and give a tolerably correct configuration to that part of Lake
+Tanganika extending from Urimba round to the south end and up along the
+eastern shore to Kasengé Island, as it was Burton and Speke who were the
+first to map out that portion of the Tanganika extending from Ujiji to a
+point nearly opposite Ubwari and the north-west, from Ubwari’s north end
+as far as Uvira.
+
+In February 1874 Lieutenant Verney Lovett Cameron, R.N., arrived at the
+same village of Ujiji, which had been seen by Burton and Speke in 1858,
+and which was known as the place where I discovered Livingstone in 1872.
+He had traversed a route rendered familiar to thousands of the readers
+of the ‘Lake Regions of Central Africa,’ ‘the Journal of the Discovery
+of the Nile,’ and ‘How I found Livingstone,’ through a country carefully
+mapped, surveyed and described. But the land that lay before him
+westerly had only been begun by Livingstone, and there were great and
+important fields of exploration beyond the farthest point he had
+reached.
+
+Lieutenant Cameron procured two canoes, turned south, and coasted along
+the eastern shore of the Tanganika, and when near the southern end of
+the Lake, crossed it, turned up north along the western shore, and
+discovered a narrow channel, between two spits of pure white sand.
+Entering this channel, the Lukuga creek, he traced it until farther
+progress was stopped by an immovable and impenetrable barrier of
+papyrus. This channel, Lieutenant Cameron wrote, was the outlet of Lake
+Tanganika. Satisfied with his discovery, he withdrew from the channel,
+pursued his course along the west coast as far as Kasengé Island, the
+camping-place of both Speke and Livingstone, and returned direct to
+Ujiji without making further effort.
+
+Lake Tanganika, as will be seen, upon Lieutenant Cameron’s departure,
+had its entire coast-line described, except the extreme south end, the
+mouth of the Lufuvu and that portion of coast lying between Kasengé
+Island and the northern point of Ubwari, about 140 miles in extent.
+
+ LIVINGSTONE’S GREAT RIVER.
+
+What we knew distinctly of this great river began with Livingstone’s
+last journey, when he wrote from Ujiji in 1869, repeating what he had
+already written in 1867, at the town of Cazembe, in a despatch to Lord
+Clarendon.
+
+Briefly, this last journey began, let us say, at Zanzibar, the date of
+his arrival being the 28th of January, 1866. On the 19th of March he
+sailed in H.M.S. _Penguin_ for the mouth of the Rovuma river, after
+invoking the blessing of the Most High upon his meditated intercourse
+with the heathen. Effecting a landing at Mikindini Bay, he directed his
+course in a south-westerly direction, arriving within view of Lake
+Nyassa on the 13th of September, 1866.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ SCHWEINFURTH, BAKER, LIVINGSTONE, STANLEY & CAMERON — 1866-75.
+
+[Illustration: _London: Sampson Low, Marston & Company, Limited.
+E. Weller, Litho._]
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+On the 16th of January, 1867, he reached the most southerly streams
+emptying into the Chambezi, after crossing the mountains which separate
+the streams flowing east to the Loangwa. He describes the northern slope
+which gives birth to the affluents of the new river thus: “It is
+needless to repeat that it is all forest on the northern slopes of the
+mountains—open glade and miles of forest; ground at present all sloppy,
+oozes full and overflowing, feet constantly wet. Rivulets rush with
+clear water; though they are in flood we can guess which are perennial
+and which are torrents that dry up; they flow northwards and westwards
+to the Chambezi.”
+
+Eight days later, in S. lat. 10° 34′, he reached the main river—the
+Chambezi—a stream “flooded with clear water-banks not more than 40 yards
+apart, showing abundant animal life in its waters and on its banks as it
+flowed westwards.” Just at the point Livingstone first saw the Chambezi,
+numerous streams are gathered from all points—northerly, easterly, and
+southerly, from the westerly slope of the uplands of Mambwe into the
+main river, which presently becomes a formidable river, and which
+subsequent explorations proved to enter Lake Bemba on its eastern side.
+
+On the 8th of November, 1867, the traveller makes a very comprehensive
+statement. It is the evening of his arrival at Lake Mweru or Moero.
+“Lake Moero seems of goodly size, and is flanked by ranges of mountains
+on the east and west. Its banks are of coarse sand, and slope gradually
+down to the water; outside of these banks stands a thick belt of
+tropical vegetation in which fishermen build their huts. The country
+called Rua lies on the west, and is seen as a lofty range of dark
+mountains; another range of less height, but more broken, stands along
+the eastern shore.”
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+“The northern shore has a fine sweep, like an unbent bow, and round the
+western end flows the water that makes the River Lualaba, which, before
+it enters Mweru, is the Luapula, and that again (if the most intelligent
+report speak true) is the Chambezi before it enters Lake Bemba or
+Bangweolo.”
+
+On page 261, vol i., of ‘Livingstone’s Last Journals,’ he sums up very
+succinctly what knowledge he has gained of the country which was the
+scene of his explorations, 1866-67. “First of all the Chambezi runs in
+the country of Mambwe, N.E. of Molemba. It then flows S.W. and W. till
+it reaches 11° S. lat. and long. 29° E., where it forms Lake Bemba or
+Bangweolo. Emerging thence, it assumes the new name Luapula, and comes
+down here to fall into Mweru. On going out of this lake it is known by
+the name Lualaba as it flows N.W. in Rua to form another lake with many
+islands called Ulengé or Urengé. Beyond this, information is not
+positive as to whether it enters Tanganika, or another lake beyond
+that.”
+
+On the 18th of July, 1868, the discovery of Lake Bemba or Bangweolo was
+made by Dr. Livingstone.
+
+On page 59, vol. ii., ‘Last Journals,’ we think we have an explanation
+of the causes which led him to form those hypotheses and theories which
+he subsequently made public by his letters, or elaborated in his
+journals, on the subject of the Nile Sources.
+
+“_Bambarre, 25th August, 1870._—One of my waking dreams is that the
+legendary tales about Moses coming up into Lower Ethiopia, with Merr his
+foster mother, and founding a city which he called in her honour
+‘Meroe,’ may have a substratum of fact.”
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+“I dream of discovering some monumental relics of Meroe, and if anything
+confirmatory of sacred history does remain, I pray to be guided
+thereunto. If the sacred chronology would thereby be confirmed, I would
+not grudge the toil and hardship, hunger and pain I have endured—the
+irritable ulcers would only be discipline.”
+
+The old explorer, a grand spectacle and a specimen of most noble manhood
+in these latter days of his life, travels on and on, but never reaches
+nearer the solution of the problem which puzzles his soul than the Arab
+depot Nyangwé, which is situate a few miles south of 4° S. lat. and a
+little east of 26° E. long. where he leaves the great river still
+flowing north.
+
+Livingstone never returned to this point, but retracing his steps to
+Ujiji, thence to the north end of Lake Tanganika and back again to Ujiji
+and Unyanyembé, directed his course to the southern shore of Lake Bemba,
+where he died of dysentery in the beginning of May 1873.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ STANLEY — 1874-77.
+
+[Illustration: _London: Sampson Low, Marston & Company, Limited.
+E. Weller, Litho._]
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+In the month of August 1874, Lieutenant Cameron, whom we left at Ujiji
+after the delineation of that part of Lake Tanganika south of Ujiji,
+after traversing Livingstone’s route to Kasongo’s Manyema, and
+travelling by canoe about thirty-five miles, reaches Nyangwé, his
+predecessor’s farthest point. Though he does not attempt to resolve this
+problem, or penetrate the region north of Nyangwé, Lieutenant Cameron
+ventures upon the following hypothesis: “This great stream must be one
+of the head-waters of the Kongo, for where else could that giant amongst
+rivers, second only to the Amazon in its volume, obtain 2,000,000 cubic
+feet of water which it unceasingly pours each second into the Atlantic?
+The large affluents from the north would explain the comparatively small
+rise of the Kongo at the coast; for since its enormous basin extends to
+both sides of the equator, some portion of it is always under the zone
+of rains, and therefore the supply to the main stream is nearly the same
+at all times, instead of varying as is the case with tropical rivers,
+whose basins lie completely on one side of the equator.” Lieutenant
+Cameron illustrates his hypothesis by causing Livingstone’s great river
+to flow soon after leaving Nyangwé straight westward, the highest part
+of which is only 3° 30′ S. lat.
+
+At Nyangwé, Lieutenant Cameron crossed the river, proceeded south with
+some Arab traders a few days’ journey, then, accompanied by guides,
+travelled still south to Juma Merikani’s, or Kasongo’s, thence, after a
+stay of nearly nine months, accompanied by Portuguese traders, he
+proceeded to Benguella, a small port belonging to the Portuguese
+Government on the Atlantic Ocean, having crossed Africa from east to
+west south of S. lat. 4°.
+
+The above is a brief sketch which with the aid of the small maps
+attached to this volume explains and illustrates the several
+geographical problems left by my predecessors. I now propose to describe
+how these problems were solved, and the incomplete discoveries of Burton
+and Speke, Speke and Grant, and Doctor Livingstone were finished, and
+how we sighted the lake Muta N’zigé, by its broad arm, which I have
+called Beatrice Gulf, by a comprehensive exploration, lasting, from sea
+to sea, two years eight months and twenty days; the results of which are
+to be found embodied in these two volumes, entitled: ‘_Through the Dark
+Continent; the Sources of the Nile, around the Great Lakes of Africa,
+and down the “Livingstone” to the Atlantic Ocean_.’
+
+-----
+
+# 1:
+
+ The portrait has been graciously subscribed—
+
+ “All’ intrepido viaggiatore
+ “Enrico Stanley
+ “UMBERTO RE.”
+
+# 2:
+
+ I have received the honour of appointment as Officier de l’Instruction
+ Publique, France; Gold Medallist of the Geographical Societies of
+ London, Paris, Italy, and Marseilles; Silver Medallist of the Chamber
+ of Commerce of Marseilles, and of the Municipality of Marseilles;
+ Honorary Member of the Geographical Societies of Antwerp, Berlin,
+ Bordeaux, Bremen, Hamburg, Lyons, Marseilles, Montpellier, Vienna, &c.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ VIEW OF A PORTION OF THE SEA-FRONT OF ZANZIBAR, FROM THE WATER
+ BATTERY TO SHANGANI POINT.
+ (_From a photograph by Mr. Buchanan, of Natal._)]
+]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+Arrival at Zanzibar Island—Life at Zanzibar—The town of Zanzibar, its
+ roadstead and buildings—The One Cocoa-nut tree and the red cliffs—
+ Selection and purchase of goods for the journey—Residence of Prince
+ Barghash—Busy mornings—Pleasant rides and quiet evenings.
+
+
+_Sept. 21._—Twenty-eight months had elapsed between my departure from
+Zanzibar after the discovery of Livingstone and my re-arrival on that
+island, September 21, 1874.
+
+The well-remembered undulating ridges, and the gentle slopes clad with
+palms and mango trees bathed in warm vapour, seemed in that tranquil
+drowsy state which at all times any portion of tropical Africa presents
+at first appearance. A pale-blue sky covered the hazy land and sleeping
+sea as we steamed through the strait that separates Zanzibar from the
+continent. Every stranger, at first view of the shores, proclaims his
+pleasure. The gorgeous verdure, the distant purple ridges, the calm sea,
+the light gauzy atmosphere, the semi-mysterious silence which pervades
+all nature, evoke his admiration. For it is probable that he has sailed
+through the stifling Arabian Sea, with the grim, frowning mountains of
+Nubia on the one hand, and on the other the drear, ochreous-coloured
+ridges of the Arab Peninsula; and perhaps the aspect of the thirsty
+volcanic rocks of Aden and the dry brown bluffs of Guardafui is still
+fresh in his memory.
+
+But a great change has taken place. As he passes close to the deeply
+verdant shores of Zanzibar Island, he views nature robed in the greenest
+verdure, with a delightful freshness of leaf, exhaling fragrance to the
+incoming wanderer. He is wearied with the natural deep-blue of the
+ocean, and eager for any change. He remembers the unconquerable aridity
+and the dry bleached heights he last saw, and lo! what a change!
+Responding to his half formed wish, the earth rises before him verdant,
+prolific, bursting with fatness. Palms raise their feathery heads and
+mangoes their great globes of dark green foliage; banana plantations
+with impenetrable shade, groves of orange, fragrant cinnamon, and
+spreading bushy clove, diversify and enrich the landscape. Jack-fruit
+trees loom up with great massive crowns of leaf and branch, while
+between the trees and in every open space succulent grasses and plants
+cover the soil with a thick garment of verdure. There is nothing grand
+or sublime in the view before him, and his gaze is not attracted to any
+special feature, because all is toned down to a uniform softness by the
+exhalation rising from the warm heaving bosom of the island. His
+imagination is therefore caught and exercised, his mind loses its
+restless activity, and reposes under the influence of the eternal summer
+atmosphere.
+
+Presently on the horizon there rises the thin upright shadows of ships’
+masts, and to the left begins to glimmer a pale white mass which, we are
+told, is the capital of the island of Zanzibar. Still steaming
+southward, we come within rifle-shot of the low green shores, and now
+begin to be able to define the capital. It consists of a number of
+square massive structures, with little variety of height and all
+whitewashed, standing on a point of low land, separated by a broad
+margin of sand beach from the sea, with a bay curving gently from the
+point, inwards to the left towards us.
+
+Within two hours from the time we first caught sight of the town, we
+have dropped anchor about 700 yards from the beach. The arrival of the
+British India Company’s steamer causes a sensation. It is the monthly
+“mail” from Aden and Europe! A number of boats break away from the beach
+and come towards the vessel. Europeans sit at the stern, the rowers are
+white-shirted Wangwana[3] with red caps. The former are anxious to hear
+the news, to get newspapers and letters, and to receive the small
+parcels sent by friendly hands “per favour of captain.”
+
+The stranger, of course, is intensely interested in this life existing
+near the African Equator, now first revealed to him, and all that he
+sees and hears of figures and faces and sounds is being freshly
+impressed on his memory. Figures and faces are picturesque enough.
+Happy, pleased-looking men of black, yellow, or tawny colour, with long
+white cotton shirts, move about with quick, active motion, and cry out,
+regardless of order, to their friends or mates in the Swahili or Arabic
+language, and their friends or mates respond with equally loud voice and
+lively gesture, until, with fresh arrivals, there appears to be a Babel
+created, wherein English, French, Swahili, and Arabic accents mix with
+Hindi, and, perhaps, Persian.
+
+In the midst of such a scene I stepped into a boat to be rowed to the
+house of my old friend, Mr. Augustus Sparhawk, of the Bertram Agency. At
+this low-built, massive-looking house near Shangani Point, I was
+welcomed with all the friendliness and hospitality of my first visit,
+when, three years and a half previously, I arrived at Zanzibar to set
+out for the discovery of Livingstone.
+
+With Mr. Sparhawk’s aid I soon succeeded in housing comfortably my three
+young Englishmen, Francis John and Edward Pocock and Frederick Barker,
+and my five dogs, and in stowing safely on shore the yawl _Wave_, bought
+for me at Yarmouth by Mr. Edwin Arnold, the gig, and the tons of goods,
+provisions, and stores I had brought.
+
+Life at Zanzibar is a busy one to the intending explorer. Time flies
+rapidly, and each moment of daylight must be employed in the selection
+and purchase of the various kinds of cloth, beads, and wire, in demand
+by the different tribes of the mainland through whose countries he
+purposes journeying. Strong, half-naked porters come in with great bales
+of unbleached cottons, striped and coloured fabrics, handkerchiefs and
+red caps, bags of blue, green, red, white and amber-coloured beads,
+small and large, round and oval, and coils upon coils of thick brass
+wire. These have to be inspected, assorted, arranged, and numbered
+separately, have to be packed in portable bales, sacks, or packages, or
+boxed according to their character and value. The house-floors are
+littered with cast-off wrappings and covers, box-lids, and a medley of
+rejected paper, cloth, zinc covers and broken boards, sawdust and other
+débris. Porters and servants and masters, employés and employers, pass
+backwards and forwards, to and fro, amid all this litter, roll bales
+over, or tumble about boxes; and a rending of cloth or paper, clattering
+of hammers, demands for the marking-pots, or the number of bale and box,
+with quick, hurried breathing and shouting, are heard from early morning
+until night.
+
+Towards evening, after such a glaring day of glaring heat and busy
+toil, comes weariness: the arm-chair is sought, and the pipe or cigar
+with a cup of tea rounds off the eventful hours. Or, as sometimes the
+case would be, we would strike work early, and after a wholesome dinner
+at 4.30 P.M. would saddle our horses and ride out into the interior of
+the island, returning during the short twilight. Or we would take the
+well-known path to Mnazi-Moya—the One Cocoa-nut Tree, where it stands
+weird and sentinel-like over humble tombs on the crest of an ancient
+beach behind Shangani Point. Or, as the last and only resource left to
+a contemplative and studious mind, we would take our easy-chairs on the
+flat roof, where the cowhides of the merchant are poisoned and dried,
+and, with our feet elevated above our heads, watch the night coming.
+
+If we take our ride, in a few minutes we may note, at the pleasantest
+hour, those local features which, with the thermometer at 95° Fahr.,
+might have been a dangerous pleasure, or, at any rate, disagreeable.
+Through a narrow, crooked, plastered lane, our horses’ feet clattering
+noisily as we go, we ride by the tall, white-washed, massive houses,
+which rise to two and three stories above our heads. The residences
+of the European merchants and the officials here stand side by side,
+and at the tall doorway of each sits the porter—as comfortable as his
+circumstances will permit. As we pass on, we get short views of the
+bay, and then plunge again into the lane until we come in view of the
+worm-eaten old fort, crumbling fast into disuse and demolition. Years
+ago, behind it, I saw a market where some slaves were being sold.
+Happily there is no such market now.
+
+We presently catch sight, on our right, of the entrance to the fort
+at which sit on guard a few lazy Baluchis and dingy-looking Arabs. On
+our left is the saluting battery, which does frequent service for the
+ignition of much powder, an antique mode of exchanging compliments
+with ships of war, and of paying respect to Government officials. The
+customs sheds are close by, and directly in front of us rises the
+lofty house and harem of Prince Barghash. It is a respectable-looking
+building of the Arab architecture which finds favour at Muscat, three
+stories high and whitewashed—as all houses here appear to be. It
+is connected by a covered gangway, about 30 feet above our heads,
+with a large house on the opposite side of the lane, and possesses
+an ambitious doorway raised 3 feet above the street, and reached by
+four or five broad and circular-steps. Within the lower hall are some
+soldiers of the same pattern as those at the fort, armed with the
+Henry-Martini rifle, or matchlock, sword, and targe. A very short time
+takes us into a still narrower lane, where the whitewash is not so
+white as at Shangani, the European quarter. We are in the neighbourhood
+of Melindi now, where the European who has not been able to locate
+himself at Shangani is obliged to put up with neighbours of East Indian
+race or Arabs. Past and beyond Melindi is a medley of tall white
+houses and low sheds, where wealth and squalor jostle side by side,
+and then we find ourselves at the bridge over the inlet of Malagash,
+which extends from the bay up to Mnazi-Moya, or the One Cocoa-nut,
+behind Shangani. The banks on either side are in view as we pass over
+the bridge, and we note a dense mass of sheds and poor buildings,
+amid hills of garbage and heaps of refuse, and numbers of half-naked
+negroes, or people in white clothes, giving the whole an appearance
+somewhat resembling the more sordid village of Boulak, near Cairo.
+
+Having crossed the bridge from Melindi, we are in what is very
+appropriately termed Ngambu, or “t’other side.” The street is wide, but
+the quarter is more squalid. It is here we find the Wangwana, or
+Freedmen of Zanzibar, whose services the explorer will require as escort
+on the continent. Here they live very happily with the well-to-do
+Coastman, or Mswahili, poor Banyans, Hindis, Persians, Arabs, and
+Baluchis, respectable slave artisans, and tradesmen. When the people
+have donned their holiday attire, Ngambu becomes picturesque, even gay,
+and yields itself up to wild, frolicsome abandon of mirth. On working
+days, though the colours are still varied, and give relief to the clay
+walls and withered palm-frond roofs, this poor man’s district has a
+dingy hue, which black faces and semi-naked bodies seems to deepen.
+However, the quarter is only a mile and a half long, and quickening our
+paces, we soon have before us detached houses and huts, clusters of
+cocoa-nut palms and ancient mango trees crowned with enormous dark green
+domes of foliage. For about three miles one can enjoy a gallop along an
+ochreous-coloured road of respectable width, bordered with hedges.
+Behind the hedges grow the sugar-cane, banana, palm, orange, clove
+cinnamon, and jack-fruit trees, cassava, castor-oil, diversified with
+patches of millet, Indian corn, sweet-potatoes, and egg-plant, and
+almost every vegetable of tropic growth. The fields, gently undulating,
+display the variety of their vegetation, on which the lights and shadows
+play, deepening or paling as the setting sun clouds or reveals the
+charms of the verdure.
+
+Finally arriving upon the crest of Wirezu hill, we have a most beautiful
+view of the roadstead and town of Zanzibar, and, as we turn to regard
+it, are struck with the landscape lying at our feet. Sloping away
+gradually towards the town, the tropical trees already mentioned seem,
+in the bird’s-eye view, to mass themselves into a thin forest, out of
+which, however, we can pick out clearly the details of tree and hut.
+Whatever of beauty may be in the scene, it is Nature’s own, for man has
+done little; he has but planted a root, or a seed, or a tender sapling
+carelessly. Nature has nourished the root and the seed and the sapling,
+until they became sturdy giants, rising one above another in hillocks of
+dark green verdure, and has given to the whole that wonderful depth and
+variety of colour which she only exhibits in the Tropics.
+
+The walk to Mnazi-Moya will compel the traveller to moralize, and
+meditate pensively. Decay speaks to him, and from the moment he leaves
+the house to the moment he returns, his mind is constantly dwelling
+upon mortality. For, after lounging through two or three lanes, he
+comes to a populous graveyard, over which the wild grass has obtained
+supreme control, and through the stalks of which show white the fading
+and moss-touched headstones. Across the extensive acreage allotted
+to the victims of the sad cholera years, the Prince of Zanzibar has
+ruthlessly cut his way to form a garden, which he has surrounded
+with a high wall. Here a grinning skull and there a bleached thigh
+bone or sunken grave exposing its ghastly contents attract one’s
+attention. From time immemorial this old beach has been the depository
+of the dead, and unless the Prince prosecutes his good work for the
+reclamation of this golgotha (and the European officials urge it on
+him), the custom may be continued for a long period yet.
+
+Beyond this cemetery is to be seen the muddy head of Malagash inlet,
+between which and the sea south of Shangani there lies only this antique
+sand bar, about two hundred yards in breadth. On the crest of the sand
+bar stands the One Cocoa-nut Palm which has given its name to this
+locality. Sometimes this spot is also known as the “fiddler’s” grave. It
+is the breathing place of the hard-worked and jaded European, and here,
+seated on one of the plastered tombs near the base of the One Cocoa-nut
+Palm, with only a furtive look now and then at the “sleep and a
+forgetting” which those humble white structures represent, he may take
+his fill of ocean and watch the sun go down to his daily rest.
+
+[Illustration: RED CLIFFS BEHIND UNIVERSITIES MISSION.]
+
+Beyond Mnazi-Moya is Mbwenni, the Universities Mission, and close behind
+are some peculiar red cliffs, which are worth seeing.
+
+From the roof of the house, if we take the “last resource” already
+mentioned, we have a view of the roadstead and bay of Zanzibar.
+Generally there ride at anchor two or three British ships of war just in
+from a hunt after contumacious Arabs, who persist, against the orders of
+their prince, in transporting slaves on the high seas. There is a vessel
+moored closer to Frenchman’s Island, its “broken back” a memento of the
+Prince’s fleet shattered by the hurricane of 1872. Nearer in-shore float
+a number of Arab dhows, boats, lighters, steam launches, and two
+steamers, one of which is the famous _Deerhound_. One day I counted as a
+mere matter of curiosity, the great and small vessels in roadstead and
+harbour, and found that there were 135.
+
+From our easy-chairs on the roof we can see the massive building
+occupied formerly by the Universities Mission, and now the residence of
+Captain Prideaux, Acting British Consul and Political Resident, whose
+acquaintance I first made soon after his release from Magdala in 1868.
+This building stands upon the extremity of Shangani Point, and the first
+line of houses which fronts the beach extends northerly in a gentle
+sweep, almost up to Livingstone’s old residence on the other side of
+Malagash inlet.
+
+During the day the beach throughout its length is alive with the moving
+figures of hamals, bearing clove and cinnamon bags, ivory, copal and
+other gums, and hides, to be shipped in the lighters waiting along the
+water’s edge, with sailors from the shipping, and black boatmen
+discharging the various imports on the sand. In the evening the beach is
+crowded with the naked forms of workmen and boys from the “go-downs,”
+preparing to bathe and wash the dust of copal and hides off their bodies
+in the surf. Some of the Arab merchants have ordered chairs on the
+piers, or bunders, to chat sociably until the sun sets, and prayer time
+has come. Boats hurry by with their masters and sailors returning to
+their respective vessels. Dhows move sluggishly past, hoisting as they
+go the creaking yards of their lateen sails, bound for the mainland
+ports. Zanzibar canoes and “matepes” are arriving with wood and produce,
+and others of the same native form and make are squaring their mat
+sails, outward bound. Sunset approaches, and after sunset silence
+follows soon. For as there are no wheeled carriages with the eternal
+rumble of their traffic in Zanzibar, with the early evening comes early
+peace and rest.
+
+The intending explorer, however, bound for that dark edge of the
+continent which he can just see lying low along the west as he looks
+from Zanzibar, has thoughts at this hour which the resident cannot
+share. As little as his eyes can pierce and define the details in that
+gloomy streak on the horizon, so little can he tell whether weal or woe
+lies before him. The whole is buried in mystery, over which he ponders,
+certain of nothing but the uncertainty of life. Yet will he learn to
+sketch out a comparison between what he sees at sunset and his own
+future. Dark, indeed, is the gloom of the fast-coming night over the
+continent, but does he not see that there are still bright flushes of
+colour, and rosy bars, and crimson tints, amidst what otherwise would be
+universal blackness? And may he not therefore say—“As those colours now
+brighten the darkening west, so my hopes brighten my dark future”?
+
+[Illustration: A HOUSE AT ZANZIBAR.]
+
+-----
+
+# 3:
+
+ Wangwana (freed negroes).
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+Seyyid Barghash—His prohibition of slavery, character and reforms—Treaty
+ with British Government by Sir Bartle Frere—Tramways the need of
+ Africa—Arabs in the interior—Arabs in Zanzibar—Mtuma or Mgwana?—The
+ Wangwana, their vices and virtues—A Mgwana’s highest ambition—The
+ Wanyamwezi “the coming race.”
+
+
+_Oct. 1874._—The foot-note at the bottom of this page will explain all
+that need be known by the general reader in connection with the
+geography of the Island of Zanzibar.[4] Any student who wishes to make
+the island a special study will find books dealing most minutely with
+the subject at all great libraries. Without venturing, therefore, into
+more details than I have already given in ‘How I found Livingstone,’ I
+shall devote this chapter to the Sultan of Zanzibar—Barghash bin Sayid—
+the Arabs, the Wangwana, and the Wanyamwezi, with whose aid the objects
+of the Anglo-American Expedition were attained.
+
+It is impossible not to feel a kindly interest in Prince Barghash,
+and to wish him complete success in the reforms he is now striving
+to bring about in his country. Here we see an Arab prince, educated
+in the strictest school of Islam, and accustomed to regard the black
+natives of Africa as the lawful prey of conquest or lust, and fair
+objects of barter, suddenly turning round at the request of European
+philanthropists and becoming one of the most active opponents of the
+slave-trade—and the spectacle must necessarily create for him many
+well-wishers and friends.
+
+[Illustration: SEYYID BARGHASH.]
+
+Though Prince Barghash has attributed to myself the visit of those ships
+of war under Admiral Cumming, all who remember that period, and are
+able, therefore, to trace events, will not fail to perceive that the
+first decided steps taken by the British Government for the suppression
+of the slave-trade on the east coast of Africa were due to the influence
+of Livingstone’s constant appeals. Some of his letters, they will
+remember, were carried by me to England, and the sensation caused by
+them was such as to compel the British Government to send Sir Bartle
+Frere in the _Enchantress_, as a special envoy to Zanzibar, to conclude
+a treaty with Prince Barghash. When the Prince’s reluctance to sign
+became known, the fleet under Admiral Cumming made its appearance before
+Zanzibar, and by a process of gentle coercion, or rather quiet
+demonstration, the signature of the Prince was at last obtained. One
+thing more, however, still remained to be done before the treaty could
+be carried into full effect, and that was to eradicate any feeling of
+discontent or sullenness from his mind which might have been created by
+the exhibition of force, and this I was happy to see, was effected by
+the hospitable reception he enjoyed in England in 1875. There was a
+difference in the manner and tone of the Sultan of 1874 and of 1877,
+that I can only attribute to the greater knowledge he had gained of the
+grandeur of the power which he had so nearly provoked. We must look upon
+him now as a friendly and, I believe, sincere ally, and as a man willing
+to do his utmost for the suppression of the slave-trade.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ [_To face page 32._
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ VIEW FROM THE ROOF OF MR. AUGUSTUS SPARHAWK’S HOUSE.
+
+ Frank Pocock. Frederick Barker. A Zanzibar boy. Edward Pocock.
+ Kalulu.
+ Bull-terrier “Jack.” “Bull.” Retriever “Nero.” Mastiff
+ “Captain.” Prize Mastiff “Castor.”
+
+ (_From a photograph by the Author._)
+]
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+The philanthropist having at last obtained such signal success with the
+Prince, it is time the merchant should attempt something with him. The
+Prince must be considered as an independent sovereign. His territories
+include, besides the Zanzibar, Pemba, and Mafia islands, nearly 1000
+miles of coast, and extend probably over an area of 20,000 square
+miles, with a population of half a million. The products of Zanzibar
+have enriched many Europeans who traded in them. Cloves, cinnamon,
+tortoise-shell, pepper, copal gum, ivory, orchilla weed, indiarubber,
+and hides have been exported for years; but this catalogue does not
+indicate a tithe of what might be produced by the judicious investment
+of capital. Those intending to engage in commercial enterprise would
+do well to study works on Mauritius, Natal, and the Portuguese
+territories, if they wish to understand what these fine, fertile lands
+are capable of. The cocoa-nut palm flourishes at Zanzibar and on the
+mainland, the oil palm thrives luxuriantly in Pemba, and sugar-cane
+will grow everywhere. Caoutchouc remains undeveloped in the maritime
+belts of woodland, and the acacia forests, with their wealth of gums,
+are nearly untouched. Rice is sown on the Rufiji banks, and yields
+abundantly; cotton would thrive in any of the rich river bottoms; and
+then there are, besides, the grains, millet, Indian corn, and many
+others, the cultivation of which, though only in a languid way, the
+natives understand. The cattle, coffee, and goats of the interior await
+also the energetic man of capital and the commercial genius.
+
+First, however, the capitalist must find means of carriage, otherwise he
+will never conquer African difficulties. Cutting roads through jungles,
+and employing waggons, are mere temporary conveniences, requiring great
+outlay, patience, and constant reinforcement of work and energies.
+Almost as fast as the land is cleared, it is covered again—so prolific
+is the soil—with tall wild grasses of the thickness of cane, and one
+season is sufficient to undo the work of months of the pioneer. Cattle
+die, tormented out of life by the flies or poisoned by the rank grasses;
+natives perish from want of proper nourishment, and, while suffering
+from fatigue and debility, are subject to many fatal diseases.
+
+A tramway is one thing that is needed for Africa. All other benefits
+that can be conferred by contact with civilisation will follow in the
+wake of the tramway, which will be an iron bond, never to be again
+broken, between Africa and the more favoured continents.
+
+However energetic the small merchant may be, he can effect nothing
+permanent for the good of a country that has neither roads nor navigable
+rivers, whose climate is alike fatal to the starved hamal as it is to
+the beast of burthen. The maritime belt must first be crossed by an iron
+road, and another must tap the very centre of the rice-fields of the
+Rufiji valley, in order to insure cheap, nutritious food in abundance.
+To a company, however, which can raise the sum required to construct a
+tramway, East Africa holds out special advantages. The Sultan himself
+offers a handsome sum, five lakhs of dollars or, roughly, £100,000, and
+there are rich Hindis at Zanzibar who, no doubt, would invest large
+sums, and thus the company would become the principal merchants along
+the line. The Sultan has also poor subjects enough who would be only too
+glad of the opportunities thus afforded to work for reasonable pay, so
+that very little fear need be entertained of lack of labour. Besides,
+there are natives of the interior who, after two or three bold examples,
+would soon be induced to apply for employment along the line.
+
+Those whom we call the Arabs of Zanzibar are either natives of Muscat
+who have immigrated thither to seek their fortunes, or descendants of
+the conquerors of the Portuguese. As the present Sultan calls himself
+Barghash the son of Sayid, the son of Sultan, the son of Hamid, so all
+Arabs, from the highest to the lowest of his subjects, are known by
+their proper names—Ahmed, or Khamis, or Abdullah, as being the sons of
+Mussoud, of Mustapha, or of Mohammed. Some of them boast of unusually
+long pedigrees, and one or two I am acquainted with proclaimed
+themselves of purer and more aristocratic descent than even the Sultan.
+
+The Arab conquerors who accompanied Seyyid Sultan, the grandfather of
+the present Seyyid Barghash, took unto themselves, after the custom
+of polygamists, wives of their own race according to their means,
+and almost all of them purchased negro concubines, the result of
+which we trace to-day in the various complexions of those who call
+themselves Arabs. By this process of miscegenation the Arabs of the
+latest migration are already rapidly losing their rich colour and fine
+complexions, while the descendants of the Arabs of the first migration
+are now deteriorated so much that on the coast they can scarcely be
+distinguished from the Aborigines. While many of the descendants of
+the old settlers who came in with Seyyid Sultan, still cling to their
+homesteads, farms, and plantations, and acquire sufficient competence
+by the cultivation of cloves, cinnamon, oranges, cocoa-nut palms,
+sugar-cane, and other produce, a great number have emigrated into the
+interior to form new colonies. Hamed Ibrahim has been eighteen years
+in Karagwé, Muini Kheri has been thirty years in Ujiji, Sultan bin Ali
+has been twenty-five years in Unyanyembé, Muini Dugumbi has been eight
+years in Nyangwé, Juma Merikani has been seven years in Rua, and a
+number of other prominent Arabs may be cited to prove that, though they
+themselves firmly believe that they will return to the coast some day,
+there are too many reasons for believing that they never will.
+
+None of the Arabs in the interior with whom I am acquainted ever
+proceeded thither with the definite intention of colonisation. Some were
+driven thither, by false hopes of acquiring rapid fortunes by the
+purchase of slaves and ivory, and, perceiving that there were worse
+places on earth than Africa, preferred to remain there, to facing the
+odium of failure. Others borrowed large sums on trust from credulous
+Hindis and Banyans, and having failed in the venture now prefer to
+endure the exclusion to which they have subjected themselves, to
+returning and being arrested by their enraged creditors. Others again
+are not merely bankrupts, but persons who have fled the vengeance of the
+law for political offences, as well as ordinary crimes. There are many
+who are in better circumstances in the interior than they would be on
+their own island of Zanzibar. Some of them have hundreds of slaves, and
+he would be a very poor Arab indeed who possessed only ten. These
+slaves, under their masters’ direction have constructed roomy,
+comfortable, flat-roofed houses, or lofty cool huts, which, in the
+dangerous and hostile districts, are surrounded by strong stockades.
+Thus, at Unyanyembé there are sixty or seventy large stockades enclosing
+the owner’s house and storerooms, as well as the numerous huts of his
+slaves. Ujiji, again, may be described as a long straggling village,
+formed by the large tembes of the Arabs; and Nyangwé is another
+settlement similar to Ujiji. Many of the Arabs settled in the pastoral
+districts possess large herds of cattle and extensive fields where rice,
+wheat, Indian corn, and millet are cultivated, besides sugar-cane and
+onions, and the fruit trees of Zanzibar—the orange, lemon, papaw, mango,
+and pomegranate—are now being gradually introduced.
+
+The Arabs of Zanzibar, whether from more frequent intercourse with
+Europeans or from other causes, are undoubtedly the best of their race.
+More easily amenable to reason than those of Egypt, or the shy,
+reserved, and bigoted fanatics of Arabia, they offer no obstacles to the
+European traveller, but are sociable, frank, good-natured, and
+hospitable. In business they are keen traders, and of course will exact
+the highest percentage of profit out of the unsuspecting European if
+they are permitted. They are staunch friends and desperate haters. Blood
+is seldom satisfied without blood, unless extraordinary sacrifices are
+made.
+
+The conduct of an Arab gentleman is perfect. Indelicate matters are
+never broached before strangers; impertinence is hushed instantly by the
+elders, and rudeness is never permitted. Naturally, they have the vices
+of their education, blood, and race, but these moral blemishes are by
+their traditional excellence of breeding seldom obtruded upon the
+observation of the stranger.
+
+After the Arabs let us regard the Wangwana, just as in Europe, after
+studying the condition and character of the middle classes, we might
+turn to reflect upon that of the labouring population.
+
+Of the Wangwana there will be much written in the following pages, the
+outcome of careful study and a long experience of them. Few explorers
+have recorded anything greatly to their credit. One of them lately said
+that the negro knows neither love nor affection; another that he is
+simply the “link” between the simian and the European. Another says,
+“The wretches take a trouble and display an ingenuity in opposition and
+disobedience, in perversity, annoyance, and villainy, which rightly
+directed would make them invaluable.” Almost all have been severe in
+their strictures on the negro of Zanzibar.
+
+The origin of the Mgwana or Freeman may be briefly told. When the Arabs
+conquered Zanzibar, they found the black subjects of the Portuguese to
+be of two classes, Watuma (slaves) and Wangwana (freemen). The Freemen
+were very probably black people who had either purchased their freedom
+by the savings of their industry or were made free upon the death of
+their masters; these begat children who, being born out of bondage, were
+likewise free. Arab rulers, in classifying their subjects, perceived no
+great difference in physique or general appearance between those who
+were slaves and those who were free, both classes belonging originally
+to the same negro tribes of the interior. Thus, when any of these were
+brought before the authorities convicted of offences, the question
+naturally asked was, “Are you a Mtuma, a slave, or a Mgwana, a freeman?”
+A repetition of these questions through a long course of years
+established the custom of identifying the two classes of Zanzibar
+negroes as Watuma—slaves—and Wangwana—freemen. Later, however, came a
+new distinction, and the word Watuma, except in special and local cases,
+was dropped, for, with the advent of the free native traders direct from
+the mainland, and the increase of traffic between Zanzibar and the
+continent, as well as out of courtesy to their own slaves, the Arabs
+began to ask the black stranger, “Are you Mgwana, a freeman, or Mshensi,
+a pagan?” In disputes among themselves the question is still asked, “Are
+you a slave or a freeman?” but when strangers are involved, it is
+always, “Are you Mgwana, a freeman or a native of Zanzibar, or a
+Mshensi, a pagan or an uncircumcised native of the mainland?”
+
+It will be thus seen that the word “Wangwana” is now a generic, widely
+used, and well understood for the coloured natives of Zanzibar. When,
+therefore, the term is employed in this book, it includes alike both the
+slaves and the freemen of Zanzibar.
+
+After nearly seven years’ acquaintance with the Wangwana, I have come to
+perceive that they represent in their character much of the disposition
+of a large portion of the negro tribes of the continent. I find them
+capable of great love and affection, and possessed of gratitude and
+other noble traits of human nature; I know too, that they can be made
+good, obedient servants, that many are clever, honest, industrious,
+docile, enterprising, brave and moral; that they are, in short, equal to
+any other race or colour on the face of the globe, in all the attributes
+of manhood. But to be able to perceive their worth, the traveller must
+bring an unprejudiced judgment, a clear, fresh, and patient observation,
+and must forget that lofty standard of excellence upon which he and his
+race pride themselves, before he can fairly appreciate the capabilities
+of the Zanzibar negro. The traveller should not forget the origin of his
+own race, the condition of the Briton before St. Augustine visited his
+country, but should rather recall to mind the first state of the “wild
+Caledonian,” and the original circumstances and surroundings of
+Primitive Man.
+
+Louis Figuier says: “However much our pride may suffer by the idea, we
+must confess that, at the earliest period of his existence, man could
+have been but little distinguished from the brute. His pillow was a
+stone, his roof was the shadow of a wide-spreading tree, or some dark
+cavern, which also served as a refuge against wild beasts.”
+
+And again, in his chapter on the ‘Iron Epoch,’ he notes how “From the
+day when iron was first placed at man’s disposal, civilisation began to
+make its longest strides, and as the working of this metal improved, so
+the dominion of man—his faculties and his intellect—real activity—
+likewise enlarged in the same proportion.” And at the end of a most
+admirable book, he counsels the traveller, “Look to it, less thy pride
+cause thee to forget thy own origin.”
+
+Being, I hope, free from prejudices of cast, colour, race, or
+nationality, and endeavouring to pass what I believe to be a just
+judgment upon the negroes of Zanzibar, I find that they are a people
+just emerged into the Iron Epoch, and now thrust forcibly under the
+notice of nations who have left them behind by the improvements of over
+4000 years. They possess beyond doubt all the vices of a people still
+fixed deeply in barbarism, but they understand to the full what and how
+low such a state is; it is, therefore, a duty imposed upon us by the
+religion we profess, and by the sacred command of the Son of God, to
+help them out of the deplorable state they are now in. At any rate,
+before we begin to hope for the improvement of races so long benighted,
+let us leave off this impotent bewailing of their vices, and endeavour
+to discover some of the virtues they possess as men, for it must be by
+the aid of their virtues, and not by their vices, that the missionary of
+civilisation can ever hope to assist them. While, therefore, recording
+my experiences through Africa, I shall have frequent occasion to dilate
+upon both the vices and the virtues of the Wangwana as well as of the
+natives of the interior, but it will not be with a view to foster, on
+the one hand, the self-deception of the civilised, or the absurd
+prejudices created by centuries of superior advantages, nor, on the
+other hand, to lead men astray by taking a too bright view of things. I
+shall write solely and simply with a strong desire to enable all
+interested in the negro to understand his mental and moral powers
+rightly.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ COXSWAIN ULEDI, AND MANWA SERA, CHIEF CAPTAIN.
+ (_From a photograph._)
+]
+
+The Mgwana or native of Zanzibar, who dwells at Ngambu, is a happy,
+jovial soul. He is fond of company, therefore sociable. His vanity
+causes him to be ambitious of possessing several white shirts and
+bright red caps, and since he has observed that his superiors use
+walking-sticks, he is almost certain, if he is rich enough to own
+a white shirt and a red cap, to be seen sporting a light cane. The
+very poorest of his class hire themselves, or are hired out by their
+masters, to carry bales, boxes, and goods, from the custom-house to
+the boat, or store-room, or _vice versâ_, and as a general beast of
+burden, for camels are few, and of wheeled vehicles there are none.
+Those who prefer light work and have good characters may obtain
+positions as doorkeepers or house-servants, or for washing copal and
+drying hides for the European merchants. Others, trained as mechanics,
+obtain a livelihood by repairing muskets, manufacturing knives, belts,
+and accoutrements, or by carpentering and ship-building. There is
+a class of Wangwana living at Ngambu, in the small gardens of the
+interior of the island, and along the coast of the mainland, who prefer
+the wandering life offered to them by Arab traders and scientific
+expeditions to being subject to the caprice, tyranny, and meanness of
+small estate proprietors. They complain that the Arabs are haughty,
+grasping, and exacting; that they abuse them and pay them badly; that,
+if they seek justice at the hands of the Cadis, judgment, somehow,
+always goes against them. They say, on the other hand, that, when
+accompanying trading or other expeditions, they are well paid, have
+abundance to eat, and comparatively but little work.
+
+But the highest ambition of a Mgwana is to have a house and _shamba_
+or garden of his own. The shamba may only be large enough to possess
+a dozen cocoa-nut-trees, a dozen rows, thirty yards long, of cassava
+shrubs, half-a-dozen banana plants, half-a-dozen rows planted with
+sweet-potatoes, and two or three rows of ground-nuts; nevertheless,
+this would be _his_ garden or estate, and therefore of priceless
+estimation. At one corner of this tiny but most complete estate, he
+would erect his house, with an exclusive courtyard, which he would
+stock with half-a-dozen chickens and one goat, which last he would be
+sure to spoil with kindness. Three hundred dollars would probably be
+the total value of house, garden, chickens, goat, domestic utensils,
+tools, and all, and yet, with this property, he would be twice married,
+the father of four or five children, and even the owner of a domestic
+slave or two. If such be his condition, he will snap his fingers at the
+cruel world, and will imagine himself as prosperous, well-to-do, and
+comfortable as any Arab in Zanzibar. But he is seldom spoiled by this
+great prosperity. He is a sociable, kindly-disposed man, and his frank,
+hearty nature has won for him hosts of friends. Beer made of fermented
+mtama or Indian corn, wine of the palm or cocoa-nut milk, or the
+stronger _eau de vie_ sold by the Goanese in the town at twenty-five
+cents the bottle, serve to diffuse and cement these friendships.
+
+It is to the Wangwana that Livingstone, Burton, Speke and Grant owe, in
+great part, the accomplishment of their objects, and while in the employ
+of these explorers, this race rendered great services to geography. From
+a considerable distance north of the Equator down to the Zambezi and
+across Africa to Benguella and the mouth of the Livingstone, they have
+made their names familiar to tribes who, but for the Wangwana, would
+have remained ignorant to this day of all things outside their own
+settlements. They possess with many weaknesses, many fine qualities.
+While very superstitious, easily inclined to despair, and readily giving
+ear to vague, unreasonable fears, they may also, by judicious
+management, be induced to laugh at their own credulity and roused to a
+courageous attitude; to endure like Stoics, and fight like heroes. It
+will depend altogether upon the leader of a body of such men whether
+their worst or best qualities shall prevail.
+
+There is another class coming into notice from the interior of Africa,
+who, though of a sterner nature, will, I am convinced, as they are
+better known, become greater favourites than the Wangwana. I refer to
+the Wanyamwezi, or the natives of Unyamwezi, and the Wasukuma, or the
+people of Usukuma. Naturally, being a grade less advanced towards
+civilization than the Wangwana, they are not so amenable to discipline
+as the latter. While explorers would in the present state of
+acquaintance prefer the Wangwana as escort, the Wanyamwezi are far
+superior as porters. Their greater freedom from diseases, their great
+strength and endurance, the pride they take in their profession of
+porters, prove them born travellers of incalculable use and benefit to
+Africa. If kindly treated, I do not know more docile and good-natured
+creatures. But the discipline must not be strict, until they have had
+opportunities of understanding their employer’s nature and habits, and
+of comprehending that discipline does not mean abuse. Their courage they
+have repeatedly proved under their Napoleonic leader Mirambo, in many a
+well-fought field against the Arabs and Wangwana. Their skill in war,
+tenacity of purpose, and determination to defend the rights of their
+elected chief against foreigners, have furnished themes for song to the
+bards of Central Africa. Tippu-Tib has led 500 of these men through
+distant Bisa and the plains of Rua: Juma Merikani has been escorted by
+them into the heart of the regions beyond the Tanganika: Khamis bin
+Adallah commanded a large force of them in his search for ivory in the
+intra-lake countries. The English discoverer of Lake Tanganika and,
+finally, I myself have been equally indebted to them, both on my first
+and last expeditions.
+
+[Illustration: NEW CHURCH ON SITE OF OLD SLAVE MARKET, ZANZIBAR.]
+
+From their numbers, and their many excellent qualities, I am led to
+think that the day will come when they will be regarded as something
+better than the “best of pagazis;” that they will be esteemed as the
+good subjects of some enlightened power, who will train them up as the
+nucleus of a great African nation, as powerful for the good of the Dark
+Continent, as they threaten, under the present condition of things, to
+be for its evil.
+
+-----
+
+# 4:
+
+ “The fort of Zanzibar is in S. lat. 6° 9′ 36″ and E. long. 39° 14′
+ 33″.”—_East African Pilot._
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+Organisation of the Expedition—The _shauri_—“Poli, poli”—Msenna’s
+ successful imposture—Black sheep in the flock—The _Lady Alice_
+ remodelled—Sewing a British flag—Tarya Topan, the millionaire—Signing
+ the covenants—“On the word of a white man”—Saying good-bye—Loading the
+ dhows—Vale!—Towards the Dark Continent.
+
+
+_Nov. 1874._—It is a most sobering employment, the organizing of an
+African expedition. You are constantly engaged, mind and body; now in
+casting up accounts, and now travelling to and fro hurriedly to receive
+messengers, inspecting purchases, bargaining with keen-eyed, relentless
+Hindi merchants, writing memoranda, haggling over extortionate prices,
+packing up a multitude of small utilities, pondering upon your lists of
+articles, wanted, purchased, and unpurchased, groping about in the
+recesses of a highly exercised imagination for what you ought to
+purchase, and cannot do without, superintending, arranging, assorting,
+and packing. And this under a temperature of 95° Fahr.
+
+In the midst of all this terrific, high-pressure exercise arrives the
+first batch of applicants for employment. For it has long ago been
+bruited abroad that I am ready to enlist all able-bodied human beings
+willing to carry a load, be they Wangwana or Wanyamwezi, Wagalla,
+Somali, Wasagara, Wayow, Wajindo, Wagogo, or Wazaramo. Ever since I
+arrived at Zanzibar, since which date I have been absent exploring the
+Rufiji river, I have had a very good reputation among Arabs and
+Wangwana. They have not forgotten that it was I who found the “old white
+man”—Livingstone—in Ujiji, nor that liberality and kindness to my men
+were my special characteristics. They have also, with the true Oriental
+spirit of exaggeration, proclaimed that I was but a few months absent;
+and that, after this brief excursion, they returned to their homes to
+enjoy the liberal pay awarded them, feeling rather the better for the
+trip than otherwise. This unsought-for reputation brought on me the
+laborious task of selecting proper men out of an extraordinary number of
+applicants. Almost all the cripples, the palsied, the consumptive, and
+the superannuated that Zanzibar could furnish applied to be enrolled on
+the muster list, but these, subjected to a searching examination, were
+refused. Hard upon their heels came all the roughs, rowdies, and
+ruffians of the island, and these, schooled by their fellows, were not
+so easily detected. Slaves were also refused, as being too much under
+the influence and instruction of their masters, and yet many were
+engaged of whose character I had not the least conception until, months
+afterwards, I learned from their quarrels in the camp how I had been
+misled by the clever rogues.
+
+All those who bore good characters on the Search Expedition, and had
+been despatched to the assistance of Livingstone, in 1872, were employed
+without delay. Out of these the chiefs were selected: these were, Manwa
+Sera, Chowpereh, Wadi Rehani, Kachéché, Zaidi, Chakanja, Farjalla, Wadi
+Safeni, Bukhet, Mabruki Manyapara, Mabruki Unyanyembé, Muini Pembe,
+Ferahan, Bwana Muri, Khamseen, Mabruki Speke, Simba, Gardner, Hamoidah,
+Zaidi Mganda, and Ulimengo.
+
+But before real business could be entered into, the customary present
+had to be distributed to each.
+
+Ulimengo, or the _World_, the incorrigible joker and hunter-in-chief
+of the Search and Livingstone’s expeditions, received a gold ring to
+encircle one of his thick black fingers, and a silver chain to suspend
+round his neck, which caused his mouth to expand gratefully. Rojab, who
+was soon reminded of the unlucky accident with Livingstone’s Journal in
+the muddy waters of the Mukondokwa, was endowed with a munificent gift
+which won him over to my service beyond fear of bribery. Manwa Sera,
+the redoubtable ambassador of Speke and Grant to Manwa Sera—the royal
+fugitive distressed by the hot pursuit of the Arabs—the leader of my
+second caravan in 1871, the chief of the party sent to Unyamyembé to
+the assistance of Livingstone in 1872, and now appointed Chief Captain
+of the Anglo-American Expedition, was rendered temporarily speechless
+with gratitude because I had suspended a splendid jet necklace from
+his neck, and ringed one of his fingers with a heavy seal ring. The
+historical Mabruki Speke, called by one of my predecessors “Mabruki
+the Bullheaded,” who has each time in the employ of European explorers
+conducted himself with matchless fidelity, and is distinguished for
+his hawk-eyed guardianship of their property and interests, exhibited
+extravagant rapture at the testimonial for past services bestowed on
+him; while the valiant, faithful, sturdy Chowpereh, the man of manifold
+virtues, was rewarded for his former worth with a silver dagger, gilt
+bracelet, and earrings. His wife was also made happy with a suitable
+gift, and the heir of the Chowpereh estate, a child of two years, was,
+at his father’s urgent request, rendered safe by vaccine from any
+attack of the smallpox during our absence in Africa.
+
+All great enterprises require a preliminary deliberative palaver, or, as
+the Wangwana call it, “Shauri.” In East Africa particularly shauris are
+much in vogue. Precipitate, energetic action is dreaded. “Poli, poli!”
+or “Gently!” is the warning word of caution given.
+
+The chiefs arranged themselves in a semi-circle on the day of the
+shauri, and I sat _à la Turque_ fronting them. “What is it, my friends?
+Speak your minds.” They hummed and hawed, looked at one another, as if
+on their neighbours’ faces they might discover the purport of their
+coming, but, all hesitating to begin, finally broke down in a loud
+laugh.
+
+Manwa Sera, always grave, unless hit dexterously with a joke, hereupon
+affected anger, and said, “_You_ speak, son of Safeni; verily we act
+like children! Will the master eat us?”
+
+Wadi, son of Safeni, thus encouraged to perform the spokesman’s duty,
+hesitates exactly two seconds, and then ventures with diplomatic
+blandness and _graciosity_. “We have come, master, with words. Listen.
+It is well we should know every step before we leap. A traveller
+journeys not without knowing whither he wanders. We have come to
+ascertain what lands you are bound for.”
+
+Imitating the son of Safeni’s gracious blandness, and his low tone of
+voice, as though the information about to be imparted to the intensely
+interested and eagerly listening group were too important to speak it
+loud, I described in brief outline the prospective journey, in broken
+Kiswahili. As country after country was mentioned of which they had
+hitherto but vague ideas, and river after river, lake after lake named,
+all of which I hoped with their trusty aid to explore carefully, various
+ejaculations expressive of wonder and joy, mixed with a little alarm,
+broke from their lips, but when I concluded, each of the group drew a
+long breath, and almost simultaneously they uttered admiringly, “Ah,
+fellows, this is a journey worthy to be called a journey!”
+
+“But, master,” said they, after recovering themselves, “this long
+journey will take years to travel—six, nine, or ten years.” “Nonsense,”
+I replied. “Six, nine, or ten years! What can you be thinking of? It
+takes the Arabs nearly three years to reach Ujiji, it is true, but, if
+you remember, I was but sixteen months from Zanzibar to Ujiji and back.
+Is it not so?” “Ay, true,” they answered. “Very well, and I assure you I
+have not come to live in Africa. I have come simply to see those rivers
+and lakes, and after I have seen them to return home.” “Ah, but you know
+the old master, Livingstone,” rejoined Hamoidah, who had followed the
+veteran traveller nearly eight years, “said he was only going for two
+years, and you know that he never came back, but died there.” “That is
+true enough, but if I were quick on the first journey, am I likely to be
+slow now? Am I much older than I was then? Am I less strong? Do I not
+know what travel is now? Was I not like a boy then, and am I not now a
+man? You remember while going to Ujiji I permitted the guide to show the
+way, but when we were returning who was it that led the way? Was it not
+I, by means of that little compass which could not lie like the guide?”
+“Ay, true, master, true every word.” “Very well, then, let us finish the
+shauri, and go. To-morrow we will make a proper agreement before the
+consul;” and in Scriptural phrase, “they forthwith arose and did as they
+were commanded.”
+
+Upon receiving information from the coast that there was a very large
+number of men waiting for me, I became still more fastidious in my
+choice. But with all my care and gift of selection, I was mortified to
+discover that many faces and characters had baffled the rigorous
+scrutiny to which I had subjected them, and that some scores of the most
+abandoned and depraved characters on the island had been enlisted by me
+on the Expedition. One man, named Msenna, imposed upon me by assuming
+such a contrite penitent look, and weeping such copious tears, when I
+informed him that he had too bad a character to be employed, that my
+good-nature was prevailed upon to accept his services, upon the
+understanding that, if he indulged his murderous propensities in Africa,
+I should return him chained the entire distance to Zanzibar, to be dealt
+with by his Prince.
+
+The defence of his conduct was something like this: “Bwana,[5] you see
+these scars on my head and neck. They are from the sabres of the
+Seyyid’s soldiers. Demand of any, Arab or Freeman, why I received them.
+They will tell you they were inflicted for rebellion against Prince
+Majid at Melinda. The Arabs hate me because I joined the coast men
+against their authority. Can any one charge me with worse deeds?”—
+appealing to the Wangwana. All were silent. “I am a free-born son of the
+coast, and never did any man or woman who did not molest me the smallest
+injury. Allah be praised! I am strong, healthy, and contented with my
+lot, and if you take me you will never have cause to regret it. If you
+fear that I shall desert, give me no advance pay, but pay me when I come
+back to Zanzibar according to my deserts.”
+
+This appeal was delivered with impassioned accents and lively gestures,
+which produced a great effect upon the mixed audience who listened to
+him, and gathering from their faces more than from my own convictions,
+that poor scarred Msenna was a kind of political refugee, much abused
+and very much misunderstood, his services were accepted, and as he
+appeared to be an influential man, he was appointed a junior captain
+with prospects of promotion and higher pay.
+
+Subsequently, however, on the shores of Lake Victoria it was discovered—
+for in Africa people are uncommonly communicative—that Msenna had
+murdered eight people, that he was a ruffian of the worst sort, and that
+the merchants of Zanzibar had experienced great relief when they heard
+that the notorious Msenna was about to bid farewell for a season to the
+scene of so many of his wild exploits. Msenna was only one of many of
+his kind, but I have given in detail the manner of his enlistment that
+my position may be better understood.
+
+Soon after my return from the Rufiji delta, the B. I. S. N. Company’s
+steamer _Euphrates_ had brought the sectional exploring boat, _Lady
+Alice_, to Zanzibar. Exceedingly anxious for the portability of the
+sections, I had them at once, weighed, and great were my vexation and
+astonishment when I discovered that four of the sections weighed 280
+lbs. each, and that one weighed 310 lbs.! She was, it is true, a marvel
+of workmanship, and an exquisite model of a boat, such, indeed, as few
+builders in England or America could rival, but in her present condition
+her carriage through the jungles would necessitate a pioneer force a
+hundred strong to clear the impediments and obstacles on the road.
+
+While almost plunged into despair, I was informed that there was a very
+clever English carpenter, named Ferris, about to leave by the
+_Euphrates_ for England. Mr. Ferris was quickly made acquainted with my
+difficulty, and for a “consideration” promised, after a personal
+inspection of the boat, to defer his departure one month, and to do his
+utmost to make the sections portable without lessening her efficiency.
+When the boat was exhibited to him, I explained that the narrowness of
+the path would make her portage absolutely impossible, for since the
+path was often only 18 inches wide in Africa, and hemmed in on each side
+with dense jungle, any package 6 feet broad could by no means be
+conveyed along it. It was therefore necessary that each of the four
+sections should be subdivided, by which means I should obtain eight
+portable sections, each three feet wide, and that an afterpiece could
+easily be made by myself upon arriving at the lakes. Mr. Ferris,
+perfectly comprehending his instructions, and with the aid given by the
+young Pococks, furnished me within two weeks with the newly modelled
+_Lady Alice_. But it must be understood that her success as a safe
+exploring boat is due to the conscientious workmanship which the honest
+and thoroughly reliable boat-builder of Teddington lavished upon her.
+
+The pride which the young Pococks and Frederick Barker entertained in
+respect to their new duties, in the new and novel career of adventure
+now opening before them, did not seem to damp that honourable love of
+country which every Englishman abroad exhibits, and is determined to
+gratify if he can. Their acquaintance with the shipwright, Mr. Ferris,
+who had evidently assisted at the ceremony of planting the British flag
+at the mast-head of many a new and noble structure, destined to plough
+strange seas, reminded them, during one of the social evening hours
+which they spent together, that it would be a fine thing if they might
+also be permitted to hoist a miniature emblem of their nationality over
+their tent in camp, and over their canoes on the lakes and rivers of
+Africa.
+
+[Illustration: A MAP OF THE ROUTE OF STANLEY “THROUGH THE DARK
+CONTINENT” 1874-1877, AS WELL AS OF THE EMIN PASHA RELIEF EXPEDITION
+THROUGH AFRICA.]]
+
+The Pococks and Barker accordingly, a few days before our departure,
+formed themselves into a deputation, and Frank, who was the spokesman,
+surprised me with the following request:—
+
+“My brother, Fred Barker, and myself, Sir, have been emboldened to ask
+you a favour, which no doubt you will think strange and wrong. But we
+cannot forget, wherever we go, that we are Englishmen, and we should
+like to be permitted to take something with us that will always remind
+us of who we are, and be a comfort to us, even in the darkest hours of
+trouble, perhaps even encourage us to perform our duties better. We have
+come to ask you, Sir, if we may be permitted to make a small British
+flag to hoist above our tent, and over our canoe on the lakes.”
+
+“My dear fellow,” I replied, “you surprise me by imagining for one
+moment that I could possibly refuse you. This is not an American
+Government or a British Government Expedition, and I have neither the
+power nor the disposition to withhold my sanction to your request. If it
+will be any pleasure to you, by all means take it, I cannot have the
+slightest objection to such an innocent proceeding. All that I shall
+require from you in Africa is such service as you can give, and if you
+prove yourselves the highly recommended lads you are, I shall not
+interfere with any innocent pleasure you may feel yourselves at liberty
+to take. If one British flag is not enough, you may take a thousand so
+far as I am concerned.”
+
+“Thank you kindly, Sir. You may rest assured that we have entered your
+service with the intention to remember what my old father and our
+friends strictly enjoined us to do, which was to stick to you through
+thick and thin.”
+
+The young Englishmen were observed soon afterwards busy sewing a tiny
+flag, about 18 inches square, out of some bunting, and after a pattern
+that Mr. Ferris procured for them. Whether the complicated colours, red,
+blue, white, were arranged properly, or the crosses according to the
+standard, I am ignorant. But I observed that, while they were occupied
+in the task, they were very much interested, and that, when it was
+finished, though it was only the size of a lady’s handkerchief, they
+manifested much delight.
+
+Zanzibar possesses its “millionaires” also, and one of the richest
+merchants in the town is Tarya Topan—a self-made man of Hindustan,
+singularly honest and just; a devout Muslim, yet liberal in his ideas; a
+sharp business man, yet charitable. I made Tarya’s acquaintance in 1871,
+and the righteous manner in which he then dealt by me caused me now to
+proceed to him again for the same purpose as formerly, viz. to sell me
+cloth, cottons, and kanikis, at reasonable prices, and accept my bills
+on Mr. Joseph M. Levy, of the _Daily Telegraph_.
+
+Honest Jetta, as formerly, was employed as my vakeel to purchase the
+various coloured cloths, fine and coarse, for chiefs and their wives, as
+well as a large assortment of beads of all sizes, forms, and colours,
+besides a large quantity of brass wire ⅙ inch in thickness.
+
+[Illustration: TARYA TOPAN.]
+
+The total weight of goods, cloth, beads, wire, stores, medicine,
+bedding, clothes, tents, ammunition, boat, oars, rudder and thwarts,
+instruments and stationery, photographic apparatus, dry plates, and
+miscellaneous articles too numerous to mention, weighed a little over
+18,000 lbs., or rather more than 8 tons divided as nearly as possible
+into loads weighing 60 lbs. each, and requiring therefore the carrying
+capacity of 300 men. The loads were made more than usually light, in
+order that we might travel with celerity, and not fatigue the people.
+
+But still further to provide against sickness and weakness, a
+supernumerary force of forty men were recruited at Bagamoyo, Konduchi,
+and the Rufiji delta, who were required to assemble in the neighbourhood
+of the first-mentioned place. Two hundred and thirty men, consisting of
+Wangwana, Wanyamwezi, and coast people from Mombasa, Tanga, and Saadani,
+affixed their marks opposite their names before the American Consul, for
+wages varying from 2 to 10 dollars per month, and rations according to
+their capacity, strength, and intelligence, with the understanding that
+they were to serve for two years, or until such time as their services
+should be no longer required in Africa, and were to perform their duties
+cheerfully and promptly.
+
+On the day of “signing” the contract, each adult received an advance of
+20 dollars, or four months’ pay, and each youth 10 dollars, or four
+months’ pay. Ration money was also paid them from the time of first
+enlistment, at the rate of 1 dollar per week, up to the day we left the
+coast. These conditions were, however, not entered into without
+requiring the presence of each person’s friends and relatives to witness
+and sanction the engagements, so that on this day the parents, uncles,
+cousins, and near and distant relatives, wives and children, were in
+attendance, and crowded every room and court at the American Consulate.
+The entire amount disbursed in cash for advances of pay and rations at
+Zanzibar and Bagamoyo was 6260 dollars, or nearly £1300.
+
+The obligations, however, were not all on one side. Besides the due
+payment to them of their wages on demand, and selling them such cloths
+as they would require for dress while in Africa at reasonable prices,
+which would be a little above cost price at Zanzibar, I was compelled to
+bind myself to them, on the word of an “honourable white man,” to
+observe the following conditions as to conduct towards them:—
+
+1st. That I should treat them kindly, and be patient with them.
+
+2nd. That in case of sickness, I should dose them with proper medicine,
+and see them nourished with the best the country afforded. That if
+patients were unable to proceed, they should not be abandoned to the
+mercy of heathen, but were to be conveyed to such places as should be
+considered safe for their persons and their freedom, and convenient for
+their return, on convalescence, to their friends. That with all patients
+thus left behind, I should leave sufficient cloth or beads to pay the
+native practitioner for his professional attendance, and for the support
+of the patient.
+
+3rd. That in cases of disagreement between man and man, I should judge
+justly, honestly, and impartially. That I should do my utmost to prevent
+the ill-treatment of the weak by the strong, and never permit the
+oppression of those unable to resist.
+
+4th. That I should act like a “father and mother” to them, and to the
+best of my ability resist all violence offered to them by “savage
+natives, and roving and lawless banditti.”
+
+They also promised, upon the above conditions being fulfilled, that they
+would do their duty like men, would honour and respect my instructions,
+giving me their united support and endeavouring to the best of their
+ability to be faithful servants, and would never desert me in the hour
+of need. In short, that they would behave like good and loyal children,
+and “may the blessing of God,” said they, “be upon us.”
+
+How we kept this bond of mutual trust and forbearance, and adhered to
+each other in the hours of sore trouble and distress, faithfully
+performing our duties to one another: how we encouraged and sustained,
+cheered and assisted one another, and in all the services and good
+offices due from man to man, and comrade to comrade, from chief to
+servants and from servants to chief, how we kept our plighted word of
+promise, will be best seen in the following chapters, which record the
+strange and eventful story of our journeys.
+
+_Nov. 12._—The fleet of six Arab vessels which were to bear us away to
+the west across the Zanzibar Sea were at last brought to anchor a few
+yards from the wharf of the American Consulate. The day of farewell
+calls had passed, and ceremoniously we had bidden adieu to the
+hospitable and courteous Acting British Consul, Captain William F.
+Prideaux, and his accomplished wife,[6] to friendly and amiable Dr.
+James Robb and Mrs. Robb, to Dr. Riddle, and the German and French
+Consuls. Seyyid Barghash bin Sayid received my thanks for his courtesy,
+and his never-failing kindness, and my sincere wishes for his lasting
+prosperity and happiness. Many kind Arab and Hindi friends also received
+my parting salaams. Grave Sheikh Hashid expressed a hope that we should
+meet again on earth, Captain Bukhet, the pilot, wished me a quick and
+safe return from the dread lands of the heathen, and the princely Indian
+merchant, Tarya Topan, expressed his sincere hopes that I should be
+prosperous in my undertaking, and come back crowned with success.
+
+The young Englishmen, whose charming, simple manners and manly bearing
+had won for them a number of true friends at Zanzibar, were not without
+many hearty well-wishers, and received cheerful farewells from numerous
+friends.
+
+At the end of Ramadan, the month of abstinence of Mohammedans, the
+Wangwana, true to their promise that they would be ready, appeared with
+their bundles and mats, and proceeded to take their places in the
+vessels waiting for them. As their friends had mustered in strong force
+to take their final parting and bestow last useful hints and prudent
+advice, it was impossible to distinguish among the miscellaneous crowd
+on the beach those who were present, or to discover who were absent. The
+greater part of my company were in high spirits, and from this I
+inferred that they had not forgotten to fortify themselves with
+stimulants against the critical moment of departure.
+
+As fast as each dhow was reported to be filled, the _Nakhuda_ or Captain
+was directed to anchor further off shore to await the signal to sail. By
+5 P.M. of the 12th of November, 224 men had responded to their names,
+and five of the Arab vessels, laden with the _personnel_, cattle, and
+_matériel_ of the expedition, were impatiently waiting with anchor
+heaved short, the word of command. One vessel still lay close ashore, to
+convey myself, and Frederick Barker—in charge of the personal servants—
+our baggage, and dogs. Turning round to my constant and well-tried
+friend, Mr. Augustus Sparhawk, I fervently clasped his hand, and with a
+full heart though halting tongue, attempted to pour out my feelings of
+gratitude for his kindness and long sustained hospitality, my keen
+regret at parting and hopes of meeting again. But I was too agitated to
+be eloquent, and all my forced gaiety could not carry me through the
+ordeal. So we parted in almost total silence, but I felt assured that he
+would judge my emotions by his own feelings, and would accept the lame
+efforts at their expression as though he had listened to the most
+voluble rehearsal of thanks.
+
+A wave of my hand, and the anchors were hove up and laid within ship,
+and then, hoisting our lateen sails, we bore away westward to launch
+ourselves into the arms of Fortune. Many wavings of kerchiefs and hats,
+parting signals from white hands, and last long looks at friendly
+white faces, final confused impressions of the grouped figures of
+our well-wishers, and then the evening breeze had swept us away into
+mid-sea beyond reach of recognition.
+
+The parting is over! We have said our last words for years, perhaps for
+ever, to kindly men! The sun sinks fast to the western horizon, and
+gloomy is the twilight that now deepens and darkens. Thick shadows fall
+upon the distant land and over the silent sea, and oppress our
+throbbing, regretful hearts, as we glide away through the dying light
+towards The Dark Continent.
+
+[Illustration: “TOWARDS THE DARK CONTINENT.”]
+
+-----
+
+# 5:
+
+ “Master.”
+
+# 6:
+
+ No lady was ever more universally respected at Zanzibar than Mrs.
+ Prideaux, and no death ever more sincerely regretted by the European
+ community than was hers.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+Bagamoyo—Taming the dark brother—Bagamoyo in a ferment—An exciting
+ scene—The disturbance quelled—The Universities Mission, its origin,
+ history, decline and present condition—The Rev. Edward Steere—Notre
+ Dame de Bagamoyo—Westward ho!—In marching order—_Sub Jove fervido_—
+ Crossing the Kingani—The stolen women.
+
+
+Bagamoyo, Whindi, and Saadani, East African villages on the mainland
+near the sea, offer exceptionally good starting-points for the
+unexplored interior, for many reasons. First. Because the explorers and
+the people are strangers to one another, and a slight knowledge of their
+power of mutual cohesion, habits, and relative influences, is desirable
+before launching out into the wilds. Second. The natives of those
+maritime villages are accustomed to have their normally languid and
+peaceful life invaded and startled by the bustle of foreigners arriving
+by sea and from the continent, Arab traders bound for the interior and
+lengthy native caravans from Unyamwezi. Third. An expedition not fully
+recruited to its necessary strength at Zanzibar may be easily reinforced
+at these ports by volunteers from native caravans who are desirous of
+returning to their homes, and who, day by day, along the route, will
+straggle in towards it until the list is full and complete.
+
+These, then, were the principal reasons for my selection of Bagamoyo as
+the initial point, from whence, after inoculating the various untamed
+spirits who had now enlisted under me, with a respect for order and
+discipline, obedience and system (the true prophylactic against failure)
+I should be free to rove where discoveries would be fruitful. This
+“inoculation” will not, however, commence until after a study of their
+natures, their deficiencies and weaknesses. The exhibition of force, at
+this juncture, would be dangerous to our prospects, and all means
+gentle, patient, and persuasive, have, therefore, to be tried first.
+Whatever deficiencies, weaknesses, and foibles the people may develop
+must be so manipulated that, while they are learning the novel lesson of
+obedience, they may only just suspect that behind all this there lies
+the strong unbending force which will eventually make men of them, wild
+things though they now are. For the first few months, then, forbearance
+is absolutely necessary. The dark brother, wild as a colt, chafing,
+restless, ferociously impulsive, superstitiously timid, liable to
+furious demonstrations, suspicious and unreasonable, must be forgiven
+seventy times seven, until the period of probation is passed. Long
+before this period is over, such temperate conduct will have enlisted a
+powerful force, attached to their leader by bonds of good-will and
+respect, even, perhaps, of love and devotion, and by the moral influence
+of their support even the most incorrigible _mauvais sujet_ will be
+restrained, and finally conquered.
+
+Many things will transpire during the first few weeks which will make
+the explorer sigh and wish that he had not ventured upon what promises
+to be a hopeless task. Maddened by strong drinks and drugs, jealous of
+their status in the camp, regretting also, like ourselves, that they had
+been so hasty in undertaking the journey, brooding over the joys of the
+island fast receding from them, anxious for the future, susceptible to
+the first and every influence that assails them with temptations to
+return to the coast, these people require to be treated with the utmost
+kindness and consideration, and the intending traveller must be wisely
+circumspect in his intercourse with them. From my former experiences of
+such men, it will be readily believed that I had prepared for the scenes
+which I knew were to follow at Bagamoyo, and that all my precautions had
+been taken.
+
+_Nov. 13._—Upon landing at Bagamoyo on the morning of the 13th, we
+marched to occupy the old house where we had stayed so long to prepare
+the First Expedition. The goods were stored, the dogs chained up, the
+riding asses tethered, the rifles arrayed in the store-room, and the
+sectional boat laid under a roof close by, on rollers, to prevent injury
+from the white ants—a precaution which, I need hardly say, we had to
+observe throughout our journey. Then some more ration money, sufficient
+for ten days, had to be distributed among the men, the young Pococks
+were told off to various camp duties to initiate them to exploring life
+in Africa, and then, after the first confusion of arrival had subsided,
+I began to muster the new _engagés_.
+
+But within three hours Bagamoyo was in a ferment. “The white man has
+brought all the robbers, ruffians, and murderers of Zanzibar to take
+possession of the town,” was the rumour that ran wildly through all the
+streets, lanes, courts, and bazaars. Men with bloody faces, wild,
+bloodshot eyes, bedraggled, rumpled and torn dresses, reeled up to our
+orderly and nearly silent quarters clamouring for rifles and ammunition.
+Arabs with drawn swords, and sinewy Baluchis with matchlocks and tinder
+ready to be ignited, came up threatening, and, following them, a
+miscellaneous rabble of excited men, while, in the background, seethed a
+mob of frantic women and mischievous children.
+
+“What is the matter?” I asked, scarcely knowing how to begin to calm
+this turbulent mass of passionate beings.
+
+“Matter!” was echoed. “What is the matter?” was repeated. “Matter
+enough. The town is in an uproar. Your men are stealing, murdering,
+robbing goods from the stores, breaking plates, killing our chickens,
+assaulting everybody, drawing knives on our women after abusing them,
+and threatening to burn the town and exterminate everybody. Matter
+indeed! matter enough! What do you mean by bringing this savage rabble
+from Zanzibar?” So fumed and sputtered an Arab of some consequence among
+the magnates of Bagamoyo.
+
+“Dear me, my friend, this is shocking; terrible. Pray sit down, and be
+patient. Sit down here by me, and let us talk this over like wise men,”
+I said in soothing tones to this _enfant terrible_, for he really looked
+in feature, dress, and demeanour, what, had I been an imaginative raw
+youth, I should have set down as the “incarnate scourge of Africa,” and
+he looked wicked enough with his bare, sinewy arms, his brandished
+sword, and fierce black eyes, to chop off my innocent head.
+
+The Arab, with a short nod, accepted my proposition and seated himself.
+“We are about to have a _Shauri_—a consultation.” “Hush there! Silence!”
+“Words!” “Shauri!” “Words—open your ears!” “Slaves!” “Fools!” “List,
+Arabs!” “You Baluch there, rein in your tongue!” &c. &c., cried out a
+wild mixture of voices in a strange mixture of tongues, commanding, or
+imploring, silence.
+
+The Arab was requested to speak, and to point out, if he knew them, the
+Wangwana guilty of provoking such astonishing disorder. In an indignant
+and eloquent strain he rehearsed his special complaint. A man named
+Mustapha had come to his shop drunk, and had abused him like a low
+blackguard, and then, snatching up a bolt of cotton cloth, had run away
+with it, but, being pursued and caught, had drawn a knife, and was about
+to stab him, when a friend of his opportunely clubbed the miscreant and
+thus saved his life. By the mouths of several witnesses the complaint
+was proved, and Mustapha was therefore arrested, disarmed of his knife,
+and locked up in the dark strong-room, to reflect on his crimes in
+solitude. Loud approval greeted the sentence.
+
+“Who else?”
+
+A score of people of both sexes advanced towards me with their
+complaints, and it seemed as though silence could never be restored, but
+by dint of threatening to leave the burzah from sheer despair, quietness
+was restored. It is unnecessary to detail the several charges made
+against them, or to describe the manner of conviction, but, after three
+hours, peace reigned in Bagamoyo once more, and over twenty of the
+Wangwana had been secured and impounded in the several rooms of the
+house, with a dozen of their comrades standing guard over them.
+
+To avoid a repetition of this terrible scene, I despatched a messenger
+with a polite request to the Governor, Sheikh Mansur bin Suliman, that
+he would arrest and punish all disorderly Wangwana in my service, as
+justice should require, but I am sorry to say that the Wali (governor)
+took such advantage of this request that few of the Wangwana who showed
+their faces in the streets next day escaped violence. Acting on the
+principle that desperate diseases require desperate remedies, over
+thirty had been chained and beaten, and many others had escaped abuse of
+power only by desperate flight from the myrmidons of the now vengeful
+sheikh.
+
+Another message was therefore sent to the Governor, imploring him to be
+as lenient as possible, consistent with equitable justice, and
+explaining to him the nature and cause of these frantic moods and
+ebullitions of temper on the part of the Wangwana. I attempted to define
+to him what “sprees” were, explaining that all men, about to undergo a
+long absence from their friends and country, thought they were entitled
+to greater freedom at such a period, but that some weak-headed men, with
+a natural inclination to be vicious, had, in indulging this privilege,
+encroached upon the privileges of others, and that hence arose collision
+and confusion. But the Governor waxed still more tyrannical: beatings,
+chainings, and extortionate exactions became more frequent and
+unbearable, until at last the Wangwana appeared in a body before me, and
+demanded another “Shauri.”
+
+The result of this long consultation—after an earnest protest from me
+against their wild conduct, calculated, as I told them, to seriously
+compromise me, followed by expostulation with them on their evil course,
+and a warning that I felt more like abetting the Governor in his
+treatment of them than seeking its amelioration—was an injunction to be
+patient and well-behaved during our short stay, and a promise that I
+would lead them into Africa within two days, when at the first camp
+pardon should be extended to all, and a new life would be begun in
+mutual peace and concord, to continue, I hoped, until our return to the
+sea.
+
+There is an institution at Bagamoyo which ought not to be passed over
+without remark, but the subject cannot be properly dealt with until I
+have described the similar institution, of equal importance, at
+Zanzibar, viz. the Universities Mission. Besides, I have three pupils of
+the Universities Mission who are about to accompany me into Africa—
+Robert Feruzi, Andrew, and Dallington. Robert is a stout lad of eighteen
+years old, formerly a servant to one of the members of Lieutenant
+Cameron’s Expedition, but discharged at Unyanyembé, for not very clear
+reasons, to find his way back. Andrew is a strong youth of nineteen
+years, rather reserved, and, I should say, not of a very bright
+disposition. Dallington is much younger, probably only fifteen, with a
+face strongly pitted with traces of a violent attack of small-pox, but
+as bright and intelligent as any boy of his age, white or black.
+
+The Universities Mission is the result of the sensation caused in
+England by Livingstone’s discoveries on the Zambezi and of Lakes Nyassa
+and Shirwa. It was despatched by the Universities of Oxford and
+Cambridge in the year 1860, and consisted of Bishop Mackenzie, formerly
+Archdeacon of Natal, and the Rev. Messrs. Proctor, Scudamore, Burrup,
+and Rowley. These devoted gentlemen reached the Zambezi river in
+February 1861.
+
+When the Universities Mission met Livingstone, then engaged in the
+practical work of developing the discovery of the Zambezi and other
+neighbouring waters, a consultation was held as to the best locality for
+mission work to begin at. The Bishop and his followers were advised by
+Livingstone to ascend the Rovuma river, and march thence overland to
+some selected spot on Lake Nyassa. But, upon attempting the project, the
+river was discovered to be falling, and too shallow to admit of such a
+steamer as the _Pioneer_, and as much sickness had broken out on board,
+the Mission sailed to the Comoro Islands to recruit. In July 1861 they
+reached the foot of the Murchison Cataracts on the Shiré. Soon after,
+while proceeding overland, they encountered a caravan of slaves, whom
+they liberated, with a zeal that was commendable though impolitic.
+Subsequently, other slaves were forcibly detained from the caravans
+until the number collected amounted to 148, and with these the
+missionaries determined to begin their holy work.
+
+While establishing its quarters at Magomero, the Mission was attacked by
+the Ajawas, but the reverend gentlemen and their pupils drove off the
+enemy. Shortly after this, a difference of opinion arising with
+Livingstone as to the proper policy to be pursued, the latter departed
+to pursue his explorations, and the Bishop and his party continued to
+prosecute their work with every promise of success. But in its zeal for
+the suppression of the slave-trade, the Mission made alliance with the
+Manganjas, and joined with them in a war against the Ajawas, whom they
+afterwards discovered to be really a peaceable people. Thus was the
+character of the Mission almost changed by the complicated politics of
+the native tribes in which they had meddled without forethought of the
+consequences. Then came the rainy season with its unhealthiness and
+fatal results. Worn out with fever and privations, poor Bishop Mackenzie
+died, and in less than a month the Rev. Mr. Burrup followed him. Messrs.
+Scudamore, Dickinson, and Rowley removed the Mission to the banks of the
+Shiré, where the two former died, and the few remaining survivors,
+despairing of success, soon left the country, and the Universities
+Mission to Central Africa became only a name with which the succeeding
+Bishop, the Rev. Mr. Tozer, continued to denominate his Mission at
+Zanzibar.
+
+Nor is the record of this hitherto unfortunate and struggling Mission in
+the city of Zanzibar, with access to luxuries and comforts, brighter or
+more assuring than it was at primitive Magomero, surrounded by leagues
+of fen and morass. Many noble souls of both sexes perished, and the good
+work seemed far from hopeful. I am reminded, as I write these words, of
+my personal acquaintance with the venerable figure of Pennell, and the
+young and ardent West. The latter was alive in 1874, full of ardour,
+hope, and zealous devotion. When I returned, he had gone the way of his
+brother martyrs of the Zambezi.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ UNIVERSITIES MISSION AT KANGANI, ZANZIBAR.
+ (_From a photograph by Mr. Buchanan, of Natal._)
+]
+
+Almost single-handed remains the Rev. Edward Steere, faithful to his
+post as Bishop and Chief Pastor. He has visited Lake Nyassa, and
+established a Mission halfway, and another I believe at Lindi; he keeps
+a watchful eye upon the operations of the Mission House established
+among the Shambalas; and at the headquarters or home at Kangani, a few
+miles east of Shangani Point, the old residence, he superintends, and
+instructs lads and young men as printers, carpenters, blacksmiths, and
+in the practical knowledge of other useful trades. His quarters
+represent almost every industrial trade useful in life as occupations
+for members of the lower classes, and are in the truest sense an
+industrial and religious establishment for the moral and material
+welfare of a class of unfortunates who deserve our utmost assistance and
+sympathy. This extraordinary man, endowed with piety as fervid as ever
+animated a martyr, looms grander and greater in the imagination as we
+think of him as the one man who appears to have possessed the faculties
+and gifts necessary to lift this Mission, with its gloomy history, into
+the new life upon which it has now entered. With all my soul I wish him
+and it success, and while he lives, provided he is supported, there need
+be no fear that the Mission will resume that hopeless position from
+which he, and he alone, appears to have rescued it.
+
+From the same source that the Universities Missions have drawn their
+pupils, namely, the youthful victims of the slave-trade, her Majesty’s
+Consul has supplied to a great extent the French Catholic Missions at
+Zanzibar and Bagamoyo. The Mission in the island which has now been
+established for years is called the St. Joseph’s, that at Bagamoyo bears
+the title of “Notre Dame de Bagamoyo.” The first possesses two priests
+and four brothers, with one lay professor of music; the other, which is
+the principal one, consists of four priests, eight brothers, and twelve
+sisters, with ten lay brothers employed in teaching agriculture. The
+French fathers superintend the tuition of 250 children, and give
+employment to about 80 adults; 170 freed slaves were furnished from the
+slave-captures made by British cruisers. They are taught to earn their
+own living as soon as they arrive of age, are furnished with comfortable
+lodgings, clothing, and household utensils.
+
+“Notre Dame de Bagamoyo” is situated about a mile and a half north of
+Bagamoyo, overlooking the sea, which washes the shores just at the base
+of the tolerably high ground on which the mission buildings stand.
+Thrift, order, and that peculiar style of neatness common to the French
+are its characteristics. The cocoa-nut palm, orange, and mango flourish
+in this pious settlement, while a variety of garden vegetables and grain
+are cultivated in the fields; and broad roads, cleanly kept, traverse
+the estate. During the Superior’s last visit to France he obtained a
+considerable sum for the support of the Mission, and he has lately,
+during my absence in Africa, established a branch mission at Kidudwe. It
+is evident that, if supported constantly by his friends in France, the
+Superior will extend his work still farther into the interior, and it
+is, therefore, safe to predict that the road to Ujiji will in time
+possess a chain of mission stations affording the future European trader
+and traveller safe retreats with the conveniences of civilized life.
+
+There are two other missions on the east coast of Africa, that of the
+Church Missionary Society, and the Methodist Free Church at Mombasa. The
+former has occupied this station for over thirty years, and has a branch
+establishment at Rabbai Mpia, the home of the Dutch missionaries, Krapf,
+Rebmann, and Erhardt. But these missions have not obtained the success
+which such long self-abnegation and devotion to the pious service
+deserved.
+
+It is strange how British philanthropists, clerical and lay, persist in
+the delusion that the Africans can be satisfied with spiritual
+improvement only. They should endeavour to impress themselves with the
+undeniable fact that man, white, yellow, red or black, has also material
+wants which crave to be understood and supplied. A barbarous man is a
+pure materialist. He is full of cravings for possessing something that
+he cannot describe. He is like a child which has not yet acquired the
+faculty of articulation. The missionary discovers the barbarian almost
+stupefied with brutish ignorance, with the instincts of a man in him,
+but yet living the life of a beast. Instead of attempting to develop the
+qualities of this practical human being, he instantly attempts his
+transformation by expounding to him the dogmas of the Christian Faith,
+the doctrine of transubstantiation and other difficult subjects, before
+the barbarian has had time to articulate his necessities and to explain
+to him that he is a frail creature requiring to be fed with bread, and
+not with a stone.
+
+My experience and study of the pagan prove to me, however, that if the
+missionary can show the poor materialist that religion is allied with
+substantial benefits and improvement of his degraded condition, the task
+to which he is about to devote himself will be rendered comparatively
+easy. For the African once brought in contact with the European becomes
+docile enough; he is awed by a consciousness of his own immense
+inferiority, and imbued with a vague hope that he may also rise in time
+to the level of this superior being who has so challenged his
+admiration. It is the story of Caliban and Stefano over again. He comes
+to him with a desire to be taught and, seized with an ambition to aspire
+to a higher life, becomes docile and tractable, but to his surprise he
+perceives himself mocked by this being who talks to him about matters
+that he despairs of ever understanding, and therefore with abashed face
+and a still deeper sense of his inferiority, he retires to his den,
+cavern, or hut with a dogged determination to be contented with the
+brutish life he was born in.
+
+_Nov. 17._—On the morning of the 17th of November, 1874, the first
+bold step for the interior was taken. The bugle mustered the people to
+rank themselves before our quarters, and each man’s load was given to
+him according as we judged his power of bearing burthen. To the man of
+strong sturdy make, with a large development of muscle, the cloth bale
+of 60 lbs. was given, which would in a couple of months by constant
+expenditure be reduced to 50 lbs., in six months perhaps to 40 lbs.,
+and in a year to about 30 lbs., provided that all his comrades were
+faithful to their duties; to the short compactly formed man, the bead
+sack of 50 lbs. weight; to the light youth of eighteen or twenty years
+old, the box of 40 lbs., containing stores, ammunition, and sundries.
+To the steady, respectable, grave-looking men of advanced years, the
+scientific instruments, thermometers, barometers, watches, sextant,
+mercury bottles, compasses, pedometers, photographic apparatus,
+dry plates, stationery, and scientific books, all packed in 40-lb.
+cases, were distributed; while the man most highly recommended for
+steadiness and most cautious tread was entrusted with the carriage
+of the three chronometers which were stowed in balls of cotton, in a
+light case weighing not more than 25 lbs. The twelve Kirangozis, or
+guides, tricked out this day in flowing robes of crimson blanket cloth,
+demanded the privilege of conveying the several loads of brass wire
+coils, and as they form the second advance guard, and are active, bold
+youths—some of whom are to be hereafter known as the boat’s crew, and
+to be distinguished by me above all others, except the chiefs—they
+are armed with Snider rifles, with their respective accoutrements.
+The boat-carriers are herculean in figure and strength, for they are
+practised bearers of loads, having resigned their ignoble profession
+of hamal in Zanzibar to carry sections of the first European-made boat
+that ever floated on Lakes Victoria and Tanganika and the extreme
+sources of the Nile and the Livingstone. To each section of the boat
+there are four men, to relieve one another in couples. They get higher
+pay than even the chiefs, except the chief captain, Manwa Sera,
+and, besides receiving double rations, have the privilege of taking
+their wives along with them. There are six riding asses also in the
+expedition, all saddled, one for each of the Europeans—the two Pococks,
+Barker, and myself—and two for the sick: for the latter there are
+also three of Seydel’s net hammocks, with six men to act as a kind of
+ambulance party.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ WIFE OF MANWA SERA.
+ (_From a photograph._)
+]
+
+Though we have not yet received our full complement of men, necessity
+compels us to move from the vicinity of the Goanese liquor shops, and
+from under the severe authority of Sheikh Mansur bin Suliman, whose
+views of justice would soon demoralize any expedition. Accordingly
+at 9 A.M. of the 17th, five days after leaving Zanzibar, we filed
+out from the town, receiving some complimentary and not a few
+uncomplimentary parting words from the inhabitants, male and female,
+who are out in strong force to view the procession as follows: Four
+chiefs a few hundred yards in front; next the twelve guides clad
+in red robes of Joho, bearing the wire coils; then a long file 270
+strong, bearing cloth, wire, beads, and sections of the _Lady Alice_;
+after them thirty-six women and ten boys, children of some of the
+chiefs and boat-bearers, following their mothers and assisting them
+with trifling loads of utensils, followed by the riding asses,
+Europeans and gun-bearers; the long line closed by sixteen chiefs who
+act as rear-guard, and whose duties are to pick up stragglers, and
+act as supernumeraries until other men can be procured: in all 356
+souls connected with the Anglo-American Expedition. The lengthy line
+occupies nearly half a mile of the path which at the present day is the
+commercial and exploring highway into the Lake regions.
+
+Edward Pocock is kind enough to act as bugler, because from long
+practice at the military camps at Aldershot and Chatham he understands
+the signals. He has familiarized Hamadi, the chief guide, with its
+notes, so that in case of a halt being required, Hamadi may be informed
+immediately. The chief guide is also armed with a prodigiously long horn
+of ivory, his favourite instrument, and one that belongs to his
+profession, which he has permission to use only when approaching a
+suitable camping-place, or to notify to us danger in the front. Before
+Hamadi strides a chubby little boy with a native drum, which is to beat
+only when in the neighbourhood of villages, to warn them of the advance
+of a caravan, a caution most requisite, for many villages are scattered
+in the midst of a dense jungle, and the sudden arrival of a large force
+of strangers before they had time to hide their little belongings might
+awake jealousy and distrust.
+
+In this manner we begin our long journey, full of hopes. There is noise
+and laughter along the ranks, and a hum of gay voices murmuring through
+the fields, as we rise and descend with the waves of the land and wind
+with the sinuosities of the path. Motion had restored us all to a sense
+of satisfaction. We had an intensely bright and fervid sun shining above
+us, the path was dry, hard, and admirably fit for travel, and during the
+commencement of our first march nothing could be conceived in better
+order than the lengthy thin column about to confront the wilderness.
+
+Presently, however, the fervour of the dazzling sun grows overpowering
+as we descend into the valley of the Kingani river. The ranks become
+broken and disordered; stragglers are many; the men complain of the
+terrible heat; the dogs pant in agony. Even we ourselves under our solar
+topees, with flushed faces and perspiring brows, with handkerchiefs ever
+in use to wipe away the drops which almost blind us, and our heavy
+woollens giving us a feeling of semi-asphyxiation, would fain rest, were
+it not that the sun-bleached levels of the tawny, thirsty valley offer
+no inducements. The veterans of travel push on towards the river three
+miles distant, where they may obtain rest and shelter, but the
+inexperienced are lying prostrate on the ground, exclaiming against the
+heat, and crying for water, bewailing their folly in leaving Zanzibar.
+We stop to tell them to rest a while, and then to come on to the river,
+where they will find us; we advise, encourage, and console the irritated
+people as best we can, and tell them that it is only the commencement of
+a journey that is so hard, that all this pain and weariness are always
+felt by beginners, but that by-and-by it is shaken off, and that those
+who are steadfast emerge out of the struggle heroes.
+
+Frank and his brother Edward, despatched to the ferry at the beginning
+of these delays, have now got the sectional boat _Lady Alice_ all ready,
+and the ferrying of men, goods, asses, and dogs across the Kingani is
+prosecuted with vigour, and at 3.30 P.M. the boat is again in pieces,
+slung on the bearing poles, and the Expedition has resumed its journey
+to Kikoka, the first halting-place.
+
+But before we reach camp, we have acquired a fair idea as to how many of
+our people are staunch and capable, and how many are too feeble to
+endure the fatigues of bearing loads. The magnificent prize mastiff dog
+“Castor” died of heat apoplexy, within two miles of Kikoka, and the
+other mastiff, “Captain,” seems likely to follow soon, and only “Nero,”
+“Bull,” and “Jack,” though prostrate and breathing hard, show any signs
+of life.
+
+_Nov. 18._—At Kikoka, then, we rest the next day. We discharge two men,
+who have been taken seriously ill, and several new recruits, who arrive
+at camp during the night preceding and this day, are engaged.
+
+There are several reasons which can be given, besides heat of the
+Tropics and inexperience, for the quick collapse of many of the Wangwana
+on the first march, and the steadiness evinced by the native carriers
+confirms them. The Wangwana lead very impure lives on the island, and
+with the importation of opium by the Banyans and Hindis, the Wangwana
+and many Arabs have acquired the vicious habit of eating this drug.
+Chewing betel-nut with lime is another uncleanly and disgusting habit,
+and one that can hardly benefit the _morale_ of a man; while certainly
+most deleterious to the physical powers is the almost universal habit of
+vehemently inhaling the smoke of the _Cannabis sativa_, or wild hemp. In
+a light atmosphere, such as we have in hot days in the Tropics, with the
+thermometer rising to 140° Fahr. in the sun, these people, with lungs
+and vitals injured by excessive indulgence in these destructive habits,
+discover they have no physical stamina to sustain them. The rigour of a
+march in a loaded caravan soon tells upon their weakened powers, and one
+by one they drop from the ranks, betraying their impotence and
+infirmities.
+
+During the afternoon of this day, as I was preparing my last letters, I
+was rather astonished by a visit paid to my camp by a detachment of
+Baluchi soldiers, the chief of whom bore a letter from the governor of
+Bagamoyo—Mansur bin Suliman—wherein he complained that the Wangwana had
+induced about fifteen women to abandon their masters, and requested me
+to return them.
+
+Upon mustering the people, and inquiring into their domestic affairs, it
+was discovered that a number of women had indeed joined the Expedition
+during the night. Some of them bore free papers given them by H.M.
+Political Resident at Zanzibar, but nine were by their own confessions
+runaways. After being hospitably received by the Sultan and the Arabs of
+Zanzibar, it was no part of my duty, I considered, unauthorized as I was
+by any Government, to be even a passive agent in this novel method of
+liberating slaves. The order was therefore given that these women should
+return with the soldiers, but as this did not agree with either the
+views of the women or of their loving abductors, a determined opposition
+was raised, which bore every appearance of soon culminating in
+sanguinary strife. The men seized their Snider rifles and Tower muskets,
+and cartridges, ramrods and locks were handled with looks which boded
+mischief. Acting upon the principle that as chief of my own camp I had a
+perfect right to exclude unbidden guests, I called out the “faithfuls”
+of my first expedition, forty-seven in number, and ranked them on the
+side of the Sultan’s soldiers, to prove to the infuriated men that, if
+they fired, they must injure their own friends, brothers, and chiefs.
+Frank Pocock also led a party of twenty in their rear, and then, closing
+in on the malcontents, we disarmed them, and lashed their guns into
+bundles, which were delivered up to the charge of Edward Pocock. A small
+party of faithfuls was then ordered to escort the Sultan’s soldiers and
+the women out of camp, lest some vengeful men should have formed an
+ambuscade between our camp and the river.
+
+From the details furnished in this and the two preceding chapters, a
+tolerably correct idea may be gained by the intending traveller, trader,
+or missionary in these lands, of the proper method of organization, as
+well as the quality and nature of the men whom he will lead, the manner
+of preparation and the proportion of articles to be purchased.
+
+As there are so many subjects to be touched upon along the seven
+thousand miles of explored lines, I propose to be brief with the
+incidents and descriptive sketches of our route to Ituru, because the
+country for two-thirds of the way has been sufficiently described in
+‘How I found Livingstone.’
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ THE EXPEDITION AT ROSAKO.
+ (_From a photograph._)
+]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+On the March—Congorido to Rubuti—The hunting-grounds of Kitangeh—
+ Shooting zebra—“Jack’s” first prize—Interviewed by lions—Geology of
+ Mpwapwa—Dudoma—“The flood-gates of heaven” opened—Dismal reflections—
+ The Salina—A conspiracy discovered—Desertions—The path lost—Starvation
+ and deaths—Trouble imminent—Grain huts plundered—Situation deplorable—
+ Sickness in the camp—Edward Pocock taken ill—His death and funeral.
+
+
+The line of march towards the interior, which, after due consideration,
+we adopted, runs parallel to the routes known to us, by the writings of
+many travellers, but extends as far as thirty miles north of the most
+northerly of them.
+
+At Rosako the route began to diverge from that which led to Msuwa and
+Simba-Mwenni, and opened out on a stretch of beautiful park land, green
+as an English lawn, dipping into lovely vales, and rising into gentle
+ridges. Thin, shallow threads of water in furrow-like beds or in deep
+narrow ditches, which expose the sandstone strata on which the fat
+ochreous soil rests, run in mazy curves round forest clumps, or through
+jungle tangles, and wind about among the higher elevations, on their way
+towards the Wami river.
+
+_Nov. 23._—On the 23rd, we halted at the base of one of the three cones
+of Pongwé, at a village situated at an altitude of 900 feet above the
+sea. The lesser Pongwé cone rises about 800 feet higher than the
+village, and the greater probably 1200 feet. The pedometers marked
+forty-six miles from Bagamoyo.
+
+Congorido, a populous village, was reached on the 24th. From my hut, the
+Pongwé hills were in clear view. The stockade was newly built, and was a
+good defensive enclosure. The drinking-water was brackish, but after
+long search, something more potable was discovered a short distance to
+the south-east.
+
+Mfuteh, the next village, was another strong, newly enclosed
+construction after the pattern of the architecture of Unyamwezi. The
+baobab, at this height, began to flourish, and in the depressions of the
+land the doum, borassus, and fan-palm were very numerous. The soil
+westward of Congorido, I observed, contains considerable alkali, and it
+is probable that this substance is favourable to the growth of palms.
+The villagers are timid and suspicious. Lions are reported to abound
+towards the north.
+
+Westward of Mfuteh we travelled along the right or southern bank of the
+Wami for about four miles. Its banks are fringed with umbrageous wooded
+borders, and beyond these extends an interesting country. The colossal
+peak of Kidudu rears its lofty crown to a great height, and forms a
+conspicuous landmark, towering above its less sublime neighbours of
+Nguru, about fifteen or twenty miles north of the Wami’s course.
+
+_Nov. 29._—From Mfuteh to Rubuti, a village on the Lugumbwa creek, which
+we reached on the 29th, game is numerous, but the landscape differs
+little from that described above. We crossed the Wami three times in one
+march, the fords being only 2½ feet deep. Granite boulders protruded
+above the surface, and the boiling points at one of the fords showed a
+considerable height above the sea. At one of the fords there was a
+curious suspension bridge over the river, constructed of llianes with
+great ingenuity by the natives. The banks were at this point 16 feet
+high above the river, and from bank to bank the distance was only 30
+yards: it was evident, therefore, that the river must be a dangerous
+torrent during the rainy season.
+
+The road thence, skirting a range of mountains, leads across numerous
+watercourses and some very clear rivers—one, the Mkindo, near Mvomero,
+being a beautiful stream, and the water of which I thought very
+invigorating. I certainly imagined I felt in excellent spirits the whole
+of the day after I had taken a deep draught of it.
+
+_Dec. 3._—On the 3rd of December we came to the Mkundi river, a
+tributary of the Wami, which divides Nguru country from Usagara.
+Simba-Mwenni, or Simba-Miunyi—the Lion Lord—not the famous man farther
+south—owns five villages in this neighbourhood. He was generous,
+and gratified us with a gift of a sheep, some flour, and plantains,
+accepting with pleasure some cloth in return.
+
+The Wa-Nguru speak the same dialect as the Waseguhha and Wasagara, and
+affect the same ornaments, being fond of black and white beads and brass
+wire. They split the lobes of their ears, and introduce such curious
+things as the necks of gourds or round discs of wood to extend the gash.
+A medley of strange things are worn round the neck, such as tiny goats’
+horns, small brass chains, and large egg-like beads. Blue Kanika and the
+red-barred Barsati are the favourite cloths in this region. The natives
+dye their faces with ochre, and, probably influenced by the example of
+Wanyamwezi, dress their hair in long ringlets, which are adorned with
+pendicles of copper, or white or red beads of the large Sam-sam pattern.
+
+_Dec. 4._—Grand and impressive scenery meets the eye as we march to
+Makubika, the next settlement, where we attain an altitude of 2675 feet
+above the ocean. Peaks and knolls rise in all directions, for we are now
+ascending to the eastern front of the Kaguru mountains. The summits of
+Ukamba are seen to the north, its slopes famous for the multitude of
+elephants. The mountain characteristically called the “Back of the Bow”
+has a small, clear lake near it, and remarkable peaks or mountain crests
+break the sky line on every side. Indeed, some parts of this great
+mountain range abound in scenery both picturesque and sublime.
+
+Between Mamboya and Kitangeh, I was much struck by the resemblance that
+many of the scenes bear to others that I had seen in the Alleghanies.
+Water is abundant, flowing clear as crystal from numerous sources. As we
+neared Eastern Kitangeh, villages were beheld dotted over every hill,
+the inhabitants of which, so often frightened by inroads of the ever
+marauding Wamasai, have been rendered very timid. Here, for the first
+time, cattle were observed as we travelled westerly from Bagamoyo.
+
+By a gradual ascent from the fine pastoral basin of Kitangeh, we reached
+the spine of a hill at 4490 feet, and beheld an extensive plain,
+stretching north-west and west, with browsing herds of noble game.
+Camping on its verge, between a lumpy hill and some rocky knolls, near a
+beautiful pond of crystal-clear water, I proceeded with my gun-bearer,
+Billali, and the notorious Msenna, in the hope of bringing down
+something for the Wangwana, and was heartily encouraged thereto by Frank
+and Ted Pocock.
+
+[Illustration: VIEW FROM THE VILLAGE OF MAMBOYA.]
+
+The plain was broader than I had judged it by the eye from the crest of
+the hill whence we had first sighted it. It was not until we had walked
+briskly over a long stretch of tawny grass, crushed by sheer force
+through a brambly jungle, and trampled down a path through clumps of
+slender cane stalks, that we came at last in view of a small herd of
+zebras. These animals are so quick of scent and ear, and so vigilant
+with their eyes, that, across an open space, it is most difficult to
+stalk them. But by dint of tremendous exertion, I contrived to approach
+to within 250 yards, taking advantage of every thin tussock of grass,
+and, almost at random, fired. One of the herd leaped from the ground,
+galloped a few short maddened strides, and then, on a sudden, staggered,
+kneeled, trembled, and fell over, its legs kicking the air. Its
+companions whinnied shrilly for their mate, and, presently wheeling in
+circles with graceful motion, advanced nearer, still whinnying, until I
+dropped another with a crushing ball through the head—much against my
+wish, for I think zebras were created for better purpose than to be
+eaten. The remnant of the herd vanished, and the bull-terrier “Jack,”
+now unleashed, was in an instant glorying in his first strange prizes.
+How the rogue plunged his teeth in their throats! with what ardour he
+pinned them by the nose! and soon bathing himself in blood, he appeared
+to be the very Dog of Murder, a miracle of rabid ferocity.
+
+Billali, requested to run to camp to procure Wangwana to carry the meat
+to camp, was only too happy, knowing what brave cheers and hearty
+congratulations would greet him. Msenna was already busy skinning one of
+the animals, some 300 yards from me; Jack was lying at my feet, watchful
+of the dead zebra on which I was seated, and probably calculating, so I
+supposed, how large a share would fall to him for his assistance in
+seizing the noble quarry by the nose. I was fast becoming absorbed in a
+mental picture of what might possibly lie behind the northern mountain
+barrier of the plain, when Jack sprang up and looked southward. Turning
+my head, I made out the form of some tawny animal, that was advancing
+with a curious long step, and I recognised it to be a lion. I motioned
+to Msenna, who happened to be looking up, and beckoned him. “What do you
+think it is, Msenna?” I asked. “Simba (a lion), master,” he answered.
+
+Finding my own suspicions verified, we both lay down, and prepared our
+rifles. Two explosive bullets were slipped into an elephant rifle, and I
+felt sure with the perfect rest which the body of the zebra gave for the
+rifle, that I could drop anything living larger than a cat at the
+distance of 100 yards; so I awaited his approach with composure. The
+animal advanced to within 300 yards, and then, giving a quick bound as
+though surprised, stood still. Shortly afterwards, after a deliberate
+survey, he turned sharp round and trotted off into a low shrubby jungle,
+about 800 yards away. Ten minutes elapsed, and then as many animals
+emerged from the same spot into which the other had disappeared, and
+approached us in stately column. But it being now dusk, I could not
+discern them very clearly. We both were, however, quite sure in our own
+minds that they were lions, or at any rate some animals so like them in
+the twilight that we could not imagine them to be anything else. When
+the foremost had come within 100 yards, I fired. It sprang up and fell,
+and the others disappeared with a dreadful rush. We now heard shouts
+behind us, for the Wangwana had come; so, taking one or two with me, I
+endeavoured to discover what I felt to be a prostrate lion, but it could
+not be found. It occupied us some time to skin and divide our game, and
+as the camp was far, we did not reach it until 9 P.M., when, of course,
+we received a sincere welcome from people hungry for meat.
+
+The next day Manwa Sera went out to hunt for the lion-skin, but returned
+after a long search with only a strong doubt in his mind as to its
+having been a lion, and a few reddish hairs to prove that it was
+something which had been eaten by hyenas. This day I succeeded in
+shooting a small antelope of the springbok kind.
+
+_Dec. 11._—We crossed the plain on the 11th of December, and arrived at
+Tubugwé. It is only six miles in width, but within this distance we
+counted fourteen human skulls, the mournful relics of some unfortunate
+travellers, slain by an attack of Wahumba from the north-west. I think
+it is beyond doubt that this plain, extending, as it does, from the
+unexplored north-west, and projecting like a bay into a deep mountain
+fiord south-east of our road, must in former times have been an inlet or
+creek of the great reservoir of which the Ugombo lake, south of here, is
+a residuum. The bed of this ancient lake now forms the pastoral plains
+of the Wahumba, and the broad plain-like expanses visible in the Ugogo
+country.
+
+Rounding the western extremity of a hilly range near the scene of our
+adventures, we followed a valley till it sloped into a basin, and
+finally narrowed to a ravine, along the bottom of which runs a small
+brackish stream. A bed of rock-salt was discovered on the opposite side.
+
+Two miles farther, at the base of a hilly cone, we arrived at a wooded
+gully, where very clear and fresh water is found, and from which the
+path runs west, gradually rising along the slope of a hill until it
+terminates in a pass 3700 feet above sea-level, whence the basin of
+Tubugwé appears in view, enclosing twenty-five square, stockaded
+villages and many low hills, and patched with cultivated fields. A
+gentle descent of about 400 feet brought us to our camp, on the banks of
+a small tributary of the Mukondokwa.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ OUR CAMP AT MPWAPWA.
+ (_From a photograph._)
+]
+
+_Dec. 12._—On the 12th of December, twenty-five days’ march from
+Bagamoyo, we arrived at Mpwapwa.
+
+The region traversed from the eastern slopes of that broad range which
+we began to skirt soon after passing to the left bank of the Wami river,
+as far as Chunyu (a few miles west of Mpwapwa), comprises the extreme
+breadth of the tract distinguished in the work, ‘How I found
+Livingstone,’ as the Usagara mountains. The rocks are of the older
+class, gneiss and schists, but in several localities granite protrudes,
+besides humpy dykes of trap. From the brackish stream east of Tubugwé,
+as far as Mpwapwa, there are also several dykes of a feldspathic rock,
+notably one that overlooks the basin of Tubugwé. The various clear
+streams coursing towards the Mukondokwa, as we dipped and rose over the
+highest points of the mountains among which the path led us, reveal beds
+of granite, shale, and rich porphyritic brown rock, while many loose
+boulders of a granitic character lie strewn on each side, either
+standing up half covered with clambering plants in precarious positions
+upon a denuded base, or lying bare in the beds of the stream, exposed to
+the action of the running water. Pebbles also, lodged on small shelves
+of rock in the streams, borne thither by their force during rainy
+seasons, attest the nature of the formations higher up their course.
+Among these, we saw varieties of quartz, porphyry, green-stone, dark
+grey shale, granite, hematite, and purple jasper, chalcedony, and other
+gravels.
+
+The rock-salt discovered has a large mass exposed to the action of the
+stream. In its neighbourhood is a greyish tufa, also exposed, with a
+brown mossy parasite running in threads over its face.
+
+Wood is abundant in large clumps soon after passing Kikoka, and this
+feature of the landscape obtains as far as Congorido. The Wami has a
+narrow fringe of palms on either bank; while thinly scattered in the
+plains and less fertile parts, a low scrubby brushwood, of the acacia
+species, is also seen, but nowhere dense. Along the base and slopes of
+the mountains, and in its deep valleys, large trees are very numerous,
+massing, at times, even into forests. The extreme summits, however, are
+clothed with only grass and small herbage.
+
+Mpwapwa has also some fine trees, but no forest; the largest being the
+tamarind, sycamore, cottonwood, and baobab. The collection of villages
+denominated by this title lies widely scattered on either side of the
+Mpwapwa stream, at the base of the southern slope of a range of
+mountains that extends in a sinuous line from Chunyu to Ugombo. I call
+it a range because it appeared to be one from Mpwapwa; but in reality it
+is simply the northern flank of a deep indentation in the great mountain
+chain that extends from Abyssinia, or even Suez, down to the Cape of
+Good Hope. At the extreme eastern point of this indentation from the
+western side lies Lake Ugombo, just twenty-four miles from Mpwapwa.
+
+Desertions from the expedition had been frequent. At first, Kachéché,
+the chief detective, and his gang of four men, who had received
+their instructions to follow us a day’s journey behind, enabled me
+to recapture sixteen of the deserters; but the cunning Wangwana
+and Wanyamwezi soon discovered this resource of mine against their
+well-known freaks, and, instead of striking east in their departure,
+absconded either south or north of the track. We then had detectives
+posted long before dawn, several hundred yards away from the camp,
+who were bidden to lie in wait in the bush, until the expedition had
+started, and in this manner we succeeded in repressing to some extent
+the disposition to desert, and arrested very many men on the point of
+escaping; but even this was not adequate. Fifty had abandoned us before
+reaching Mpwapwa, taking with them the advances they had received, and
+often their guns, on which our safety might depend.
+
+Several feeble men and women also had to be left behind; and it was
+evident that the very wariest methods failed to bind the people to their
+duties. The best of treatment and abundance of provisions daily
+distributed were alike insufficient to induce such faithless natures to
+be loyal. However, we persisted, and as often as we failed in one way,
+we tried another. Had all these men remained loyal to their contract and
+promises, we should have been too strong for any force to attack us, as
+our numbers must necessarily have commanded respect in lands and among
+tribes where only power is respected.
+
+One day’s march from Mpwapwa, the route skirting a broad arm of the
+Marenga Mkali desert, which leads to the Ugombo lake, brought us to
+Chunyu—an exposed and weak settlement, overlooking the desert or
+wilderness separating Usagara from Ugogo. Close to our right towered the
+Usagara mountains, and on our left stretched the inhospitable arm of the
+wilderness. Fifteen or twenty miles distant to the south rose the vast
+cluster of Rubeho’s cones and peaks.
+
+The water at Chunyu is nitrous and bitter to the taste. The natives were
+once prosperous, but repeated attacks from the Wahehé to the south and
+the Wahumba to the north have reduced them in numbers, and compelled
+them to seek refuge on the hill-summits.
+
+_Dec. 16._—On the 16th of December, at early dawn, we struck camp, and
+at an energetic pace descended into the wilderness, and at 7 P.M. the
+vanguard of the expedition entered Ugogo, camping two or three miles
+from the frontier village of Kikombo. The next day, at a more moderate
+pace, we entered the populated district, and took shelter under a mighty
+baobab a few hundred yards distant from the chief’s village.
+
+The fields, now denuded of the dwarf acacia and gum jungle which is the
+characteristic feature of the wilderness of Marenga Mkali and its
+neighbourhood, gave us a clear view of a broad bleak plain, with nothing
+to break its monotony to the jaundiced eye save a few solitary baobab,
+some square wattled enclosures within which the inhabitants live, and an
+occasional herd of cattle or flock of goats that obtain a poor
+subsistence from the scanty herbage. A few rocky hills rise in the
+distance on either hand.
+
+Kikombo, or Chikombo, stands at an altitude by aneroid of 2475 feet. The
+hills proved, as we afterwards ascertained on arriving at Itumbi, Sultan
+Mpamira’s, to be the eastern horn of the watershed that divides the
+streams flowing south to the Rufiji from those that trend north.
+
+We march under a very hot sun to Mpamira’s village; and through the
+double cover of the tent the heat at Itumbi rose to 96° Fahr. Within an
+hour of our arrival, the sky, as usual in this season, became overcast,
+the weather suddenly became cold, and the thermometer descended to 69°
+Fahr., while startling claps of thunder echoed among the hills,
+accompanied by vivid flashes of lightning. About three miles to the
+south-west, we observed a thick fog, and knew that rain was falling, but
+we only received a few drops. Half an hour later, a broad and dry sandy
+stream-bed, in which we had commenced to dig for water, was transformed
+into a swift torrent of 18 inches deep and 50 yards wide, the general
+direction of which was north by east. Within two or three hours, there
+were only a few gentle threads of water remaining; the torrent had
+subsided as quickly as it had risen.
+
+On our road to Leehumwa, we passed over a greyish calcareous tufa. On
+either side of us rise hills bare of soil, presenting picturesque
+summits, some of which are formed by upright masses of yellow feldspar,
+coloured by the presence of iron and exposure to weather.
+
+The next settlement, Dudoma, is situated on a level terrace to the north
+of the hills which form the watershed, and from its base extends, to the
+unknown north, the great plain of Uhumba, a dry, arid, and inhospitable
+region, but covered with brushwood, and abandoned to elephants, lions,
+large game, and intractable natives.
+
+_Dec. 23._—The rainy season began in earnest on the 23rd of December,
+while we halted at Dudoma, and next day we struggled through a pelting
+storm, during an eight miles’ march to Zingeh, the plain of which we
+found already half submerged by rushing yellow streams.
+
+_Dec. 25._—The following sketch is a portion of a private letter to
+a friend, written on Christmas Day at Zingeh: “I am in a centre-pole
+tent, seven by eight. As it rained all day yesterday, the tent was set
+over wet ground, which, by the passing in and out of the servants, was
+soon trampled into a thick pasty mud bearing the traces of toes, heels,
+shoe nails, and dogs’ paws. The tent walls are disfigured by large
+splashes of mud, and the tent corners hang down limp and languid, and
+there is such an air of forlornness and misery about its very set that
+it increases my own misery, already great at the sight of the doughy
+muddy ground with its puddlets and strange hieroglyphic traceries and
+prints. I sit on a bed raised about a foot above the sludge, mournfully
+reflecting on my condition. Outside, the people have evidently a fellow
+feeling with me, for they appear to me like beings with strong suicidal
+intentions or perhaps they mean to lie still, inert until death
+relieves them. It has been raining heavily the last two or three days,
+and an impetuous downpour of sheet rain has just ceased. On the march,
+rain is very disagreeable; it makes the clayey path slippery, and the
+loads heavier by being saturated, while it half ruins the cloths. It
+makes us dispirited, wet, and cold, added to which we are hungry—for
+there is a famine or scarcity of food at this season, and therefore we
+can only procure half-rations. The native store of grain is consumed
+during the months of May, June, July, August, September, October, and
+November. By December, the planting month, there is but little grain
+left, and for what we are able to procure, we must pay about ten times
+the ordinary price. The natives, owing to improvidence, have but little
+left. I myself have not had a piece of meat for ten days. My food is
+boiled rice, tea, and coffee, and soon I shall be reduced to eating
+native porridge, like my own people. I weighed 180 lbs. when I left
+Zanzibar, but under this diet I have been reduced to 134 lbs. within
+thirty-eight days. The young Englishmen are in the same impoverished
+condition of body, and unless we reach some more flourishing country
+than famine-stricken Ugogo, we must soon become mere skeletons.
+
+“Besides the terribly wet weather and the scarcity of food from which we
+suffer, we are compelled to undergo the tedious and wearisome task of
+haggling with extortionate chiefs over the amount of black-mail which
+they demand, and which we must pay. We are compelled, as you may
+perceive, to draw heavy drafts on the virtues of prudence, patience, and
+resignation, without which the transit of Ugogo, under such conditions
+as above described, would be most perilous. Another of my dogs, ‘Nero,’
+the retriever, is dead. Alas! all will die.”
+
+_Dec. 26._—The next camp westward from Zingeh which we established was
+at Jiweni, or the Stones, at an altitude above sea-level of 3150 feet;
+crossing on our march three streams with a trend southerly to the
+Rufiji. Formerly there had been a settlement here, but in one of the
+raids of the Wahumba it had been swept away, leaving only such traces of
+man’s occupation as broken pottery, and shallow troughs in the rocks
+caused probably by generations of female grinders of corn.
+
+Through a scrubby jungle, all of which in past times had been
+cultivated, we marched from the “Stones” to Kitalalo, the chief of which
+place became very friendly with me, and, to mark his delight at my
+leading a caravan to his country—the first, he hoped, of many more—he
+presented a fat ox to the Wangwana and Wanyamwezi.
+
+The outskirts of Kitalalo are choked with growths of acacia, tamarisk,
+and gum, while clusters of doum palms are numerous. Further west
+stretches the broad plain of Mizanza and Mukondoku, with its deceitful
+mirage, herbless and treeless expanse, and nitrous water.
+
+One Somali youth, Mohammed, deserted just eastward of Kitalalo, and was
+never afterwards heard of.
+
+_Dec. 29._—Early on the 29th of December, guided by Kitalalo’s son, we
+emerged from our camp under the ever rustling doum palms, and a short
+mile brought us to the broad and almost level Salina, which stretches
+from Mizanza to the south of the track to the hills of Unyangwira,
+north.
+
+The hilly range or upland wall which confronted us on the west ever
+since we left the “Stones,” and which extends from Usekké northwards to
+Machenché, is the natural boundary accepted by the natives as separating
+Ugogo from Uyanzi—or Ukimbu, as it is now beginning to be called. The
+slope of the Salina, though slight and imperceptible to the eye, is
+southerly, and therefore drained by the Rufiji. The greatest breadth of
+this plain is twenty miles, and its length may be estimated at fifty
+miles. The march across it was very fatiguing. Not a drop of water was
+discovered _en route_, though towards the latter part of the journey a
+grateful rain shower fell, which revived the caravan, but converted the
+plain into a quagmire.
+
+On approaching the Mukondoku district, which contains about a hundred
+small villages, we sighted the always bellicose natives advancing upon
+our van with uplifted spears and noisy show of war. This belligerent
+exhibition did not disturb our equanimity, as we were strangers and had
+given no cause for hostilities. After manifesting their prowess by a few
+harmless boasts and much frantic action, they soon subsided into a more
+pacific demeanour, and permitted us to proceed quietly to our camp under
+a towering baobab near the king’s village.
+
+This king’s name is Chalula, and he is a brother of Masumami of
+Kitalalo. Unlike his nobler brother, he is crafty and unscrupulous, and
+levies extortionate tribute on travellers, for which he never deigns to
+send the smallest present in return. His people are numerous, strong,
+and bold, and, sharing the overweening pride of their king, are prone to
+insolence and hostility upon the slightest cause. Being so powerful, he
+is cordially detested by his royal brothers of Kiwyeh, Khonko, and
+Mizanza. We experienced therefore much difficulty in preserving the
+peace, as his people would insist upon filling the camp, and prying into
+every tent and hut.
+
+A conspiracy was discovered at this place, by which fifty men, who had
+firmly resolved to abscond, were prevented from carrying out their
+intention by my securing the ring-leaders and disarming their deluded
+followers. Twenty men were on the sick list, from fever, sore feet,
+ophthalmia, and rheumatism. Five succeeded in deserting with their guns
+and accoutrements, and two men were left at Mukondoku almost blind.
+Indeed, to record our daily mischances and our losses up to this date in
+full detail would require half of this volume; but these slight hints
+will suffice to show that the journey of an expedition into Africa is
+beset with troubles and disaster.
+
+Frank and Edward Pocock and Frederick Barker rendered me invaluable
+services while endeavouring to harmonise the large, unruly mob with its
+many eccentric and unassimilating natures. Quarrels were frequent,
+sometimes even dangerous, between various members of the Expedition, and
+at such critical moments only did my personal interference become
+imperatively necessary. What with taking solar observations and making
+ethnological notes, negotiating with chiefs about the tribute moneys and
+attending on the sick, my time was occupied from morning until night. In
+addition to all this strain on my own physical powers, I was myself
+frequently sick from fever, and wasted from lack of proper, nourishing
+food; and if the chief of an expedition be thus distressed, it may
+readily be believed that the poor fellows depending on him suffer also.
+
+_Jan. 1._—Having received our guides from Chalula, king of Mukondoku,
+on the 1st of January 1875 we struck north, thus leaving for the
+first time the path to Unyanyembé, the common highway of East Central
+Africa. We were skirting the eastern base of the upland wall, or hilly
+range (which, as I have said, we sighted westward from the “Stones”),
+by a path which connected several Wahumba villages. Though humble
+to the European eye, these villages owned several herds of humped,
+short-horned cattle, flocks of sheep and goats, with many strong asses
+and dogs. Some of the young women were unusually pretty, with regular
+features, well-formed noses, thin, finely chiselled lips, and graceful
+forms.
+
+We—the Europeans—were as great curiosities to the natives as though
+they lived hundreds of miles from the Unyanyembé road. Each of the
+principal men and women extended to us pressing invitations to stop in
+their villages, and handsome young chiefs entreated us to become their
+blood-brothers. Young Keelusu, the son of the chief of Mwenna, even
+came to my camp at night, and begged me to accept a “small gift from
+a friend,” which he had brought. This gift was a gallon of new milk,
+still warm from the udder. Such a welcome present was reciprocated with
+a gilt bracelet, with a great green crystal set in it, a briarwood
+pipe, stem banded in silver, a gilt chain, and a Sohari cloth, with
+which he was so overjoyed as almost to weep. His emotions of gratitude
+were visible in the glistening and dilated eyes, and felt in the
+fervent grasp he gave my hand. By some magic art with his sandals of
+cowhide, he predicted success to my journey. As the right sandal after
+being tossed three times upward, each time turned upside down, my good
+health and well-being, he said, were assured, without a doubt.
+
+_Jan. 2._—The next halt was made at Mtiwi, the chief of which was
+Malewa. The aneroid here indicated an altitude of 2825 feet. Our
+faithless Wagogo guides having deserted us, we marched a little distance
+farther north, and ascended the already described “upland wall,” where
+the aneroid at our camp indicated a height of 3800 feet—or about 950
+feet above the plain on which Mtiwi, Mwenna, and Mukondoku are situated.
+
+The last night at Mtiwi was a disturbed one. The “floodgates of heaven”
+seemed literally opened for a period. After an hour’s rainfall, 6 inches
+of water covered our camp, and a slow current ran southerly. Every
+member of the expedition was distressed, and even the Europeans, lodged
+in tents, were not exempted from the evils of the night. My tent walls
+enclosed a little pool, banked by boxes of stores and ammunition.
+Hearing cries outside, I lit a candle, and my astonishment was great to
+find that my bed was an island in a shallow river, which, if it
+increased in depth and current, would assuredly carry me off south
+towards the Rufiji. My walking boots were miniature barks, floating to
+and fro on a turbid tide seeking a place of exit to the dark world of
+waters without. My guns, lashed to the centre pole, were stock deep in
+water. But the most comical sight was presented by Jack and Bull,
+perched back to back on the top of an ammunition-box, butting each other
+rearward, and snarling and growling for that scant portion of comfort.
+
+In the morning, I discovered my fatigue cap several yards outside the
+tent, and one of my boots sailing down south. The harmonium, a present
+for Mtesa, a large quantity of gunpowder, tea, rice and sugar, were
+destroyed. Vengeance appeared to have overtaken us. At 10 A.M. the sun
+appeared, astonished no doubt at a new lake formed during his absence.
+By noon the water had considerably decreased, and permitted us to march;
+and with glad hearts we surmounted the upland of Uyanzi, and from our
+busy camp, on the afternoon of the 4th of January, gazed upon the
+spacious plain beneath, and the vast broad region of sterility and
+thorns which we had known as inhospitable Ugogo.
+
+_Jan. 4._—On the upland which we were now about to traverse, we had
+arrived at an elevation which greatly altered the character of the
+vegetation. On the plain of Ugogo flourish only dwarf bush, a mongrel
+and degenerate variety of the noble trees growing in Uyanzi, consisting
+of acacia, rank-smelling gum-trees, and euphorbias. Here we have the
+stately myombo or African ash. This tree grows on the loftier ridges
+and high uplands, flourishing best on loose ferruginous soil. It
+utterly rejects the rich alluvium, as well as the shady loam. Where the
+tree assumes its greatest height and girth, we may be sure also that
+not far off strange freaks of rock will be found in the bosom of the
+forest, such as gigantic square blocks of granite, of the magnitude
+of cottages, and at a distance reminding the traveller of miniature
+castles and other kinds of human dwellings. Large sheets of hematite
+and gneiss denuded of soil are also characteristics of this plateau,
+while still another feature is a succession of low and grandly swelling
+ridges, or land-waves.
+
+On our road to Muhalala, we met hundreds of fugitives who were escaping
+from the battle-grounds near Kirurumo, the natives of which were being
+harassed by Nyungu, son of Mkasiwa of Unyanyembé, for expressing
+sympathy with Mirambo, the warrior chief of Western Unyamwezi.
+
+_Jan. 6._—Muhalala is a small settlement of Wakimbu, the chief of which
+declares he owes a nominal allegiance to Malewa of Mtiwi. Procuring
+guides here, on the 6th of January we ascended a ridge, its face rough
+with many a block of iron ore, and a scabby grey rock, on which torrents
+and rains had worked wonderful changes, and within two hours arrived at
+Kashongwa, a village situated on the verge of a trackless wild, peopled
+by a mixture of Wasukuma, renegade Wangwana, and Wanyamwezi. We were
+informed by officious Wangwana, who appeared glad to meet their
+countrymen, that we were but two days’ march from Urimi. As they had no
+provisions to sell, and each man and woman had two days’ rations, we
+resumed our journey, accompanied by one of them as a guide, along a road
+which, they informed us, would take us the day after to Urimi, and after
+two hours camped near a small pool.
+
+_Jan. 8._—The next day we travelled over a plain which had a gradual
+uplift towards the north-west, and was covered with dense, low bush. Our
+path was ill-defined, as only small Wagogo caravans travelled to Urimi,
+but the guide assured us that he knew the road. In this dense bush there
+was not one large tree. It formed a vast carpet of scrub and brush, tall
+enough to permit us to force our way among the lower branches, which
+were so interwoven one with another that it sickens me almost to write
+of this day’s experience. Though our march was but ten miles, it
+occupied us as many hours of labour, elbowing and thrusting our way, to
+the injury of our bodies and the detriment of our clothing. We camped at
+5 P.M. near another small pool, at an altitude of 4350 feet above the
+sea. The next day, on the afternoon of the 8th, we should have reached
+Urimi, and, in order to be certain of doing so, marched fourteen miles
+to still another pool at a height of 4550 feet above sea-level. Yet
+still we saw no limit to this immense bush-field, and our labours had,
+this day, been increased tenfold. Our guide had lost the path early in
+the day, and was innocently leading us in an easterly direction!
+
+The responsibility of leading a half-starved expedition—as ours now
+certainly was—through a dense bush, without knowing whither or for how
+many days, was great; but I was compelled to undertake it rather than
+see it wander eastward, where it would be hopeless to expect provisions.
+The greater number of our people had consumed their rations early in the
+morning. I had led it northward for hours, when we came to a large tree
+to the top of which I requested the guide to ascend, to try if he could
+recognise any familiar feature in the dreary landscape. After a short
+examination, he declared he saw a ridge that he knew, near which, he
+said, was situate the village of Uveriveri. This news stimulated our
+exertions, and, myself leading the van, we travelled briskly until 5
+P.M., when we arrived at the third pool.
+
+Meantime Barker and the two Pococks, assisted by twenty chiefs, were
+bringing up the rear, and we never suspected for a moment that the broad
+track which we trampled over grass and through bush would be unperceived
+by those in rear of us. The Europeans and chiefs, assisted by the
+reports of heavily loaded muskets, were enabled to reach camp
+successfully at 7 P.M.; but the chiefs then reported that there had not
+arrived a party of four men, and a donkey boy who was leading an ass
+loaded with coffee. Of these, however, there was no fear, as they had
+detailed the chief Simba to oversee them, Simba having a reputation
+among his fellows for fidelity, courage, and knowledge of travel.
+
+_Jan. 9._—The night passed, and the morning of the 9th dawned, and I
+anxiously asked about the absentees. They had not arrived. But as each
+hour in the jungle added to the distress of a still greater number of
+people, we moved on to the miserable little village of Uveriveri. The
+inhabitants consisted of only two families, who could not spare us one
+grain! We might as well have remained in the jungle, for no sustenance
+could be procured here.
+
+In this critical position, many lives hanging on my decision, I resolved
+to despatch forty of the strongest men—ten chiefs and thirty of the
+boldest youths—to Suna in Urimi, for the villagers of Uveriveri had of
+course given us the desired information as to our whereabouts. The
+distance from Uveriveri to Suna was twenty-eight miles, as we
+subsequently discovered. Pinched with hunger themselves, the forty
+volunteers advanced with the resolution to reach Suna that night. They
+were instructed to purchase 800 lbs. of grain, which would give a light
+load of 20 lbs. to each man, and urged to return as quickly as possible,
+for the lives of their women and friends depended on their manliness.
+
+Manwa Sera was also despatched with a party of twenty to hunt up the
+missing men. Late in the afternoon they returned with the news that
+three of the missing men were dead. They had lost the road, and,
+travelling along an elephant track, had struggled on till they perished,
+of despair, hunger, and exhaustion. Simba and the donkey-boy, the ass
+and its load of coffee, were never seen or heard of again.
+
+_Jan. 10._—With the sad prospect of starvation impending over us, we
+were at various expedients to sustain life until the food purveyors
+should return. Early on the morning of the 10th, I travelled far and
+searched every likely place for game, but though tracks were numerous,
+we failed to sight a single head. The Wangwana also roamed about the
+forest—for the Uveriveri ridge was covered with fine myombo trees—in
+search of edible roots and berries, and examined various trees to
+discover whether they afforded anything that could allay the grievous
+and bitter pangs of hunger. Some found a putrid elephant, on which they
+gorged themselves, and were punished with nausea and sickness. Others
+found a lion’s den, with two lion whelps, which they brought to me.
+Meanwhile, Frank and I examined the medical stores, and found to our
+great joy we had sufficient oatmeal to give every soul two cupfuls of
+thin gruel. A “Torquay dress trunk” of sheet-iron was at once emptied of
+its contents and filled with 25 gallons of water, into which were put 10
+lbs. of oatmeal and four 1-lb. tins of “revalenta arabica.” How the
+people, middle-aged and young, gathered round that trunk, and heaped
+fuel underneath that it might boil the quicker! How eagerly they watched
+it lest some calamity should happen, and clamoured, when it was ready,
+for their share, and how inexpressibly satisfied they seemed as they
+tried to make the most of what they received, and with what fervour they
+thanked “God” for his mercies!
+
+At 9 P.M., as we were about to sleep, we heard the faint sound of a gun
+fired deliberately three times, and we all knew then that our young men
+with food were not very far from us. The next morning, about 7 A.M., the
+bold and welcome purveyors arrived in camp with just enough millet-seed
+to give each soul one good meal. This the people soon despatched, and
+then demanded that we should resume our journey that afternoon, so that
+next morning we might reach Suna in time to forage.
+
+Skirting the southern base of the wooded ridge of Uveriveri, we
+continued to ascend almost imperceptibly for eight miles, when we
+arrived at another singular series of lofty rocks, called at once by the
+Wangwana the Jiweni or “Stones.” We camped near a rocky hill 125 feet
+high, from the summit of which I obtained a view of a green grassy plain
+stretching towards the north. The altitude of this camp was 5250 feet
+above sea-level. Towards night I shot a wild boar and a duck, but
+several of the Wangwana, being strict Muslims, could not be induced to
+eat the pork. From the “Stones” we came to what we had called a plain
+from the summit, but what was really, from its marshy nature, more of a
+quagmire. It appeared to be a great resort for elephants; thousands of
+the tracks of these great animals ran in all directions. Plunging into
+another jungle, we reappeared, after marching twenty miles, in the
+cultivated fields of Suna; and on the verge of a coppice we constructed
+a strong camp, whence we had a view of the “Stones,” which we had left
+in the morning, no other eminences being visible above what appeared a
+very ocean of bush.
+
+_Jan. 12._—Next morning there was a strange and peculiar air of
+discontent, like a foreshadowing of trouble, among the natives who
+appeared before our camp. They did not appear to understand us. They
+were seen hurrying their women and children away, and deserting their
+villages, while others hovered round our camp menacingly, carrying in
+their hands a prodigious quantity of arms—spears, bows and arrows, and
+knob-sticks. Trouble seemed imminent. To prevent it, if possible, I
+stepped out to them with empty hands, motioned them to be seated, and,
+calling an interpreter, likewise unarmed, I attempted to explain the
+nature of our expedition and a few of its objects, one of which of
+course was to reach Lake Victoria. To those elders who appeared to have
+most influence, I gave some beads, as an expression of goodwill and
+friendship. But nothing seemed to be of avail until, after close
+questioning, I ascertained they had a grievance. Some of the Wangwana,
+in their ravenous hunger, had plundered the grain huts, and stolen some
+chickens. The natives were requested to come and point out the thieves.
+They did so, and pointed their fingers at Alsassi, a notorious thief and
+gourmand. Convicted of the crime after a strict examination of his
+quarters by Kachéché, the chief detective, Alsassi was flogged in their
+presence, not severely but sufficiently to mark my sense of extreme
+displeasure. The value of the stolen food was given to the defrauded
+natives, and peace and tranquillity were restored.
+
+The Warimi are the finest people in physique we saw between their
+country and the sea. They are robust, tall, manly in bearing, and
+possess very regular features. As they go stark naked, we perceived that
+the males had undergone the process of circumcision. Their ornaments are
+cinctures of brass wire round the loins, armlets and leglets of brass,
+brass-wire collars, beads plentifully sprinkled over their hair, and
+about a dozen long necklaces suspended from the neck. The war costumes
+which they were wearing when I had thought that trouble was near were
+curious and various. Feathers of the kite and hawk, manes of the zebra
+and giraffe, encircled their foreheads. Their arms consisted of
+portentous-looking spears, bows and yard-long arrows, and shields of
+rhinoceros hide. The women, I imagine, are generally a shade lighter
+than the men. I failed to see in a day’s examination a single flat nose
+or thick lip, though they were truly negroidal in hair and colour. I
+ought to have said that many shaved their heads, leaving only a thin
+wavy line over the forehead.
+
+The rolling plain of Suna was at this season utterly devoid of grass. An
+immense area was under cultivation; clusters of small villages were
+sprinkled over all the prospect the eye embraced, and large flocks of
+goats and sheep and herds of cattle proved that they were a pastoral as
+well as an agricultural people.
+
+The Warimi appear to have no chief, but submit to direction by the
+elders, or heads of families, who have acquired importance by judicious
+alliances, and to whom they refer civil causes. In time of war, however,
+as we observed the day after we arrived, they have for their elder one
+who has a military reputation. This fighting elder, to whom I remarked
+great deference was paid, was certainly 6½ feet in height. The species
+of beads called Kanyera were, it seemed to me, most in favour; brass
+wire was also in demand, but all cloth was rejected except the blue
+Kaniki.
+
+We halted four days at Suna, as our situation was deplorable. A
+constantly increasing sick list, culminating in the serious illness of
+Edward Pocock, the evident restlessness of the Warimi at our presence,
+who most certainly wished us anywhere except in their country, and yet
+had no excuse for driving us by force from their neighbourhood, the
+insufficient quantity of food that could be purchased, and the growing
+importunacy of the healthy Wangwana to be led away from such a churlish
+and suspicious people, plunged me in perplexity.
+
+We had now over thirty men ailing. Some suffered from dysentery, others
+from fever, asthma, chest diseases, and heart sickness; lungs were weak,
+and rheumatism had its victims. Edward Pocock, on the afternoon of the
+day we arrived at Suna, came to me, and complained of pain in the loins,
+a throbbing in the head—which I attributed to weariness after our
+terribly long march—and a slight fever. I suggested to him that he had
+better lie down and rest. Before I retired, I reminded Frank, his
+brother, that he should give Edward some alterative medicine. The next
+day the young man was worse. His tongue was thickly coated with a dark
+fur, his face fearfully pallid, and he complained of wandering pains in
+his back and knees, of giddiness and great thirst. I administered to him
+sweet spirits of nitre with orange water, and a few grains of
+ipecacuanha as an emetic. The fourth day he was delirious, and we were
+about to sponge him with cold water, when I observed that small red
+pimples with white tops covered his chest and abdomen, arms and neck.
+One or two were very like small-pox pustules, which deceived me for a
+time into the belief that it was a mild case of small-pox. However, by
+carefully noticing the symptoms, I perceived that it was unmistakably a
+case of the dreadful typhus.
+
+_Jan. 17._—There were two or three cases of sickness equally dangerous
+in camp, but far more dangerous was the sickness of temper from which
+the Warimi suffered. It became imperative that we should keep moving, if
+only two or three miles a day. Accordingly, on the 17th of January,
+after rigging up four hammocks, and making one especially comfortable
+for Edward Pocock, roofed over with canvas, we moved from the camp
+through the populated district at a very slow pace; Frank Pocock and
+Fred Barker at the side of the hammock of the sick European, and a chief
+and four men attending to each suffering Wangwana. Hundreds of natives
+fully armed kept up with us on either side of our path.
+
+Never since leaving the sea were we weaker in spirit than on this day.
+Had we been attacked, I doubt if we should have made much resistance.
+The famine in Ugogo, and that terribly protracted trial of strength
+through the jungle of Uveriveri, had utterly unmanned us; besides, we
+had such a long list of sick, and Edward Pocock and three Wangwana were
+dangerously ill in hammocks. We were an unspeakably miserable and
+disheartened band; yet, urged by our destiny, we struggled on, though
+languidly. Our spirits seemed dying, or resolving themselves into
+weights which oppressed our hearts. Weary, harassed, and feeble
+creatures, we arrived at Chiwyu, four hundred miles from the sea, and
+camped near the crest of a hill, which was marked by aneroid as 5400
+feet above the level of the ocean.
+
+Edward Pocock was reported by Frank to have muttered in his delirium,
+“The master has just hit it,” and to have said that he felt very
+comfortable. On arriving at the camp, one of the boat sections was
+elevated above him as a protection from the sun, until a cool grass hut
+could be erected. A stockade was being constructed by piling a thick
+fence of brushwood around a spacious circle, along which grass huts were
+fast being built, when Frank entreated me to step to his brother’s side.
+I sprang to him—only in time, however, to see him take his last gasp.
+Frank gave a shriek of sorrow when he realised that the spirit of his
+brother had fled for ever, and removing the boat section, bent over the
+corpse and wailed in a paroxysm of agony.
+
+We excavated a grave 4 feet deep at the foot of a hoary acacia with
+wide-spreading branches, and on its ancient trunk Frank engraved a deep
+cross, the emblem of the faith we all believe in, and, when folded in
+its shroud, we laid the body in its final resting-place during the last
+gleams of sunset. We read the beautiful prayers of the church service
+for the dead, and, out of respect for the departed, whose frank,
+sociable, and winning manners had won their friendship and regard,
+nearly all the Wangwana were present to pay a last tribute of sighs to
+poor Edward Pocock.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ IN MEMORIAM
+
+ EDWARD POCOCK + DIED JAN. 17. 1875
+]
+
+When the last solemn prayer had been read, we retired to our tents, to
+brood in sorrow and silence over our irreparable loss.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ [_To face page 92._
+
+[Illustration: BURYING OUR DEAD IN HOSTILE TURU: VIEW OF OUR CAMP.]
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+From Chiwyu to Vinyata—Kaif Halleck murdered—The magic doctor—Giving
+ away the heart—Deeds of blood—“The white men are only women”—A three
+ days’ fight—Punishment of the Wanyaturu—The ubiquitous Mirambo—The
+ plain of the Luwamberri—In a land of plenty—Through the open country—
+ “I have seen the lake, sir, and it is grand!”—Welcomed at Kagehyi.
+
+
+_Jan. 18._—We have seen no remarkable feature in the landscape since we
+surmounted that steep wall of the upland which bounds Ugogo on the west.
+Near its verge, it is true, it rose in steep terraces, until finally it
+extended westward and northward in a broad jungle-covered plain, which
+had a gradual rise, culminating in the myombo-clad slopes of the
+Uveriveri ridge. While standing at Suna, we were in view of that vast
+waste out of which, after terrible experience, we had emerged as it were
+only with our lives.
+
+At Chiwyu, we camped near the loftiest altitude of the gradual and
+almost unbroken rise of upland, at a height of 5400 feet. To the
+northward of Suna and Chiwyu, the country, however, no longer retained
+that grand unfurrowed uplift, but presented several isolated hills and
+short ranges, while to the westward also we saw that it was divided into
+oval basins, rimmed with low hills. From these same hollows and furrows
+and basins at the base of the hills, scattered to the north and west of
+Suna and Chiwyu, issue the first tiny rivulets, which, as we continue
+our journey to the north-west, gradually converge to one main stream,
+trending towards Lake Victoria. It is in this region, therefore, that
+the most extreme southern Sources of the Nile were discovered.
+
+Since leaving Mpwapwa, we have not crossed one perennial stream. All
+our drinking water has been obtained from pools, or shallow depressions
+lately filled by rain. Between Suna and Chiwyu was crossed one small
+rill flowing north-easterly, which soon afterwards joins another and
+still another, and gathering volume, swerves north, then north-west.
+These are the furthest springs and head-waters of a river that will
+presently become known as the Leewumbu, then as the Monangah, and
+lastly as the Shimeeyu, under which name it enters Lake Victoria on the
+south-east coast of Speke Gulf.
+
+Descending into the basin of Matongo from Chiwyu with its melancholy
+associations, we crossed several narrow and shallow furrows, which a few
+late rains had probably caused, and came to a clear stream flowing north
+through a deep rocky channel. Near this ravine was a space about a
+square mile in extent, strangely torn up and exhibiting thousands of
+boulders and blocks, large and small, with smooth, waterworn tops; and
+the sides of what is now a small hill in the centre of the basin showed
+visible traces of the action of furious torrents through centuries of
+time. The hard granite was worn into cones, the tops of which bore a
+calcined appearance, proving the effect of intense heat suddenly cooled
+by rain. The rocky channel of this stream in the Matongo basin was a
+veritable geological section. The surface consisted of massive granite
+boulders imbedded in vegetable deposit; below this was a stratum of sand
+about 3 feet deep, below the sand a stratum of coarse shingle of quartz,
+feldspar, and porphyry, about 8 feet thick, and below this was alluvium,
+resting on solid rock.
+
+_Jan. 20._—During these days the thermometer had seldom risen higher
+than 78°; for hours during the day it stood at 66°, while at night the
+mean was 63°. Seven miles from Chiwyu stand the villages of Mangura on
+the borders of Ituru. Soon after leaving Mangura we ought to have
+followed the left-hand road, which, after traversing a forest, would
+have brought us to Mgongo Tembo, where we should have found Wangwana and
+Wanyamwezi. We also discovered that we had already lost the regular path
+to Usukuma at Kashongwa, which would have taken us, we were told, to
+Utaturu and thence to Mgongo Tembo. But the Mangura natives, though they
+were otherwise tolerant of our presence and by no means ill-disposed,
+would not condescend to show us the road, and we were therefore exposed
+to a series of calamities, which at one time threatened our very
+existence.
+
+After passing Mangura, we entered Ituru. Streams now became numerous,
+all flowing northward; but though such a well-watered country, the
+cattle in it were poor and gaunt in frame, the dogs half starved, and
+the sheep and goats mere skeletons. Only the human beings seemed to me
+to be in good condition. Among the birds of this region which attracted
+our attention, we noted spur-winged geese, small brown short-billed
+ducks, delicate of flesh and delicious eating, long-legged plover,
+snipe, cranes, herons, spoonbills, parroquets and jays, and a large
+greyish-brown bird with short legs resembling a goose, and very shy and
+difficult of approach.
+
+The language of Ituru is totally distinct from that of Ugogo or of
+Unyamwezi. Besides possessing large herds of cattle, nearly every
+village boasts of one or two strong Masai asses. As the Wanyaturu stood
+in groups indulging their curiosity outside our camps, I observed they
+had a curious habit of employing themselves in plucking the hair from
+their faces and armpits. Being extremely distant in their manner, we
+found it difficult to gain their confidence, though we were assiduous in
+our attempts to cultivate their goodwill.
+
+Izanjeh was our next camp after Mangura, and the first place we halted
+at in Ituru. It was 5450 feet above the sea.
+
+On leaving Izanjeh, Kaif Halleck, the bearer of the letter-bag to
+Livingstone in 1871, was afflicted with asthma, and as we were compelled
+to travel slowly, I entreated him not to lag behind the Expedition while
+it traversed such a dangerous country. But I have observed that sick men
+seldom heed advice. Being obliged to go forward to the front during
+these evil and trying days, I had to leave the rearguard under Frank
+Pocock and Fred Barker and the Wangwana chiefs. As my duties would be
+mainly to introduce and ingratiate our expedition with the natives, I
+could not possibly know what happened in the rear until we reached camp,
+and reports were made to me by Frank and Manwa Sera.
+
+_Jan. 21._—From the top of a ridge, accompanied by a guide whose
+goodwill had been secured by me, I descended to the basin of what the
+Wangwana at Mgongo Tembo call Vinyata, but which the guide, I feel
+assured, called Niranga. The basin is oval, about twelve miles long by
+six miles wide, cut through the centre by the Leewumbu, as it flows in a
+W.N.W. direction, becoming lost, soon after leaving the basin, in a
+cluster of woodclad hills. Numbers of villages are sprinkled over it
+from end to end, and from the summit of the ridge we guessed it to
+contain a populous and wealthy community. On the evening of the same
+day, the 21st of January 1875, we arrived at Vinyata.
+
+There was nothing in the horizon of our daily life that the most fearful
+and timid could have considered ominous. Nevertheless, consistent with
+custom, the camp was constructed on the summit of a slightly swelling
+ground, between a forest and the fields in the basin. The people of the
+small village nearest to us deserted it upon first sight of our party,
+but they were finally persuaded to return. Everything promised at night
+to be peaceful, though anxiety began to be felt about the fate of Kaif
+Halleck. He had not been seen for two days. Some suggested he had
+deserted, but “faithfuls” rarely desert upon mere impulse, without
+motive or cause. It was necessary therefore to halt a day at Vinyata to
+despatch a searching party. Manwa Sera was told to take four staunch
+men, one of whom was the scout and famous detective, Kachéché, to hunt
+up the sick “letter-carrier of 1871.”
+
+During Manwa Sera’s absence, Frank, Barker, and myself were occupied in
+reducing our loads, and rejecting every article that we could possibly
+subsist without. Our sick were many, twenty had died, and eighty-nine
+had deserted, between the coast and Vinyata!
+
+While examining the cloth bales, we discovered that several were wet
+from the excessive rains of Ugogo, and to save them from being ruined,
+it was imperative, though impolitic, that we should spread the cloths to
+dry. In the midst of this work the great magic doctor of Vinyata came to
+pay me a visit, bringing with him a fine fat ox as a peace offering.
+Being the first we had received since leaving Kitalalo, we regarded it
+as a propitious omen, and I showed by my warmth toward the ancient
+Mganga that I was ready to reciprocate his kindness. He was introduced
+to my tent, and after being sociably entertained with exceedingly sweet
+coffee and some of Huntley and Palmer’s best and sweetest biscuits, he
+was presented with fifteen cloths, thirty necklaces, and ten yards of
+brass wire, which repaid him fourfold for his ox. Trivial things, such
+as empty sardine boxes, soup and bouilli pots, and empty jam tins, were
+successively bestowed on him as he begged for them. The horizon appeared
+clearer than ever, when he entreated me to go through the process of
+blood-brotherhood, which I underwent with all the ceremonious gravity of
+a pagan. As he was finally departing, he saw preparations being made to
+despatch the ox, and he expressed his desire that the heart of the
+animal should be returned to him. While he stayed for it, I observed
+with uneasiness that he and his following cast lingering glances upon
+the cloths which were drying in camp.
+
+During the day the Wangwana received several days’ back rations, towards
+repairing the havoc which the jungle of Uveriveri and famine-stricken
+Ugogo had effected in their frames, and our intercourse with the natives
+this day was most friendly. But before retiring for the night, Manwa
+Sera and his scouts returned with the report that “Kaif Halleck’s” dead
+body had been discovered, gashed with over thirty wounds, on the edge of
+a wood between Izanjeh and Vinyata!
+
+“We cannot help it, my friends,” I said after a little deliberation. “We
+can mourn for him, but we cannot avenge him. Go and tell the people to
+take warning from his fate not to venture too far from the camp, and
+when on the march not to lag behind the caravan; and you, who are the
+chiefs and in charge of the rear, must not again leave a sick man to
+find his way unprotected to camp.”
+
+_Jan. 22._—The next day the magic doctor appeared about 8 A.M. to
+receive another present, and as he brought with him about a quart of
+curded milk, he was not disappointed. He also received a few beads for
+his wife and for each of his children. We parted about 9.30 A.M., after
+shaking hands many times, apparently mutually pleased with each other.
+No mention was made to any native of Vinyata of the murder of Kaif
+Halleck, lest it might be suspected we charged our new friends with
+being cognisant of, or accessory to, the cruel deed, which would,
+without doubt, have caused new complications.
+
+Half an hour after the departure of the magic doctor, while many of the
+Wangwana were absent purchasing grain, and others were in the forest
+collecting faggots, we heard war-cries. Imagining that they were the
+muster-call to resist their neighbours of Izanjeh, or of some tribe to
+the east, we did not pay much attention to them. However, as these
+peculiar war-cries, which may be phonetically rendered “Hehu-a-hehu,”
+appeared to draw nearer, we mustered a small party on the highest ground
+of the camp, in an attitude of doubt and inquiry, and presently saw a
+large body of natives armed with spears, bows and arrows, and shields,
+appear within a hundred yards on a similar high-ground outside the camp.
+The sight suggested to us that they had mustered against us, yet I could
+divine no cause of grievance or subject of complaint to call forth a
+warlike demonstration.
+
+I despatched two unarmed messengers to them to inquire what their
+intentions were, and to ascertain the object of this apparently hostile
+mob. The messengers halted midway between the camp and the crowd, and
+sitting down, invited two of the natives to advance to them for a
+“shauri.”
+
+We soon discovered upon the return of the messengers that one of the
+Wangwana had stolen some milk, and that the natives had been aroused to
+“make war”[7] upon us because of the theft. They were sent back to
+inform the natives that war was wicked and unjust for such a small
+crime, and to suggest that they should fix a price upon the milk, and
+permit us to atone for the wrong with a handsome gift. After some
+deliberation the proposition was agreed to. A liberal present of cloth
+was made, and the affair had apparently terminated.
+
+But as this mob was about to retire peacefully, another large force
+appeared from the north. A consultation ensued, at first quietly enough,
+but there were one or two prominent figures there, who raised their
+voices, the loud, sharp, and peremptory tones of which instinctively
+warned me that their owners would carry the day. There was a bellicose
+activity about their movements, an emphasis in their gestures, and a
+determined wrathful fury about the motion of head and pose of body that
+were unmistakable. They appeared to be quarrelling doggedly with those
+who had received cloth for the milk, and were evidently ready to fight
+with them if they persisted in retiring without bloodshed.
+
+In the midst of this, Soudi, a youth of Zanzibar, came hastily upon the
+scene. He had a javelin gash near the right elbow joint, and a slight
+cut as though from a flying spear was visible on his left side, while a
+ghastly wound from a whirling knobstick had laid open his temples. He
+reported his brother Suliman as lying dead near the forest, to the west
+of the camp.
+
+We decided, nevertheless, to do nothing. We were strong disciples of the
+doctrine of forbearance, for it seemed to me then as if Livingstone had
+taught it to me only the day before. “Keep silence,” I said: “even for
+this last murder I shall not fight; when they attack the camp, it will
+be time enough then.” To Frank I simply said that he might distribute
+twenty rounds of ammunition without noise to each man, and dispose our
+party on either side of the gate, ready for a charge should the natives
+determine upon attacking us.
+
+The loudly arguing mob had not yet settled conclusively what they should
+do, and possibly hostilities might have been averted, had not the
+murderers of young Suliman, advancing red-handed and triumphant,
+extorted from all the unanimous opinion that it would be better after
+all to fight “the cowardly Wangwana and the white men, who were
+evidently only women.”
+
+They quickly disposed themselves, delivered loud whoops of triumph,
+prepared their bows, and shot their first arrows. The Wangwana became
+restless, but I restrained them. Perceiving no sign of life in our camp,
+the Wanyaturu judged, doubtless, that we were half dead with fright, and
+advanced boldly to within thirty yards, when the word was given to the
+Wangwana and Wanyamwesi, who rushed outside and, by the very momentum of
+the rush, drove the savages to a distance of 200 yards. The Wangwana
+were then ordered to halt, and deployed as skirmishers.
+
+We still waited without firing. The savages, not comprehending this
+extraordinary forbearance, advanced once more. The interpreters were
+requested to warn them that we should delay no longer. They replied, “Ye
+are women, ye are women; go, ask Mirambo how he fared in Ituru,” saying
+which they twanged their bows. It was only then, perceiving that they
+were too savage to understand the principles of forbearance, that the
+final word to “fight” was given. A brisk encounter was maintained for an
+hour, and then, having driven the savages away, the Wangwana were
+recalled to camp.
+
+Meanwhile Frank was busy with sixty men armed with axes in constructing
+a strong stockade, and on the return of the Wangwana they were employed
+in building marksmen’s “nests” at each corner of the camp. We also
+cleared the ground to the space of 200 yards around the camp. By night
+our camp was secure, and perfectly defensible.
+
+_Jan. 24._—On the morning of the 24th we waited patiently in our camp.
+Why should we attack? We were wretched enough as it was without seeking
+to add to our wretchedness. We numbered only seventy effective men, for
+all the others were invalids, frightened porters, women, donkey-boys,
+and children. The sick list was alarming, but, try how we might, the
+number was not to be reduced. While we lived from hand to mouth on a few
+grains of corn a day, after a month’s experience of famine fare, our
+plight must not only remain pitiable, but become worse. We were
+therefore in a mood to pray that we might not be attacked, but permitted
+to leave the camp in safety.
+
+At 9 A.M., however, the enemy appeared, reinforced both in numbers and
+confidence, for the adjoining districts on the north and east had been
+summoned to the “war.” This word means now, as is evident, daily attacks
+upon our camp, with forces hourly increasing, until we shall have also
+perhaps strange tribes to the westward invited to the extermination of
+the strangers, and ourselves be in the meantime penned in our hold until
+hunger reduces us to surrender, to be butchered without mercy.
+
+Our position, as strangers in a hostile country, is such that we cannot
+exist as a corporate expedition, unless we resist with all our might and
+skill, in order to terminate hostilities and secure access to the
+western country. We therefore wait until they advance upon our camp, and
+drive them from its vicinity, as we did the day before. In half an hour
+our people are back, and organised into four detachments of ten men each
+under their separate chiefs, two more detachments of ten men each being
+held in reserve, and one other, of ten also, detailed for the defence of
+the camp. They are instructed to proceed in skirmishing order in
+different directions through the hostile country, and to drive the
+inhabitants out wherever they find them lodged, to a distance of five
+miles east and north, certain rocky hills, the rendezvous of the foe,
+being pointed out as the place where they must converge. Messengers are
+sent with each detachment to bring me back information.
+
+The left detachment, under chief Farjalla Christie, were soon thrown
+into disorder, and were killed to a man except the messenger who brought
+us the news, imploring for the reserve, as the enemy were now
+concentrated on the second detachment. Manwa Sera was therefore
+despatched with fifteen men, and arrived at the scene only in time to
+save eight out of the second detachment. The third plunged boldly on,
+but lost six of its number; the fourth, under chief Safeni, behaved
+prudently and well, and, as fast as each enclosed village was taken, set
+it on fire. But ten other men despatched to the scene retrieved what the
+third had lost, and strengthened Safeni.
+
+About 4 P.M. the Wangwana returned, bringing with them oxen, goats, and
+grain for food. Our losses in this day’s proceedings were twenty-one
+soldiers and one messenger killed, and three wounded.
+
+_Jan. 25._—On the morning of the 25th we waited until 9 A.M., again
+hoping that the Wanyaturu would see the impolicy of renewing the fight;
+but we were disappointed, for they appeared again, and apparently as
+numerous as ever. After some severe volleys we drove them off again on
+the third day, but upon the return of the Wangwana, instead of dividing
+them into detachments I instructed them to proceed in a compact body.
+Some of the porters volunteered to take the place of the soldiers who
+perished the previous day, and we were therefore able to show still a
+formidable front. All the villages in our neighbourhood being first
+consumed, they continued their march, and finally attacked the rocky
+hill, which the Wanyaturu had adopted as a stronghold, and drove them
+flying precipitately into the neighbouring country, where they did not
+follow them.
+
+We knew now that we should not be disturbed. Some of the guns, lost
+the day before, we recaptured. On reckoning up our loss on the evening
+of the third day, we ascertained it to be twenty-two men killed, three
+men wounded, twelve guns lost, and four cases of ammunition expended.
+Including Kaif Halleck and Suliman murdered, our losses in Ituru were
+therefore twenty-four men killed and four wounded, and as we had
+twenty-five on the sick-list, it may be imagined that to replace these
+fifty-three men great sacrifices were necessary on the part of the
+survivors, and much ingenuity had to be exercised. Twelve loads were
+accordingly placed on the asses, and ten chiefs were detailed to carry
+baggage until we should arrive at Usukuma. Much miscellaneous property
+was burned, and on the morning of the 26th, just before daybreak, we
+resumed our interrupted journey.
+
+The expedition on this day consisted of three Europeans, 206 Wangwana
+and Wanyamwezi, twenty-five women, and six boys. At 9.30 A.M. we camped
+at a place which might be called a natural fortress. To our right and
+left rose two little hills 100 feet high and almost perpendicular.
+Behind us dropped a steep slope 400 feet down to the Leewumbu river, so
+that the only way of access was the narrow gap through which we had
+entered. We soon closed the gateway with a dense wall of brushwood, and
+in perfect security lay down to rest.
+
+This camp was at an altitude of 5650 feet above the ocean, and due west
+of Vinyata about ten miles. On one side of us was the deep-wooded valley
+through which the rapid Leewumbu rushes. Its banks on each side slope
+steeply upward, and at the top become detached hills clothed with
+forest; from their base wave the uplands in grand and imposing wooded
+ridges. North of the Leewumbu the hills are bolder than those to the
+south.
+
+_Jan. 27._—On the 27th, at dawn, we crossed the Leewumbu, and the whole
+of that day and the day following our route was through a forest of fine
+myombo, intersected by singular narrow plains, forming at this season of
+the year so many quagmires. Other features of this region were enormous
+bare rocks, looming like castles through the forest, and hillocks
+composed of great fragments of splintered granite and broad heaving
+humps of grey gneiss. One of these singular features of this part of
+Africa gives its name to Mgongo Tembo, “The Elephant’s Back.” Far to the
+south is a similar hill, which I passed by during the first expedition;
+and its chief, emigrating to Iramba, has bestowed upon a like feature at
+the site of his new colony the name of his former village, to remind him
+of old associations.
+
+_Jan. 29._—On the 29th we entered Mgongo Tembo, and became acquainted
+with the chief, who is also known by the fantastic name which he has
+given his new quarters, though his real name is Malewa. He is a strong
+conservative, dislikes innovations, declares young men nowadays to be
+too fond of travel, and will not allow his sons—he has sixteen—to visit
+either Unyanyembé or Zanzibar lest they should learn bad habits. He is a
+hearty, jovial soul, kindly disposed if let alone. He has lately emerged
+triumphantly out of a war with Maganga of Rubuga, an ally of the famous
+Mirambo.
+
+It had been an object with me at one time to steer clear of Mirambo, but
+as I recognised and became impressed with his ubiquitous powers, I
+failed to perceive how the system of exploration I had planned could be
+effected if I wandered great distances out of his way. On the first
+expedition some of my people perished in a conflict with him, and on
+returning with Livingstone to Unyanyembé, we heard of him dealing
+effective blows with extraordinary rapidity on his Arab and native foes.
+Since leaving Ugogo, we heard daily of him on this expedition. He was
+one day advancing upon Kirirumo, at another place he was on our flanks
+somewhere in Utaturu. He fought with Ituru, and, according to Mgongo
+Tembo’s chief, lost 1100 men two months before we entered the country.
+Mgongo Tembo, who kept a wary eye upon the formidable chief’s movements,
+informed us that Mirambo was in front of us, fighting the Wasukuma.
+Mgongo Tembo further said, in explanation of the unprovoked attacks of
+the Wanyaturu upon us, that we ought not to have bestowed the heart of
+the presented ox upon the magic doctor of Vinyata, as by the loss of
+that diffuser of blood, the Wanyaturu believed we had left our own
+bodies weakened and would be an easy prey to them. “The Wanyaturu are
+robbers, and sons of robbers,” said he fiercely, after listening to the
+recital of our experiences in Ituru.
+
+_Feb. 1._—On the 1st of February, after a very necessary halt of two
+days at Mgongo Tembo, with an addition to our force of eight pagazis and
+two guides, and encouraged by favourable reports of the country in
+front, we entered Mangura in Usukuma near a strange valley which
+contained a forest of borassus palms. In the beds of the several streams
+we crossed this day we observed granite boulders, blue shale, basalt,
+porphyry and quartz.
+
+Beyond Mangura, or about six miles west of it, was situate Igira, a
+sparse settlement overlooking the magnificent plain of Luwamberri, at an
+altitude by boiling-point of 5350 feet. A camp which we established in
+this plain, was ascertained with the same apparatus to be 4475 feet. Ten
+miles farther, near a sluggish ditch-like creek, the boiling-point
+showed 4250 feet, only 100 feet higher than Lake Victoria.
+
+As far as Igira the myombo flourished, but when we descended into the
+plain, and the elevation above the sea decreased to 4000 feet, we
+discovered that the baobab became the principal feature of the
+vegetation, giving place soon after to thorny acacias and a variety of
+scrub, succeeded in their turn by a vast expanse of tawny grass.
+
+The Luwamberri plain—with its breadth of nearly forty miles, its
+indefinite length of level reach towards the N.N.W., its low altitude
+above the Victorian Lake, the wave-worn slopes of the higher elevations
+which hem it on the east and the south—appears to me to have been in
+ancient times a long arm of the great lake which was our prospective
+goal at this period. About sixteen miles from Igira there is a small
+sluggish stream with an almost imperceptible current northward, but
+though it was insignificant at the time of our crossing, there were
+certain traces on the tall grass to show that during the middle of the
+rainy season it is nearly a mile broad, and very deep. Several nullahs
+or ravines with stagnant water, when followed up, prove to have their
+exit in the broad channel.
+
+In the centre of the level plain rises a curious elevation, like an
+island crowned with a grove, whither the game with which the plain teems
+resort during the wet season. At the period of our crossing, however,
+they roved in countless numbers over the plain—giraffe, zebra, gnu,
+buffalo, springbok, water-buck, kudu, hartebeest, wild-boar, and several
+varieties of smaller antelope; while birds abounded, ibis, field-larks,
+fish-hawks, kingfishers, spur-winged geese, ducks, vultures, flamingoes,
+spoonbills, and cranes.
+
+With such a variety before them, it may readily be conceived that the
+Wangwana and Wanyamwezi which now numbered, with the accessions to our
+strength gained at Mangura and Igira, 280 men, earnestly hoped that I
+should be successful in the sport to which I now devoted myself with the
+aid of my faithful factotum Billali. One day I shot a giraffe and a
+small antelope; on the next, in the neighbourhood of the woody elevation
+in the plain, five zebra; and the third day on the western verge, I shot
+two gnu, one buffalo, and a zebra, besides bagging two spur-winged
+geese, four guinea-fowl, and five ducks. Meat was now a drug in our
+camp. It was cooked in various styles, either stewed, roasted, fried, or
+pounded for cakes. Some of the Wanyamwezi carried, besides their cloth
+bale of 60 lbs. weight, nearly 35 lbs. of dried meat.
+
+_Feb. 2._—On the western verge of the grassy plain we crossed the Itawa
+river, a broad but sluggish stream choked with grass, and camped in a
+locality which seemed to be favourable only to the production of baobab
+and mimosa. After a few hours’ travel west of the Itawa, we crossed the
+Gogo river with a course N.N.E. towards the Luwamberri plain. Here we
+arrived at the easternmost of a chain of low hills with truncated tops.
+These hills, pleasant to the eye, and covered with waving grass and a
+sprinkling of thin dwarf bush, consisted of silicious feldspathic rock,
+the stratification of which was vertical, in other parts diagonal, with
+a dip to the north-west. The slopes of the hills were thickly covered
+with detached pieces of this rock, and at the base with shingle. The
+plain beneath, close to the vicinity of the hills, had extensive beds of
+the same rock, which, in places, rose above it, exposed in great sheets.
+
+_Feb. 9._—On the 9th of February we crossed the Nanga ravine, and the
+next day, by a gradual ascent, arrived at the Seligwa, flowing to the
+Leewumbu, and, after following it for four miles, reached the hospitable
+village of Mombiti. We had fairly entered the rich country of Usukuma,
+where the traveller, if he has resources at his disposal, need never
+fear starvation.
+
+The products of the rich upland were here laid at our feet, and it must
+be conceded that the plenteous stores of grain, beans, potatoes,
+vetches, sesamum, millet, vegetables, such as melons and various garden
+herbs, honey, and tobacco, which we were enabled to purchase at Mombiti,
+were merited by the members of the long-enduring expedition. The number
+of chickens and goats that were slaughtered by the people was enormous.
+Long arrears of rewards were due to them for the many signal examples of
+worth they had shown; and here I earned anew the flattering appellation
+bestowed upon me three years previously in Africa—“The white man with
+the open hand”—“Huyu Msungu n’u fungua mikono.”
+
+With the rewards they received, the Wangwana and Wanyamwezi, men, women,
+and children, revelled in the delights of repleted stomachs, and the
+voice of the gaunt monster, Hunger, was finally hushed. In festive
+rejoicings and inordinate fulness we spent three days at Mombiti.
+
+A fresh troop of porters was here engaged to relieve the long-suffering
+people, and with renewed spirits and rekindled vigour, and with reserve
+stores of luxuries on our shoulders, we plunged into the jungle in
+the direction of the Monangah valley and Usiha, in preference to the
+ever-troubled route by Usanda, Nguru, and Masari. Mirambo, it was
+reported, was also in the neighbourhood of Masari, and hovering about
+our path like a phantom.
+
+_Feb. 14._—During the second day’s march from Mombiti, Gardner, one of
+the faithful followers of Livingstone during his last journey, succumbed
+to a severe attack of typhoid fever. We conveyed the body to camp, and
+having buried him, raised a cairn of stones over his grave at the
+junction of two roads, one leading to Usiha, the other to Iramba. His
+last words were, “I know I am dying. Let my money (370 dollars), which
+is in charge of Tarya Topan of Zanzibar, be divided. Let a half be given
+to my friend Chumah, and a half be given to these my friends—pointing to
+the Wangwana—that they may make the mourning-feast.” In honour of this
+faithful, the camp is called after his name—“Camp Gardner.”
+
+A gradual descent from the ridges and wavy upland brought us to the
+broad, brown valley of the Leewumbu, or the Monangah river, as the
+Wasukuma now called the river. At the ford in this season the Monangah
+was 30 yards wide and 3 feet deep, with a current of about a mile an
+hour, but discoloured marks high above its present level denote a
+considerable rise during the rainy season. A few hills on the south bank
+showed the same features of the silicified feldspathic rock visible near
+the Gogo stream. Giraffe were numerous, feeding on the dwarf acacia, but
+the country was too open to permit my approaching them. However, I
+succeeded in dropping a stray springbok in a hunting excursion which I
+made in the evening.
+
+On leaving the Monangah, we struck northerly across a pathless country
+seamed with elephant tracks, rhinoceros wallows, and gullies which
+contained pools of grey muddy water. Four miles from the river, Kirira
+Peak bore W.N.W., Usanda west by north, Wanhinni N.N.W., and Samui west
+by south. A chain of hill-cones ran from Samui to Wanhinni.
+
+_Feb. 17._—Surmounting a ridge which bounded the valley of the Monangah
+on the north, and following its crest westerly, we arrived on the
+morning of the 17th of February at Eastern Usiha. When in sight of their
+conical cotes, we despatched one of our native guides ahead, to warn the
+natives that a caravan of Wangwana was approaching, and to bear messages
+of peace and goodwill. But in his absence, one of the Kinyamwezi asses
+set up a terrific braying, which nearly created serious trouble. It
+appears that on one of his former raids the terrible Mirambo possessed a
+Kinyamwezi ass which also brayed, and, like the geese of the Roman
+Capitol, betrayed the foe. Hence the natives insisted, despite the
+energetic denial of our guide, that this ass must also belong to
+Mirambo, and for a short period he was in a perilous state. They seized
+and bound him, and would probably have despatched him had not the
+village scouts returned laughing heartily at the fright the vicious ass
+had caused.
+
+Usiha is the commencement of a most beautiful pastoral country, which
+terminates only in the Victoria Nyanza. From the summit of one of the
+weird grey rock piles which characterise it, one may enjoy that
+unspeakable fascination of an apparently boundless horizon. On all sides
+there stretches toward it the face of a vast circle replete with
+peculiar features, of detached hills, great crag-masses of riven and
+sharply angled rock, and outcropping mounds, between which heaves and
+rolls in low, broad waves a green grassy plain whereon feed thousands of
+cattle scattered about in small herds.
+
+As fondly as the Wangwana with their suffering vitals lingered over
+their meals in the days of plenty at Mombiti, so fondly did I gloat over
+this expanding extent, rich in contrasts and pleasing surprises. Fresh
+from the tawny plains of Monangah, with its thirsty and sere aspect, I
+was as gratified as though I possessed the wand of an enchanter, and had
+raised around me the verdant downs of Sussex. I seated myself apart, on
+the topmost grey rock. Only my gunbearer was near me, and he always
+seemed intuitively to know my moods. I revelled therefore undisturbed in
+the bland and gracious prospect. The voices of the Wangwana came to me
+now and again faint by distance, and but for this I might, as I sat
+there, have lost myself in the delusion that all the hideous past and
+beautiful present was a dream.
+
+After the traveller has performed his six hundred miles from the ocean
+to Usiha, however phlegmatic he may be, he will surely glow with
+pleasure when he views this fair scene of promise. The delicious smell
+of cattle and young grass comes up from the plain quick, and reminds
+one of home-farm memories, of milk and cheese, and secret dippings
+into cream-pots, and from the staked bomas and the hedge-encircled
+villages there rise to my hearing the bleating of young calves, and the
+lowing of the cows as they looked interested towards the village, and I
+could see flocks of kids and goats, and sheep with jealously watchful
+shepherd-boys close by—the whole prospect so peaceful and idyllic that
+it made a strangely affecting impression on me.
+
+_Feb. 19._—Daybreak of the 19th of February saw the refreshed Expedition
+winding up and down the rolling pasture-land, escorted by hundreds of
+amiable natives who exchanged pleasant jests with our people, and
+laughed recklessly and boisterously to show us that they were glad we
+had visited their country. “Come yet again,” said they, as they turned
+to go back after escorting us three miles on our way. “Come always, and
+you will be welcome.”
+
+We thoroughly enjoyed marching with such a broad prospect on either
+hand. We felt free, and for the first time enjoyed something of the
+lordly feeling to which it is said man is born, but to which we had
+certainly been strangers between the ocean and the grassy plains of
+Usukuma. One half the distance, it appears to me, we had ploughed our
+way through the lower regions of vegetation—the dense intermeshed tangle
+of a full-grown jungle—or we had crawled about like an army of ants,
+with the ordinary grasses of the maritime lands, the Luwamberri and the
+Monangah plains, towering like a forest of cane above our heads. The
+myombo forests of Uveriveri, and wood-clad ridges—drained by the
+crystal-clear streams and rivulets which supply the furthest waters to
+Egypt’s sacred river—though tolerably open, did not inspire us with such
+a large, indescribable sense of freedom as the open short-grass lands in
+which we now found ourselves.
+
+A fair idea of the rugged rock-heaps which relieved a landscape that
+might otherwise have been monotonous may be obtained from the photograph
+of Wezi’s rocks. They are extremely picturesque from their massiveness
+and eccentricity, which distance increases and charms into ruined
+castles or antique human dwellings.
+
+Villages were numerous between Usiha and Wandui. Sweet springs bubbled
+from all sides, especially from the opposing bases of the granite ridges
+which, like walls, flank the broad natural avenue, at the upper end of
+which stands the capital of the king of Usiha, shaded by glorious baobab
+and bowery masses of milk-weed.
+
+_Feb. 20._—As we were marching from Wandui to Mondo, on the 20th of
+February, we were once again mistaken by the warlike natives for
+Mirambo, but the mistake went no further than war-cries, long, loud, and
+melodious, caught up by hundreds of clear voices, and a demonstrative
+exhibition of how they would have exterminated us had we been really and
+truly Mirambo. In proportion as Mirambo haunts their vicinity, so do the
+natives appear to be possessed and disturbed. Wandui and Usiha become
+suddenly exercised at seeing their cattle run frightened from some
+prowling beast, and immediately the cry of “Mirambo, Mirambo!” is
+raised, and from every height the alarming cry is echoed, until from
+Usiha to Usanda, and from Masari north to Usmau, the dread name is
+repeated. Then two neighbours, finding it was a mistake, quarrel with
+each other, and begin fighting, and in the midst of their local war
+Mirambo veritably appears, as though from the ground, and attacks both.
+
+North of Mondo, as far as Abaddi, or Baddi—sometimes Abatti—the country
+rolled, clear and open, like a treeless park, with scarcely a single
+shrub or tree. The grass was only an inch high. The rock-crowned hills
+were, however, still frequent features. All the male adults of Abaddi
+stalked about stark naked, but their women were clad with stiff skins
+and half tanned cowhides. The herds of cattle and flocks of goats and
+sheep absolutely whitened the glorious park country.
+
+The following brief list of prices will serve to illustrate this
+extraordinary land of plenty:—
+
+ _Prices at Abaddi._
+
+ 1 ox 6 yards of sheeting.
+
+ 1 goat 2 ” ”
+
+ 1 sheep 2 ” ”
+
+ 1 chicken 1 necklace.
+
+ 6 chickens 2 yards of sheeting.
+
+ 40 kubaba of Mtama 4 ” ”
+
+
+ _Prices in Ugogo._
+
+ 1 ox 48 yards of sheeting.
+
+ 1 goat 12 ” ”
+
+ 1 sheep 10 ” ”
+
+ 1 chicken From 5 to 10
+ necklaces.
+
+ 6 chickens 12 yards of sheeting.
+
+ 40 kubaba of Mtama 16 ” ”
+
+The villages of this part of Usukuma are surrounded by hedges of
+euphorbias, milk-weed, the juice of which is most acrid, and when a drop
+is spattered over such a tender organ as the eye, the pain is almost
+intolerable. My poor bull-terrier “Jack,” while chasing a mongoose into
+one of these hedges, quite lost the use of one eye.
+
+_Feb. 22._—Our next camp was Marya, fifteen miles north by east Mag.
+from Mondo, and 4800 feet above the sea. We were still in view of the
+beautiful rolling plain, with its rock-crested hills, and herds of
+cattle, and snug villages, but the people, though Wasukuma, were the
+noisiest and most impudent of any we had yet met. One of the chiefs
+insisted on opening the door of the tent while I was resting after the
+long march. I heard the tent-boys remonstrate with him, but did not
+interfere until the chief forcibly opened the door, when the bull-dogs
+“Bull” and “Jack,” who were also enjoying a well-earned repose, sprang
+at him suddenly and pinned his hands. The terror of the chief was
+indescribable, as he appeared to believe that the white man in the tent
+had been transformed into two ferocious dogs, so little was he prepared
+for such a reception. I quickly released him from his position, and won
+his gratitude and aid in restoring the mob of natives to a more moderate
+temper.
+
+_Feb. 24._—A march of seventeen miles north by west across a waterless
+jungle brought us on the 24th to South Usmau. Native travellers in this
+country possess native bells of globular form with which, when setting
+out on a journey, they ring most alarming though not inharmonious
+sounds, to waken the women to their daily duties.
+
+The journey to Hulwa in North Usmau was begun by plunging through a
+small forest at the base of some rocky hills which had been distinctly
+visible from Marya, thirty-one miles south. A number of monkeys lined
+their summits, gazing contemptuously at the long string of bipeds
+condemned to bear loads. We then descended into a broad and populous
+basin, wherein villages with their milk-weed hedges appeared to be only
+so many verdant circlets. Great fragments and heaps of riven granite,
+gneiss, and trap rock, were still seen cresting the hills in irregular
+forms.
+
+Through a similar scene we travelled to Gambachika in North Usmau, which
+is at an altitude of 4600 feet above the sea, and fourteen miles from
+Hulwa. As we approached the settlement, we caught a glimpse to the far
+north of the mountains of Urirwi, and to the north-east of the Manassa
+heights which, we were informed by the natives, formed the shores of the
+Great Lake.
+
+_Feb. 27._—On the morning of the 27th of February we rose up early, and
+braced ourselves for the long march of nineteen miles, which terminated
+at 4 P.M. at the village of Kagehyi.
+
+The people were as keenly alive to the importance of this day’s march,
+and as fully sensitive to what this final journey to Kagehyi promised
+their wearied frames, as we Europeans. They, as well as ourselves,
+looked forward to many weeks of rest from our labours and to an
+abundance of good food.
+
+When the bugle sounded the signal to “Take the road,” the Wanyamwezi and
+Wangwana responded to it with cheers, and loud cries of “Ay, indeed, ay,
+indeed, please God;” and their goodwill was contagious. The natives, who
+had mustered strongly to witness our departure, were affected by it, and
+stimulated our people by declaring that the lake was not very far off—
+“but two or three hours’ walk.”
+
+[Illustration: MNYAMWEZI PAGAZI.]
+
+We dipped into the basins and troughs of the land, surmounted ridge
+after ridge, crossed watercourses and ravines, passed by cultivated
+fields, and through villages smelling strongly of cattle, by
+good-natured groups of natives, until, ascending a long gradual slope,
+we heard, on a sudden, hurrahing in front, and then we too, with the
+lagging rear, knew that those in the van were in view of the Great Lake!
+
+Frank Pocock impetuously strode forward until he gained the brow of the
+hill. He took a long sweeping look at something, waved his hat, and came
+down towards us, his face beaming with joy, as he shouted out
+enthusiastically with the fervour of youth and high spirits, “I have
+seen the Lake, Sir, and it is grand!” Frederick Barker, riding painfully
+on an ass, and sighing wearily from illness and the length of the
+journey, lifted his head to smile his thanks to his comrade.
+
+Presently we also reached the brow of the hill, where we found the
+expedition halted, and the first quick view revealed to us a long broad
+arm of water, which a dazzling sun transformed into silver, some 600
+feet below us, at the distance of three miles.
+
+A more careful and detailed view of the scene showed us that the hill on
+which we stood sloped gradually to the broad bay or gulf edged by a line
+of green wavy reeds and thin groves of umbrageous trees scattered along
+the shore, on which stood several small villages of conical huts. Beyond
+these, the lake stretched like a silvery plain far to the eastward, and
+away across to a boundary of dark blue hills and mountains, while
+several grey rocky islets mocked us at first with an illusion of Arab
+dhows with white sails. The Wanyamwezi struck up the song of triumph:—
+
+ Sing, O friends, sing; the journey is ended:
+ Sing aloud, O friends; sing to the great Nyanza.
+ Sing all, sing loud, O friends, sing to the great sea;
+ Give your last look to the lands behind and then turn to the sea.
+
+ Long time ago you left your lands,
+ Your wives and children, your brothers and your friends;
+ Tell me, have you seen a sea like this
+ Since you left the great salt sea?
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+ Then sing, O friends, sing; the journey is ended:
+ Sing aloud, O friends; sing to this great sea.
+
+ This sea is fresh, is good, and sweet;
+ Your sea is salt, and bad, unfit to drink.
+ This sea is like wine to drink for thirsty men,
+ The salt sea—bah! it makes men sick.
+
+ Lift up your heads, O men, and gaze around;
+ Try if you can see its end.
+ See, it stretches moons away,
+ This great, sweet, fresh-water sea.
+
+ We come from Usukuma land,
+ The land of pastures, cattle, sheep and goats,
+ The land of braves, warriors, and strong men,
+ And lo! this is the far-known Usukuma sea.
+
+ Ye friends, ye scorned at us in other days.
+ Ah, ha! Wangwana. What say ye now?
+ Ye have seen the land, its pastures and its herds,
+ Ye now see the far-known Usukuma sea.
+
+ Kaduma’s land is just below;
+ He is rich in cattle, sheep, and goats.
+ The Msungu is rich in cloth and beads;
+ His hand is open, and his heart is free.
+ To-morrow the Msungu must make us strong
+ With meat and beer, wine and grain.
+ We shall dance and play the livelong day,
+ And eat and drink, and sing and play.
+
+I have in the above (as literal a translation as I can render it) made
+no attempt at rhyme—nor, indeed, did the young, handsome, and stalwart
+Corypheus who delivered the harmonious strains with such startling
+effect. The song, though extemporised, was eminently dramatic, and when
+the chorus joined in, it made the hills ring with a wild and strange
+harmony. Reanimated by the cheerful music, we flung the flags to the
+breeze, and filed slowly down the slopes towards the fields of Kagehyi.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ VIEW OF KAGEHYI FROM THE EDGE OF THE LAKE.
+ (_From a photograph._)
+]
+
+About half a mile from the villages we were surprised by seeing hundreds
+of warriors decked with feathered head-dresses and armed to the teeth,
+advancing on the run towards us, and exhibiting, as they came, their
+dexterity with bows and arrows and spears. They had at first been
+alarmed at the long procession filing down the hill, imagining that we
+were the ubiquitous Mirambo and his force, but, though discovering their
+error, they still thought it too good an opportunity to be lost for
+showing their bravery, and therefore amused us with this byplay. Sungoro
+Tarib, an Arab resident at Kagehyi, also despatched a messenger with
+words of welcome, and an invitation to us to make Kagehyi our camp, as
+Prince Kaduma, chief of Kagehyi, was his faithful ally.
+
+In a short time we had entered the wretched-looking village, and Kaduma
+was easily induced by Sungoro to proffer hospitalities to the strangers.
+A small conical hut about 20 feet in diameter, badly lighted, and with a
+strong smell of animal matter—its roof swarmed with bold rats, which,
+with a malicious persistence, kept popping in and out of their nests in
+the straw roof and rushing over the walls—was placed at my disposal as a
+store-room. Another small hut was presented to Frank Pocock and Fred
+Barker as their quarters.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ FRANK POCOCK.
+ (_From a photograph by the Author at Kagehyi._)
+]
+
+In summing up, during the evening of our arrival at this rude village on
+the Nyanza, the number of statute miles travelled by us, as measured by
+two rated pedometers and pocket watch, I ascertained it to be 720. The
+time occupied—from November 17, 1874, to February 27, 1875, inclusive—
+was 103 days, divided into 70 marching and 33 halting days, by which it
+will be perceived that our marches averaged a little over 10 miles per
+day. But as halts are imperative, the more correct method of
+ascertaining the rate of travel would be to include the time occupied by
+halts and marches, and divide the total distance by the number of days
+occupied. This reduces the rate to 7 miles per diem.
+
+-----
+
+# 7:
+
+ “Make war” is the literal translation of _fanya vita_.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+A burzah held—Paying off recruits—Kagehyi becomes a great trading
+ centre—A Central African “toper”—Prince Kaduma—Hopes of assistance
+ from him relinquished—The boat ready for sea—No volunteers—Selecting
+ my crew—The start for the circumnavigation of Lake Victoria.
+
+
+_Feb. 28._—We all woke up on the morning of the 28th of February with a
+feeling of intense relief. There were no more marches, no more bugle
+summons to rouse us up for another fatiguing day, no more fear of
+hunger—at least for a season.
+
+We Europeans did not rise from bed until 8 A.M., and we then found the
+Wangwana and Wanyamwezi still extended at their full lengths on their
+mats and goat-skins, and peacefully reposing after their fatigues; and
+had I not finally sallied out into the open air at this hour, I believe
+that Sungoro and Kaduma, who, by the bye, were inseparable friends,
+would, from motives of delicacy, have refrained from paying a morning
+call, supposing that I should need many hours of rest.
+
+At 9 A.M. a _burzah_, or levee, was held. First came Frank and Fred—now
+quite recovered from fever—to bid me good morning, and to congratulate
+themselves and me upon the prospective rest before us. Next came the
+Wangwana and Wanyamwezi chiefs, to express a hope that I had slept
+well, and after them the bold youths of the Expedition; then came
+Prince Kaduma and Sungoro, to whom we were bound this day to render an
+account of the journey and to give the latest news from Zanzibar; and,
+lastly, the princess and her principal friends—for introductions have
+to be undergone in this land as in others. The burzah lasted two hours,
+after which my visitors retired to pursue their respective avocations,
+which I discovered to be principally confined, on the part of the
+natives, to gossiping, making or repairing fishing-nets, hatchets,
+canoes, food-troughs, village fences, and huts; and on the part of our
+people to arranging plans for building their own grass-huts, being
+perfectly content to endure a long stay at Kagehyi.
+
+Though the people had only their own small domestic affairs to engage
+their attentions, and Frank and Fred were for this day relieved from
+duty, I had much to do—observations to take to ascertain the position of
+Kagehyi, and its altitude above the sea; to prepare paper, pens, and ink
+for the morrow’s report to the journals which had despatched me to this
+remote and secluded part of the globe; to make calculations of the time
+likely to be occupied in a halt at Kagehyi, in preparing and equipping
+the _Lady Alice_ for sea, and in circumnavigating the great “Nianja,” as
+the Wasukuma call the lake. It was also incumbent upon me to ascertain
+the political condition of the country before leaving the port and the
+camp, that my mind might be at rest about its safety during my
+contemplated absence. Estimates were also to be entered upon as to the
+quantity of cloth and beads likely to be required for the provisioning
+of the expeditionary force during my absence, and as to the amount of
+tribute and presents to be bestowed upon the King of Uchambi—of which
+Kagehyi was only a small district, and to whom Prince Kaduma was only a
+subordinate and tributary. In brief, my own personal work was not begun,
+and pages would not suffice to describe in detail the full extent of the
+new duties now devolving upon me.
+
+During the afternoon the Wasukuma recruits were summoned to receive
+farewell gifts, and nearly all were discharged. Then 13 doti of cloth
+were measured for the King of Uchambi, and 10 doti for Prince Kaduma;
+and beads were also given in proportion—the expectations of these two
+magnates and their favourite wives being thus satisfactorily realised.
+These grave affairs were not to be disposed of as mere trivialities, and
+occupied me many hours of our second day’s life at Kagehyi. Meanwhile
+the Wangwana and Wanyamwezi required me to show my appreciation of their
+fidelity to me during the march, and chiefs and men received accordingly
+substantial tokens thereof. Besides new cloths to wear, and beads to
+purchase luxuries, I was expected to furnish them with meat for a
+banquet; and in accordance with their just wishes, six bullocks were
+purchased and slaughtered for their benefit. In addition to which, as a
+banquet would be rather tame without wine for cheer, twenty gallons of
+_pombé_—beer in a state of natural fermentation—were distributed. To
+satisfy all which demands and expectations, three full bales of cloth
+and 120 lbs. of beads were disbursed.
+
+_March 1-8._—On the evening of the second day, I was rewarded for my
+liberality when I saw the general contentment, and heard on all sides
+expressions of esteem and renewed loyalty.
+
+Nor were Frank and Fred forgotten, for I gave permission for them to
+issue for themselves, each day while in camp, four yards of cloth, or
+two fundo of beads, to be expended as they thought fit, over and above
+ration money. Small as this may seem, it was really equal to a gift of
+4_s._ per day pocket-money. Though they lived on similar food to that
+cooked for myself, I observed that they chose to indulge in many things
+which I could not digest, or for which I had no appetite, such as
+ground-nuts, ripe bananas, plaintains, and parched green corn. Fred
+Barker was remarkably partial to these things. This extra pocket-money
+also served to purchase a larger quantity of milk, eggs, chickens, and
+rice from the Wasukuma and Sungoro. My daily fare at this time consisted
+principally of chickens, sweet-potatoes, milk, tea and coffee. Pocock
+and Barker varied this diet with rice, with which Sungoro furnished
+them, and bread made of Indian corn and millet.
+
+The village of Kagehyi, in the Uchambi district and country of Usukuma,
+became after our arrival a place of great local importance. It attracted
+an unusual number of native traders from all sides within a radius of
+twenty or thirty miles. Fishermen from Ukerewé, whose purple hills we
+saw across the arm of the lake, came in their canoes, with stores of
+dried fish; those of Igusa, Sima, and Magu, east of us in Usukuma,
+brought their cassava, or manioc, and ripe bananas; the herdsmen of
+Usmau, thirty miles south of Kagehyi, sent their oxen; and the tribes of
+Muanza—famous historically as being the point whence Speke first saw
+this broad gulf of Lake Victoria—brought their hoes, iron wire, and
+salt, besides great plenty of sweet-potatoes and yams.
+
+Reports of us were carried far along the paths of trade to the countries
+contiguous to the highways of traffic, because we were in a land which
+had been, from time immemorial, a land of gossip and primitive commerce;
+and a small band of peaceful natives, accustomed to travel, might
+explore hundreds of square miles in Usukuma without molestation. But
+though Unyanyembé, and through it Zanzibar, might receive within a few
+months reliable information about our movements, there were countries in
+the immediate neighbourhood of Kagehyi whither traders never venture,
+which were for ever cut off from the interesting intelligence that there
+were three _white_ men on the shores of the lake, who were said to be
+most amiable and sociable. Ujiji, far away on Lake Tanganika, might be
+set to wondering whether they had come from Masr (Cairo) or from
+Zanzibar, but Wirigedi, close at hand here, on Speke Gulf, might still
+be in profound ignorance of the arrival. Mtesa of Uganda might prick up
+his ears at the gratifying intelligence, and hope they would soon visit
+him, while Ukara, though only about twenty-five geographical miles from
+Kagehyi, might be excluded for ever from discussing the strange topic.
+The natives of Karagwé and their gentle king might be greatly exercised
+in their minds with the agreeable news, and wonder whether they, in
+their turn, should ever see the white men, and yet Komeh, 300 miles
+nearer to us, might only hear of the wonderful event years after our
+departure! Thus it is that information is only conveyed along the lines
+of traffic, and does not filter into those countries which are
+ostracised from common interests and events by the reputed ferocity of
+their inhabitants and their jealous hostility to strangers, even though
+they may actually border upon the localities where those interests and
+events are freely discussed.
+
+Prince Kaduma, truth compels me to state, is a true Central African
+“toper”—a naturally amiable man, whose natural amiability might be
+increased to enormous proportions, provided that it was stimulated by
+endless supplies of pombé. From perpetual indulgence in his favourite
+vice, he has already attained to that blear-eyed, thick-tongued,
+husky-voiced state from which only months of total abstinence can
+redeem a man. In his sober moments—I cannot say hours—which were soon
+after he rose in the morning, he pretended to manifest an interest in
+his cattle-yard, and to be deeply alive to the importance of doing
+something in the way of business whenever opportunities offered. In
+fact, he would sometimes go so far as to say to his half-dozen elders
+that he had something in view even then—“but we must have a shauri
+first.” Becoming exceedingly interested, the elders would invite him
+to speak, and instantly assume that wise, thoughtful, grave respect
+which you sometimes see in members of Parliament, Congress, Reichstag,
+&c. “Ah, but,” Kaduma would say, “does a man work when he is hungry?
+Can he talk when he is thirsty?” The elders slily exchange winks and
+nods of approval, at which Kaduma bursts into a hoarse chuckle—never a
+laugh—for Kaduma is remarkable for possessing the conceit of humour.
+Others may laugh at his dry sayings, but he himself never laughs: he
+chuckles.
+
+The great jar of froth-topped pombé[8] is then brought up by a naked
+youth of fourteen or fifteen years, who is exceedingly careful to plant
+the egg-bottomed jar firmly on the ground lest it should topple over.
+Beside it is conveniently placed Kaduma’s favourite drinking cup, as
+large as a quart measure, and cut out of a symmetrically shaped gourd.
+Kaduma is now seated on a favourite low stool, and folds his greasy
+Sohari cloth about him, while the elders are seated on either side of
+him on wood chips, or axe handles, or rocks. The foaming jar is ready,
+and the dusky Ganymede attentive. Kaduma stretches out his hand
+languidly—it is all affectation, for Kaduma is really thirsty—and
+Ganymede, with both hands, presents the cup kneeling. The pombé being
+broached, the valves of the “shauri” are opened. During the hour devoted
+to the consumption of the pombé, Kaduma may be said to be rational, and
+even interested in business. Withal he is gay, light-hearted, and
+pleasant in conversation; grand projects are hinted at; trading
+expeditions even as far as Ujiji suggested; a trip to Unyanyembé and
+Zanzibar appears to be in serious contemplation with him. But, alas! the
+pombé is ended. Kaduma goes to sleep. At three o’clock he expands again
+into a creature of intelligence. Two or three pots are exhausted between
+3 and 6 P.M., and finally Kaduma reels to his cot like the inebriated
+sot he really is. Alas! for the virtues of a naturally intelligent
+nature drowned by such intemperance! Alas! for the fine attributes of
+manhood conquered by vile indulgences! Alas! for the brains muddled by
+such impurities!
+
+It will be apparent, then, that, though the Prince of Kagehyi is a
+well-meaning and well-disposed creature, he possessed an infirmity
+that rendered him incapable of rendering me that service which he had
+himself suggested to me. He promised that he would accompany me in my
+exploration of Lake Victoria! It is to be doubted, after acquiring
+such a knowledge of his character, whether his intentions could be
+fulfilled. Yet he informed me that he had visited Ukerewé, Ururi, and
+Ugeyeya, and would, for a consideration, place himself at my disposal.
+The consideration was ready, but Kaduma, unfortunately for me, I
+saw, could not be ready within a decade! Hopes of his assistance and
+influence were therefore relinquished; and, since the chief was not
+available, it became evident that none of his people could be obtained
+for the service of exploration. Without this insight into Kaduma’s life
+and manners, it would have been a matter for fair speculation whether
+his weakness and intemperance, or his dread of the vast lake, were the
+real causes of his reluctance to accompany me.
+
+The prince was learned in the names of several countries or villages—but
+which they were, I was then ignorant. But if every name he repeated to
+my interested ears were the names of real countries, then, I began to
+think, it might be true, as he himself believed, that the lake was so
+large that its exploration would occupy years. Nearly all the Wangwana,
+while the _Lady Alice_ was being prepared for sea, were impressed with
+the vastness of the enterprise, as Prince Kaduma, his people, Sungoro,
+and his slaves—who had really only reached Ururi—sketched it to them
+with their superstitious and crude notions of its size. There were, they
+said, a people dwelling on its shores who were gifted with tails;
+another who trained enormous and fierce dogs for war; another a tribe of
+cannibals, who preferred human flesh to all other kinds of meat. The
+lake was so large it would take years to trace its shores, and who then
+at the end of that time would remain alive? Therefore, as I expected,
+there were no volunteers for the exploration of the Great Lake. Its
+opposite shores, from their very vagueness of outline, and its people,
+from the distorting fogs of misrepresentation through which we saw them,
+only heightened the fears of my men as to the dangers which filled the
+prospect.
+
+Within seven days the boat was ready, and strengthened for a rough sea
+life. Provisions of flour and dried fish, bales of cloth and beads of
+various kinds, odds and ends of small possible necessaries were boxed,
+and she was declared, at last, to be only waiting for her crew. “Would
+any one volunteer to accompany me?” A dead silence ensued. “Not for
+rewards and extra pay?” Another dead silence: no one would volunteer.
+
+“Yet I must,” said I, “depart. Will you let me go alone?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“What then? Show me my braves—those men who freely enlist to follow
+their master round the sea.”
+
+All were again dumb. Appealed to individually, each said he knew nothing
+of sea life; each man frankly declared himself a terrible coward on
+water.
+
+“Then, what am I to do?”
+
+Manwa Sera said:—
+
+“Master, have done with these questions. Command your party. All your
+people are your children, and they will not disobey you. While you ask
+them as a friend, no one will offer his services. Command them, and they
+will all go.”
+
+So I selected a chief, Wadi Safeni—the son of Safeni—and told him to
+pick out the elect of the young men. Wadi Safeni chose men who knew
+nothing of boat life. Then I called Kachéché, the detective, and told
+him to ascertain the names of those young men who were accustomed to sea
+life, upon which Kachéché informed me that the young guides first
+selected by me at Bagamoyo were the sailors of the Expedition. After
+reflecting upon the capacities of the younger men, as they had developed
+themselves on the road, I made a list of ten sailors and a steersman, to
+whose fidelity I was willing to entrust myself and fortunes while
+coasting round the Victorian Sea.
+
+Accordingly, after drawing up instructions for Frank Pocock and Fred
+Barker on about a score of matters concerning the wellbeing of the
+Expedition during my absence, and enlisting for them, by an adequate
+gift, the goodwill of Sungoro and Prince Kaduma, I set sail on the 8th
+of March, 1875, eastward along the shores of the broad arm of the lake
+which we first sighted, and which henceforward is known, in honour of
+its first discoverer, as “Speke Gulf.”
+
+-----
+
+# 8:
+
+ Native beer, made from fermented grain or coarse flour.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+Afloat on the lake—We catch a guide—Saramba’s terror—The Shimeeyu—
+ Pyramid Point—The island of Ukerewé—In the haunts of crocodiles—Shizu
+ Island—The hippopotami—Ururi—The headlands of Goshi—Bridge Island—
+ Volcanoes—U-go-weh—the inebriates of Ugamba—Treachery at Maheta—
+ Primitive man—The art of pleasing—A night at Uvuma—Mobbed by Wavuma—
+ Barmecide fare—Message from Mtesa—“In the Kabaka’s name”—Camp on Soweh
+ Island.
+
+
+_March 8._—Afloat on the waters of Speke Gulf! The sky is gloomy and the
+light grey water has become a dull ashen grey; the rocks are bare and
+rugged; and the land, sympathising with the gloom above, appears silent
+and lonely. The people sigh dolorously, their rowing is as that of men
+who think they are bound to certain death, and now and again wistful
+looks are thrown towards me as though they expected an order to return.
+Their hearts are full of misgivings. Slowly, however, we move through
+the dull, dead waters; slowly we pass by the dull grey rocks of Lutari
+Point, and still slower do the boatmen row when the rugged rocks shut
+off the view of Kagehyi and front them with their bare rude masses.
+
+Five miles brought us to Igusa, a settlement doubtless pleasant
+enough under a fair sky, but bearing this afternoon its share of the
+universal gloom. Without a guide or interpreter, we bore in for a
+little reed-lined creek. A fisherman, with a head of hair resembling
+a thick mop, came down to the boat. He had, it seems, visited Kagehyi
+two or three days before, and recognised us. A better acquaintance was
+soon begun, and ended in his becoming captivated with our promises of
+rewards and offering his services as guide. The boatmen were overjoyed;
+for the guide, whose name was Saramba, proved to have been one of
+Sungoro’s boatmen in some of that Arab’s trading excursions to Ururi.
+We passed a cheerless night, for the reeds turned out to be the haunt
+of a multitude of mosquitoes, and the air was cold. However, with
+Saramba as guide, we promised ourselves better quarters in future.
+
+_March 9._—At 6 A.M., after Saramba’s appearance, we resumed our voyage,
+and continued on our way eastward, clinging to the shores of Sima. At 11
+A.M. the clouds, which had long been gathering over the horizon to the
+north-west, discharged both squall and gale, and the scene soon became
+wild beyond description. We steered from the shore, and were soon
+involved in the dreadful chaos of watery madness and uproar. The wind
+swept us over the fierce waves, the _Lady Alice_ bounding forward like a
+wild courser. It lashed the waters into spray and foam, and hurled them
+over the devoted crew and boat. With a mere rag presented to the gale,
+we drove unresistingly along. Strange islets in the neighbourhood of
+Mashakka became then objects of terror to us, but we passed them in
+safety and saw the grey hills of Magu far in front of us. The boatmen
+cowered to windward: Saramba had collapsed in terror, and had resignedly
+covered his moppy head with his loin-cloth. Zaidi Mganda, the steersman,
+and myself were the only persons visible above the gunwale, and our
+united strengths were required to guide the boat over the raging sea. At
+2 P.M. we came in view of the Shimeeyu river, and, steering close to the
+little island of Natwari swept round to leeward, and through a calm
+water made our way into harbour, opposite the entrance to the river.
+
+_March 10._—The next day was beautiful. The wild waters of yesterday
+were calm as those of a pond. The bold hills of Magu, with all their
+sere and treeless outlines, stood out in fine relief. Opposite them, at
+about 1300 yards distant, were the brush-covered tops of the Mazanza
+heights; while between them lay glittering the broad and noble creek
+which receives the tribute flood of the Shimeeyu, the extreme southern
+reach of Nile waters. The total length of the course of this river, as
+laid out on the chart, is 300 miles, which gives the course of the Nile
+a length of 4200 miles: thus making it the second longest river in the
+world. The creek extends to a considerable distance, and then contracts
+to a width of about 400 yards, through which the Monangah, after uniting
+with the Luwamberri and the Duma rivers, discharges its brown waters,
+under the name of the Shimeeyu, into the lake.
+
+After an examination of these features, we continued our journey along
+the coast of Mazanza, which forms the eastern shore of the bay of
+Shimeeyu, passing by the boldly rising and wooded hills of Manassa. At 4
+P.M. we attempted to land in a small cove, but were driven away by a
+multitude of audacious hippopotami, who rushed towards us open-mouthed.
+Perceiving that they were too numerous and bold for us, we were
+compelled to drop our stone anchors in 40 feet of water, about two miles
+from shore.
+
+_March 11._—On the 11th of March, after rowing nearly the whole day
+against a head-wind, we arrived at the eastern end of Speke Gulf, which
+here narrows to about seven miles. On the southern side Manassa extends
+from Mazanza, its coast-line marked by an almost unbroken ridge about
+two miles inland, varied here and there by rounded knolls and hills,
+from whose base there is a gradual slope covered with woods down to the
+water’s edge. The eastern end of the gulf is closed by the land of the
+Wirigedi or, as Saramba called them, the Wajika. At the north-eastern
+end begins Shahshi, consisting of a group of sterile hills, which, as we
+proceed west along the north side of the gulf, sink down into a naked
+plain. The Ruana river empties itself into the head of the gulf by two
+narrow mouths through a low wooded shore.
+
+_March 12._—On the 12th we continued to coast along Shahshi’s low,
+bare plain, margined at the water’s edge by eschinomenæ, and a little
+farther inland lined by mimosa, thence past Iramba, a similar country
+to Shahshi, until we reached Pyramid Point, so christened from the
+shape of its hills, but on running up into the bay (which has its
+greatest width at Rugedzi Strait), we found that Pyramid Point really
+forms the south-western end of a mountain-range. One of the most
+conspicuous objects we saw, as we stood on the uplands of Usmau,
+looking towards the N.N.E., was this Pyramid Point, but at that time we
+had, of course, only a dim idea of its neighbourhood to the lake.
+
+Near the Point is a group of small islands, the principal being Kitaro,
+on which cattle and goats are found. Though the islanders obtain but a
+scanty subsistence from the soil, they find reason to congratulate
+themselves in that they are safe from the periodical raids made by the
+Wajika, or Wirigedi, a tribe unpleasantly distinguished for the length
+of their knives and the breadth and weight of their spears. On one of
+this group, which was uninhabited, we stayed to cook our midday meal. It
+appeared fair and pleasant enough from without—one mass of deepest
+verdure, with a cone rising about 100 feet above the lake. Upon
+exploring it, we found it to be a heap of gigantic rocks, between which
+the deposit of vegetable matter had given birth to a forest of young
+trees, the spreading green foliage of which was rendered still more
+impervious to sunshine by a multitude of parasitical plants and llianes,
+which had woven the whole into as thick and dense a shade as I ever
+remember to have seen. Below this mass of tangled branch and leaf the
+thermometer descends to 70° Fahr.; without, exposed to the blazing sun,
+it ascends to 115° Fahr.
+
+In the evening we camped on a small island in the middle of the bay of
+Ukerewé, east of the beautiful isle of Nifuah, which is inhabited and is
+the home of an industrious colony subject to the king of Ukerewé.
+
+From the summit of Nifuah we could distinguish the tall trees which gave
+shade to our camp and to Kaduma’s village of Kagehyi, across Speke Gulf.
+Upon coming down to the water’s edge, we saw nothing but the blue hills,
+600 feet high, situated three miles south of Kagehyi; nor, turning our
+eyes to the north, could we see anything of the low shore which the
+Rugedzi Channel cuts. Standing close to the water at Nifuah, we would
+have imagined that Ukerewé was an island separated by a strait about two
+miles broad; but turning our boat to the north, a couple of hours’
+rowing brought us so near that we could see that the opposing point of
+the mainland is joined to the island, or appears to be joined, by a very
+low bush-covered neck of land a mile in width, which thus separates the
+waters of Speke Gulf from the great body of Lake Victoria. A still
+closer examination, however, reveals the fact that this narrow neck is
+cut by a shallow channel 6 feet wide and in some places only 3 feet
+deep. The ground, though extremely low on each side, is firm and compact
+enough; but here and there it is of a boggy nature. Hence it will be
+seen that Captain Speke, who called Ukerewé an island, was literally
+correct.
+
+_March 13._—On the 13th we enjoyed a fine six-knot breeze, and were able
+to make a good day’s work, though we still clung to the shore of Ukerewé
+near enough to note clearly the features of the water-line. A glance at
+the country of Ukerewé showed it to be exceedingly populous and
+extensively cultivated. From Matembé to Yambuyah extends a bold ridge
+about 300 feet above the lake, and beyond this point is a deep
+indentation, called Ukwya, near the western horn of which we perceived a
+group of islets named Kiregi. These are the haunts of an immense number
+of crocodiles, and one nest discovered here contained fifty-eight eggs.
+At almost every step I took, when walking round one of the reed-lined
+islets, a specimen of the ugly Saurian tribe sprang with a startling
+rush into the lake. There appeared also to be as many monitors as there
+were crocodiles in this infested islet, and all round me, from the
+little creeks, and sometimes in very close proximity, lowed the
+hippopotami. I shot one of the monitors, and it measured 7 feet from the
+tip of the snout to the tip of the tail. One of the boat’s crew skinned
+it, but, not having means or time to preserve it, we were finally
+compelled to abandon our treasure. Being extremely keen-eyed and agile
+in its movements, the monitor is a valuable auxiliary to the more
+indolent crocodile, which it wakes frequently from slumber, and by its
+impetuous rush at sight of the intruder saves it from becoming a prey to
+the hunter. In return for its services the greater monster furnishes it
+with many a delicious meal on its eggs. The enormous number of smaller
+lizards, skinks, and geckos, which these islets also sustain, prove that
+the monitors have abundant means of supplies.
+
+From here we sailed round the coast of Wiru, and leaving about four
+miles on our left the Kuneneh group, we steered N.N.W. Mag. for the
+Irangara Islands, at the north-western extremity of Ukerewé, the shore
+presenting to our view throughout only a low hill range clothed with
+woods. Leaving Irangara behind us, we emerged in view of the vast
+amplitude, as though of ocean, of the Victoria Nyanza.[9]
+
+After sailing past the Kamassi and Kindevi islets, we rounded the hilly
+point of Masonga, and beheld on our right, as far as Shizu Island, a
+broad bay, bounded by a crescent-shaped ridge, springing some 300 feet
+above the lake, and extensively wooded, while on our left lay the large
+and populous island of Ukara, peopled by an intensely superstitious
+colony, who cherish the most devout faith in charms and witchcraft.
+
+_March 16._—As we rowed past Shizu Island, we beheld the table-topped
+mountain of Majita rising, massive and grand, to the eastward. On the
+16th of March we encamped on one of the bird-rocks about three miles
+from the base of Majita, which rises probably between 2000 and 3000
+feet above the lake. From the northern angle of Majita we sailed,
+on a north-east course for the district of Wye, across a deep bay
+distinguished only for the short hill range of Usambara, between which,
+on either side, extends the low and almost treeless plain of Shahshi to
+the waters of Speke Gulf.
+
+From Wye we coasted along populous Ururi. The country appears well
+cultivated, and villages are numerous. Some of the Waruri fishermen
+informed us we should be eight years circumnavigating the lake! Numerous
+rocky islands, almost all uninhabited at this period, stud the
+neighbourhood of the mainland, and the coast is so indented with deep
+bays and inlets that it requires very careful attention to survey it.
+Its features are similar to those of Usukuma, namely, swelling and
+uneven lines of hills, sometimes with slopes extending for three or four
+miles, more often, as in the case of nearly all the headlands, with
+points springing abrupt and sheer from the water’s edge. Wherever the
+ridges rise gradually and at a distance from the lake, special
+advantages for cultivation appear to obtain, for I have noted that all
+such sites were thickly populated by the tribes of Ururi, Ukerewé, Sima,
+Magu, or Uchambi. A few of the Burdett-Coutts Islands exhibited traces
+of having been the resort of fugitives, for on several of them we
+discovered bananas and other garden plants, and ruined huts. We struck
+across the bay to Ikungu, and thence across another to picturesque Dobo,
+nearly opposite Irieni.
+
+_March 17._—Having arrived at anchorage at dusk, we were led to seek
+shelter under the lee of one of the outlying rocks of Dobo. We had
+moored both by bow and stern, to prevent being swept by the restless
+surf against the rocks, but about midnight a storm arose from the
+eastward, exposing us to all its fury. We were swept with great force
+against the rocks, and should inevitably have been lost had not the
+oars, which we had lashed outside the boat as fenders, protected it.
+Through the pelting rain, and amid the thunders of the aroused waves
+which lashed the reef, we laboured strenuously to save ourselves, and
+finally succeeded in rowing to the other lee.
+
+Externally, the aspect of these islands on the coast of Ururi is very
+rugged, bare, and unpromising, but within are many acres of cultivable
+soil covered with green grass, and the hippopotami, which abound in the
+neighbourhood of these deserted, grassy islands, here find luxurious
+pasturage. Like the tribes on the mainland, these amphibiæ appear to
+possess also their respective boundaries and their separate haunts. The
+hippopotami of Lake Victoria, moreover, are an excessively belligerent
+species, and the unwary voyager, on approaching their haunts, exposes
+himself to danger. We were frequently chased by them; and as the boat
+was not adapted for a combat with such pachyderms, a collision would
+have been fatal to us. The settlements at Irieni possess large herds of
+cattle, but the soil does not seem to be highly cultivated. In this
+respect the people appear to resemble in character the Watusi in
+Unyamwezi, who live only on the milk of their cattle, and such grain as
+they are enabled to obtain by its sale.
+
+_March 18._—Suspecting, after leaving Irieni, and approaching Mori Bay,
+that a river of considerable importance emptied into it, we paid
+particular attention to every indentation on its uneven coast; but on
+arriving at a lofty though small island at the eastern extremity, and
+climbing to its summit 150 feet above the lake, we saw that the river
+was small, and that its course was from south of east. Observation
+Island was rich in plants, though only a few hundred yards in length.
+The wild pine-apple, mimosas, acacia, thorn, gum, vines, euphorbias,
+eschinomenæ, llianes, water-cane, and spear-grass flourished with a
+luxuriance quite astonishing. As we passed Utiri, we observed that the
+natives were much interested in our boat, and some fishermen whom we
+encountered fell into ecstasies of laughter when they saw the novel
+method we adopted for propelling her. They mocked us good-naturedly, and
+by their gestures seemed to express contempt for the method in question,
+as not being equal to paddling. The rudder and its uses also excited
+unusual astonishment, and when the sail was hoisted, they skurried away
+as though it were an object of terror.
+
+_March 19._—After leaving the hilly coast of Utiri, the lowlands of
+Shirati and Mohruru rose into view, and the black mountain mass of
+Ugeyeya appeared to the eastward at the distance of about twenty miles.
+To the west of it, grim and lofty, loomed the island of Ugingo. Clusters
+of grey, rocky islets stud the lake along the coast of Shirati, while
+from the water’s edge, to a distance of five or six miles, an
+uninteresting plain, unenlivened by forest or verdure, slopes slowly up
+to where the land breaks into groups and masses of irregular hills. This
+continues to the mouth of a river which the natives call Gori, and which
+terminates the country of Ururi. On the right bank of the river begins
+mountainous Ugeyeya, the south-western extremity of which runs out into
+the lake like a promontory.
+
+Gori is an important and powerful river during the rainy season. It is
+said to rise in a north-easterly direction near Kavi. Far inland on the
+east, to a distance of twenty-five days’ journey, the country is
+reported to be a continuous plain, dotted with low hills and containing
+water only in pools. About fifteen days’ journey from the lake, the
+natives also report a region wherein are “low hills which discharge
+smoke and sometimes fire from their tops.” This district is called Susa,
+and is a portion of the Masai Land. All concurred in stating that no
+stream runs north, but that all waters for at least twenty days’ journey
+enter the lake. Beyond that distance lies a small lake which discharges
+a stream eastward—supposed by me to be the Pangani.
+
+_March 21._—On the 21st of March we were passing under the lee—for the
+wind blew then from the north-east, off the land—of the dark headlands
+of Goshi, which at first rise steeply from the lake 900 feet and, later,
+receding from the lake, attain a height of from 2000 to 3000 feet. On
+our left towered the tall, tree-clad island of Ugingo, extending far to
+the north-west. Thin blue columns of smoke rising from the depths of its
+woods announced the presence of man, probably fishermen or fugitives
+from the mainland. Judging from what I observed of the slopes of this
+extremity of Ugeyeya, I should say that much of this portion is
+uninhabited. Rounding the point that confronts the island of Ugingo, we
+passed between two more uninhabited islands, and then the dome-like
+hills of Wakuneh burst upon our view. Our impression of the land on this
+side was that it was a pastoral country, and more thickly populated, for
+smoke curled more frequently from above depressions and sheltered
+positions.
+
+At evening we camped on Bridge Island, so named from a natural bridge of
+basaltic rock which forms an irregular arch of about 24 feet in length
+by about 12 feet in depth, and under which we were able to pass from one
+side of the island to the other. The island is covered with brushwood
+and tall grass, and in the interstices of the rocks, where the vegetable
+deposit was of great depth, grew several fine mangroves. The height is
+about 50 feet above the lake, and from its summit we obtained a fine
+view of Ugingo Island, brooding in its gloomy solitude, and of the steep
+and high ranges of Ugeyeya, with the level plains of Wagansu and Wigassi
+extending eastward. To the west stretched an apparently boundless sea,
+its face ruffled by a strong breeze, and farther northward still loomed
+upward unknown lands, their contour broken now by rounded domes and
+again by sharp cones.
+
+[Illustration: BRIDGE ISLAND.]
+
+_March 22._—The number of islands encountered next day proved so
+troublesome to us that we were compelled to creep cautiously along the
+shore. As we neared Nakidimo, we observed the water change from its
+usual clear grey colour to that of a rich brown, and, seeing a creek
+close by, felt fully assured that we had discovered some important
+river. As we entered, the creek widened and disclosed picturesque
+features of outlined hill and wooded slope. We pulled steadily to its
+farther extremity, but the stream which entered here was small, and
+oozed through a reedy marsh. We endeavoured for an hour to induce a
+canoe with three fishermen in it to approach, but all we could make out
+from Saramba, who, I fear, did not understand them, was that the name of
+the country was Ugoweh, which sounded so like _You go ’way_ that I
+declined accepting it, until the natives shouted out still more clearly
+and emphatically, “U-go-weh.” It was evident, however, that these
+natives spoke a language that our guide from the south did not quite
+comprehend. We continued our keen inspection of the numerous
+indentations from Ugoweh (?) to Nakidimo Creek, into which an important
+stream debouches. The hippopotami were numerous, and as bold as those of
+Speke Gulf.
+
+Emerging once more into the lake, we anchored about a mile from the
+shore in 6 fathoms, and found that there was a current of about half a
+knot setting westward. At 2 P.M. we hoisted sail, and with a fair wind
+were able to hug the mainland and make good progress, within view of a
+very populous and extensively cultivated shore. This was the land of
+Maheta, we were told, and the same which we had sighted from the summit
+of Bridge Island. We flew away with a bellying sail along the coast of
+Maheta, where we saw a denser population and more clusters of large
+villages than we had beheld elsewhere. We thought we would make one more
+effort to learn of the natives the names of some of these villages, and
+for that purpose steered for a cove on the western shore. We anchored
+within 50 yards, and so paid out our cable that only a few feet of deep
+water separated us from the beach. Some half-dozen men, wearing small
+land-shells above their elbows and a circle of them round their heads,
+came to the brink. With these we opened a friendly conversation, during
+which they disclosed the name of the country as “Mahata” or “Maheta” in
+Ugeyeya; but more they would not communicate unless we would land. We
+prepared to do so, but the numbers on the shore increased so fast that
+we were compelled to pull off again until they should moderate their
+excitement and make room. They seemed to think we were about to pull off
+altogether, for there suddenly appeared out of the bush on each side of
+the spot where we had intended to land such a host of spears that we
+hoisted sail, and left them to try their treachery on some other boat or
+canoe more imprudent than ours. The discomfited people were seen to
+consult together on a small ridge behind the bush lining the lake, and
+no doubt they thought we were about to pass close to a small point at
+the north end of the cove, for they shouted gleefully at the prospect of
+a prize; but, lowering sail, we pulled to windward, far out of the reach
+of bow or sling, and at dusk made for a small island to which we moored
+our boat, and there camped in security.
+
+_March 24._—From our little island off Maheta, we sailed at the dawn of
+day towards the low shores, and were making good progress, when we
+bumped over the spine of a rising hippopotamus, who, frightened by this
+strange and weighty object on his back, gave a furious lunge, and shook
+the boat until we all thought she would be shaken to pieces. The hippo,
+after this manifestation of disgust, rose a few feet astern, and loudly
+roared his defiance; but after experiencing his great strength, we rowed
+away hard from his neighbourhood.
+
+About 10 A.M. we found ourselves abreast of the cones of Manyara, and
+discovered the long and lofty promontory which had attracted our
+attention ever since leaving Maheta to be the island of Usuguru,
+another, though larger copy of Ugingo. Through a channel two miles broad
+we entered the bay of Manyara, bounded on the east by the picturesque
+hills of that country, on the north by the plain of Ugana, and on the
+west by Muiwanda and the long, narrow promontory of Chaga. This bay
+forms the extreme north-east corner of Lake Victoria, but strangers,
+travelling by land, would undoubtedly mistake it for a separate lake, as
+Usuguru, when looked at from this bay, seems to overlap the points of
+Chaga and Manyara.
+
+About six miles from the north-eastern extremity of the bay, we anchored
+on the afternoon of the 24th of March, about 100 yards from the village
+of Muiwanda. Here we found a people speaking the language of Usoga. A
+good deal of diplomacy was employed between the natives and ourselves
+before a friendly intercourse was established, but we were finally
+successful in inducing the natives to exchange vegetable produce and a
+sheep for some of the blue glass beads called _Mutunda_. Neither men nor
+women wore any covering for their nakedness save a kirtle of green
+banana-leaves, which appeared to me to resemble in its exceeding
+primitiveness the fig-leaf costume of Adam and Eve. The men were
+distinguished, besides, by the absence of the upper and lower front
+teeth, and by their shaven heads, on which were left only irregular
+combs or crescents of hair on the top and over the forehead. While we
+were negotiating for food, a magnificent canoe, painted a reddish brown,
+came up from the western side of the village, but, despite the loud
+invitations tendered to them, the strangers kept on their way and
+proceeded up the bay of Manyara.
+
+_March 25._—On the 25th, refreshed by the meat and vegetables we had
+purchased, we began our voyage along the northern coast of Lake
+Victoria, and, two hours later, were in conversation with the natives of
+Chaga or Shaga, who informed us that Murambo, king of Usuguru, was also
+king of Chaga. I am unable to decide whether Chaga is a promontory or an
+island, but I believe that there is a narrow channel navigable for
+canoes (of the same nature as the Rugedzi[10] Channel) separating Chaga
+from the mainland. Between its southern point and Usuguru Island, there
+is a strait about three-quarters of a mile wide, through which we passed
+to Fisherman’s Island, where we rested for our noonday meal. At 2 P.M.
+we arrived, after an hour’s rowing, near Ngevi Island, and when close to
+it, we were compelled to take shelter from a furious nor’-wester.
+
+We had been at anchor scarcely ten minutes before we saw a small canoe,
+paddled by two men, boldly approach us from the shore of Ugamba, distant
+about a mile and a half on our right or to the east of us. In our
+mildest accents we hailed them, and, after a protracted interval
+employed by them in curiously scanning us, they permitted us to hear the
+sound of their voices. But nothing would induce them to come nearer than
+about 100 yards. In the midst of these vain efforts to win their
+confidence, a canoe similar in form and colour to that which had won our
+admiration at Muiwanda advanced towards us. A false prow projected
+upward, curving in the shape of a bent elbow, from the tip of which to
+the top of the bow of the canoe was strung a taut line, and along this
+was suspended some fine grass, which waved like a mane as she charged
+up, bold and confident, propelled by forty paddlers. Half of this
+number, who were seated forward, sprang up when they came within 50
+yards, and, seizing long tufted lances and shields, began to sway them
+menacingly. As we made no demonstration of resistance, they advanced
+cautiously, and when within 20 yards, swerved aside, wheeling round us
+in a defiant style.
+
+Finally we broke silence, and demanded who they were, and why they came
+up as though they would attack us. As they did not understand either
+Kingwana, Kisukuma, or Kinyamwezi, one of my boatmen attempted Kiganda,
+a little of which they appeared to understand; and by this means we
+opened a conversation. They edged towards us a little nearer, and ended
+by ranging their long canoe alongside of our boat. Our tame, mild
+manners were in striking contrast to their bullying, overbearing, and
+insolent demeanour. The paddlers, half of whom were intoxicated, laid
+their hands with familiar freedom upon everything. We still smiled, and
+were as mild and placable as though anger and resentment could never
+enter our hearts. We were so courteous, indeed, that we permitted them
+to handle our persons with a degree of freedom which to them appeared
+unaccountable—unless we were so timid that we feared to give offence. If
+we had been so many sheep, we could not have borne a milder or a more
+innocent aspect. Our bold friends, reeling and jostling one another in
+their eagerness to offend, seized their spears and shields, and began to
+chant in bacchanalian tones a song that was tipsily discordant. Some
+seized their slings and flung stones to a great distance, which we
+applauded. Then one of them, under the influence of wine, and spirits
+elated by the chant, waxed bolder, and looked as though he would aim at
+myself, seated observant but mute in the stern of my boat. I made a
+motion with my hand as though deprecating such an action. The sooty
+villain seemed to become at once animated by an hysteric passion, and
+whirled his stone over my head, a loud drunken cheer applauding his
+boldness.
+
+Perceiving that they were becoming wanton through our apparently mild
+demeanour, I seized my revolver and fired rapidly into the water, in the
+direction the stone had been flung, and the effect was painfully
+ludicrous. The bold, insolent bacchanals at the first shot had sprung
+overboard, and were swimming for dear life to Ngevi, leaving their canoe
+in our hands. “Friends, come back, come back; why this fear?” cried out
+our interpreter; “we simply wished to show you that we had weapons as
+well as yourselves. Come, take your canoe; see, we push it away for you
+to seize it.” We eventually won them back with smiles. We spoke to them
+sweetly as before. The natives were more respectful in their demeanour.
+They laughed, cried out admiringly; imitated the pistol shots; “Boom,
+boom, boom,” they shouted. They then presented me with a bunch of
+bananas! We became enthusiastic admirers of each other.
+
+Meantime, two more large canoes came up, also bold and confident, for
+they had not yet been taught a lesson. These new-comers insisted that we
+should visit their king Kamoydah. We begged to be excused. They became
+still more urgent in their request. We said it was impossible; they were
+strangers, and not very well behaved; if they wished to barter with us,
+they could load their canoes and come to Ngevi, where we would be happy
+to exchange beads or cloth for their articles. Three other canoes were
+now seen approaching. We sat, however, extremely still, patient, and
+placable, and waited for them. The united voices of the 130 natives made
+a terrible din, but we endured it with saintly meekness and the
+fortitude of stoics—for a period. We bore the storm of entreaties mixed
+with rude menace until instinct warned me that it was becoming
+dangerous. I then delivered some instructions to the boat’s crew, and,
+nodding to the shore, affected to surrender with an indifferent grace.
+They became suddenly silent. We lifted the stone anchor, and took to our
+oars, steering to the broken water, ruffled by the nor’-wester, beyond
+the shelter of the island, convoyed by the six canoes. We accompanied
+them some hundreds of yards, and then, suddenly hoisting sail, swept by
+them like an arrow. We preferred the prospect of the lone watery expanse
+to the company of the perverse inebriates of Ugamba.
+
+We continued sailing for half an hour, and as it was then near sunset,
+dropped anchor in 75 feet of water. The wind, which had swept in strong
+gusts from the north-west, suddenly fell, for in the north-east the
+aspect of the sky had long been threatening. Clouds surged up in thick
+masses from that direction, and cast a gloom over the wood-clothed
+slopes and crests of Usuguru, which became almost as black as a velvet
+pall, while the lake grew as quiet as though vitrified into glass. Soon
+the piled up cloud-mass grew jagged, and a portentous zigzag line of
+deep sable hue ran through its centre, from which the storm seemed to
+issue. I requested the crew to come farther aft, and, fastening a double
+rope to the stone anchor, prepared every mug and baler for the rain with
+which we were threatened. The wind then fell, as though from above, upon
+our bowed heads with an overpowering force, striving against the
+resistance which it met, as if it would bear us down to the bottom of
+the lake, and then, repelled by the face of the water, it brushed it
+into millions of tiny ripples. The temperature fell to 62° Fahr., and
+with this sudden cold down dropped a severe shower of hailstones of
+great size, which pelted us with great force, and made our teeth
+chatter. After this the rain fell in sheets, while the lightning blazed,
+preceding the most dreadful thunder-claps I remember to have ever heard.
+
+The rain, indeed, fell in such quantities that it required two men for
+each section to keep the boat sufficiently buoyant to ride the crest of
+the waves. The crew cried out that the boat was sinking—that, if the
+rain continued in such volume, nothing could save us. In reply, I only
+urged them to bale her out faster.
+
+The sable mass of Usuguru—as I observed by the bars of intense light
+which the lightning flashed almost every second—was still in front, and
+I knew, therefore, that we were not being swept very fast to sea. Our
+energies were wholly devoted to keeping our poor pelted selves afloat,
+and this occupied the crew so much that they half forgot the horrors of
+the black and dismal night. For two hours this experience lasted, and
+then, unburdening our breasts with sighs of gladness not unmixed with
+gratitude, we took our anchor on board, and stole through the darkness
+to the western side of Ngevi Island, where, after kindling a fire, we
+dried our clothes and our wetted bodies, and, over a hot potful of
+Liebig, affected to laugh at our late critical position.
+
+_March 26._—In the morning the world appeared re-born, for the sky was a
+bluish crystal, the shores looked as if fresh painted in green, the lake
+shone like burnished steel, the atmosphere seemed created for health.
+Glowing with new life, we emerged out of our wild arbour of cane and
+mangrove to enjoy the glories of a gracious heaven, and the men relieved
+their grateful breasts by chanting loudly and melodiously one of their
+most animating boat-songs.
+
+As we rowed in this bright mood across the bay of Ugamba, we noticed a
+lofty mount which I should judge to be fully 3000 feet above the lake,
+towards the north-east. From the natives of Usamu Island, we obtained
+the name of Marsawa for this the most conspicuous feature of the
+neighbourhood. After obtaining a clear meridian altitude, on a small
+island between Usamu and Namungi, we steered for the latter. The art of
+pleasing was never attempted with such effect as at Namungi. Though we
+had great difficulty in even obtaining a hearing, we persisted in the
+practice of the art with all its amusing variations, until our
+perseverance was finally rewarded. A young fisherman was despatched to
+listen from the shore, but the young wretch merely stared at us. We
+tossed into his canoe a bunch of beads, and he understood their
+signification. He shouted out to his fellows on the shore, who were
+burning with curiosity to see closer the strange boat and strange crew,
+amongst whom they saw a man who was like unto no man they had ever seen
+or heard, or dreamed of.
+
+A score of canoes loaded with peaceful, harmless souls came towards
+us, all of whom begged for beads. When we saw that they could be
+inspired to talk, we suggested to them that, in return for food,
+abundance of beads might be obtained. They instantly raced for the
+banana and plantain groves in great excitement. We were so close that
+we could hear the heavy clusters falling under the native machetes,
+and within a short time so many bunches were held out to us that we
+might have sunk under the waves had we purchased all. After storing a
+sufficient quantity to provision us for three days, of bananas, fowls
+and eggs, and sweet maramba or banana wine, and eliciting the names
+of the various islands, capes, and most prominent hills, we attempted
+to resume our journey. But the people, upon whom our liberality had
+produced too strong an effect, would not permit us to do so until
+we had further celebrated our acquaintance with copious draughts of
+their delicious wine. The Wangwana would have been delighted to have
+exhausted many days in such a fascinating life, but the coast of the
+Victoria was lengthy, the winds not always favourable, and we had a
+large number of friends in Usukuma who might become restless, were we
+too long absent. We therefore set sail, convoyed a long distance by
+about thirty canoes, manned by light-hearted guileless creatures in an
+extreme state of enjoyment and redundant hilarity.
+
+This was altogether a remarkable scene; our exploring boat, with its
+lug-sail set, dragging about thirty canoes, whose crews were all
+intoxicated, and whose good-nature was so excessive as to cause them to
+supply our boat’s crew with copious quantities of their wine, until all
+were in an uncommonly joyous mood. It would be well worth describing in
+detail, but I am compelled to be brief. After sailing in company a few
+miles, we finally freed ourselves from our hospitable entertainers, and
+steering across the channel to the island opposite Neygano, coasted
+along its well-wooded shores. Perceiving a deep bay farther west, we
+entered it, and near the extreme eastern end of Uvuma anchored about 150
+yards off the village of Mombiti.
+
+Had we been better acquainted with the character of the Wavuma, we
+probably should have been less inclined to visit their shores, but,
+ignorant of their ferocity, and zealous to perform our duties, we
+persevered in attempting to open intercourse with this tribe. We were,
+however, prudent enough not to rush into danger by taking it for granted
+that most savages were a guileless, amiable set, who would never dream
+of injuring or molesting strangers—and this circumspection most likely
+saved our lives.
+
+After a few minutes’ distant conversation, the Wavuma approached us,
+and we were enabled to purchase fuel for cooking, making a liberal
+payment. We hoped they would be induced to sell us food also, not that
+we were really in need of it, but because it furnished us with another
+motive for continuing our intercourse, and enlarged our opportunities
+for studying their nature and habits, and obtaining names for the
+localities around. We had numerous visitors, who appeared to be fine,
+manly, well-made fellows, but nothing would induce them to bring the
+smallest quantity of food for sale. We therefore resignedly forbore
+from troubling them, but inspected them with as much interest as they
+inspected us. They were evidently people with abundant self-confidence,
+from the cool complacency with which they regarded us. Their canoes
+were beautiful specimens, and descriptions and pictures of them will
+be given hereafter. The shores were bold, irregular in outline, and
+clothed with a luxuriance of vegetation and many tall trees, between
+which were seen the banana groves, their pale green colour strongly
+contrasting with the darker tints of the forest foliage.
+
+The night that followed was wild. At sunset the temperature fell to 70°
+Fahr., and the wind was charged with a cold drizzle. Being in rather an
+exposed position, we moved our anchorage near the mouth of the Munulu
+river, and not a minute too soon, for the wind increased to a gale; and
+the gale, heralded by a short-lived squall, brought hailstones with it.
+Preparing to pass the night here, we covered the boat with a sail, under
+which the sailors slept, though the watch, frequently relieved, was
+obliged to maintain a strict look-out. Throughout the long hours of
+darkness, the gale maintained its force; the boat pitched and groaned,
+and the rain fell in torrents; the seas frequently tossed capfuls of
+water into us, so that, under such circumstances, we enjoyed no rest.
+
+_March 27._—By morning the gale had subsided, and the heavy, sluggish
+waves were slumbering. After waiting to cook our morning meal, and
+assisting the restoration of animal heat with draughts of Liebig’s
+extract liquefied, we resumed our journey along the southern coast of
+Uvuma about 8 A.M.
+
+Upon leaving the bay of Mombiti, we were compelled to pass by a point of
+land closely covered with tall grass, whither we saw a large force of
+natives rush to take up advantageous positions. As we slowly neared the
+point, a few of them advanced to the rocks, and beckoned us to approach
+nearer. We acceded so far as to approach within a few feet, when the
+natives called out something, and immediately attacked us with large
+rocks. We sheered off immediately, when a crowd emerged from their
+hiding-place with slings, with which they flung stones at us, striking
+the boat and wounding the steersman, who was seated next to me. To
+prevent further harm, I discharged my revolver rapidly at them, and one
+of the natives fell: whereupon the others desisted from their attack,
+and retreated into the grass, leaving us to pursue our way unmolested.
+
+Again edging close to the shore, we continued our investigations of the
+numerous indentations. The island rose with steep, grassy, treeless
+slopes to a height of about 300 feet above the lake. Herds of cattle
+were abundant, and flocks of goats grazed on the hillsides. The villages
+were many, but unenclosed, and consisted of a few dome-like huts, from
+which we inferred that the Wavuma were a people who could well defend
+themselves. At this time the lake was as still as a pond; no clouds hung
+over any part of the horizon; the sky was of a steel-blue colour, out of
+which the sun shone with true tropical fervour. But the atmosphere was
+not clear; a light vapour rose out of the lake, trembling in the heat,
+rendering islands but five miles distant dim and indistinct.
+
+Arrived in the channel between the tawny, grass-clad island of Bugeyeya
+and that of Uvuma, we steered midway, that we might take compass
+bearings. From a small cove in the Uvuma shores, abreast of us, emerged
+quite a fleet of canoes, thirteen in number. The more advanced held up a
+handful of sweet-potatoes to our view, and we ceased rowing, but left
+the sail hoisted, which, with the very slight breeze then blowing,
+drifted us westward about half a knot an hour.
+
+The Wavuma were permitted to range alongside, and we saw that they were
+fully armed with spear and shield. We offered several kinds of beads for
+the potatoes they had offered to sell, but with a gesture of contempt
+they refused everything, and from their actions and manner we became
+soon convinced that they had manned their canoes for other purposes than
+barter; besides, they possessed only about twenty potatoes, which,
+singularly enough, were all in the first canoe. Strange to say, also,
+the men of the first canoe were, though disinclined to sell, moderate in
+their behaviour; but their temper changed as soon as their comrades had
+arrived, and had taken up their positions in front of our boat, blocking
+our progress through the water. The Wavuma, now emboldened by their
+numbers, waxed noisy, then insolent, and finally aggressive. They seized
+one thing after another with a cunning dexterity, which required all our
+attention to divine their purpose; and while we were occupied with the
+truculent rabble in our front, a movement of which we were unaware was
+being made successfully at the stern; but the guide, Saramba, catching
+sight of a thief, warned me to cast my eyes behind, and I detected him
+in the act of robbery. Becoming assured by this time that the Wavuma had
+arrived in such numbers for the sole purpose of capturing what appeared
+to them an apparently easy prey, and their manœuvres were evidently
+intended to embarrass us and distract our attention, I motioned them to
+depart with my hand, giving orders at the same time to the boat’s crew
+to make ready their oars. This movement, of necessity, caused them to
+declare their purposes, and they manifested them by audaciously laying
+their hands on the oars, and arresting the attempts of the boat’s crew
+to row. Either we were free or we were not. If yet free men, with the
+power to defend our freedom, we must be permitted to continue our voyage
+on the sea without let or hindrance. If not free men, we had first to be
+disarmed. I seized my gun, and motioned them again to depart. With a
+loud, scornful cry they caught up their spears and shields, and prepared
+to launch their weapons. To be saved, we must act quickly, and I fired
+over their heads; and as they fell back from the boat, I bade my men
+pull away. Forming a line on each side of us, about 30 yards off, they
+flung their spears, which the boat’s crew avoided by dropping into the
+bottom of the boat. The canoes astern clapped their hands gleefully,
+showing me a large bunch of _Mutunda_ beads which had been
+surreptitiously abstracted from the stern of the boat. I seized my
+repeating rifle and fired in earnest, to right and left. The fellow with
+the beads was doubled up, and the boldest of those nearest to us was
+disabled. The big rifle, aimed at the waterline of two or three of the
+canoes, perforated them through and through, which compelled the crews
+to pay attention to their sinking crafts, and permitted us to continue
+our voyage into Napoleon Channel and to examine the Ripon Falls.[11] On
+an uninhabited point of Usoga, near the falls, we encamped; and on the
+29th of March crossed the channel, and coasted along Uganda between
+numerous islands, the largest of which are densely inhabited.
+
+At Kiwa Island we rested for the day, and were received with the
+greatest cordiality by the chief, who sent messengers to the island of
+Keréngé, a distance of three miles, to purchase bananas and jars of
+maramba wine, for the guest, as he said, of the _Kabaka_ Mtesa. As it
+was the first time for twenty-two days that we had lived with natives
+since leaving Kagehi we celebrated, as we were in duty bound, our
+arrival among friends.
+
+_March 30._—The next day, guided and escorted by the chief, we entered
+Ukafu, where we found a tall handsome young Mtongoleh in command of the
+district, before whom the chief of Kiwa Island made obeisance as before
+a great lord. The young Mtongoleh, though professing an ardent interest
+in us, and voluble of promises, treated us only to Barmecide fare after
+waiting twenty-four hours. Perceiving that his courtesies, though
+suavely proffered, failed to satisfy the cravings of our jaded stomachs,
+we left him still protesting enormous admiration for us, and still
+volubly assuring us that he was preparing grand hospitalities in our
+honour.
+
+I was staggered when I understood in its full extent the perfect art
+with which we had been duped. “Could this be Central Africa,” I asked
+myself, “wherein we find such perfect adepts in the art of deception?
+But two days ago the savagery of the land was intense and real, for
+every man’s hand was raised in ferocity against the stranger. In the
+land next adjoining we find a people polite, agreeable, and professing
+the warmest admiration for the stranger, but as inhospitable as any
+hotel-keeper in London or New York to a penniless guest!”
+
+At a little village in the bay of Buka we discovered we were premature
+in our judgment. The Mtongoleh at this place invited us to his village,
+spread out before us a feast of new as well as clotted milk, mellow and
+ripe bananas, a kid, sweet-potatoes, and eggs, and despatched a
+messenger instantly to the _Kabaka_ Mtesa to announce the coming of a
+stranger in the land, declaring, at the same time, his intention not to
+abandon us until he had brought us face to face with the great monarch
+of Equatorial Africa, in whom, he smilingly assured us, we should meet a
+friend, and under whose protection we might sleep secure.
+
+_April 1._—We halted one more day to enjoy the bounteous fare of the
+chief of Buka. My admiration for the land and the people steadily
+increased, for I experienced with each hour some pleasing civility.
+The land was in fit accord with the people, and few more interesting
+prospects could Africa furnish than that which lovingly embraces the
+bay of Buka. From the margin of the lake, lined by waving water-cane,
+up to the highest hill-top, all was verdure—of varying shades. The
+light green of the elegant matete contrasted with the deeper tints of
+the various species of fig; the satin-sheeny fronds of the graceful
+plantains were overlapped by clouds of the pale foliage of the
+tamarind; while between and around all, the young grass of the pastured
+hillsides spreads its emerald carpet. In free, bold, and yet graceful
+outline, the hills shut in the scene, swelling upward in full dome-like
+contour, here sweeping round to enclose within its hollow a gorgeous
+plantain-grove, there projecting boldly into abrupt, steep headlands,
+and again receding in a succession of noble terraces into regions as
+yet unexplored by the white man. One village had a low pebbly beach,
+that ran in a sinuous light-grey line between the darker grey face
+of the lake and the living perennial green of a banana plantation. I
+imagined myself fallen into an estate which I had inherited by right
+divine and human, or at least I felt something akin to that large
+feeling which heirs of unencumbered broad lands may be supposed to
+feel, and attributed such an unusual feeling to an attack of perfect
+digestion, and a free, unclogged, and undisturbed liver.
+
+_April 2._—On the 2nd of April we proceeded, in an amiable,
+light-hearted mood, the favourites both of men and nature, along the
+beautiful shore separating Buka Bay from Kadzi Bay, and halted about
+noon at the village of Kirudo, where we experienced hospitalities
+similar to those of the day previous. We purposely made our voyages
+short, in order that the _Kabaka_ might be informed in time of our
+coming.
+
+_April 3._—Just as we were about to depart next morning, we saw six
+beautiful canoes, crowded with men, coming round a point, and for a very
+short period were under the impression that they composed another
+piratical fleet on its way to intercept us, but on surveying them with
+my glass I saw that several who were seated amidships were dressed in
+white, like the Wangwana, and our Waganda guides, among whom was our
+hospitable entertainer of Buka, informed us that they were the
+_Kabaka’s_ people. As they approached us, the commander was seen
+arraying himself for the occasion. He donned a bead-worked head-dress,
+above which long white cock’s feathers waved, and a snowy white and
+long-haired goat-skin, while a crimson robe, depending from his
+shoulders, completed the full dress.
+
+In the middle of the bay of Kadzi we encountered, and a most ceremonious
+greeting took place. The commander was a fine lusty young man of twenty
+or thereabouts, and after springing into our boat he knelt down before
+me, and declared his errand to the following effect:—
+
+“The _Kabaka_ sends me with many salaams to you. He is in great hopes
+that you will visit him, and has encamped at Usavara, that he may be
+near the lake when you come. He does not know from what land you have
+come, but I have a swift messenger with a canoe who will not stop until
+he gives all the news to the _Kabaka_. His mother dreamed a dream a few
+nights ago, and in her dream she saw a white man on this lake in a boat
+coming this way, and the next morning she told the _Kabaka_, and, lo!
+you have come. Give me your answer, that I may send the messenger.
+Twiyanzi-yanzi-yanzi!” (Thanks, thanks, thanks.)
+
+Whereupon, as the young commander, whose name was Magassa, understood
+Kiswahili, I delivered the news to him and to his people freely and
+frankly; and after I had ended, Magassa translated what the information
+was into Kiganda, and immediately the messenger departed. Meanwhile
+Magassa implored me to rest for this one day, that he might show me the
+hospitality of his country, and that I might enter the _Kabaka’s_
+presence in good humour with him. Persuaded also by my boat’s crew to
+consent, we rowed to the village of Kadzi. Magassa was in his glory now.
+His voice became imperious to his escort of 182 men; even the feathers
+of his curious head-dress waved prouder, and his robe had a sweeping
+dignity worthy of a Roman emperor’s. Upon landing, Magassa’s stick was
+employed frequently. The sub-chief of Kadzi was compelled to yield
+implicit obedience to his vice-regal behests.
+
+“Bring out bullocks, sheep, and goat’s milk, and the mellowest of your
+choicest bananas, and great jars of maramba, and let the white man and
+his boatmen eat, and taste of the hospitalities of Uganda. Shall a white
+man enter the _Kabaka’s_ presence with an empty belly? See how sallow
+and pinched his cheeks are. We want to see whether we cannot show him
+kindness superior to what the pagans have shown him.”
+
+Two bullocks and four goats, a basketful of fat mellow bananas, and four
+two gallon jars of maramba, were then brought before us, to which
+extraordinary bounty the boat’s crew did ample justice. Nor were the
+escort of Magassa without supplies. The country was at their mercy. They
+killed three bullocks for themselves, cut down as many bananas as they
+wished, and made a raid on the chickens, in accordance with Magassa’s
+serene gracious permission to help themselves.
+
+“A wonderful land!” I thought, “where an entire country can be subjected
+to such an inordinate bully and vain youth as this Magassa, at the mere
+mention of the _Kabaka’s_ name, and very evidently with the _Kabaka’s_
+sanction!” Uganda was new to us then. We were not aware how supreme the
+_Kabaka’s_ authority was; but, having a painful suspicion that the vast
+country which recognised his power was greatly abused, and grieving that
+the poor people had to endure such rough treatment for my sake, I did my
+best to prevent Magassa from extorting to excess.
+
+_April 4._—The next day we sallied forth from Kadzi Bay, with Magassa’s
+escort leading the way. We crossed Bazzi Bay, from the middle of which
+we gained a view of old Sabaganzi’s Hill, a square tabular mount, from
+the summit of which Magassa said we should see the whole of Murchison
+Bay and Rubaga, one of the _Kabaka’s_ capitals. About 10 A.M. we rounded
+Muvwo Point, and entered Murchison Bay. The entrance is about four miles
+wide, and naturally guarded by Linant Island, a lofty, dome-shaped
+island, situated between the opposing points of Muvwo and Umbiru. Upon
+leaving Muvwo south of us we have a full view of this fine body of
+water, which reaches its extreme width between Soweh Island and Ukumba.
+This, the farthest reach of its waters west, is about ten miles across,
+while its extreme length, from Linant Island to the arm of Monyono Bay,
+where Mtesa keeps his favourite canoes, cannot be less than fourteen
+miles.
+
+We encamped, according to Magassa’s wish, behind Soweh Island, on the
+east side of Murchison Bay, whence, the next day, we were to start for
+Usavara, the _Kabaka’s_ hunting village.
+
+-----
+
+# 9:
+
+ Out of respect to the memory of Captain Speke, I leave the word Nyanza
+ as he spelled it, adding only the explanation that none but the Arabs
+ and Wangwana pronounce it N’yanza. All the native tribes and nations
+ round the lake pronounce it either Nee-yanja or Nee-yanza, Niyanja or
+ Niyanza.
+
+# 10:
+
+ Rugedzi is the name of the narrow channel which separates Ukerewé from
+ the mainland.
+
+# 11:
+
+ A more detailed account of this part of the lake will be given in
+ later chapters, as I paid three visits to the Ripon Falls, and during
+ the third visit photographed them.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+An extraordinary monarch—I am examined—African “chaff”—Mtesa, Emperor of
+ Uganda—Description of Mtesa—A naval review—Arrival at the imperial
+ capital—Mtesa’s palace—Fascination of the country—I meet a white man—
+ Col. Linant de Bellefonds—The process of conversion—A grand mission
+ field—A pleasant day with Col. de Bellefonds—Starting for my camp.
+
+
+_April 5._—The little insight we obtained into the manners of Uganda
+between Soweh Island, Murchison Bay, and Kiwa Island, near Ukafu Bay,
+impressed us with the consciousness that we were about to become
+acquainted with an extraordinary monarch and an extraordinary people,
+as different from the barbarous pirates of Uvuma, and the wild,
+mop-headed men of Eastern Usukuma, as the British in India are from
+their Afridi fellow-subjects, or the white Americans of Arkansas from
+the semi-civilized Choctaws. If politeness could so govern the actions
+of the men of Kiwa Island, far removed as they were from contact with
+the Uganda court, and suave duplicity could so well be practised by the
+Mtongoleh of Ukafu, and such ready, ungrudging hospitality be shown by
+the chief of Buka, and the _Kabaka’s_ orders be so promptly executed
+by Magassa, the messenger, and the chief of Kadzi, what might we not
+expect at the court, and what manner of man might not this “_Kabaka_”
+be!
+
+Such were our reflections as Magassa, in his superb canoe, led the way
+from behind Soweh Island, and his little slave drummed an accompaniment
+to the droning chant of his canoe-men.
+
+Compared with our lonely voyage from our camp at Usukuma round all the
+bays and inlets of the much-indented coasts of the Great Lake, these
+five superb canoes forming line in front of our boat, escorting us to
+the presence of the great potentate of Equatorial Africa, formed a scene
+which promised at least novelty, and a view of some extraordinary pomp
+and ceremony.
+
+When about two miles from Usavara, we saw what we estimated to be
+thousands of people arranging themselves in order on a gently rising
+ground. When about a mile from the shore, Magassa gave the order to
+signal our advance upon it with fire-arms, and was at once obeyed by his
+dozen musketeers. Half a mile off I saw that the people on the shore had
+formed themselves into two dense lines, at the ends of which stood
+several finely-dressed men, arrayed in crimson and black and snowy
+white. As we neared the beach, volleys of musketry burst out from the
+long lines. Magassa’s canoes steered outward to right and left, while
+200 or 300 heavily loaded guns announced to all around that the white
+man—whom Mtesa’s mother had dreamed about—had landed. Numerous kettle
+and bass drums sounded a noisy welcome, and flags, banners, and
+bannerets waved, and the people gave a great shout. Very much amazed at
+all this ceremonious and pompous greeting, I strode up towards the great
+standard, near which stood a short young man, dressed in a crimson robe
+which covered an immaculately white dress of bleached cotton, before
+whom Magassa, who had hurried ashore, kneeled reverently, and turning to
+me begged me to understand that this short young man was the _Katekiro_.
+Not knowing very well who the “Katekiro” was, I only bowed, which,
+strange to say, was imitated by him, only that his bow was far more
+profound and stately than mine. I was perplexed, confused, embarrassed,
+and I believe I blushed inwardly at this regal reception, though I hope
+I did not betray my embarrassment.
+
+A dozen well-dressed people now came forward, and grasping my hand
+declared in the Swahili language that I was welcome to Uganda. The
+_Katekiro_ motioned with his head, and amid a perfect concourse of
+beaten drums, which drowned all conversation, we walked side by side,
+and followed by curious thousands, to a courtyard, and a circle of
+grass-thatched huts surrounding a larger house, which I was told were my
+quarters.
+
+The _Katekiro_ and several of the chiefs accompanied me to my new hut,
+and a very sociable conversation took place. There was present a native
+of Zanzibar, named Tori, whom I shortly discovered to be chief drummer,
+engineer, and general jack-of-all-trades for the _Kabaka_. From this
+clever, ingenious man I obtained the information that the _Katekiro_ was
+the prime minister, or the _Kabaka’s_ deputy, and that the titles of the
+other chiefs were Chambarango, Kangau, Mkwenda, Sekebobo, Kitunzi,
+Sabaganzi, Kauta, Saruti. There were several more present, but I must
+defer mention of them to other chapters.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ [_To face page 148._
+
+[Illustration: RECEPTION BY KING MTESA’S BODY-GUARD AT USAVARA.]
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Waganda, as I found subsequently, are not in the habit of remaining
+incurious before a stranger. Hosts of questions were fired off at me
+about my health, my journey, and its aim, Zanzibar, Europe and its
+people, the seas and the heavens, sun, moon, and stars, angels and
+devils, doctors, priests, and craftsmen in general; in fact, as the
+representative of nations who “know everything,” I was subjected to a
+most searching examination, and in one hour and ten minutes it was
+declared unanimously that I had “passed.” Forthwith after the
+acclamation, the stately bearing became merged into a more friendly one,
+and long, thin, nervous black hands were pushed into mine
+enthusiastically, from which I gathered that they applauded me as though
+I had won the honours of a senior wrangler. Some proceeded direct to the
+_Kabaka_ and informed him that the white man was a genius, knew
+everything, and was remarkably polite and sociable, and the _Kabaka_ was
+said to have “rubbed his hands as though he had just come into the
+possession of a treasure.”
+
+The fruits of the favourable verdict passed upon myself and merits were
+seen presently in fourteen fat oxen, sixteen goats and sheep, a hundred
+bunches of bananas, three dozen fowls, four wooden jars of milk, four
+baskets of sweet-potatoes, fifty ears of green Indian corn, a basket of
+rice, twenty fresh eggs, and ten pots of maramba wine. Kauta, Mtesa’s
+steward or butler, at the head of the drovers and bearers of these
+various provisions, fell on his knees before me and said:—
+
+“The _Kabaka_ sends salaams unto his friend who has travelled so far to
+see him. The _Kabaka_ cannot see the face of his friend until he has
+eaten and is satisfied. The _Kabaka_ has sent his slave with these few
+things to his friend that he may eat, and at the ninth hour, after his
+friend has rested, the _Kabaka_ will send and call for him to appear at
+the burzah. I have spoken. Twiyanzi-yanzi-yanzi!”
+
+I replied suitably, though my politeness was not so excessive as to
+induce me to kneel before the courtly butler and thank him for
+permission to say I thanked him.
+
+My boat’s crew were amazed at this imperial bounty, which provided more
+than a bullock apiece for each member of my following. Saramba, the
+mop-headed guide from Usukuma, was requested to say what he thought
+of the _Kabaka_, who gave bullocks and goats in proportion as the
+Usukuma chief gave potatoes to his guests. Saramba’s wits were all this
+time under a cloud. He was still dressed in the primitive goatskin of
+his country, as greasy and dingy as a whaling cook’s pan-cloth—the
+greasiest thing I ever saw. He was stared at, jeered, and flouted by
+the courtly, cleanly pages of the court, who by this time had taken
+such keen and complete mental inventories of my features, traits,
+and points of character as would have put to shame even a Parisian
+newsmonger.
+
+“What land is this undressed pagan from?” asked the pages, loud enough
+for poor Saramba to hear.
+
+“Regard the pagan’s hair,” said another.
+
+“He had better not let the _Kabaka_ see him,” said a third.
+
+“He is surely a pagan slave—worth about a goat,” remarked a fourth.
+
+“Not he. I would not buy him for a ripe banana,” ventured a fifth.
+
+I looked up at Saramba, and half fancied that he paled.
+
+Poor Saramba! “As soon as they are gone, off goes that mop, and we will
+dress you in white cloth,” said Safeni, the coxswain, compassionately.
+
+But Baraka, one of the boatmen, an incorrigible scoffer, said, “What is
+the use? If we give him cloth, will he wear it? No; he will roll it up
+and tie it with a piece of string, and save it for his mammy, or sell it
+in Usukuma for a goat.”
+
+To my surprise the boatmen endeavoured to impress the fact on Saramba’s
+mind that the _Kabaka_ was a special personal friend of theirs; that all
+these cattle, goats, and fowls were the _Kabaka’s_ usual gifts to
+Wangwana, and they endeavoured, with a reckless disregard for accuracy,
+to enumerate fabulous instances of his generosity to a number of other
+Safenis, Sarbokos, Barakas, and Zaidis, all natives, like themselves, of
+Zanzibar. Let Englishmen never henceforth indulge in the illusion, or
+lay the flattering unction to their self-love, that they are the only
+people who have studied the art of “chaff.” The Zanzibaris are perfect
+in the art, as the sordid barbarian Saramba discovered to his cost.
+
+The ninth hour of the day approached. We had bathed, brushed, cleaned
+ourselves, and were prepared externally and mentally for the memorable
+hour when we should meet the Foremost Man of Equatorial Africa. Two of
+the _Kabaka’s_ pages, clad in a costume semi-Kingwana and semi-Kiganda,
+came to summon us—the Kingwana part being the long white shirt of
+Zanzibar, folded with a belt or band about the loins, the Kiganda part
+being the Sohari doti cloth depending from the right shoulder to the
+feet. “The _Kabaka_ invites you to the burzah,” said they. Forthwith we
+issue from our courtyard, five of the boat’s crew on each side of me
+armed with Snider rifles. We reach a short broad street, at the end of
+which is a hut. Here the _Kabaka_ is seated with a multitude of chiefs,
+Wakungu[12] and Watongoleh, ranked from the throne in two opposing
+kneeling or seated lines, the ends being closed in by drummers, guards,
+executioners, pages, &c. &c. As we approached the nearest group, it
+opened, and the drummers beat mighty sounds; Tori’s drumming being
+conspicuous from its sharper beat. The Foremost Man of Equatorial Africa
+rises and advances, and all the kneeling and seated lines rise—generals,
+colonels, chiefs, cooks, butlers, pages, executioners, &c. &c.
+
+The _Kabaka_, a tall, clean-faced, large-eyed, nervous-looking, thin
+man, clad in a tarbush, black robe, with a white shirt belted with gold,
+shook my hands warmly and impressively, and, bowing not ungracefully,
+invited me to be seated on an iron stool. I waited for him to show the
+example, and then I and all the others seated ourselves.
+
+He first took a deliberate survey of me, which I returned with interest,
+for he was as interesting to me as I was to him. His impression of me
+was that I was younger than Speke, not so tall, but better dressed. This
+I gathered from his criticisms as confided to his chiefs and favourites.
+
+My impression of him was that he and I would become better acquainted,
+that I should make a convert of him, and make him useful to Africa—but
+what other impressions I had may be gathered from the remarks I wrote
+that evening in my diary:—
+
+ “As I had read Speke’s book for the sake of its geographical
+ information, I retained but a dim remembrance of his description of
+ his life in Uganda. If I remember rightly, Speke described a youthful
+ prince, vain and heartless, a wholesale murderer and tyrant, one who
+ delighted in fat women. Doubtless he described what he saw, but it is
+ far from being the state of things now. Mtesa has impressed me as
+ being an intelligent and distinguished prince, who, if aided in time
+ by virtuous philanthropists, will do more for Central Africa than
+ fifty years of Gospel teaching, unaided by such authority, can do. I
+ think I see in him the light that shall lighten the darkness of this
+ benighted region; a prince well worthy the most hearty sympathies that
+ Europe can give him. In this man I see the possible fruition of
+ Livingstone’s hopes, for with his aid the civilisation of Equatorial
+ Africa becomes feasible. I remember the ardour and love which animated
+ Livingstone when he spoke of Sekeletu; had he seen Mtesa, his ardour
+ and love for him had been tenfold, and his pen and tongue would have
+ been employed in calling all good men to assist him.”
+
+Five days later I wrote the following entry:—
+
+ “I see that Mtesa is a powerful Emperor, with great influence over his
+ neighbours. I have to-day seen the turbulent Mankorongo, king of Usui,
+ and Mirambo, that terrible phantom who disturbs men’s minds in
+ Unyamwezi, through their embassies kneeling and tendering their
+ tribute to him. I saw over 3000 soldiers of Mtesa nearly half
+ civilised. I saw about a hundred chiefs who might be classed in the
+ same scale as the men of Zanzibar and Oman, clad in as rich robes, and
+ armed in the same fashion, and have witnessed with astonishment such
+ order and law as is obtainable in semi-civilised countries. All this
+ is the result of a poor Muslim’s labour; his name is Muley bin Salim.
+ He it was who first began teaching here the doctrines of Islam. False
+ and contemptible as these doctrines are, they are preferable to the
+ ruthless instincts of a savage despot, whom Speke and Grant left
+ wallowing in the blood of women, and I honour the memory of Muley bin
+ Salim—Muslim and slave-trader though he be—the poor priest who has
+ wrought this happy change. With a strong desire to improve still more
+ the character of Mtesa, I shall begin building on the foundation
+ stones laid by Muley bin Salim. I shall destroy his belief in Islam,
+ and teach the doctrines of Jesus of Nazareth.”
+
+It may easily be gathered from these entries that a feeling of
+admiration for Mtesa must have begun very early, and that either Mtesa
+is a very admirable man, or that I am a very impressionable traveller,
+or that Mtesa is so perfect in the art of duplicity and acted so clever
+a part, that I became his dupe.
+
+ [_To face page 152._
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ SEKEBOBO, MTESA, CHAMBARANGO,
+ CHIEF OF CHAGWÉ. THE EMPEROR OF UGANDA. THE CHIEF.
+ POKINO, THE PRIME MINISTER.
+ OTHER CHIEFS.
+ (_From a photograph by the Author._)
+]
+
+The chief reason for admiration lay, probably, in the surprise with
+which I viewed the man whom Speke had beheld as a boy—and who was
+described by him through about two hundred pages of his book as a vain,
+foolish, peevish, headstrong youth and a murderous despot—sedate and
+composed in manner, intelligent in his questions and remarks beyond
+anything I expected to meet in Africa. That I should see him so well
+dressed, the centre of a court equally well dressed and intelligent,
+that he should have obtained supremacy over a great region into which
+moneyed strangers and soldiers from Cairo and Zanzibar flocked for the
+sake of its supreme head, that his subjects should speak of him with
+respect, and his guests, so far as I could gather, honour him, were
+minor causes, which, I venture to consider, were sufficient to win my
+favourable judgment. That he should have been so royally liberal in his
+supplies to me, have proffered other courtesies in a tone of sincerity,
+and have appeared to me a kindly, friendly soul, who affected all the
+dignity of one who entertains a vast respect for himself and his
+position without affronting or giving wanton offence to those around him
+who also have wants, hopes, and self-respect, may also be offered as
+reasons which contributed not a little towards creating a favourable
+impression on me. I am aware that there are negrophobists who may
+attribute this conduct of Mtesa to a natural gift for duplicity. He is
+undoubtedly a man who possesses great natural talents, but he also shows
+sometimes the waywardness, petulance, and withal the frank, exuberant,
+joyous moods, of youth. I will also admit that Mtesa can be _politic_,
+as, indeed, future pages will show, but he has also a child’s unstudied
+ease of manner. I soon saw that he was highly clever, and possessed of
+the abilities to govern, but his cleverness and ability lacked the
+mannerisms of a European’s.
+
+Whether or no I became Mtesa’s dupe will be seen in the chapters on
+Uganda. Meanwhile, he appeared to me to be a generous prince and a frank
+and intelligent man, and one whose character was well worth studying for
+its novel intensity and extreme originality, and also as one whom I
+judged could be made to subserve higher ends than he suspected he was
+fashioned for. I met his friendly advances with the utmost cordiality,
+and the burzah concluded at sunset, with the same ceremony that had
+inaugurated it, leaving Mtesa and myself mutually pleased and gratified
+with our acquaintance.
+
+A description of Mtesa’s person was written in my diary on the third
+evening of my visit to him, from which I quote:—
+
+ “_April 7._—In person Mtesa is tall, probably 6 feet 1 inch, and
+ slender. He has very intelligent and agreeable features, reminding me
+ of some of the faces of the great stone images at Thebes, and of the
+ statues in the Museum at Cairo. He has the same fulness of lips, but
+ their grossness is relieved by the general expression of amiability
+ blended with dignity that pervades his face, and the large, lustrous,
+ lambent eyes that lend it a strange beauty, and are typical of the
+ race from which I believe him to have sprung. His colour is of a dark
+ red brown, of a wonderfully smooth surface. When not engaged in
+ council, he throws off unreservedly the bearing that characterises him
+ when on the throne, and gives rein to his humour, indulging in hearty
+ peals of laughter. He seems to be interested in the discussion of the
+ manners and customs of European courts, and to be enamoured of hearing
+ of the wonders of civilisation. He is ambitious to imitate as much as
+ lies in his power the ways of the white man. When any piece of
+ information is given him, he takes upon himself the task of
+ translating it to his wives and chiefs, though many of the latter
+ understand the Swahili language as well as he does himself.”
+
+On this day I recorded an interesting event which occurred in the
+morning. Mtesa, about 7 A.M., sallied out of his quarters, accompanied
+by a host of guards, pages, standard bearers, fifers, drummers, chiefs,
+native guests, claimants, &c., and about two hundred women of his
+household, and as he passed by my courtyard, he sent one of his pages to
+request my presence. While he passed on, I paid some attention to my
+toilet, and made as presentable an appearance as my clothes-bag enabled
+me, and then, accompanied by two of my boat’s crew as gunbearers,
+followed the court to the lake. Mtesa was seated on an iron stool, the
+centre of a large group of admiring women, who, as soon as I appeared,
+focussed about two hundred pairs of lustrous, humid eyes on my person,
+at which he laughed.
+
+“You see, ‘Stamlee,’” said he, “how my women look at you; they expected
+to see you accompanied by a woman of your own colour. I am not jealous
+though. Come and sit down.”
+
+Presently Mtesa whispered an order to a page, who sprang to obey, and
+responding to his summons, there darted into view from the bend in
+Murchison Bay west of Usavara forty magnificent canoes, all painted an
+ochreous brown, which I perceived to be the universally favourite
+colour. _En passant_, I have wondered whether they admire this colour
+from an idea that it resembles the dark bronze of their own bodies. For
+pure Waganda are not black by any means. The women and chiefs of Mtesa,
+who may furnish the best specimens of Waganda, are nearly all of a
+bronze or a dark reddish brown, with peculiar smooth, soft skins,
+rendered still more tender and velvety to the touch by their habit of
+shampooing with butter. Some of the women, I observed, were of a very
+light red-gold colour, while one or two verged on white. The native
+cloths—the national dress—which depended from the right shoulders of the
+larger number of those not immediately connected with the court were of
+a light brown also. It struck me, when I saw the brown skins, brown
+robes, and brown canoes, that brown must be the national colour.
+
+These forty canoes, which now rode on the calm grey-green waters of
+Murchison Bay, contained in the aggregate about 1200 men. The captain of
+each canoe was dressed in a white cotton shirt and a cloth head-cover,
+neatly folded turban-fashion, while the admiral wore over his shirt a
+crimson jacket, profusely decorated with gold braid, and on his head the
+red fez of Zanzibar. Each captain, as he passed us, seized shield and
+spear, and, with the bravado of a matador addressing the Judge of the
+Plaza to behold his prowess, went through the performance of defence and
+attack by water. The admiral won the greatest applause, for he was the
+Hector of the fleet, and his actions, though not remarkably graceful,
+were certainly remarkably extravagant. The naval review over, Mtesa
+commanded one of the captains of the canoes to try and discover a
+crocodile or a hippopotamus. After fifteen minutes he returned with the
+report that there was a young crocodile asleep on a rock about 200 yards
+away. “Now, Stamlee,” said Mtesa, “show my women how white men can
+shoot.” To represent all the sons of Japhet, on this occasion, was a
+great responsibility, but I am happy to say that—whether owing to the
+gracious influence of some unseen divinity who has the guardianship of
+their interests or whether from mere luck—I nearly severed the head of
+the young crocodile from its body at a distance of 100 yards with a
+three-ounce ball, which was accepted as conclusive proof that all white
+men are dead shots.
+
+In the afternoon we amused ourselves with target practice, at which an
+accident occurred that might have produced grave results. A No. 8
+double-barrelled rifle was fractured in Mtesa’s hands at the second
+shot, but fortunately without injuring either him or the page on whose
+shoulder it rested. General alarm prevailed for a short time, until
+that, seeing it was about to be accepted as a bad omen, I examined the
+rifle and showed Mtesa an ancient flaw in the barrel, which his good
+sense perceived had led to the fracture. The gun was a very old one, and
+had evidently seen much service.
+
+_April 10._—On the 10th of April the court broke up its hunting lodges
+at Usavara, on Murchison Bay, and moved to the capital, whither I was
+strongly urged to follow. Mtesa, escorted by about two hundred
+musketeers and the great Wakungu and their armed retainers, travelled
+quickly, but owing to my being obliged to house my boat from the hot
+sun, I did not reach the capital until 1 P.M.
+
+The road had been prepared for his Imperial Majesty’s hunting excursion,
+and was 8 feet wide, through jungle and garden, forest and field.
+Beautiful landscapes were thus enjoyed of rolling land and placid lake,
+of gigantic tamarinds and gum-trees, of extensive banana groves and
+plantations of the ficus, from the bark of which the national dress or
+_mbugu_, is made. The peculiar dome-like huts, each with an attempt at a
+portico, were buried deep in dense bowers of plantains which filled the
+air with the odour of their mellow rich fruit.
+
+The road wound upward to the summits of green hills which commanded
+exquisite prospects, and down again into the sheltered bosoms of woody
+nooks, and vales, and tree-embowered ravines. Streams of clear water
+murmured through these depressions as they flowed towards Murchison Bay.
+The verdure was of a brilliant green, freshened by the unfailing rains
+of the Equator; the sky was of the bluest, and the heat, though great,
+was tempered by the hill breezes, and frequently by the dense foliage
+overhead.
+
+Within three hours’ march from Usavara, we saw the capital crowning the
+summit of a smooth rounded hill—a large cluster of tall conical grass
+huts, in the centre of which rose a spacious, lofty, barn-like
+structure. The large building, we were told, was the palace! the hill,
+Rubaga; the cluster of huts, the imperial capital!
+
+From each side of the tall cane fence enclosing the grass huts on
+Rubaga hill radiated very broad avenues, imperial enough in width.
+Arriving at the base of the hill, and crossing by a “corduroy” road
+over a broad slimy ooze, we came up to one of these avenues, the
+ground of which was a reddish clay strongly mixed with the detritus of
+hematite. It gave a clear breadth of 100 feet of prepared ground, and
+led by a gradual ascent to the circular road which made the circuit of
+the hill outside the palace enclosure. Once on the dome-like height,
+we saw that we had arrived by the back avenue, for the best view of
+this capital of magnificent distances was that which was obtained by
+looking from the burzah of the palace, and carrying the eye over the
+broad front highway, on each side of which, as far as could be defined
+from the shadows of the burzah, the Wakungu had their respective courts
+and houses, embowered in gardens of banana and fig. Like the enclosure
+round the palace courts and quarters, each avenue was fenced with tall
+_matete_ (water-cane) neatly set very close together in uniform rows.
+The by-streets leading from one avenue to another were narrow and
+crooked.
+
+While I stood admiring the view, a page came up, and, kneeling,
+announced that he had been despatched by the Emperor to show me my
+house. Following him, I was ushered within a corner lot of the fenced
+square, between two avenues, into what I might appropriately term a
+“garden villa” of Uganda. My house, standing in the centre of a plantain
+garden about 100 feet square, was 20 feet long, and of a marquee shape,
+with a miniature portico or eave projecting like a bonnet over the
+doorway, and was divided into two apartments. Close by, about 30 feet
+off, were three dome-like huts for the boat’s crew and the kitchen, and
+in a corner of the garden was a railed space for our bullocks and goats.
+Were it not that I was ever anxious about my distant camp in Usukuma, I
+possessed almost everything requisite to render a month’s stay very
+agreeable, and for the time I was as proud of my tiny villa as a London
+merchant is of his country house.
+
+In the afternoon I was invited to the palace. A number of people in
+brown robes, or white dresses, some with white goatskins over their
+brown robes, others with cords folded like a turban round their heads,
+which I heard were distinguishing marks of the executioners, were also
+ascending to the burzah. Court after court was passed until we finally
+stood upon the level top in front of the great house of cane and straw,
+which the Waganda fondly term _Kibuga_, or the Palace. The space at
+least was of aulic extent, and the prospect gained at every point was
+also worthy of the imperial eyes of the African monarch.
+
+On all sides rolled in grand waves a voluptuous land of sunshine, and
+plenty, and early summer verdure, cooled by soft breezes from the great
+equatorial freshwater sea. Isolated hill-cones, similar to that of
+Rubaga, or square tabular masses, rose up from the beautiful landscape
+to attract, like mysteries, the curious stranger’s observation, and
+villages and banana groves of still fresher green, far removed on the
+crest of distant swelling ridges, announced that Mtesa owned a land
+worth loving. Dark sinuous lines traced the winding courses of deep
+ravines filled with trees, and grassy extents of gently undulating
+ground marked the pastures; broader depressions suggested the cultivated
+gardens and the grain fields, while on the far verge of the horizon we
+saw the beauty and the charm of the land melting into the blues of
+distance.
+
+There is a singular fascination about this country. The land would be
+loved for its glorious diversified prospects, even though it were a
+howling wilderness; but it owes a great deal of the power which it
+exercises over the imagination to the consciousness that in it dwells a
+people peculiarly fascinating also. “How comes it,” one asks, “that this
+barbarous, uneducated, and superstitious monarch builds upon this
+height?” Not for protection, surely, for he has smoothed the uneven
+ground and formed broad avenues to approach it, and a single torch would
+suffice to level all his fences? Does he, then, care for the charms of
+the prospect? Has he also an eye to the beauties of nature?
+
+Were this monarch as barbarous as other African chiefs whom I had met
+between Zanzibar and Napoleon Channel, he would have sought a basin, or
+the slope of some ridge, or some portion of the shores of the lake where
+his cattle might best graze, and would there have constructed his grass
+dwellings. But this man builds upon a hill that he may look abroad, and
+take a large imperial view of his land. He loves ample room; his house
+is an African palace, spacious and lofty; large clean courtyards
+surround it; he has spacious quarters for his harem, and courtyards
+round those; he has spacious quarters for his guards, and extensive
+courtyards round those; a cane enclosure surrounds all, and beyond the
+enclosure again is a wide avenue running round the palace fences. His
+people, great and small, imitate him as much as lies in their power.
+They are well dressed, and immodesty is a crime in the land. Yet I am
+still in Africa, and only yesterday, as it were, I saw naked men and
+naked women. It may be that such a monarch and people fascinate me as
+much as their land. The human figures in the landscape have, indeed, as
+much interest for me as the gracious landscape itself.
+
+The drums sounded. Mtesa had seated himself on the throne, and we
+hastened to take our seats.
+
+Since the 5th of April, I had enjoyed ten interviews with Mtesa, and
+during all I had taken occasion to introduce topics which would lead up
+to the subject of Christianity. Nothing occurred in my presence but I
+contrived to turn it towards effecting that which had become an object
+to me, viz., his conversion. There was no attempt made to confuse him
+with the details of any particular doctrine. I simply drew for him the
+image of the Son of God humbling Himself for the good of all mankind,
+white and black, and told him how, while He was in man’s disguise, He
+was seized and crucified by wicked people who scorned His divinity, and
+yet out of His great love for them, while yet suffering on the cross, He
+asked His great Father to forgive them. I showed the difference in
+character between Him whom white men love and adore, and Mohammed, whom
+the Arabs revere; how Jesus endeavoured to teach mankind that we should
+love all men, excepting none, while Mohammed taught his followers that
+the slaying of the pagan and the unbeliever was an act that merited
+Paradise. I left it to Mtesa and his chiefs to decide which was the
+worthier character. I also sketched in brief the history of religious
+belief from Adam to Mohammed. I had also begun to translate to him the
+Ten Commandments, and Idi, the Emperor’s writer, transcribed in Kiganda
+the words of the Law as given to him in choice Swahili by Robert Feruzi,
+one of my boat’s crew, and a pupil of the Universities Mission at
+Zanzibar.
+
+The enthusiasm with which I launched into this work of teaching was soon
+communicated to Mtesa and some of his principal chiefs, who became so
+absorbingly interested in the story as I gave it to them that little of
+other business was done. The political burzah and seat of justice had
+now become an alcove, where only the moral and religious laws were
+discussed.
+
+Before we broke up our meeting Mtesa informed me that I should meet a
+_white man_ at his palace the next day.
+
+“A white man, or a Turk?”
+
+“A white man like yourself,” repeated Mtesa.
+
+“No; impossible!”
+
+“Yes, you will see. He comes from Masr (Cairo), from Gordoom (Gordon)
+Pasha.”
+
+“Ah, very well, I shall be glad to see him, and if he is really a white
+man I may probably stay with you four or five days longer,” said I to
+Mtesa, as I shook hands with him, and bade him good-night.
+
+_April 11._—The “white man,” reported to be coming the next day, arrived
+at noon with great éclat and flourishes of trumpets, the sound of which
+could be heard all over the capital. Mtesa hurried off a page to invite
+me to his burzah. I hastened up by a private entrance. Mtesa and all his
+chiefs, guards, pages, executioners, claimants, guests, drummers and
+fifers were already there, _en grande tenue_.
+
+Mtesa was in a fever, as I could see by the paling of the colour under
+his eyes and his glowing eyeballs. The chiefs shared their master’s
+excitement.
+
+“What shall we do,” he asked, “to welcome him?”
+
+“Oh, form your troops in line from the entrance to the burzah down to
+the gate of the outer court, and present arms, and as he comes within
+the gate, let your drums and fifes sound a loud welcome.”
+
+“Beautiful!” said Mtesa. “Hurry Tori, Chambarango, Sekebobo; form them
+in two lines just as Stamlee says. Oh, that is beautiful! And shall we
+fire guns, Stamlee?”
+
+“No, not until you shake hands with him; and as he is a soldier, let the
+guards fire, then they will not injure anyone.”
+
+Mtesa’s flutter of excitement on this occasion made me think that there
+must have been a somewhat similar scene before my landing at Usavara,
+and that Tori must have been consulted frequently upon the form of
+ceremony to be adopted.
+
+What followed upon the arrival of the white man at the outer gate had
+best be told as an interlude by the stranger himself:
+
+ “At two o’clock, the weather having cleared up, Mtesa sent a messenger
+ to inform me that he was ready to receive me. Notice is given in the
+ camp; every one puts on his finest clothes; at last we are ready; my
+ brave Soudanians look quite smart in their red jackets and white
+ trousers. I place myself at their heads; trumpets flourish and drums
+ sound as we follow an avenue from eighty-five to a hundred yards wide,
+ running direct north and south, and terminating at Mtesa’s palace.”...
+
+ “On entering this court, I am greeted with a frightful uproar; a
+ thousand instruments, each one more outlandish than the other, produce
+ the most discordant and deafening sounds. Mtesa’s bodyguard, carrying
+ guns, present arms on my appearance; the king is standing at the
+ entrance of the reception hall. I approach and bow to him _à la
+ turque_. He holds out his hand, which I press; I immediately perceive
+ a sunburnt European to the left of the king, a traveller, whom I
+ imagine to be Cameron. We exchange glances without speaking.
+
+ “Mtesa enters the reception room, and we follow him. It is a narrow
+ hall about 60 feet long by 15 feet wide, the ceiling of which, sloping
+ down at the entrance, is supported by a double row of wooden pillars
+ which divide the room into two aisles. The principal and central room
+ is unoccupied, and leads to the king’s throne; the two aisles are
+ filled with the great dignitaries and chief officers. At each pillar
+ stands one of the king’s guard, wearing a long red mantle, a white
+ turban ornamented with monkey skin, white trousers and black blouse
+ with a red band. All are armed with guns.
+
+ “Mtesa takes his place on his throne, which is a wooden seat in the
+ shape of an office arm-chair; his feet rest upon a cushion; the whole
+ placed on a leopard’s skin spread over a Smyrna carpet. Before the
+ king is a highly polished elephant’s tusk, and at his feet are two
+ boxes containing fetishes; on either side the throne is a lance (one
+ copper, the other steel), each held by a guard; these are the insignia
+ of Uganda; the dog which Speke mentions has been done away with.
+ Crouching at the foot of the king are the vizier and two scribes.
+
+ “Mtesa is dignified in his manner, and does not lack a certain natural
+ air of distinction; his dress is elegant: a white _couftan_ finished
+ with a red band, stockings, slippers, vest of black cloth embroidered
+ with gold, and a _tarbouche_ with a silver plate on the top. He wears
+ a sword with ivory-inlaid hilt (a Zanzibar weapon), and a staff.
+
+ “I exhibited my presents, which Mtesa scarcely pretended to see, his
+ dignity forbidding him to show any curiosity.
+
+ “I address the traveller, who sits in front of me, on the left of the
+ king: ‘Have I the honour of speaking to Mr. Cameron?’
+
+ “STANLEY. ‘No, sir; Mr. Stanley.’
+
+ “MYSELF. ‘M. Linant de Bellefonds, member of the Gordon-Pasha
+ Expedition.’
+
+ “We bow low to each other, as though we had met in a drawing-room, and
+ our conversation is at an end for the moment.
+
+ “This meeting with Mr. Stanley greatly surprises me. Stanley was far
+ from my thoughts; I was totally ignorant of the object of his
+ Expedition.
+
+ “I take leave of the king, who meanwhile has been amusing himself by
+ making my unlucky soldiers parade and flourish their trumpets. I shake
+ hands with Mr. Stanley, and ask him to honour me with his presence at
+ dinner.
+
+ “I had scarcely been more than a few minutes in my hut when Mr.
+ Stanley arrived. After having mutually expressed the pleasure our
+ meeting gave us, Mr. Stanley informed me that Cameron had written from
+ Ujiji that he was starting for the Congo. Mr. Cameron, he told me,
+ must have been much embarrassed by the question of money, having
+ exceeded the amount allowed by the Royal Geographical Society. At
+ Ujiji, he would have lost all his companions, and would be actually
+ alone. Mr. Stanley was loud in his praises of Cameron, and hoped that
+ he would succeed in his expedition.”...
+
+ “Leaving his expedition at Usukuma, Mr. Stanley embarked with eleven
+ men on the Victoria Lake, in a small boat which he had brought with
+ him; he explored all the eastern part of the lake, penetrating into
+ all the bays, gulfs, and creeks, and taking the bearings of islands
+ and capes. I saw Mr. Stanley’s work, which is very extensive. He
+ showed me some curious sketches of islands he had seen; the islands of
+ the Bridge, the Grotto, and the Sphinx. The first is a natural bridge
+ of granite, with all the appearance of a bridge made by the hand of
+ man; the second is like the grotto of the enchantress Calypso; the
+ third greatly resembles the Egyptian Sphinx.”...
+
+Colonel Linant de Bellefonds having thus described our meeting, there
+remains but little for me to add.
+
+As soon as I saw him approaching the burzah, I recognised him to be a
+Frenchman. Not being introduced to him—and as I was then but a mere
+guest of Mtesa, with whom it was M. Linant’s first desire to converse—I
+simply bowed to him, until he had concluded addressing the Emperor, when
+our introduction took place as he has described.
+
+I was delighted at seeing him, and much more delighted when I discovered
+that M. Linant was a very agreeable man. I observed that there was a
+vast difference between his treatment of his men and the manner in which
+I treated mine, and that his intercourse with the Waganda was conducted
+after exactly opposite principles to those which governed my conduct. He
+adopted a half military style which the Waganda ill brooked, and many
+things uncomplimentary to him were uttered by them. He stationed guards
+at the entrance to his courtyard to keep the Waganda at a distance,
+except those bearing messages from Mtesa, while my courtyard was nearly
+full of Watongolehs, soldiers, pages, children, with many a dark-brown
+woman listening with open ears to my conversation with the Waganda. In
+fact, my courtyard from morning to night swarmed with all classes, for I
+loved to draw the natives to talk, so that perfect confidence might be
+established between us, and I might gain an insight into their real
+natures. By this freer converse with them I became, it seemed, a
+universal favourite, and obtained information sufficient to fill two
+octavo volumes.
+
+M. Linant passed many pleasant hours with me. Though he had started from
+Cairo previous to my departure from Zanzibar, and consequently could
+communicate no news from Europe, I still felt that for a brief period I
+enjoyed civilised life. His _cuisine_ was after the French fashion. He
+possessed French beans and olive oil, various potted meats of Paris
+brands, _pâtés de foie gras_ and Bologna sausage, sardines and
+Marseilles biscuits, white sugar, coffee, cocoa, chocolate, and tea. If
+we add to this list the articles that the natives and Mtesa’s bounty
+furnished—milk, beef, kid, green and ripe bananas, eggs, sweet-potatoes,
+tomatoes, melons, and cassava flour—it will be seen that his cook had
+abundance of material wherewith to supply and satisfy our moderate
+gastronomic tastes. The pleasure we mutually felt in each other’s
+company, and the exceptional good health which blessed us, sharpened our
+appetites and improved our digestion. The religious conversations which
+I had begun with Mtesa were maintained in the presence of M. Linant de
+Bellefonds, who, fortunately for the cause I had in view, was a
+Protestant.[13] For when questioned by Mtesa about the facts which I had
+uttered, and which had been faithfully transcribed, M. Linant, to
+Mtesa’s astonishment, employed nearly the same words, and delivered the
+same responses. The remarkable fact that two white men, who had never
+met before, one having arrived from the south-east, the other having
+emerged from the north, should nevertheless both know the same things,
+and respond in the same words, charmed the popular mind without the
+burzah as a wonder, and was treasured in Mtesa’s memory as being
+miraculous.
+
+The period of my stay with Mtesa drew to a close, and I requested leave
+to depart, begging the fulfilment of a promise he had made to me that he
+would furnish me with transport sufficient to convey the Expedition by
+water from Kagehyi in Usukuma to Uganda. Nothing loth, since one white
+man would continue his residence with him till my return, and being
+eager to see the gifts I told him were safe at Usukuma, he gave his
+permission, and commanded Magassa to collect thirty canoes, and to
+accompany me to my camp.
+
+_April 15._—On the 15th of April, then, escorted by Magassa and his
+Watongolehs, and also by M. Linant and ten of his Nubian soldiers, we
+left Rubaga.
+
+We arrived at Usavara about 10 A.M., and I imagined, foolishly enough,
+that Magassa would be ready for the voyage. But the Magassa of the 15th
+of April was several grades higher in his own estimation than the
+Magassa of the 1st of April. Fifteen days’ life in the Emperor’s favour
+and promotion to an admiralship had intoxicated the youth. Magassa could
+not be ready for two days.
+
+“Not if I send a messenger back to Mtesa with this information?” I
+asked.
+
+“Ah, yes, perhaps to-morrow morning.”
+
+“Only a few hours longer, M. Linant; so it does not matter much.
+Meantime we will take possession of our old quarters at Usavara, and
+pass the evening in a ramble along the shores of the bay, or a sail in
+the boat.” To which suggestion M. Linant assented.
+
+There was matter sufficient to engage us in conversation. The rich
+region we trod, landscapes steeped in most vivid green, the splendour of
+the forest foliage, the magnificent lake of Equatorial Africa, studded
+with a thousand isles, the broad and now placid arm known as Murchison
+Bay, the diversity of scenery, the nature of the rocks, the variety of
+the plants, ourselves met upon this far strand of the inland sea, to
+part perhaps for ever—a continuous chain of topics which, with an
+intelligent and sympathetic companion like M. Linant, might have served
+to make our rambles and our evenings in the hut enjoyable for weeks.
+
+In the evening I concluded my letters dated 14th of April 1875, which
+were sent to the _Daily Telegraph_ and the _New York Herald_, the
+English and American journals I represented here, appealing for a
+Christian mission to be sent to Mtesa.
+
+The appeal written hurriedly, and included in the letter left at
+Usavara, was as follows:—
+
+ “I have, indeed, undermined Islamism so much here that Mtesa has
+ determined henceforth, until he is better informed, to observe the
+ Christian Sabbath as well as the Muslim Sabbath, and the great
+ captains have unanimously consented to this. He has further caused the
+ Ten Commandments of Moses to be written on a board for his daily
+ perusal—for Mtesa can read Arabic—as well as the Lord’s Prayer and the
+ golden commandment of our Saviour, ‘Thou shalt love thy neighbour as
+ thyself.’ This is great progress for the few days that I have remained
+ with him, and, though I am no missionary, I shall begin to think that
+ I might become one if such success is feasible. But oh! that some
+ pious, practical missionary would come here! What a field and harvest
+ ripe for the sickle of civilisation! Mtesa would give him anything he
+ desired—houses, lands, cattle, ivory, etc.! he might call a province
+ his own in one day. It is not the mere preacher, however, that is
+ wanted here. The bishops of Great Britain collected, with all the
+ classic youth of Oxford and Cambridge, would effect nothing by mere
+ talk with the intelligent people of Uganda. It is the practical
+ Christian tutor, who can teach people how to become Christians, cure
+ their diseases, construct dwellings, understand and exemplify
+ agriculture, and turn his hand to anything, like a sailor—this is the
+ man who is wanted. Such an one, if he can be found, would become the
+ saviour of Africa. He must be tied to no church or sect, but profess
+ God and His Son and the moral law, and live a blameless Christian,
+ inspired by liberal principles, charity to all men, and devout faith
+ in Heaven. He must belong to no nation in particular, but to the
+ entire white race. Such a man or men, Mtesa, Emperor of Uganda, Usogo,
+ Unyoro, and Karagwé—an empire 360 geographical miles in length, by 50
+ in breadth—invites to repair to him. He has begged me to tell the
+ white men that, if they will only come to him, he will give them all
+ they want. Now, where is there in all the pagan world a more promising
+ field for a mission than Uganda? Colonel Linant de Bellefonds is my
+ witness that I speak the truth, and I know he will corroborate all I
+ say. The Colonel, though a Frenchman, is a Calvinist, and has become
+ as ardent a well-wisher for the Waganda as I am. Then why further
+ spend needlessly vast sums upon black pagans of Africa who have no
+ example of their own people becoming Christians before them? I speak
+ to the Universities Mission at Zanzibar and to the Free Methodists at
+ Mombasa, to the leading philanthropists, and the pious people of
+ England. ‘Here, gentlemen, is your opportunity—embrace it! The people
+ on the shores of the Nyanza call upon you. Obey your own generous
+ instincts, and listen to them; and I assure you that in one year you
+ will have more converts to Christianity than all other missionaries
+ united can number. The population of Mtesa’s kingdom is very dense; I
+ estimate the number of his subjects at 2,000,000. You need not fear to
+ spend money upon such a mission, as Mtesa is sole ruler, and will
+ repay its cost tenfold with ivory, coffee, otter skins of a very fine
+ quality, or even in cattle, for the wealth of this country in all
+ these products is immense. The road here is by the Nile, or viâ
+ Zanzibar, Ugogo, and Unyanyembé. The former route, so long as Colonel
+ Gordon governs the countries of the Upper Nile, seems the most
+ feasible.’”
+
+When the letters were written and sealed, I committed them to the charge
+of Colonel Linant. My friend promised he would await my return from
+Usukuma; meanwhile he lent me a powerful field-glass, as mine, being
+considerably injured, had been given to Mtesa.
+
+Magassa was not ready on the second day of our arrival. One of his women
+had absconded, or some of Mtesa’s chiefs had seized her. Only ten canoes
+had arrived by the evening of the 16th.
+
+_April 17._—The parting between M. Linant and myself, I shall allow him
+to describe:
+
+ “At 5 A.M. drums are beaten: the boats going with Stanley are
+ collecting together.
+
+ “Mr. Stanley and myself are soon ready. The _Lady Alice_ is unmoored;
+ luggage, sheep, goats, and poultry are already stowed away in their
+ places. There is nothing to be done except to hoist the American flag
+ and head the boat southwards. I accompany Stanley to his boat; we
+ shake hands and commend each other to the care of God. Stanley takes
+ the helm; the _Lady Alice_ immediately swerves like a spirited horse,
+ and bounds forward, lashing the water of the Nyanza into foam. The
+ starry flag is hoisted, and floats proudly in the breeze; I
+ immediately raise a loud hurrah with such hearty good will as perhaps
+ never before greeted the traveller’s ears.
+
+ “The _Lady Alice_ is already far away. We wave our handkerchiefs as a
+ last farewell; my heart is full; I have just lost a brother. I had
+ grown used to seeing Stanley, the open-hearted, sympathetic man and
+ friend and admirable traveller. With him I forgot my fatigue; this
+ meeting had been like a return to my own country. His engaging
+ instructive conversation made the hours pass like minutes. I hope I
+ may see him again, and have the happiness of spending several days
+ with him.”
+
+-----
+
+# 12:
+
+ Wakungu is the plural of _mkungu_, a rank equivalent to “general.”
+ Watongoleh is the plural of _mtongoleh_, or “colonel.”
+
+# 13:
+
+ In the original manuscript, which is in the possession of General C.
+ P. Stone, Chief of the Staff in his Highness the Khedive’s service, M.
+ Linant has alluded in the most flattering manner to these hours
+ devoted to religious instruction.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X.
+
+Parting with Colonel Linant—Magassa’s vanity and disloyalty—The sailor’s
+ island—Jumba’s Cove—Uganga—Dumo—The Alexandra Nile—Lupassi Point—In
+ danger at Makongo—Alone with Nature—Insect life—Dreams of a happier
+ future—A dark secret—Murabo and the fish—Alice Island—A night never to
+ be forgotten—The treachery of Bumbireh—Saved!—Refuge Island—Wiru—“Go
+ and die in the Nyanza!”—Back in camp—Sad news.
+
+
+_April 17._—“Adieu! adieu! mon ami Linant! Remember my words, I shall
+return within a month; if not, present my compliments to your friends at
+Ismailia (Gondokoro), and tell them they may see me on the Albert
+Nyanza,” were the last words I said to M. Linant de Bellefonds, as I
+seated myself in my boat on the morning of the 17th of April.[14]
+
+We had scarcely gone three miles on our voyage, before the vanity of the
+youth Magassa exceeded all bounds. Deeming it prudent—before it was too
+late—to lecture him, and hold out prospects of a reward conditional upon
+good behaviour, I called to him to approach me, as I had something to
+say to him. He would not come, but continued on his way with a slight
+grimace and a saucy inclination of the head. I reserved the lecture
+until we should arrive in camp.
+
+At noon I took observations for latitude at the entrance to Murchison
+Bay, and during the afternoon we rowed hard upon our voyage, reaching
+Chiwanuko Island near sunset. Magassa soon followed me, and as I landed,
+I laid hold of him gently but firmly, and seating him by my side,
+employed myself in holding forth grand expectations before him, only,
+however, on the condition that he obeyed Mtesa’s orders, behaved well,
+and acted in unison with me. Magassa promised faithfully, and as a sign
+that he was sincere, begged to be permitted to continue his voyage to
+Sessé, a large island where Mtesa’s canoes were beached, to procure the
+full quota of thirty promised to me. Leaving five canoes in charge of
+Sentum and Sentageya, two of his Watongolehs, he departed by night,
+which I thought was a remarkable instance of energy. The truth was,
+however, that he only proceeded two miles, and slept at a village, where
+he abused his authority by seizing a woman, and binding the chief.
+
+_April 20._—The next day we proceeded with the Watongolehs, Sentum and
+Sentageya, and camped at Jumba’s Cove. Jumba is the hereditary title of
+one of the junior admirals in command of a section of the imperial canoe
+fleet, to whom is awarded the district of Unjaku, a headland abutting on
+the left or north bank of the Katonga river. It is an exceedingly
+fertile district, separating Gabunga’s, or the chief admiral’s, district
+from Sambuzi’s, a sub-chief of Kitunzi.
+
+The whole of the north coast from Murchison Bay presents a panorama of
+beautiful views, of square table-topped mounts, rounded hills, and cones
+forming low ranges, which run in all directions, but with a general
+inclination east and west, and form, as it were, a natural boundary to
+the lake on the north. These masses of mountain, forming irregular
+ranges, suggest to the observer that no rivers of importance issue into
+the lake from the north side. They are terminated suddenly at the
+Katonga, and from the north-west along their base the river flows
+sluggishly into the lake. On the right or southern bank the land appears
+to be very low, as far as the hills of Uddu, four miles off. The Katonga
+river at this mouth is about 400 yards wide, but its current is very
+slow, almost imperceptible.
+
+Uganda is a lowland district lying at the mouth of the Katonga, on the
+south or right bank, whence a large bay with well-wooded shores rounds
+from this river to the southward in a crescent form, to Bwiru, from
+which point we begin to trace the coast of Uddu. Uganda proper extends
+only as far as the Katonga river; from its bank Uddu begins, and
+stretches as far as the Alexandra Nile or Kagera.
+
+Sessé Island extends from a point six miles south of Kibonga, westward
+to a point seven miles south of Jumba’s village, and southward—parallel
+almost with the coast of Uddu—to a distance of about twenty-three miles.
+Its extreme length is about forty-two miles, while its extreme breadth
+must be about twenty miles. The principal canoe builders and the greater
+number of the sailors of Mtesa’s empire dwell in Sessé, and because of
+their coal-black colour, timidity, superstition, and general uncleanly
+life, are regarded as the helots of Uganda.
+
+_April 21._—On the 21st we made a tedious, eventless voyage along the
+low, swampy, and jungly shores of Ujaju to Dumo, a village situated on
+the mainland nearly opposite the extreme southern end of Sessé Island.
+From a curious stony hill near Dumo, which bears traces of ancient
+effects of water, we obtained a distant view of the outskirts of a
+pastoral plateau rising westward.
+
+Magassa appeared in the evening from his unsuccessful quest for canoes.
+He gave a graphic account of the dangers he had encountered at Sessé,
+whose inhabitants declared they would rather be beheaded by the _Kabaka_
+than risk themselves on an endless voyage on the stormy sea, but he had
+obtained a promise from Magura, the admiral in charge of the naval yards
+at Sessé, that he would endeavour to despatch fourteen canoes after us.
+Meanwhile, Magassa had left me at Chiwanuko with five canoes, but
+returned with only two, alleging that the other three leaked so much
+that they were not seaworthy. He suggested also that, as Magura might
+cause great delay if left alone, I should proceed with Sentum and
+Sentageya, and leave him in charge of five. Having witnessed his vanity
+and heard of his atrocious conduct near Chiwanuko, I strongly suspected
+him of desiring to effect some more mischief at Dumo, but I was
+powerless to interpose the strong arm, and therefore left him to answer
+for his shortcomings to Mtesa, who would doubtless hear of them before
+long.
+
+After leaving Dumo and Sessé north of us, we had a boundless horizon of
+water on the east, while on the west stretched a crescent-shaped bay,
+bordered by a dense forest, ending south at Chawasimba Point. From here
+another broad bay extends southwards, and is terminated by the
+northernmost headland of Uzongora. Into this bay issues the Alexandra
+Nile in one powerful deep stream, which, from its volume and dark iron
+colour, may be traced several miles out. At its mouth it is about 150
+yards wide, and at two miles above narrows to about 100 yards. We
+attempted to ascend higher, but the current was so strong that we made
+but slow progress, and after an ascent of three miles were obliged to
+abandon it. The plain on either side has a breadth of from five to ten
+miles, which during the rainy season is inundated throughout its whole
+extent. The deepest soundings we obtained were 85 feet. I know no other
+river to equal this in magnitude among the affluents of the Victoria
+Nyanza. The Shimeeyu river thus becomes the second largest affluent of
+the lake, and the two united would form a river equal to that which has
+its exit by the Ripon Falls.
+
+The Waganda Watongolehs, Sentum and Sentageya, call the Alexandra Nile
+the “Mother of the River at Jinja,” or the Ripon Falls.
+
+The Alexandra Nile constitutes a natural boundary between the
+sovereignty of Uganda and its subject kingdoms of Karagwé and Uzongora,
+which begin south of the river. The plain of the Alexandra stretches
+south a few miles to an irregular line of grassy and treeless mountains,
+which are the characteristics of the fine pastoral countries of Uzongora
+and Karagwé. At Lupassi Point the mountains project steeply, almost
+cliff-like, into the lake, with heights varying from 200 feet to 500
+feet. The steep slopes bristle at many points with grey gneiss rocks—
+massy débris from the mountain brows. Near this point I discovered a
+stream which had a fall of 3 feet issuing from an orifice in a rocky
+cliff, though above it there was not the faintest sign of a watercourse.
+In the gullies and clefts of the cliff-sides most beautiful ferns
+abounded.
+
+I managed to climb to the top of the bluffs, and to my surprise
+overlooked a plateau, with a grandly rolling surface, covered with
+pasture and almost treeless, except near the villages, where grew dense
+groves of bananas. Further west, however, the plateau heaves upwards
+into mountain masses of the same naked character. Looking towards the
+east, directly in front of North Uzongora, stretches an apparently
+illimitable silvery sea; but towards the south one or two lofty islands
+are visible, situated about twenty-five miles from the mainland, serene
+and royal in their lone exclusiveness.
+
+The first village we halted at on the coast of Uzongora was Makongo. It
+nestles in a sheltered nook in a bay-like indentation of the lofty
+mountain wall crowded with banana groves and huts scattered under their
+impenetrable shades—with a strip of grey gravel beach gently sloping
+from the water’s edge about 40 feet upward to where it meets the
+prodigious luxury of the grove. There were about a dozen natives clad in
+dingy goat-skins seated on the beach, sucking the potent maramba from
+gourds when we came up, and without question we hauled our boat and two
+canoes high and dry. To our greetings the natives responded readily and
+civilly enough. With rather glazed eyes they offered us some of the
+equatorial nectar. The voyage had been long on this day, and we were
+tired, and it might be that we sighed for such cordial refreshing drink
+as was now proferred to us. At any rate, we accepted their hospitable
+gift, and sucked heartily, with bland approval of the delicacy of the
+liquid, and cordial thanks for their courtesy. An observation for
+longitude was taken, the natives looking on pleased and gratified. To
+all our questions as to the names of the localities and islands in view
+they replied like friends.
+
+Sunset came. We bade each other good-night. At midnight there was a
+fearful drumming heard, which kept us all awake from the sheer violence
+of the sound. “Is anything wrong?” we demanded of Sentum and Sentageya.
+“Oh, no!” they answered. Still the drumming sounded hoarsely through the
+dark night, and the desire for sleep fled.
+
+My men were all up before dawn, impatient for the day.
+
+Instinct, startled by that ominous drumming, warned them that something
+was wrong. I was still in my boat with drawn curtains, though able to
+communicate with my people. At sight of the natives Safeni, the
+coxswain, hailed me. As I was dressed, I arranged my guns and soon
+stepped out, and my astonishment was great when I perceived that there
+were between 200 and 300 natives, all in war costume and armed with
+spears, and bows and arrows, and long-handled cleaver-like weapons, with
+ample and long cane shields for defence, so close to us. For this
+terrible looking body of men stood only about thirty paces off,
+regarding us steadfastly. It was such a singular position, so unusual
+and so strangely theatrical, that, feeling embarrassed, I hastened to
+break the silence, and advanced towards a man whom I recognised as the
+elder who had given me some native wine on the previous evening.
+
+“What means this, my friend?” I asked. “Is anything wrong?”
+
+He replied rapidly, but briefly and sternly, in the Kinyambu language,
+which as I did not understand, I called the Mtongoleh Sentum to
+translate for me.
+
+“What do you mean by drawing your canoes on our beach?” I was told he
+asked.
+
+“Tell him we drew them up lest the surf should batter them to pieces
+during the night. The winds are rough sometimes, and waves rise high.
+Our canoes are our homes, and we are far from our friends who are
+waiting for us. Were our canoes injured or broken how should we return
+to our friends?”
+
+He next demanded, “Know you this is our country?”
+
+“Yes, but are we doing wrong? Is the beach so soft that it can be hurt
+by our canoes? Have we cut down your bananas, or entered into your
+houses? Have we molested any of your people? Do you not see our fires by
+which we slept exposed to the cold night?”
+
+“Well, you must leave this place at once. We do not want you here. Go!”
+
+“That is easily done,” I answered; “and had you told us last night that
+our presence was not welcome to you, we should have camped on yonder
+island.”
+
+“What did you come here for?”
+
+“We came to rest for the night, and to buy food, and is that a crime? Do
+you not travel in your canoes? Supposing people received you as you
+received us this morning, what would you say? Would you not say they
+were bad? Ah, my friend, I did not expect that you who were so good
+yesterday would turn out thus! But never mind; we will go away quickly
+and quietly, and the _Kabaka_ Mtesa shall hear of this, and judge
+between us.”
+
+“If you wish food, I will send some bananas to yonder island, but you
+must go away from this, lest the people, who wish to fight you, should
+break out.”
+
+We soon shoved the boat and two canoes into the water, and I and my
+boat’s crew embarked and rowed away a few yards. But Sentum was angry
+with the people, and instead of quietly departing, was loudly
+expostulating with them. To prevent mischief and the massacre of his
+entire party, I shouted to Sentum, commanding him to embark at once,
+which after a short time he obeyed, growling.
+
+We steered for Musira Island, about three miles from Makongo, where we
+found four or five canoes from Kamiru’s country loaded with coffee and
+butter. The Waganda, Sentum and Sentageya, with feelings embittered
+against the natives, seized upon several packages of coffee, which drew
+a loud remonstrance from the natives. The Waganda sailors, ever ready
+for a scramble, followed their chiefs’ example, and assisted in
+despoiling the natives, which caused one of them to appeal to me. I was
+busy directing my boat’s crew to set my tent, when I was thus made
+acquainted with the conduct of the Waganda. The property taken from them
+was restored immediately, and Sentum and Sentageya were threatened with
+punishment if they molested them further, and the natives were advised
+to leave for another island about five miles north of us, as soon as the
+lake should become calm.
+
+About 10 A.M. the chief of Makongo, true to his promise, sent us ten
+bunches of green bananas, sufficient for one day’s provisions for the
+sixty-two men, Waganda and Wangwana, of whom our party consisted.
+
+After these events I strolled alone into the dense and tangled
+luxuriance of the jungle woods which lay behind our camp. Knowing that
+the people would be discussing their bananas, that no foe could molest
+them, and that they could not quarrel with any natives—there being
+nobody else on the island of Musira but ourselves—I was able to leave
+them to pass the time as they might deem most agreeable. Therefore, with
+all the ardour of a boy, I began my solitary exploration. Besides, it
+was so rare for me to enjoy solitude and silence in such perfect safety
+as was here promised to me. My freedom in these woods, though I was
+alone, none could endanger or attempt to restrain; my right to climb
+trees, or explore hollows, or stand on my head, or roll about on the
+leaves or ruins of branch and bark, or laugh or sing, who could oppose?
+Being thus absolute monarch and supreme arbiter over myself, I should
+enjoy for a brief period perfect felicity.
+
+That impulse to jump, to bound, to spring upward and cling to branches
+overhead, which is the characteristic of a strong green age, I gave free
+rein to. Unfettered for a time from all conventionalisms, and absolved
+from that sobriety and steadiness which my position as a leader of half
+wild men compelled me to assume in their presence, all my natural
+elasticity of body came back to me. I dived under the obstructing bough
+or sprang over the prostrate trunk, squeezed into almost impossible
+places, crawled and writhed like a serpent through the tangled
+undergrowth, plunged down into formidable depths of dense foliage, and
+burrowed and struggled with frantic energy among shadowing pyramids of
+vines and creepers, which had become woven and plaited by their numbers
+into a solid mass.
+
+What eccentricities of creation I became acquainted with in this
+truanting in the wild woods! Ants, red, black, yellow, grey, white, and
+parti-coloured, peopling a miniature world with unknown emmet races.
+Here were some members of the belligerent warrior caste always
+threatening the harmless, and seeking whom they might annoy, and there
+the ferocious food-providers, active for the attack, ranging bole,
+bough, twigs and leaf for prey; the meek and industrious artisans
+absorbed in defending the poor privilege of a short existence; the
+frugal neuters tugging enormous loads towards their cunningly
+constructed nests; sentries on watch at the doors to defend the
+approaches to their fastnesses. They swarmed among the foliage in
+columns of foraging and plundering marauders and countless hordes of
+ruthless destroyers. In the decaying vegetation I heard all around me
+the xylophagous larvæ of great beetles hard at work by thousands, and
+saw myriads of termites destroying with industrious fury everything that
+lay in their path, whether animal or vegetable. Armies of psyllæ and
+moths innumerable were startled from the bushes, and from every bough
+shrilled the tiresome cicada, ever noisy. Here the relentless ant-lions
+prepared their pitfalls, and there the ghostly mantis, green or grey,
+stood waiting for unwary insects. Diamond beetles abounded, and many
+other species, uncouth and horrid, scrambled away from before my feet.
+Nor are these a thousandth part of the insect nations that I disturbed;
+the secluded island was a world of infinite activities.
+
+Beyond the flats I came at last to where the ground sloped upward
+rapidly, though still clothed with tall trees and their parasitical
+plants and undergrowth; and in spite of the intense heat, I continued my
+exploration, determined to view the upper regions. Clambering up the
+steep side, I had a large choice of supports; here a tamarind and next a
+bombax, now a projecting branch of mimosa and now a thick lliane, hung
+down, inviting me to haul myself upward and forward: the young and
+pliant teak sapling or slender jasmine bent as I seized them to assist
+my labouring feet, and at last I emerged above the trees and the tangle
+of meshed undergrowth, and stood upright on the curious spiky grass,
+studded with wild pine-apple, ground orchids and aloes, which covered
+the summit.
+
+After a general look around the island, I discovered it was in the
+form of a rudely shaped boot-last, lying east and west, the lowest
+parts being the flats through which I had just struggled. It was about
+three-quarters of a mile long and about 200 yards wide. The heel
+was formed by a narrow projecting ledge rising about 50 feet nearly
+perpendicularly from the water. From this ledge rose the rock 80 feet
+above it, and 130 feet therefore above the water.
+
+I gazed long on the grand encircling prospect. A halcyon calm brooded
+on the lake, eastward, northward, and southward, until the clear
+sky and stainless silver water met, the clear bounds of both veiled
+by a gauzy vapour, suggesting infinity. In a bold, majestic mass to
+the south-east rose Alice Island, while a few miles south-east of
+it appeared the Bumbireh group. Opposite me, to the west, and two
+miles from where I stood, was the long cliffy front of the plateau of
+Uzongora, its slowly-rising summit gemmed with patches of evergreen
+banana, until it became banked in the distance by lines of hazy blue
+mountains.
+
+It is a spot from which, undisturbed, the eye may rove over one of the
+strangest yet fairest portions of Africa—hundreds of square miles of
+beautiful lake scenes—a great length of grey plateau wall, upright and
+steep, but indented with exquisite inlets, half surrounded by embowering
+plantains—-hundreds of square miles of pastoral upland dotted thickly
+with villages and groves of banana. From my lofty eyrie I can see herds
+upon herds of cattle, and many minute specks, white and black, which can
+be nothing but flocks of sheep and goats. I can also see pale blue
+columns of ascending smoke from the fires, and upright thin figures
+moving about. Secure on my lofty throne, I can view their movements and
+laugh at the ferocity of the savage hearts which beat in those thin dark
+figures; for I am a part of Nature now, and for the present as
+invulnerable as itself. As little do they know that human eyes survey
+their forms from the summit of this lake-girt isle as that the eyes of
+the Supreme in heaven are upon them. How long, I wonder, shall the
+people of these lands remain thus ignorant of Him who created the
+gorgeous sunlit world they look upon each day from their lofty upland!
+How long shall their untamed ferocity be a barrier to the Gospel, and
+how long shall they remain unvisited by the Teacher!
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ [_To face page 174._
+
+[Illustration: RECEPTION AT BUMBIREH ISLAND, VICTORIA NYANZA.]
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+What a land they possess! and what an inland sea! How steamers afloat on
+the lake might cause Ururi to shake hands with Uzongora, and Uganda with
+Usukuma, make the wild Wavuma friends with the Wazinza, and unite the
+Wakerewé with the Wagana! A great trading port might then spring up on
+the Shimeeyu, whence the coffee of Uzongora, the ivory, sheep, and goats
+of Ugeyeya, Usoga, Uvuma, and Uganda, the cattle of Uwya, Karagwé,
+Usagara, Ihangiro, and Usukuma, the myrrh, cassia, and furs and hides of
+Uganda and Uddu, the rice of Ukerewé, and the grain of Uzinza, might be
+exchanged for the fabrics brought from the coast; all the land be
+redeemed from wildness, the industry and energy of the natives
+stimulated, the havoc of the slave-trade stopped, and all the countries
+round about permeated with the nobler ethics of a higher humanity. But
+at present the hands of the people are lifted—murder in their hearts—one
+against the other; ferocity is kindled at sight of the wayfarer; piracy
+is the acknowledged profession of the Wavuma; the people of Ugeyeya and
+Wasoga go stark naked; Mtesa impales, burns, and maims his victims; the
+Wirigedi lie in wait along their shores for the stranger, and the
+slingers of the islands practise their art against him; the Wakara
+poison anew their deadly arrows at sight of a canoe; and each tribe,
+with rage and hate in its heart, remains aloof from the other. “Verily,
+the dark places of the earth are full of the habitations of cruelty.”
+
+Oh for the hour when a band of philanthropic capitalists shall vow to
+rescue these beautiful lands, and supply the means to enable the Gospel
+messengers to come and quench the murderous hate with which man beholds
+man in the beautiful lands around Lake Victoria!
+
+I descended from the lofty height, the summit of Musira Island, by
+another way, which disclosed to me the character of the rocky island,
+and exposed to my view the precipitous walls of shale, rifted and
+indented by ages of atmospheric influences, that surround the island
+upon all sides but the western. After great difficulty I succeeded in
+getting upon the top of a portion of an upper ledge that had fallen on
+the north-east corner and now formed a separate projection about 30 feet
+high. In a cavernous recess upon the summit of it, I discovered six
+human bodies in a state of decomposition, half covered with grass and
+débris of rock. One of the skulls showed the mark of a hatchet, which
+made me suspect that a tragedy had occurred here but a short time
+before. No doubt the horrible event took place on the island on the
+ground occupied by our camp, for there was no other spot where such a
+deed could have been wrought, and probably the victims were taken in
+canoes, and deposited in this hidden recess, that strangers might not be
+alarmed at the sight of the bodies, or of such evidence of violence as
+the hatchet-cleft skull. Probably, also, these strangers were murdered
+for their cargo of coffee or of butter by the natives of the mainland,
+or by a later arrival of strangers like my own Waganda, who because of
+their numerical superiority had begun their molestation and robbery of
+the coffee traders, without other cause than that they were strong and
+the traders weak.
+
+About 5 P.M., having long before returned to camp, I saw on the horizon
+Magassa’s fleet of canoes, and counted fourteen. I despatched Safeni and
+some of the Waganda in a canoe to the small islands we passed just
+before reaching Makongo, begging Magassa to hasten and join me early
+next morning, as we were short of provisions, and starvation would ensue
+if we were delayed in our voyage. Safeni returned about 9 P.M. with a
+request from Magassa that I would go on as early as I wished, and a
+promise that he would follow me to camp.
+
+_April 26._—I waited, however, for Magassa until 10 A.M., and as Alice
+Island—which Sentum and Sentageya advised me was the best place to touch
+at in order to make a short course for Usukuma—was about thirty miles
+from Musira, I could delay no longer. It was then agreed that Sentum
+should stay at Musira Island until Magassa arrived, and inform him of
+the direction which Sentageya and I had taken.
+
+We had proceeded on our voyage but three miles when Sentageya turned
+back with all speed towards Musira, waving his hand to me to continue my
+journey. Imagining that he had merely forgotten something, I did as he
+directed.
+
+We reached Alice Island about 9 P.M., for we had been delayed by a
+strong head wind since 4 P.M. As it was pitch-dark, we were guided to a
+camping-place by a flickering light which we saw on the shore. The light
+for which we steered was that of a fire kindled by two men and a boy,
+who were drying fish in a cavern the entrance of which opened on the
+lake. Though the fishermen were rather frightened at first, they were
+discreet enough to remain passive; and to calm their fears, I assumed an
+air of extreme blandness and amiability. It being late, I prepared to
+rest in the stern-sheets of my boat, but as I was about to lie down, I
+heard the natives expostulating. I knew by this that the boat’s crew
+must be committing depredations on their fish stores; so I sprang out—
+and only just in time to save them a serious loss. Murabo had already
+made himself master of half-a-dozen large fish, when I came up with
+naked feet behind him, announcing my arrival by a staggering blow, which
+convinced the fishermen better than any amount of blandness and
+affectation of amiability could have done, that I was sincere, and
+convinced the Wangwana also that injustice would not be permitted. The
+fishermen received a handful of beads as an atonement for the attempted
+spoliation, and to secure the Wangwana against further temptation, I
+gave them double rations.
+
+_April 27._—The next morning, when I woke, I found that we were camped
+under the shadow of a basaltic cliff, about 50 feet high, at the base of
+which was the fishermen’s cavern, extending about 15 feet within. The
+island was lofty, about 400 feet above the lake at its highest part,
+nearly four miles in length, and a mile and a half across at its
+greatest breadth. The inhabitants consisted of about forty families from
+Ukerewé, and owned King Lukongeh as their liege lord.
+
+The summit of Alice Island is clothed with an abundance of coarse grass,
+and the ravines and hollows are choked with a luxuriance of vegetable
+life—trees, plants, ferns, ground orchids, and wild pine-apples: along
+the water’s edge there waves a thin strip of water-cane. The people
+became fast friends with us, but their keen trading instincts impelled
+them to demand such exorbitant prices for every article, that we were
+unable to purchase more than a few ears of corn. I obtained a view from
+the summit with my field-glass, but I could distinguish nothing east or
+south-east. South-west we saw the Bumbireh group, and to purchase food
+we were compelled to proceed thither—disagreeably convinced that we had
+lost a whole day by calling at Alice Island, whereas, had we kept a
+direct course to the south, we might have reached the Bumbireh group in
+a few hours.
+
+_April 28._—As we started only at noon from Alice Island, being delayed
+by expectations of seeing Magassa, and also by the necessity for
+purchasing something even at high prices to prevent starvation, we did
+not reach Barker’s Island—the easternmost of the Bumbireh group—until
+night, which we passed most miserably in a little cove surrounded by
+impenetrable brushwood. It was one downpour of rain throughout the whole
+night, which compelled us to sit up shivering and supperless, for, to
+crown our discomforts, we had absolutely nothing to eat. No more abject
+objects can be imagined than the human beings that occupied the boat
+through the hours of darkness. There were my crew all sitting as closely
+as possible, back to back or side by side, on the oars and boards which
+they had arranged like a platform on the thwarts, and I sitting alone
+under the awning in the stern sheets, wearily trying to outline their
+figures, or vaguely taking mental notes of the irregularities of the
+bush, with occasional hasty glances at the gloomy sky, or at Bumbireh,
+whose black mass looked grim and lofty in the dark, and all the time the
+rain kept pouring down with a steady malignant impetuosity. I doubt if
+even the happiest hours which may fall to my lot in the future will ever
+obliterate from my memory that dismal night of discomfort and hunger.
+
+But as it generally happens, the dismal night was followed by a
+beautiful, bright morning. Every inch of nature that we could scan
+seemed revivified, refreshed, and gay, except the little world which the
+boat contained. We were eager to renew our acquaintance with humanity,
+for only by contact with others could we live. We accordingly sailed for
+Bumbireh, which lay about two miles from Barker’s Island, and ran down
+the coast in search of a cove and haven for our boat, while we should be
+bartering our beads for edibles.
+
+Bumbireh Island is about eleven miles in extreme length by two miles
+greatest breadth. It is in appearance a hilly range, with a tolerably
+even and softly rolling summit line clothed with short grass. Its slopes
+are generally steep, yet grassy or cultivated. It contains probably
+fifty small villages, averaging about twenty huts to a village, and if
+we calculate four souls to each hut, we have a population of about 4000
+including all ages.
+
+Herds of cattle grazed on the summit and slopes; a tolerably large
+acreage here and there showed a brown soil upturned for planting, while
+extensive banana groves marked most of the village sites. There was a
+kindly and prosperous aspect about the island.
+
+As soon as we had sailed a little distance along the coast, we caught
+sight of a few figures which broke the even and smooth outline of the
+grassy summit, and heard the well-known melodious war-cries employed
+by most of the Central African tribes, “Hehu-a-hehu-u-u-u!” loud,
+long-drawn, and ringing.
+
+The figures increased in number, and fresh voices joined in the defiant
+and alarming note. Still, hungry wretches as we were, environed by
+difficulties of all kinds, just beginning to feel warm after the cold
+and wet of the night before, with famine gnawing at our vitals, leagues
+upon leagues of sea between us and our friends at Usukuma, and nothing
+eatable in our boat, we were obliged to risk something, reminding
+ourselves “that there are no circumstances so desperate which Providence
+may not relieve.”
+
+At 9 A.M. we discovered a cove near the south-east end of the long
+island, and pulled slowly into it. Immediately the natives rushed down
+the slopes, shouting war-cries and uttering fierce ejaculations. When
+about 50 yards from the shore, I bade the men cease rowing, but Safeni
+and Baraka became eloquent, and said, “It is almost always the case,
+master, with savages. They cry out, and threaten, and look big, but you
+will see that all that noise will cease as soon as they hear us speak.
+Besides, if we leave here without food, where shall we obtain it?”
+
+The last argument was unanswerable, and though I gave no orders to
+resume their oars, four of the men impelled the boat on slowly, while
+Safeni and Baraka prepared themselves to explain to the natives, who
+were now close within hearing, as they came rushing to the water’s edge.
+I saw some lift great stones, while others prepared their bows.
+
+We were now about 10 yards from the beach, and Safeni and Baraka spoke,
+earnestly pointing to their mouths, and by gestures explaining that
+their bellies were empty. They smiled with insinuating faces; uttered
+the words “brothers,” “friends,” “good fellows,” most volubly; cunningly
+interpolated the words Mtesa—the _Kabaka_—Uganda, and Antari king of
+Ihangiro, to whom Bumbireh belongs. Safeni and Baraka’s pleasant
+volubility seemed to have produced a good effect, for the stones were
+dropped, the bows were unstrung, and the lifted spears lowered to assist
+the steady, slow-walking pace with which they now advanced.
+
+Tafeni and Baraka turned to me triumphantly and asked, “What did we say,
+master?” and then, with engaging frankness, invited the natives, who
+were now about two hundred in number, to come closer. The natives
+consulted a little while, and several—now smiling pleasantly themselves—
+advanced leisurely into the water until they touched the boat’s prow.
+They stood a few seconds talking sweetly, when suddenly with a rush they
+ran the boat ashore, and then all the others, seizing hawser and
+gunwale, dragged her about 20 yards over the rocky beach high and dry,
+leaving us almost stupefied with astonishment!
+
+Then ensued a scene which beggars description. Pandemonium—all its
+devils armed—raged around us. A forest of spears was levelled; thirty or
+forty bows were drawn taut; as many barbed arrows seemed already on the
+wing; thick, knotty clubs waved above our heads; two hundred screaming
+black demons jostled with each other and struggled for room to vent
+their fury, or for an opportunity to deliver one crushing blow or thrust
+at us.
+
+In the meantime, as soon as the first symptoms of this manifestation of
+violence had been observed, I had sprung to my feet, each hand armed
+with a loaded self-cocking revolver, to kill and be killed. But the
+apparent hopelessness of inflicting much injury upon such a large crowd
+restrained me, and Safeni turned to me, though almost cowed to dumbness
+by the loud fury around us, and pleaded with me to be patient. I
+complied, seeing that I should get no aid from my crew; but, while
+bitterly blaming myself for my imprudence in having yielded—against my
+instincts—to placing myself in the power of such savages, I vowed that,
+if I escaped this once, my own judgment should guide my actions for the
+future.
+
+I assumed a resigned air, though I still retained my revolvers. My crew
+also bore the first outburst of the tempest of shrieking rage which
+assailed them with almost sublime imperturbability. Safeni crossed his
+arms with the meekness of a saint. Baraka held his hands palms outward,
+asking with serene benignity, “What, my friends, ails you? Do you fear
+empty hands and smiling people like us? We are friends, we came as
+friends to buy food, two or three bananas, a few mouthfuls of grain, or
+potatoes, or muhogo (cassava), and, if you permit us, we shall depart as
+friends.”
+
+Our demeanour had a great effect. The riot and noise seemed to be
+subsiding, when some fifty new-comers rekindled the smouldering fury.
+Again the forest of spears swayed on the launch, again the knotty clubs
+were whirled aloft, again the bows were drawn, and again the barbed
+arrows seemed flying. Safeni received a push which sent him tumbling,
+little Kirango received a blow on the head with a spear-staff, Saramba
+gave a cry as a club descended on his back.
+
+I sprang up this time to remonstrate, with the two revolvers in my left
+hand. I addressed myself to an elder, who seemed to be restraining the
+people from proceeding too far. I showed him beads, cloth, wire, and
+invoked the names of Mtesi, and Antari their king.
+
+The sight of the heaps of beads and cloth I exposed awakened, however,
+the more deliberate passions of selfishness and greed in each heart. An
+attempt at massacre, they began to argue, would certainly entail the
+loss of some of themselves. “Guns might be seized and handled with
+terrible effect even by dying men, and who knows what those little iron
+things in the white man’s hands are?” they seemed to be asking
+themselves. The elder, whatever he thought, responded with an
+affectation of indignation, raised his stick, and to right and left of
+him drove back the demoniac crowd. Other prominent men now assisted this
+elder, whom we subsequently discovered to be Shekka, the king of
+Bumbireh.
+
+Shekka then, having thus bestirred himself, beckoned to half-a-dozen
+men and walked away a few yards behind the mass. It was the “shauri,”
+dear to a free and independent African’s heart, that was about to be
+held. Half the crowd followed the king and his council, while the other
+half remained to indulge their violent, vituperative tongues on us,
+and to continually menace us with either club or spear. An audacious
+party came round the stern of the boat and, with superlatively hideous
+gestures, affronted me; one of them even gave a tug at my hair,
+thinking it was a wig. I avenged myself by seizing his hand, and
+suddenly bending it back almost dislocated it, causing him to howl with
+pain. His comrades swayed their lances, but I smilingly looked at them,
+for all idea of self-preservation had now almost fled.
+
+The issue had surely arrived. There had been just one brief moment of
+agony when I reflected how unlovely death appears in such guise as that
+in which it then threatened me. What would my people think as they
+anxiously waited for the never returning master! What would Pocock and
+Barker say when they heard of the tragedy of Bumbireh! And my friends in
+America and Europe! “Tut, it is only a brief moment of pain, and then
+what can the ferocious dogs do more? It is a consolation that, if
+anything, it will be short, sharp, sudden—a gasp, and then a silence—for
+ever and ever!” And after that I was ready for the fight and for death.
+
+“Now, my black friends, do your worst; anything you choose; I am ready.”
+
+A messenger from the king and the council arrives, and beckons Safeni. I
+said to him, “Safeni, use your wit.” “Please God, master,” he replied.
+
+Safeni drew nearly all the crowd after him, for curiosity is strong in
+the African. I saw him pose himself. A born diplomatist was Safeni. His
+hands moved up and down, outward and inward; a cordial frankness sat
+naturally on his face; his gestures were graceful; the man was an
+orator, pleading for mercy and justice.
+
+Safeni returned, his face radiant. “It is all right, master, there is no
+fear. They say we must stop here until to-morrow.”
+
+“Will they sell us food?”
+
+“Oh, yes, as soon as they settle their shauri.”
+
+While Safeni was speaking, six men rushed up and seized the oars.
+
+Safeni, though hitherto politic, lost temper at this, and endeavoured to
+prevent them. They raised their clubs to strike him. I shouted, “Let
+them go, Safeni.”
+
+A loud cheer greeted the seizure of the oars. I became convinced now
+that this one little act would lead to others; for man is the same all
+over the world. Set a beggar on horseback, and he will ride to the
+devil; give a slave an inch, and he will take an ell; if a man submit
+once, he must be prepared to submit again.
+
+The “shauri” proceeded. Another messenger came, demanding five cloths
+and five fundo of necklaces. They were delivered. But as it was now near
+noon, and they were assured we could not escape, the savages withdrew to
+their nearest village to refresh themselves with wine and food.
+
+After the warriors had departed, some women came to look at us. We spoke
+kindly to them, and in return they gave us the consoling assurance that
+we should be killed; but they said that if we could induce Shekka to
+make blood-brotherhood, or to eat honey with one of us, we should be
+safe. If we failed, there was only flight or death. We thanked them, but
+we would wait.
+
+About 3 P.M. we heard a number of drums beaten. Safeni was told that if
+the natives collected again he must endeavour to induce Shekka with
+gifts to go through the process of blood-brotherhood.
+
+A long line of natives in full war costume appeared on the crest of the
+terrace, on which the banana grove and village of Kajurri stood. Their
+faces were smeared with black and white pigments. Almost all of them
+bore the peculiar shields of Usongora. Their actions were such as the
+dullest-witted of us recognised as indicating hostilities.
+
+Even Safeni and Baraka were astounded, and their first words were,
+“Prepare, master. Truly, this is trouble.”
+
+“Never mind me,” I replied, “I have been ready these three hours. Are
+you ready, your guns and revolvers loaded, and your ears open this
+time?”
+
+“We are,” they all firmly answered.
+
+“Don’t be afraid; be quite cool. We will try, while they are collecting
+together, the woman’s suggestion. Go frankly and smilingly, Safeni, up
+to Shekka, on the top of that hill, and offer him these three fundo of
+beads, and ask him to exchange blood with you.”
+
+Safeni proceeded readily on his errand, for there was no danger to him
+bodily while we were there within 150 yards, and their full power as yet
+unprepared. For ten minutes he conversed with them, while the drums kept
+beating, and numbers of men bepainted for war were increasing Shekka’s
+force. Some of them entertained us by demonstrating with their spears
+how they fought; others whirled their clubs like tipsy Irishmen at
+Donnybrook fair. Their gestures were wild, their voices were shrill and
+fierce, they were kindling themselves into a fighting fever.
+
+Safeni returned. Shekka had refused the pledge of peace. The natives now
+mustered over 300.
+
+Presently fifty bold fellows came rushing down, uttering a shrill cry.
+Without hesitation they came straight to the boat, and, hissing
+something to us, seized our Kiganda drum. It was such a small affair we
+did not resist; still the manner in which it was taken completely
+undeceived us, if any small hope of peace remained. Loud applause
+greeted the act of gallantry.
+
+Then two men came towards us, and began to drive some cows away that
+were grazing between us and the men on the hill. Safeni asked one of
+them, “Why do you do that?”
+
+“Because we are going to begin fighting presently, and if you are men,
+you may begin to prepare yourselves,” he said scornfully.
+
+“Thanks, my bold friend,” I muttered to myself. “Those are the truest
+words we have heard to-day.”
+
+The two men were retiring up the hill. “Here Safeni,” I said, “take
+these two fine red cloths in your hand; walk slowly up after them a
+little way, and the minute you hear my voice run back; and you, my boys,
+this is for life and death, mind; range yourselves on each side of the
+boat, lay your hands on it carelessly, but with a firm grip, and when I
+give the word, push it with the force of a hundred men down the hill
+into the water. Are you all ready, and do you think you can do it?
+Otherwise we might as well begin fighting where we are.”
+
+“Yes, Inshallah Master,” they cried out with one voice.
+
+“Go, Safeni!”
+
+I waited until he had walked fifty yards away, and saw that he acted
+precisely as I had instructed him.
+
+“Push, my boys; push for your lives!”
+
+The crew bent their heads and strained their arms; the boat began to
+move, and there was a hissing, grinding noise below me. I seized my
+double-barrelled elephant rifle and shouted, “Safeni! Safeni, return!”
+
+The natives were quick-eyed. They saw the boat moving, and with one
+accord they swept down the hill uttering the most fearful cries.
+
+My boat was at the water’s edge. “Shoot her into the lake, my men; never
+mind the water”; and clear of all obstructions she darted out upon the
+lake.
+
+Safeni stood for an instant on the water’s edge, with the cloths in his
+hand. The foremost of a crowd of natives was about twenty yards from
+him. He raised his spear and balanced himself.
+
+“Spring into the water, man, head first,” I cried.
+
+The balanced spear was about to fly, and another man was preparing his
+weapon for a deadly cast, when I raised my gun and the bullet ploughed
+through him and through the second. The bowmen halted and drew their
+bows. I sent two charges of duck-shot into their midst with terrible
+effect. The natives retreated from the beach on which the boat had
+lately lain.
+
+Having checked the natives, I assisted one of my men into the boat, and
+ordered him to lend a hand to the others, while I reloaded my big guns,
+keeping my eyes on the natives. There was a point about 100 yards in
+length on the east, which sheltered the cove. Some of the natives made a
+rush for this, but my guns commanded the exposed position, and they were
+obliged to retire.
+
+The crew seized their rifles, but I told them to leave them alone, and
+to tear the bottom-boards out of the boat and use them as paddles; for
+there were two hippopotami advancing upon us open-mouthed, and it seemed
+as if we were to be crushed in the water after such a narrow escape from
+the ferocious people ashore. I permitted one of the hippos to approach
+within ten yards, and, aiming between his eyes, perforated his skull
+with a three-ounce ball, and the second received such a wound that we
+were not molested by him.
+
+Meanwhile the savages, baffled and furious at seeing their prey escape,
+had rushed, after a short consultation, to man two canoes that were
+drawn up on the beach at the north-west corner of the cove. Twice I
+dropped men as they endeavoured to launch the boats; but they persisted,
+and finally, launching them, pursued us vigorously. Two other canoes
+were seen coming down the coast from the eastern side of the island.
+
+Unable to escape, we stopped after we had got out of the cove, and
+waited for them.
+
+My elephant rifle was loaded with explosive balls for this occasion.
+Four shots killed five men and sank two of the canoes. The two others
+retired to assist their friends out of the water. They attempted nothing
+further, but some of those on shore had managed to reach the point, and
+as we resumed our paddles, we heard a voice cry out, “Go and die in the
+Nyanza!” and saw them shoot their arrows, which fell harmlessly a few
+yards behind us. We were saved!
+
+It was 5 P.M. We had only four bananas in the boat, and we were twelve
+hungry men. If we had a strong fair breeze, a day and a night would
+suffice to enable us to reach our camp. But if we had head-winds, the
+journey might occupy a month. Meanwhile, after the experience of
+Makongo, Alice Island, and Bumbireh, where should we apply for food?
+Fresh water we had in abundance, sufficient to satisfy the thirst of all
+the armies of the world for a century. But food? Whither should we turn
+for it?
+
+A gentle breeze came from the island. We raised the lug sail, hoping
+that it would continue fair for a south-east course. But at 7 P.M. it
+fell a dead calm. We resumed our extemporized paddles—those thin weak
+bottom-boards. Our progress was about three-quarters of a mile per hour.
+
+Throughout the night we laboured, cheering one another. In the morning
+not a speck of land was visible: all was a boundless circle of grey
+water.
+
+_April 29._—About 9 A.M. a squall came fair and drove us about eight
+miles to the south; about 10.30 it became calm again, but still we
+paddled unceasingly. At night we found ourselves about seven miles away
+from an island to the southward of us, and we made noble efforts to
+reach it. But a gale came up from the south-west, against which it was
+useless to contend. The crew were fatigued and weakened after paddling
+forty-nine hours without food.
+
+We resigned ourselves to the waves and the rain that was falling in
+sheets, and the driving tempest. Up and down we rose and sank on the
+great waves, battered from side to side, swung round, plunged in dark
+hollows, and bathed in spray. We baled the boat out, and again sat down.
+At midnight the gale moderated and the moon rose, throwing a weird light
+upon the face of the lake and its long heaving billows, which still
+showed high crests whitened with foam. Up and down we rose and plunged.
+The moon now shone clear upon the boat and her wretched crew, ghastlily
+lighting up the crouching, wearied, despairing forms, from which there
+sometimes rose deep sighs that wrung my heart. “Cheer up, my lads, think
+nothing of the curse of those of Bumbireh; bad men’s curses sometimes
+turn out blessings,” I said, to encourage them. One of the thwarts was
+chopped up, and we made a fire, and with some of the coffee which I had
+obtained from Colonel Linant at Mtesa’s we felt somewhat refreshed. And
+then, completely wearied out, they all slept, but I watched, busy with
+my thoughts.
+
+_April 30._—The morning came, the morning of the 30th of April, and
+though my men had only eaten four bananas between them and tasted,
+besides, a cup of coffee since 10 A.M. of the 27th, they nevertheless,
+sixty-eight hours afterwards, when I urged them to resume their paddles
+that we might reach an island twelve miles south of us, rallied to my
+appeal with a manliness which won my admiration, responding with heroic
+will but, alas! with little strength.
+
+At 2 P.M.—seventy-six hours after leaving Alice Island—we approached a
+cove in an uninhabited island, which I have distinguished on the chart
+by the name of “Refuge.” We crawled out of the boat, and each of us
+thanked God for even this little mercy and lay down on the glowing sand
+to rest.
+
+But food must be obtained before night. Baraka and Safeni were sent to
+explore the interior in one direction, Murabo and Marzouk in another.
+Robert and Hamoidah were set to kindle a fire, and I took my shot-gun to
+shoot birds. Within half an hour I had obtained a brace of large fat
+ducks; Baraka and Safeni returned each with two bunches of young green
+bananas, and Murabo and his comrade had discovered some luscious berries
+like cherries.
+
+And what glad souls were we that evening around our camp fire with
+this gracious abundance to which a benignant Providence had led us,
+storm-tossed, bruised, and hungry creatures that we were but a few
+hours before! Bananas, ducks, berries, and coffee! The tobacco gourd
+and pipe closed one of the most delicious evenings I ever remember to
+have passed. No wonder that before retiring, feeling ourselves indebted
+to the Supreme Being, who had preserved us through so many troubles, we
+thanked Him for His mercies and His bounties.
+
+_May 2._—We rested another day on Refuge Island to make oars; and
+further explorations enabled us to procure half-a-dozen more bunches of
+bananas. Our appetites were so keen that there was but little left next
+morning by the time we were ready to start afresh. With oar and sail we
+set out for Singo Island. Perceiving it was uninhabited, we steered for
+Ito Island, the slopes of which were rich with plantains, but the
+natives slung stones at us, and we were therefore obliged to continue on
+our way to the Kuneneh group, near the peninsula of Ukerewé.
+
+_May 4._—On the afternoon of the 4th of May, a stormy head-wind rising,
+we were compelled to turn into the cove of Wiru, where, through the
+influence of Saramba the guide, who was at home in this country, we were
+hospitably received, and meat, potatoes, milk, honey, bananas both ripe
+and green, eggs and poultry, were freely sold to us. We cooked these
+delicacies on board, and ate them with such relish and appetite as only
+half-starved men can appreciate.
+
+_May 5._—Hoping to reach our camp next morning, we set sail at 9 P.M.,
+steering across Speke Gulf. But about 3 A.M., when we were nearly in
+mid-gulf, the fickle wind failed us, and then, as if resolved we should
+taste to the uttermost the extreme of suffering, it met us with a
+tempest from the N.N.E., as fearful in other respects as that which we
+experienced at Usuguru, but with the fresh torments added of hailstones
+as large as filberts. The sky was robed in inky blackness, not a star
+was visible, vivid lightnings flashed accompanied by loud thunder
+crashes, and furious waves tossed us about as though we were imprisoned
+in a gourd, the elements thus combining to multiply the terrors of our
+situation. Again we resigned the boat to wind and wave, as all our
+efforts to keep our course were unavailing.
+
+We began to think that the curse of the people of Bumbireh, “Go and die
+in the Nyanza,” might be realized after all—though I had much faith in
+the staunch craft which Messenger of Teddington so conscientiously
+constructed.
+
+_May 6._—A grey, cheerless morning dawned at last, and we discovered
+ourselves to be ten miles north of Rwoma, and about twenty miles
+north-west of Kagehyi. We put forth our best efforts, hoisted sail, and
+though the wind was but little in our favour at first, it soon veered
+round, and sent us sailing merrily over the tall waves, and along the
+coast of Usukuma, straight towards camp.
+
+Shouts of welcome greeted us from shore, for the people had recognized
+us by our sail when miles away, and as we drew nearer the shouts
+changed to volleys of musketry, and the waving of flags, and the land
+seemed alive with leaping forms of the glad-hearted men. For we had
+been fifty-seven days away from our people, and many a false rumour had
+reached them of our deaths, strengthened each day that our return was
+deferred and our absence grew longer. But the sight of the exploring
+boat sailing towards Kagehyi dissipated all alarm, concern, and fear.
+
+As the keel grounded, fifty men bounded into the water, dragged me from
+the boat, and danced me round the camp on their shoulders, amid much
+laughter, and clapping of hands, grotesque wriggling of forms, and real
+Saxon hurrahing.
+
+Frank Pocock was there, his face lit up by fulness of joy, but when I
+asked him where Frederick Barker was, and why he did not come to welcome
+me, Frank’s face clouded with the sudden recollection of our loss, as he
+answered, “Because he died twelve days ago, Sir, and he lies there,”
+pointing gravely to a low mound of earth by the lake!
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ CAIRN ERECTED TO THE MEMORY OF FREDERICK BARKER:
+ MAJITA, AND URIRWI MOUNTAINS IN THE DISTANCE, ACROSS SPEKE GULF.
+
+ (_From a photograph by the Author._)]
+]
+
+-----
+
+# 14:
+
+ Owing to the events which are recorded in this chapter I was unable to
+ return to Mtesa’s capital within the time specified to M. Linant, but
+ it is evident that my friend waited nearly six weeks for me. He
+ sustained a fierce attack for fourteen hours from several thousand
+ Wanyoro _en route_ to Ismailia, but finally succeeded in making his
+ escape, and reaching Colonel Gordon’s headquarters in safety. On the
+ 26th August, however, being on another mission, he was attacked by the
+ Baris near a place called Labore, and he and his party of thirty-six
+ soldiers were massacred. This sad event occurred four days after I
+ returned on my second visit to the Ripon Falls.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI.
+
+Barker’s illness and death—Other deaths—Traitors in the camp—Rest!—
+ Sickness—Rwoma blocks our passage by land—Magassa fails us by water—A
+ serious dilemma—Lukongeh comes to the rescue—History of Ukerewé—
+ Educated amphibians—Leaving Kagehyi with half the Expedition—The
+ foundering canoes—All saved—Ito conciliates us—Arrival at Refuge
+ Island with half the Expedition—I return for the rest—A murderous
+ outbreak in camp—Final departure from Kagehyi—All encamped on Refuge
+ Island—We ally ourselves with Komeh—A dance of kings—Mahyiga Island
+ (in the Bumbireh group)—Interviewed by Iroba canoes—Our friendship
+ scorned—The king of Bumbireh a hostage—The massacre of the Kytawa
+ chief and his crew—The punishment of the murderers—Its salutary effect
+ upon their neighbours—We arrive in Uganda.
+
+
+_May 6._—When the hysterical congratulations of the Expedition had
+somewhat slackened, Prince Kaduma and the friends of Saramba, the guide
+(who was now quite a hero), and Frank accompanied me to my hut—the dogs
+Jack and Bull following—to give me a brief narrative of the events that
+had transpired.
+
+Fred Barker, according to Frank, had good health till the middle of
+April; after which he began to experience aguish fits. On the 22nd he
+had enjoyed a hippopotamus hunt on the shore between Kagehyi and Lutari,
+and on the morning of the 23rd had bathed in the lake and eaten a hearty
+early breakfast. At 9 A.M., however, he complained of feeling ill, and
+lay down. Almost immediately a cold fit seized him, and his blood seemed
+to stagnate in its veins. Frank and Barker’s servants employed their
+utmost art to increase the warmth of his body. They administered brandy
+and hot tea, put heated stones to his feet, and piled blanket after
+blanket upon him, but the congealed blood would not run, and at 11 A.M.
+the poor young man was dead.
+
+“At 3 P.M. we buried him,” said Frank, “close to the Nyanza. Poor
+fellow! many and many a time he said during the last few days, ‘I wish
+the master would come back. I should then feel as if there were some
+chance of life for me, but I shall die stagnating and rotting here if he
+does not come.’ I think, Sir, he would have pulled through had you been
+here.”
+
+I missed young Barker very much. He had begun to endear himself to me by
+his bright intelligence and valuable services. When ill, my least wish
+was immediately gratified: he understood the least motion or sign. He
+was also a good writer, and he kept the accounts of the various stores,
+cloths, and beads. He was an admirable companion to Frank, and the two
+young men were good company for me; they had also won the hearts of the
+Wangwana by their gentle, amiable conduct. An oath or a profane word I
+seldom heard from either of them; and when angry, their anger at the
+stupidity or insolence of the people was of the passive kind; they never
+resorted to violence without appealing to me.
+
+But Frank had other bad news to tell. Mabruki Speke, whom Burton
+called the bull-headed—the faithful servant of Burton and Speke, Speke
+and Grant, of myself on the first expedition, of Livingstone on his
+last journey, and one of the most trusted men of my present following
+from Zanzibar to Lake Victoria—was dead. Jabiri (one of the stout
+boat-bearers) was dead, and so was old Akida, besides three others.
+All had died of dysentery. Msenna the “bully of Zanzibar” had broken
+out once more, after nearly six months of good behaviour. I arrived at
+Kagehyi on the 5th of May from the exploration of the lake; on the 6th
+he was to have led a body of sixty men to Unyanyembé, if the master did
+not return!
+
+Kipingiri, chief of Lutari, and brother of Kaduma, chief of Kagehyi, had
+formed a conspiracy with Kurrereh, chief of Kyenzi, and the chief of
+Igusa, to unite their forces to attack and plunder the camp. But the
+Wangwana chiefs, Manwa Sera and Kachéché, had discovered the plot, and
+Frank and Fred Barker, after sounding Kaduma, had distributed
+ammunition, with every intention of employing their best abilities to
+resist the attack. Prince Kaduma’s loyalty to his absent friend, and
+Frank and Fred’s bold conduct, with the sudden death of the chief of
+Igusa, had caused Kipingiri to abandon the wicked conspiracy.
+
+Frank informed me also that he had suffered one or two slight attacks of
+fever, but that he had “easily shaken them off.” The Wangwana were
+wonderfully recovered from the miserable attenuation which the scant
+fare of Ugogo and Urimi had wrought in their frames, and some were so
+robust and fat that I scarcely knew them. Upon examining the stock of
+goods left in the store-room, I was gratified to discover that Frank had
+been extremely economical. I found him in perfect accord with Prince
+Kaduma, good friends with Sungoro, and respected by the Wangwana; and on
+inspecting his work, there was nothing in his conduct that did not
+deserve hearty approval and commendation.
+
+_May 7._—Our return to Kagehyi was followed by Sabbath repose and
+rest, fairly earned and much needed. When I placed myself under the
+spring-balance scales, I found I weighed only 115 lbs., just 63 lbs.
+less than when leaving Zanzibar. Frank Pocock weighed 162 lbs.! I saved
+this excessive reduction of flesh to scant fare and days of hunger, not
+to sickness.
+
+Sweet were those first days of rest! Frank was eager to hear all that
+had befallen us, in our 1000 miles’ sail round the lake, and the
+Wangwana formed circles many deep, to hear the Iliad of our woes. What
+hearty sympathisers these poor, black, untutored men were! Kaduma was
+all amazement, and Sungoro never ceased to express his wonder as to how
+we managed to go round the lake in the “little boat.” The Wasukuma
+extemporized songs in her honour, which they sang in the evenings; and
+the naked urchins made miniature boats out of the stem of the banana,
+with twigs as masts and leaves for sails. The influence of one example
+had, it seemed to me, already produced fruit here, and the efforts of
+the little ones proved to me that the natives needed but one or two more
+such examples to stimulate them to similar enterprises. Future explorers
+will find many ready to imitate bold Saramba’s conduct as guides, and
+the Wasukuma may become in future as docile boatmen as they are capable
+porters and steady travellers on land.
+
+Then came sickness. The African fever having found my frame weakened
+from privations attacked me vigorously one day after another. Three
+fevers reduced me 7 lbs. in weight. But I quininized myself thoroughly
+from dawn of day to set of sun, and on the fifth day stepped out,
+sallow, pale, weak, and trembling, it is true, with jaundiced eyes,
+palpitating heart, and ringing ears—but the fever had been conquered.
+
+Where was Magassa with his canoes? Day after day we hoped and wished he
+would appear, but his canoes were never sighted on the horizon, and we
+finally abandoned all hope of seeing him, or of being able to reach
+Uganda by water. We prepared therefore to march overland by way of Mweré
+through King Rwoma’s country. We made no secret of it. Kaduma was
+informed, and he communicated it to every one, and it soon came to
+Rwoma’s ears.
+
+But King Rwoma, being an ally of Mirambo, entertained a strong objection
+to Wangwana, and he had exaggerated ideas of the appearance of the white
+men who were at Kagehyi. Some silly child of nature had told him there
+was a white man at Kagehyi with “long red hair, and great red eyes”—it
+was probably Frank, though a libellous caricature of him certainly—and
+the report induced Rwoma to send an embassy to Kagehyi. He said, “Rwoma
+sends salaams to the white man. He does not want the white man’s cloth,
+beads, or wire, and the white man must not pass through his country;
+Rwoma does not want to see him or any other white man with long red hair
+down to his shoulders, white face, and big red eyes; Rwoma is not afraid
+of him, but if the white man comes near his country, Rwoma and Mirambo
+will fight him.” To this bold but frank challenge the Wasukuma added
+other reasons to prove that the overland route was impassable. The road
+between Muanza and Mweré was closed by factious tribes. Rwoma was an
+ally of Mirambo; Kijaju, his neighbour, was an ally of the predatory
+Watuta; the chief of Nchoza, hard by him, was at war with the Watuta;
+Antari, king of Ihangiro and Bumbireh, would naturally resent our
+approach; Mankorongo, successor of Swarora of Usui, could only be
+appeased with such tribute as would be absolutely ruinous. If I
+proceeded south to Unyanyembé the Wangwana could never be held together,
+and the Expedition would dissolve like snow.
+
+By water, what was the outlook? Magassa and his fleet were not to be
+heard of. He had probably returned from Musira Island, afraid to risk
+his canoes in the great waste of waters between Musira Island and Alice
+Island, for Waganda canoes made of plank and sewn together with fibre of
+cane sometimes founder in bad weather, and the lake in the rainy season
+is dangerous to such. The Wasukuma possessed no canoes, and I but one
+boat capable of carrying fifteen men in rough weather. Yet my duty urged
+me to proceed to Uganda. Lake Albert must be visited, for I had given my
+word of honour that I would attempt it. Yet the land route was
+impassable, and to all appearance so also was the lake route!
+
+While explaining my difficulties to Sungoro, he informed me, after
+responding to various other questions, that Lukongeh, king of Ukerewé,
+possessed numerous canoes, but he doubted if he would lend them to me.
+“However,” said he, “he is an agreeable man, and a good friend if he
+takes a fancy to one.” I thought of Lukongeh, but another attack of
+fever cut short my deliberations. My system was much injured by exposure
+and privations, and in my delirium I fancied myself pleading with the
+king, and throughout each day’s sick vagaries, “Lukongeh, Lukongeh,”
+nothing but Lukongeh, flitted through my brain.
+
+_May 15._—On the 15th of May I was convalescent, and arranged that
+Prince Kaduma, Sungoro’s carpenter, and Frank Pocock should proceed
+together to Lukongeh, bearing ten fine cloths, ten fundo of beads, and
+five fathom of brass wire, to open negotiations either for the sale or
+hire of canoes.
+
+_May 28._—On the 28th, Frank and his party returned with fifty canoes
+and their crews, under the command of two chiefs and the “premier” of
+Ukerewé. I gripped Frank’s hand with ardour, but was dismayed when I was
+told that these canoes were to convey the Expedition to Ukerewé! This
+was by no means a desirable thing, for its progress might be delayed for
+months by caprice, or by any future ill will arising from a too intimate
+acquaintance between the Wangwana and the natives. I refused, and told
+the chiefs they could accompany me back to Ukerewé, as I would see
+Lukongeh myself.
+
+_May 29._—Accordingly, on the 29th, after providing myself with presents
+such as might win any African’s goodwill—fine rugs, blankets, crimson
+cloth, and striped cloths of Kutch and Muscat, besides beads of a rare
+quality, and other things too numerous to mention, equal to about 800
+dollars’ worth—I started for Msossi, Lukongeh’s capital on the north
+side of Ukerewé.
+
+_May 30._—We halted a few hours at Wezi, and its curious granite rocks
+were photographed by me, and in the afternoon continued our journey,
+arriving at Kisorya at 4 P.M., where we camped. The next morning, about
+9 A.M., we passed through Rugedzi Channel, which connects Speke Gulf
+with Majita Bay. It was 6 feet wide in some places, and if left
+undisturbed there was every indication from the grasses and water-plants
+which grew in it that it would soon be choked, but by vigorous punting
+with poles we succeeded in getting through. Some of the Wakerewé say
+that Majita mountain is separated from the mainland by a similar
+channel, at which I should not be surprised. We reached Msossi, and
+received a hut to house ourselves in, an ox for meat, bananas for
+vegetables, and milk for drink.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ _To face page 194._
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ THE STRANGE GRANITE ROCKS OF WEZI ISLAND, MIDWAY BETWEEN USUKUMA AND
+ UKEREWÉ.
+ (_From a photograph by the Author._)
+ [This island is reported to be that on which Lieutenant Smith and Mr.
+ O’Neill were lately killed by the Wakerewé.]
+]
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+_May 31._—At 9 A.M. of the 31st we advanced upon the aulic council
+of Ukerewé, which, seated on some rising rocks on a plain, was quite
+picturesque, with the gay figure of Lukongeh in the centre, round
+which the lesser lights revolved. The king, a handsome, open-faced,
+light-coloured young man of twenty-six or twenty-eight years old,
+merely gazed his fill; and his chiefs Msiwa, Mosota, Mgeyeya, and
+Wakoreh, followed his example, as well as the lesser chiefs, men, boys,
+and women.
+
+From his questions I perceived that Lukongeh would be quite as much
+influenced by conversations about Europe as Mtesa of Uganda, and I soon
+saw in him as eligible a convert to Christianity, though the future was
+too fraught with anxiety for me to attempt it. No business could be
+commenced on this day. We were to eat and rest, and the next, if the
+king felt in good health, we might begin the negotiations.
+
+On the second day Lukongeh was fortunately in excellent health and
+spirits, and I felt so also, and with the greatest possible suavity I
+proposed that he should either sell or lend me thirty canoes. All his
+objections were met and overruled by the exhibition of my presents. But
+when he saw me thus publicly expose the gorgeous cloths in broad
+daylight, he trembled, and bade me cover them up quickly, saying that he
+would visit me in my hut at night, and that I might rest assured he
+would do his best for me. On the evening of the 4th of June, he stole
+into my hut at night, in company with his faithful premier, and four
+principal chiefs, and here I presented him with two fine rugs, one
+Scotch plaid, two red blankets, ornaments of copper, thirty fine cloths,
+fifty fundo of beads, and two coils of brass wire, besides various other
+things, such as dishes, plates, tin pots, &c. His chiefs received five
+cloths each and five fundo (a fundo consists of ten necklaces) of beads,
+and two fathoms each of brass wire. For these munificent presents, I
+should obtain my answer shortly; but in the meantime I must enjoy
+myself. “Feed and get fat,” said Lukongeh, as he withdrew, happy with
+his wealth.
+
+The Wakerewé, following the example of their king, treated us with
+consideration. We had to undergo a narrow inspection, and a keen
+analysis of physiognomy, that they might compare us with the Arab
+Sungoro; but we had long become accustomed to this, and therefore bore
+it with unconcern.
+
+There are representatives of many tribes in Ukerewé—such as Wataturu,
+Wa-hya, Wattambara, Wasumbwa, Waruri, Wakwya and Wazinja.
+
+The elders, to whom are entrusted the traditions of the country,
+furnished me with a list of the following kings:—
+
+ 1. Ruhinda I.
+ 2. Kasessa.
+ 3. Kytawa.
+ 4. Kahana I.
+ 5. Gurta I.
+ 6. Nagu.
+ 7. Mehigo I.
+ 8. Mehigo II.
+
+ 9. Kahana II.
+ 10. Gurta II.
+ 11. Ruhinda II.
+ 12. Kahana III.
+ 13. Iwanda.
+ 14. Machunda.
+ 15. Lukongeh, the present king.
+
+The founder of Ukerewé, Ruhinda I., is the king whose memory is most
+revered. He brought his people in canoes from Usongora and Ihangiro,
+which was known in old times by the name of U-wya. He it was who
+introduced the plantain and banana plants into Ukerewé. The aborigines,
+whom he conquered, were called Wa-kwya—another name for the inhabitants
+of Majita Mount. A small remnant of the tribe still live on the south
+coast of Ukerewé, opposite Kagehyi.
+
+The royal sepulchre is at Kitari. The hill on which it is situated is
+seen in the photograph of the boat at the landing-place of Msossi, and
+an eminent chief of Ukerewé has the charge of it to protect it
+inviolate. The kings are all buried in a sitting posture.
+
+Lukongeh’s dominions east of Rugedzi Channel were acquired by the
+forcible dispossession of Wataturu shepherds, after a fierce battle,
+which lasted five days, during which many of the Wakerewé were slain by
+the poisoned arrows, of the shepherds. Though they live harmoniously
+together now, there is as much difference between the Wakerewé and the
+Wataturu as exists between a Nubian and a Syrian Arab. The Wataturu are
+light-coloured, straight, thin-nosed and thin-lipped, while the Wakerewé
+are a mixture of the Ethiopic and negro type.
+
+The king is supposed to be endowed with supernatural power, and Lukongeh
+seizes every opportunity to heighten this belief. He is believed to be
+enabled to create a drought at pleasure, and to cause the land to be
+drenched with rain. It is fortunate that, since his accession to power,
+rain has been regular and copious in its season. The king has not been
+slow to point out this immense advantage which Ukerewé has gained since
+he succeeded his father; he is therefore beloved and feared.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ AT THE LANDING-PLACE OF MSOSSI:
+ VIEW OF KITARI HILL TO THE LEFT: MAJITA MOUNTAIN TO THE RIGHT.
+
+ (_From a photograph by the Author._)
+]
+
+Aware of the value of a reputation as rain-maker, he was ambitious to
+add to it that of “great medicine man,” and besought me earnestly to
+impart to him some of the grand secrets of Europe—such as how to
+transform men into lions and leopards, to cause the rains to fall or
+cease, the winds to blow, to give fruitfulness to women and virility to
+men. Demands of this character are commonly made by African chiefs. When
+I stated my inability to comply with his requests, he whispered to his
+chiefs:—
+
+“He will not give me what I ask, because he is afraid he will not get
+the canoes; but you will see when my men return from Uganda, he will
+give me all I ask.”
+
+The custom of greeting the king is a most curious one, differing from
+any I have observed elsewhere. His people, after advancing close to him,
+clap their hands and kneel to him. If the king is pleased, he reveals
+his pleasure by blowing and spitting into their hands, with which they
+affect to anoint their faces and eyes. They seem to believe that the
+king’s saliva is a collyrium for the eyes.
+
+To each other the Wakerewé kneel, clap hands, and cry, “Waché! waché!”
+“Waché sug!” “Mohoro!” “Eg sura?” which, translated, signifies,
+“Morning! morning!” “Good-morning!” “A good day!” “Are you well?”
+
+The stories current in this country about the witchcraft practised by
+the people of Ukara Island proe that those islanders have been at pains
+to spread abroad a good repute for themselves, that they are cunning,
+and, aware that superstition is a weakness of human nature, have sought
+to thrive upon it. Their power—according to the Wakerewé—over the
+amphibiæ is wonderful. One Khamis, son of Hamadi, the carpenter of
+Sungoro, having been a long time constructing a dhow, or sailing vessel,
+for his employer, shared most thoroughly in these delusions.
+
+Khamis averred, with an oath, that there was a crocodile who lived in
+the house of the chief of Ukara, which fed from his hands, and was as
+docile and obedient to his master as a dog, and as intelligent as a man.
+Lukongeh had once a pretty woman in his harem, who was coveted by the
+Ukara chief, but the latter could devise no means to possess her for a
+long time until he thought of his crocodile. He instantly communicated
+his desire to the reptile, and bade him lie in wait in the rushes near
+Msossi until the woman should approach the lake to bathe, as was her
+custom daily, and then seize and convey her without injury across the
+eight-mile channel to Ukara. The next day, at noon, the woman was in the
+Ukara chief’s house.
+
+When I expressed a doubt about the veracity of the marvellous tale,
+Khamis said, indignantly, “What, you doubt me? Ask Lukongeh, and he will
+confirm what I have told you.”
+
+He then added, “Machunda, Lukongeh’s father, owned a crocodile that
+stole an Arab’s wife, and carried her across the country to the king’s
+house!” To Khamis, and the Wangwana who listened to him, this last was
+conclusive evidence that the crocodiles of Ukara were most astonishing
+creatures.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ 1 Storage for grain, Ukerewé. 5 Woman’s breasts, Ukerewé.
+
+ 2 House, Ukerewé. 6 A warrior of Ukerewé.
+
+ 3 Stool, Ukerewé. 7 Women with coils of brasswork,
+ Ukerewé.
+
+ 4 Canoe, Ukerewé. 8 Fish-nets, Ukerewé.
+
+The Wakerewé also believe that, if a hawk seizes a fish belonging to the
+Wakara, it is sure to die in the very act!
+
+Kaduma Kagehyi, according to Khamis, possessed a hippopotamus which came
+to him each morning, for a long period, to be milked!
+
+It requires twelve goats and three hoes to purchase a wife in Ukerewé
+from her parents. Sungoro, the Arab, was obliged to pay Lukongeh 350
+lbs. of assorted beads and 300 yards of good cloth before he succeeded
+in obtaining one of his young sisters in marriage. If the lover is so
+poor that he has neither goats nor hoes, he supplies such articles as
+spears, or bows and arrows, but he cannot obtain a wife until he
+furnishes a sufficient dowry to please her parents. If the parents or
+older relatives are grasping, and impose hard conditions, the state of
+the lover is hard indeed, as frequently after marriage demands are made
+for cattle, sheep, goats, &c., a refusal of which renders the marriage
+void until children have been born, when all connection with her blood
+relatives ceases.
+
+Thieves, adulterers, and murderers are put to death by decapitation.
+They may escape death, however, by becoming the slaves of the party they
+have wronged.
+
+Coils of brass wire are much coveted by the Wakerewé, for the adornment
+of their wives, who wear it in such numerous circlets round their necks
+as to give them at a distance an appearance of wearing ruffs. Wristlets
+of copper and brass and iron, and anklets of the same metal, besides
+armlets of ivory, are the favourite decorations of the males.
+
+Families in mourning are distinguished by bands of plaintain leaf round
+their heads, and by a sable pigment of a mixture of pulverized charcoal
+and butter. The matrons who have fallen into the sere of life are
+peculiar for their unnatural length of breasts, which, depending like
+pouches down to the navel, are bound to their bodies by cords. The
+dresses of men and women consist of half dressed ox-hides, goat-skins,
+or a cincture of banana leaves, or kirtles of a coarsely made grass
+cloth.
+
+_June 6._—On the 6th of June, Lukongeh, having issued instructions to
+his chiefs how to assist me, called on me at night, accompanied by his
+premier, to impart his decisions and plans.
+
+Said he, “My people are very timid in strange lands. They are no
+travellers like the Wangwana. I am obliged therefore to act in the dark
+with them, otherwise I could not help you. I am going to give you
+twenty-three canoes and their paddles. They are not worth much, and if
+they give you trouble, you must not blame me. I am telling my people you
+are coming back to Ukerewé. Don’t deny it, and don’t talk about it, or
+they will be sure to run away back here. If you are clever, they will
+follow you to Usukuma. Once there, take the canoes and paddles, because
+I give them to you; and here are my young nephew and cousin, who will
+follow you to Uganda, and make friends with the Wazinja, as far as
+Ihangiro, for you. When you reach Uganda, I wish you to make Mtesa and
+myself brothers, and we will exchange gifts. You must also remember to
+send my young men back from Uganda. Good-bye. I have said all.”
+
+I was also enjoined to send to Lukongeh by his young nephew and cousin
+two suits of crimson and blue flannels, medicine for rheumatism and
+headache, one revolver and ammunition, one bale of cloth, beads of
+various kinds to the amount of 50 lbs., two fezes, one English rug, one
+Kiganda canoe, capable of carrying forty men, two tusks of ivory, Usoga
+goat-skins, otter furs, and iron and brass wire—all of which of course I
+promised most faithfully to send.
+
+_June 7._—Lukongeh and his chiefs were out early on the morning of the
+7th of June to bid me farewell. But there were only five small canoes
+ready! “How is this, Lukongeh?” I asked. “Never mind, go on; and
+remember what I have said to you, my brother. Lukongeh is true,” he
+replied, with dignity.
+
+“Wonderful man,” I thought, “to have a respect for truth in this
+country. He is assuredly one of the first. However, we shall see.”
+
+We punted our boat through the narrow Rugedzi Channel, and rowed to
+Kisorya. Lukongeh’s premier, his nephew and cousin, who were to be our
+guides, were with us.
+
+_June 11._—From the hills of Kisorya I obtained a capital photograph of
+the deep bay which leads from Speke Gulf to Rugedzi Channel, and of the
+mountains of Urirwi, across the bay. From Kisorya we moved to Ugoma,
+where we halted, a sore trial to our patience, until the 11th of June,
+on which day, with twenty-seven canoes of Ukerewé, we rowed to Wezi
+Island,[15] situate nearly midway in Speke Gulf between Ukerewé and
+Kagehyi.
+
+_June 12._—The next day, upon landing at Kagehyi, I whispered
+instructions to Frank and Manwa Sera to haul up the canoes to a distance
+of eighty yards on land, and with the aid of Lukongeh’s premier and the
+king’s relatives induced the Wakerewé canoe-men, 216 in number, to store
+their paddles in my hut.
+
+The Wakerewé were then apprised of the strategy of their king, and told
+that there were four canoes left to them to return to Ukerewé, and that,
+as it would occupy four days to transport their entire party back, beads
+would be given for ten days’ provisions. At this the Wakerewé were
+naturally very much surprised, and the uproar became tremendous. They
+seized the premier, but he audaciously shuffled the fault upon the young
+relatives, so releasing him they bound Lukongeh’s relatives, and would
+undoubtedly have murdered them then and there but for the precautions I
+had taken. A nod to Frank and Manwa Sera, and fifty Wangwana had dashed
+up to the rescue and, charging on the excited mob with the muzzles of
+their guns, drove them clear out of the village of Kagehyi.
+
+When the Wakerewé were outside, we held a palaver with them, at which it
+was explained that we should wait six days at Kagehyi, during which time
+they could communicate with Lukongeh, and if the king repented of his
+promise, the canoes should be sent back, or that, if they pleased, they
+could return and, by manning the canoes for us, would be sure of earning
+each man his reward, but that the relatives of Lukongeh, being in my
+camp and in my service, must not be molested, as I was bound to protect
+them.
+
+This firm decision being fully explained to them, forty-five took the
+four canoes given and returned to Ukerewé, to communicate with Lukongeh.
+Six additional canoes, despatched by their friends the next day,
+assisted in the transport of the natives of Ukerewé back to their
+country; and on the third day our camp was emptied of almost all of
+them, but though we waited seven days at Kagehyi, no further
+communication came from Lukongeh, and therefore the premier and his five
+servants departed.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ [_To face page 202._
+
+[Illustration: VIEW OF THE BAY LEADING TO RUGEDZI CHANNEL FROM KIGOMA,
+NEAR KISORYA, SOUTH SIDE OF UKEREWÉ, COAST OF SPEKE GULF.]
+
+(_From a photograph by the Author._)
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Meanwhile I had despatched messengers to all the districts around to
+summon the people to a grain market, whereat all grain brought to
+Kagehyi would be purchased, at the rate of eight measures (similar to
+pecks) at the rate of one doti or four yards of blue, white, or coloured
+cloth. By the 19th of June, 12,000 lbs. of grain, sesamum, millet, and
+Indian corn, and 500 lbs. of rice had been purchased and stowed in cloth
+sacks, each containing about 100 lbs.
+
+As the canoes were so rotten, the crews of each were detailed under the
+supervision of Lukanjah, the nephew, and Mikondo, the cousin of
+Lukongeh, to repair them. This was done by re-sewing many of the planks
+with cane-fibre and caulking them with the bruised stalk of the banana.
+
+_June 20._—At early dawn we began the embarkation of 150 men, women, and
+children, with 100 loads of cloth, beads, and wire, 88 sacks of grain,
+and 30 cases of ammunition; and as I could not delegate to others the
+care of the flotilla without feeling uncontrollable anxiety about it,
+the _Lady Alice_, loaded with most of the ammunition, led the way at 9
+A.M. to Mabibi. These islets are three miles westward of Wezi, six miles
+from Ukerewé, and about nine miles from Kagehyi.
+
+To my great satisfaction I perceived that the Wangwana would soon
+acquire the art of paddling, though many were exceedingly timid on the
+water. Until they gained confidence in their new duties, our plan was to
+avail ourselves of the calm periods, and not to risk so many lives and
+so much property in a tempestuous sea.
+
+A strong breeze from the north-west lasted all the morning, but at noon
+it moderated, and two hours afterwards, taking advantage of the calm, we
+pushed off from Mabibi, and, rounding the south-west corner of the
+Ukerewé peninsula, pulled for the Kunneneh islets, which we reached
+without loss or accident. Again the north-west breeze blew strong, and,
+as it had power over a greater expanse of water, the waves did not
+subside until 2 P.M. It was tough labour rowing against the heavy swell,
+and the distance to the Miandereh Islands was long. By persevering,
+however, we made good progress, yet at sunset Miandereh islets were not
+in sight.
+
+Intense darkness set in. We could not see one another, though we could
+hear the measured, rhythmic beat and splash of oar and paddle, but no
+voices. Now and then I flashed a waxlight over the dark waste as a
+beacon to the thoughtless and unwary. By this means, and by threats of
+punishment to those who strayed from the line, the canoes were kept
+together.
+
+We had proceeded quietly for three hours in the darkness, when suddenly
+shrill cries were heard for “the boat.” Hurrying to the spot, I managed
+to distinguish, to my astonishment, round dark objects floating on the
+water, which we found to be the heads of men who were swimming towards
+us from a foundered canoe. We took the frightened people on board, and
+picked up four bales of cloth, but a box of ammunition and 400 lbs. of
+grain had sunk.
+
+We moved forward again, but had scarcely gone half a mile when again
+piercing cries from the deep gloom startled us. “The boat, oh, the
+boat!” was screamed in frenzied accents.
+
+As we steered for the spot, I lit a wax taper and set fire to the leaves
+of a book I had been reading during the afternoon, to lighten up the
+scene. Heads of struggling men and bales were found here likewise in the
+water, and a canoe turned bottom up with a large rent in its side; and
+while distributing these among the other canoes, we heard to our alarm
+that five guns had sunk, but fortunately no lives were lost or other
+property, except four sacks of grain.
+
+My boat was now up to her gunwale with twenty-two men and thirty loads,
+and if a breeze rose, she would, unless we lightened her of property,
+inevitably sink.
+
+Through the darkness I shouted out to the frightened men, that if any
+more canoes collapsed, the crews should at once empty out the grain and
+beads, but on no account abandon their boats, as they would float and
+sustain them until I could return to save them.
+
+I had scarcely finished speaking before the alarming cries were raised
+again: “Master, the canoe is sinking! Quick, come here. Oh, master, we
+cannot swim!”
+
+Again I hurried up to the cries, and distinguished two men paddling
+vigorously, while five were baling. I was thinking how I could possibly
+assist them, when other cries broke out: “The boat! Bring the boat here!
+Oh, hurry—the boat, the boat!” Then another broke out, “And we are
+sinking—the water is up to our knees. Come to us, master, or we die!
+Bring the boat, my master!”
+
+It was evident that a panic was raging amongst the timid souls, that the
+people were rapidly becoming utterly unnerved. In reply to their
+frenzied cries, and as the only way to save us all, I shouted out
+sternly: “You who would save yourselves, follow me to the islets as fast
+as you can; and you who are crying out, cling to your canoes until we
+return.”
+
+We rowed hard. The moon rose also, and cheered us in half an hour with a
+sight of Miandereh, for which we steered. Her brightness had also the
+effect of rousing up the spirits of the Wangwana; but still the piteous
+cries were heard far behind: “Master! oh, master! bring your boat—the
+boat.”
+
+“Hark to them, my boys—hark,” I sang out to my crew, and they responded
+to my appeal by causing the _Lady Alice_ to fly through the water,
+though the waves almost curled over her sides. “Pull, my men; break your
+oars; shoot her through the water; life and death hang on your efforts.
+Pull like heroes.” She hissed through the waves, as ten men, bending
+with the wildest, most desperate effort, spurred her with their oars.
+
+Miandereh islets rose larger and clearer into view. “Hurrah, my boys,
+here is our island! pull and defy the black water—your brothers are
+drowning!”
+
+We reached Miandereh—shot the goods out, lightened her of the wrecked
+men, and flew back again, skimming over the dark surface.
+
+There were two brothers who had been made coxswains of canoes, who came
+prominently into notice on this terrible night. Each had his special
+crew, friends and people of the same tribe, and their names were Uledi
+and Shumari; the former about twenty-five years old, the latter
+eighteen.
+
+As I was returning with my boat to the scene, two canoes passed me like
+arrows. “Who go there?” I demanded.
+
+“Uledi and Shumari’s canoes,” replied somebody.
+
+“Return instantly, after unloading, to save the people.”
+
+“It is what we intend to do, Inshallah!” answered a voice.
+
+“Fine fellows those, I warrant them,” I thought. “Their very action and
+tone reveal their brave spirits.”
+
+Away we flew to the rescue, blowing the bugle to announce our approach.
+We passed three or four canoes, racing by us to the islets. Thank
+Heaven, the lake was calm, and the moon shone clear and strong, casting
+a golden light upon the waters.
+
+“You are brave fellows; pull, my sons; think of those poor men in
+the lake in sinking canoes.” Responding to my prayers, the crew
+almost cracked their hearts in the mighty efforts they made; their
+quick-swaying figures, the deep sighs which burst from their breasts,
+the careering boat, the excited helmsman, everything sympathized with
+me. I seized one of the oars myself to relieve a lad, and to assist the
+force which now dashed the boat over the water. She seemed instinct
+with life.
+
+We now heard the cries for aid, “Oh, the boat! Master, bring the boat!”
+come once more pealing over the golden lake from the foundering canoes.
+
+“Do you hear, men? break the oars—lift the boat over the water. We will
+save them yet. It is to-night or never!”
+
+With fresh force she bounded upward. Every fibre of our straining bodies
+and the full strength of our energies were roused, and in five minutes
+we ran alongside first one canoe, then a second and a third—until again
+the boat was down in the water to within an inch of her gunwale. But all
+the people—men, women, and children—were saved. The light material of
+which the canoes were constructed had sufficed to float the loads that
+were in them.
+
+We rested until help should arrive, and presently Uledi’s and Shumari’s
+canoes were seen advancing side by side, with lines of pale foam
+flashing from each bow, as they were driven with the force of strong men
+towards us. With loud, glad cries they stopped their furious career
+alongside, and the first words they uttered were, “Are all safe?”
+
+“Yes, all,” we replied.
+
+“El hamd-ul’-illah!” (“Thanks be to God!”), they answered fervently.
+
+With the aid of these two canoes we were able to return to the islets
+with the thirty-two men, women, and children, and the entire property
+safe. Our loss during this fearful night was five canoes, five guns, one
+case of ammunition, and twelve hundred pounds of grain.
+
+_June 21._—The next morning, leaving a third of the party and goods at
+Miandereh, we departed for Singo, which we reached at 9 A.M. A few
+canoes were then hastened back to Miandereh for the remainder.
+
+It will be remembered that, while the boat was returning from Uganda and
+passing by Ito, an island situated half a mile south-west of Singo, the
+natives of Ito drove us away by slinging stones at us. Such a force as
+we now numbered could not be received with such rudeness: at the same
+time they were secure from molestation by us. I despatched therefore
+Lukanjah and Mikondo, the Wakerewé guides, to the Island of Ito, to
+explain to the natives who we were, and to remove all fears of reprisal.
+Lukanjah was extremely successful, and brought the chief of Ito, who, as
+some atonement for our previous treatment, had furnished himself with
+peace-offerings in the shape of a couple of fat kids, and several
+bunches of mellow plantains. The large island of Komeh also, on the next
+day, sent its king to rejoice with us over numerous jars of potent beer
+and many slaughtered goats. The king of Komeh sold us besides four good,
+almost new, canoes of sufficient capacity to render us secure from
+further anxiety.
+
+The Wangwana, after their terrible experiences while crossing the
+entrance to Speke Gulf, were awakened to the necessity of narrowly
+inspecting and carefully repairing their canoes. At Kagehyi the repairs
+had been extremely superficial, but the men were now fully alive to the
+importance of good caulking and a thorough relacing of the planks
+together, while Frank, Lukanjah, and I superintended their work.
+
+_June 24._—Seven hours’ paddling on the 24th of June brought us to
+Refuge Island, and on its south side we proceeded to establish a small
+camp. The 25th was employed in constructing one large store hut for the
+grain, and another for the property of the Expedition; and the huts of
+the garrison were built with due regard to the strict watch of the camp.
+
+After selecting forty-four men as garrison, and appointing Frank Pocock
+captain and Manwa Sera his lieutenant, with the two guides, Lukanjah and
+Mikondo, as interpreters in case of visitors, and leaving four canoes
+for the garrison to communicate, if they wished, with the natives of
+Itawagumba on the mainland, I began my return to Usukuma on the 26th
+with the boat, seventeen canoes, and 106 men.
+
+_July 1._—Four days afterwards we reached Kagehyi, at 3 P.M. But as the
+voyage had been extremely rough, only fourteen canoes were mustered in
+the cove.
+
+When five days had passed, and we received no tidings of the three
+canoes and their crews of thirteen men which were still absent, I
+despatched a canoe with two Wangwana and eight Wasukuma to Lukongeh, the
+king, requesting him to hunt up the laggards, who no doubt had either
+deserted or had been captured by the Wakerewé.
+
+On this day also I purchased from Kipingiri, for 40 yards of cloth, a
+large canoe capable of carrying thirty men, which the Wangwana, on
+account of her uncouth shape, called the “Hippopotamus.” The wood of
+which she was made was sycamore, and she was so rotten at the stern that
+one thrust of my foot kicked a hole in her 9 inches in diameter. Though
+she was an ancient craft, and heavy with saturation, she might, I
+thought, be still made serviceable for the transport of the riding
+asses.
+
+Whilst Uledi and Salaam Allah, the carpenters, and two or three chiefs,
+were assisting me to repair the venerable “Hippo” in a hollow close to
+the water’s edge, a man came rushing down, crying, “Quick! quick!
+Master, the Wangwana are murdering one another! They are all dead men!”
+
+Leaving one man to look after our tools, we ran up the hill, and
+witnessed a most horrible scene. About thirty men armed with guns were
+threatening one another in an excited manner; others brandished clubs or
+knobsticks; some held spears menacingly, while several flourished
+knives. A frenzy seemed to have possessed the hitherto well-behaved
+people. One man was already dead with a ghastly knife-wound in his
+heart, another lay prostrate with a fractured skull from a knobstick,
+and the author of this deed was even then striding with sweeping
+flourishes of a long club through the ranks of a turbulent crowd,
+delivering sounding blows on their heads and shoulders.
+
+Snatching a stout stick, I rapped the ruffian so vigorously over his
+knuckles that he dropped his club and was secured by my assistants, and
+then, calling the chiefs to my aid, we disarmed the infuriates. This
+summary proceeding soon quelled the disturbance, and then, perceiving
+that pombé—beer—was at the bottom of the mischief, all who were sober
+were ordered to fall into line, by which we discovered that fifty-three
+were quite intoxicated.
+
+Upon examination it was found that the murderer of Membé, one of the
+stoutest of our boat-bearers, was Fundi Rehani, and that he who had
+fractured the other man’s skull was Rehani, the brother of Membé. Both
+were immediately secured for trial before Prince Kaduma, the Arab
+Sungoro, and the Wangwana chiefs. The jars of pombé were broken, and
+diligent search made in every place for beer.
+
+This bloodshed upon the soil of Usukuma had to be paid for out of my
+cloth stores to mollify Prince Kaduma, and further payment was required
+for the privilege of burial.
+
+The jury which I convened to adjudge the case sentenced the murderer to
+death; but, as I would not consent to this extreme measure, the sentence
+was changed to two hundred lashes and the chain, until his arrival at
+Zanzibar, when he might be rendered to his prince. The drunken madman
+Rehani, though he had been inspired to the fury which led him to
+fracture a man’s skull by the sight of his dead brother, was also
+condemned by the jury, for endangering the life of a perfectly innocent
+man, to fifty lashes. These sentences, faithfully executed with due
+ceremony in presence of all the Wangwana, affected them greatly, and I
+took advantage of this scene to call the attention of the bully Msenna,
+and others who had distinguished themselves in the previous day’s
+ebullition of madness, to the punishment which must assuredly follow the
+commission of such dreadful acts.
+
+_July 5._—On the 5th of July, to my great joy, the scouts sent to
+Lukongeh in search of the missing canoes returned with two of them, but
+of the third we received no news, until a year later—after our arrival
+at Ujiji—when we heard that they had deserted and had proceeded direct
+to Unyanyambé with their guns. The crews of the two canoes, now happily
+restored to us, informed me that they had been driven by the gale to
+seek shelter on the mainland of Ukerewé, where they were instantly
+seized and conveyed to Lukongeh, when, instead of being slain, as the
+natives expected the captives would be, they were kindly treated by the
+king, proving to the islanders that the white man had only acted by his
+orders.
+
+_July 6._—On the 6th of July, after giving farewell presents to Prince
+Kaduma and his clever, genial princess, to the Arab Sungoro, Prince
+Kipingiri of Lutari, and Kurereh—though the two latter little deserved
+them—as well as to many others, I embarked all the people, animals, and
+effects of the Expedition, and by ten o’clock we were safely clear of
+Kipingiri’s power and vicious intents, and, for the last time, of
+Kagehyi.
+
+There was not one feeling of regret in my breast at leaving this place,
+where the Expedition had found a camp for over four months. Not that the
+village was in any way destitute of comforts, for these it afforded, nor
+that the natives were in any manner repugnant to me, for they were not;
+but the objects for which we came into the land could never be attained
+by unnecessary residence at any one spot. The time had simply arrived to
+begin our travels again, and I was glad of it, for the bold and bad
+Kipingiri was, I suspected, ever exercising an evil influence over
+Kaduma.
+
+_July 11._—On the 11th of July we arrived safely and without accident
+at Refuge Island, where I found the garrison thriving admirably.
+Through the influence of young Lukanjah—the cousin of the king of
+Ukerewé—the natives of the mainland had been induced to exchange their
+churlish disposition for one of cordial welcome, and the process of
+blood-brotherhood had been formally gone through between Maawa Sera, on
+my part, and Kijaju, king of Komeh, and the king of Itawagumba on the
+other part.
+
+Lukanjah, aware of the respect paid by his dusky brothers to power, had
+deftly exaggerated my influence and the numbers of my force, until a
+friendly alliance with one so powerful became a cherished project with
+Kijaju, and caused him to seek it by a tribute of three fat oxen, six
+goats, and fifty bunches of bananas, besides a store of delectable
+maramba, upon which I found that the garrison had been subsisting during
+my absence from Refuge Island.
+
+I deputed Frank to repay with cloths, beads, and wire Kijaju’s
+generosity, for the constant anxiety which I suffered during the
+passages between Refuge Island and Kagehyi, for the safety of my people
+and effects, had induced such a serious illness, that for five days I
+was unable to leave my hut on the island.
+
+_July 17._—On the sixth day, however, I left my bed and strolled over
+the island on which, on that terrible day of our escape from Bumbireh,
+we had found a refuge and relief in our distress, and now an asylum
+for half of the Expedition for about a month. The younger portion of
+the garrison knew every nook and cranny of our island home, and had
+become quite attached to it. On the eastern side about fifteen fruit
+trees had been discovered by them, laden with delicious berries, the
+flavour of which seemed something of a mixture of custard apple and a
+ripe gooseberry. The stones of this small fruit were two in number,
+like small date-stones. The leaves of the tree resemble those of the
+peach; its fruit are smooth-surfaced, and hang in threes; its wood
+is tough and flexible. It is no doubt a species of the _Verbenaceæ_.
+The garrison had failed to consume half the quantity found, so that,
+when I arrived with a reinforcement of 150 men, there was a sufficient
+quantity left to cause them all to remember the sweet fruit of Refuge
+Island.
+
+On this day, Kijaju, king of Komeh, visited me, to our mutual
+satisfaction. He furnished me with two guides to accompany me to Uganda,
+who were to be returned to Komeh along with Lukanjah and Mikondo. Their
+assistance was valuable only as the means of furnishing me with the
+names of localities between Refuge Island and Uzongora.
+
+In the same manner that we had left Kagehyi, we departed from Refuge
+Island, viz. by embarking the garrison, and leaving those who had stayed
+at Kagehyi to rest upon Refuge Island until we should return for them.
+
+The night was passed with a wild dance under the moonlight, at which
+three kings were present, who participated with all the light-hearted
+gaiety of children in the joyous sport.
+
+Old Kijaju distinguished himself on the wild “fantastic toe” most
+extraordinarily. Itawagumba, jealous of his uncle’s performance, exerted
+himself with mad vigour, and the stalwart chief of Bwina bounded upward
+as though performing on the flying trapeze. Young Lukanjah of Ukerewé,
+and his royal relative Mikondo, with all the suppleness of acrobats,
+made their début on this night with great spirit, and the hundred
+warriors from the mainland sang to the dance with such force of lungs as
+startled the colossal rocks of Refuge Island into echoing the wild
+harmony. The Wangwana, headed by Frank and the gallant Manwa Sera,
+enlarged the vast circle with 150 men and 20 women, and all voices
+chimed to the song which old Kijaju sang to celebrate the day on which
+the white chief made brotherhood with the king of Komeh.
+
+Refreshments were not wanting to cheer the dancers. Great masses of beef
+were roasted over glorious fires, and many jars of beer and maramba,
+brought from Bwina and Komeh, invited the special attention of the
+thirsty.
+
+_July 18._—As we left Refuge Island, on the morning of the 18th of July,
+the guides furnished by Kijaju, king of Komeh, propitiated the genius of
+the lake with beads given to him for the occasion, and adjured it by
+saying:—
+
+“Be kind to the white M’kama, O Nianja, I charge thee! Give him a safe
+and prosperous voyage across thy wide waters.”
+
+From Kazaradzi Island, on which we rested for the night, we beheld a
+most glorious sunset. The western sky, halfway up to the zenith, was all
+aglow for about an hour with resplendent gold, which tinted mountain,
+hill, plain, and lake with the reflection of the lustrous hue.
+
+_July 19._—Next day we sailed for Wawizua Island; and on the 20th,
+passing by the picturesque islands of Mysomeh and Rumondo—every canoe
+hoisting small lug-sails, made of the loin-cloths of the crew, in order
+to benefit by the strong south-easter—we steered for Nameterré Island,
+where we arrived without accident.
+
+_July 21._—On the 21st of July we arrived at the southernmost of the
+dreaded Bumbireh group, Mahyiga Island, which I ascertained, after
+careful survey, was not inhabited.
+
+At a little cove on the western side we discovered relics of a large
+camp, which, by the shape of the dome-like huts and bonneted doorways
+had, we were assured, been constructed by Waganda. Yet what force of
+Waganda could have penetrated thus far to the south?
+
+As we were now in a dangerous neighbourhood, it behoved us to form a
+proper camp, as a small party would be compelled to remain upon this
+island until the remainder of the Expedition could be brought from
+Refuge Island. For this purpose, every hand was employed to clear the
+scrub and bush for a distance of 200 yards from the cove, and a road 12
+feet wide was cut from the south side of Mahyiga Island to the north
+end.
+
+About 5 P.M. while we were still at work, two large canoes approached
+cautiously from the direction of Iroba Island towards our cove. They
+took great pains to ascertain the number of our canoes, and we could see
+that they endeavoured to reckon up the number of men on the island
+before they spoke a word. Finally they hailed us, and Lukanjah, of
+Ukerewé, and Kijaju’s man were requested to reply to them.
+
+Our conversation, which was of great interest to us, as we burned to
+know what to expect from Bumbireh, was as follows:—
+
+“Is this the white chief who was at Bumbireh?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Oh, he was not lost on the Nianja then?”
+
+“No, he lives, and has returned.”
+
+“Oh. The white chief must not be angry with Iroba. We did not trouble
+him, therefore he has no quarrel with us. The people of Bumbireh are
+bad. What has the white chief come for?”
+
+“He is going to Uganda.”
+
+“How can he go to Uganda? Does he not know that Bumbireh is in the way,
+and Ihangiro’s eyes will be upon him? Will he fly?”
+
+“No; he will proceed by water in his canoes. Tell Bumbireh the white
+chief is not afraid; his young men are many in number. If the men of
+Bumbireh wish to make friends, let Shekka send the oars he stole, and
+the white chief will be glad.”
+
+“Magassa,” replied they, “who camped on that island you are on, received
+the oars from Shekka, and he took them away to Uganda, believing you
+were lost in the Nianja.”
+
+“The white chief was not lost; he is here. If it is true that the oars
+are gone to Uganda, let Shekka make friends with the white chief, and
+send him two or three men to go with him to Makongo, in Uzongora, or to
+Uganda, as Lukongeh of Ukerewé and Kijaju of Komeh have done, and there
+will be no more words between them.”
+
+“Shekka is very strong, and the men of Bumbireh are bold. Antari of
+Ihanghiro, the great king, is stronger, and Shekka is his son. All this
+Nianja about here is his water, and they will not let you pass. What
+will the white chief do?”
+
+“Tell Shekka and Antari, his father, that the white chief will remain
+here for many days. He will be glad to hear good words from them. When
+he is ready to go away, he will let them know. If the king of Iroba is
+the white chief’s friend, let him send food here to sell.”
+
+After promising to perform all that we required, and to bring food the
+next day, the two canoes paddled away, two or three of their crews
+laughing ostentatiously.
+
+_July 23._—On the morning of the 23rd, about 10 A.M., another canoe,
+containing fifteen men, approached us from Iroba, in a bold, defiant
+manner. We asked their crew if they brought food for sale. They replied,
+“No; but you will get food in plenty by-and-by.” After taking a
+searching look at our camp, they turned away, giving expression to their
+contempt by a method which obtains all round the Uvuma, Uganda,
+Uzongora, and Ukerewé coasts, viz. by throwing up water behind them in
+the air with their paddles, which is as well understood as the British
+youth’s gesture of placing a thumb to his nose.
+
+Lukanjah smiled when he saw this, and when requested to give me his
+thoughts, he said significantly, “Those people mean something.”
+
+_July 24._—On the morning of the 24th, long before dawn, in order that
+the Iroba or Bumbireh people might not espy their departure, I
+despatched sixteen of the largest canoes under Manwa Sera, to return to
+Refuge Island for the remainder of the Expedition, after many
+injunctions to be cautious, and not to commit any folly.
+
+Our camp was now in perfect condition, and presented as clean and
+orderly an appearance as two days’ labour could render it. Watch-huts
+were also erected upon the highest part of the island, and five men
+under a chief were detached for the duty of observation. The garrison
+left with me upon the island consisted of forty-five men and the four
+guides from my friends Lukongeh and the Kijaju.
+
+On this day also canoes came from Iroba, to the crews of which, as they
+rested in the water, we exhibited beads and cloth, copper bracelets and
+bright brass wire. In return for our professions of friendliness and our
+proffers of gifts, they spurned the water towards us, and replied with
+mockery.
+
+_July 25._—On the 25th, when the Iroba natives came, I adopted, after
+due forethought, a sterner tone, perceiving that amiability was liable
+to contempt and misconstruction. I told them that the king of Iroba must
+prove his friendship by sending food for sale by noon of the next day;
+and that as I was assured he was in communication with the king of
+Bumbireh, his neighbour, I should expect either the return of the oars
+or two or three men as sureties and pledges of peace. I knew the
+mainland was hostile, and since I was compelled to proceed to Uganda, I
+resolved to be assured, before venturing the lives of the women and
+children in rotten and crowded canoes, that I should be permitted to
+proceed in peace, and not be attacked midway between Bumbireh and the
+mainland.
+
+The natives, cowed a little by the tone of voice, promised that there
+should be no delay in sending provisions, bananas, milk, honey,
+chickens, even oxen, for the white M’kama.
+
+_July 26._—On the morning of the 26th, the men at the observation-post
+reported that they saw a great many canoes proceeding from the mainland
+towards the great island of Bumbireh. I ascended the road to the summit,
+and with my glass I counted eighteen canoes, heavily laden with men, and
+watched them till they had passed round Iroba’s westernmost point
+towards Bumbireh. It was evident that mischief was brewing, but how or
+in what shape I could not tell. It was probable that they would attack
+the island by night, knowing we were not very strong in numbers at the
+time. It was a very possible feat, for the islanders, as we had
+experienced, were not dull-witted, and were resolute and brave.
+Meantime, what should I do in such a case?
+
+I waited until 3 P.M. for the king of Iroba. He did not come. Instant
+action on my part was therefore imperative.
+
+I manned my boat and four of the canoes with thirty-five men, leaving
+only Safeni with fourteen men in charge of the camp and island, and
+proceeded to Iroba to make a reconnaissance. As we came up, I observed a
+flutter of excitement on the shore. I steered straight for the beach
+opposite a village, and landed. Twenty-five of the men were deployed as
+skirmishers along the shore, to give due effect to what I purposed.
+Lukanjah of Ukerewé was told to request the king of Iroba and elders to
+approach, or we should begin fighting.
+
+They came to us, about fifteen in number. “Tell him, Lukanjah,” I said,
+“that Iroba has behaved badly by sending his young men to laugh at us.
+Since he has lied so many times to me, he himself and two of his chiefs
+must depart with me to my camp. He will not be hurt, but he must stay
+with me until Shekka of Bumbireh is in my hands, or peace is made as I
+suggested.”
+
+There was no violence used, and the king of Iroba and two chiefs quietly
+walked into the boat. When they were seated, the king was requested to
+give instructions to his young men how to capture Shekka of Bumbireh and
+two Bumbireh chiefs; and a solemn promise was given that on their
+appearance the king of Iroba and his friends would be released. The
+natives of Iroba, who were collected by this time on the beach, entered
+into the project with animation. They declared that next day Shekka
+should be in my hands.
+
+_July 27._—On the morning of the 27th, a canoe from Iroba came with
+provisions for the king and chiefs, and to report their failure at
+Bumbireh. One of the young men, said to be the king’s son, offered to
+remain in his father’s place, while he himself should try to obtain
+possession of Shekka’s person. This touching confidence so affected me
+that, after inducing the king of Iroba to go through the process of
+blood-brotherhood with one of the Wangwana, he was released.
+
+At 5 P.M., faithful to his promise that he would perform what I wished,
+the king of Iroba brought the treacherous king of Bumbireh with two of
+his chiefs, whose appearance, after he had landed at Mahyiga and been
+recognised, was hailed with a loud shout by the Wangwana. He was about
+to be maltreated, and had I not been present at the time, there is no
+doubt that he would have been murdered by the enraged boat’s crew. But
+they calmed down when they were told that his life and services were
+necessary to us, and that good treatment might secure his friendship and
+peace with Bumbireh.
+
+My purpose in possessing myself of the person of the king of Bumbireh
+and his two chiefs may easily be divined. It must have been perceived
+that weakness and irresolution—or, in other words, over-gentleness and
+want of firmness—had proved harmful on several previous occasions. Thus,
+the hesitation to act immediately after the commission of murder by the
+Wanyaturu led them to imagine that it was fear which withheld us; the
+forbearance exhibited at Ngevi Island only brought upon us more
+annoyance; our mildness at Mombiti in Uvuma suggested the attack upon us
+by stoning; our long-suffering temper at the straits between Uvuma and
+Ugeyeya induced the Wavuma to proceed to piracy and violence; our
+patient bearing at Bumbireh led the natives to think we might be
+murdered like lambs; our placability merited and received the contempt
+of the natives of Iroba; and a hundred times afterwards did I see that
+the savage only respects force, power, boldness, and decision; and that
+he is totally ignorant of the principles which govern the conduct of
+Christian man to man. Forbearance is to him cowardice: mildness,
+patience, and an equable temper are, in his undeveloped and unreasoning
+mind, only evidences of effeminacy. But the murderous Wanyaturu, when we
+finally turned out of our camp, learned, when it was too late, that our
+womanly gentleness covered power; the audacious Wakamba at Ngevi Island
+were only brought to their senses when they heard the startling reports
+of the revolver; the intention of the daring Wavuma to murder was only
+checked by quick, and energetic action; the treacherous rock-slingers of
+Mombiti only desisted when fired upon; the ferocious Wa-Bumbireh only
+respected us after our successful escape; the cunning king of Iroba only
+became really friendly when we quietly showed our power, and his rapidly
+growing insolence was only cowed by the exhibition of sternness.
+
+But the exercise of power without magnanimity is simply brutality, and
+has only a transient effect. If, therefore, I could only show the king
+of Bumbireh and his people that the first white man they had seen was
+extremely gentle in his manner until aroused, but, though strong and
+powerful when angered, was magnanimous afterwards, I should, I felt,
+leave a lasting good effect upon their minds. Though Shekka’s capture
+was necessary, in order to ensure the passage of the Expedition between
+Bumbireh and Ihangiro in peace and safety, his good treatment and
+after-release were none the less necessary also—provided that nothing
+serious occurred in the meantime to prevent the exhibition of clemency
+towards him.[16]
+
+Perceiving himself to be in the power of those whom he had outraged with
+a wanton ferocity, and whom he had compelled to risk the terrors of the
+stormy sea without the means of subsistence, or means to seek shelter
+from the gales and tempests which prevail during the rainy season,
+Shekka’s behaviour became as abject as it had been ferocious when our
+positions were reversed. But he was informed in mild tones that we
+sought not his life, but our own safety; that he was captured to secure
+ourselves from violence by the possession of his person; that, while he
+was a prisoner with us, there would be no fear that Antari of Ihangiro
+and the people of Bumbireh would attack us by night, as they must know
+that we possessed the means of retaliation through him.
+
+He was pleased to be communicative on this assurance, and informed us
+that Antari was collecting a vast force on Bumbireh, by day and night,
+for the purpose of attacking us on the island of Mahyiga. He imparted to
+us also the narrative of how Antari’s father, in conjunction with Kytawa
+in the days of old, had successfully defied for a long period the full
+power of the great Suna of Uganda, and he was curious to know how a
+small body of men like ourselves could hope to escape from Antari[17]—or
+“the Lion”—of Ihangiro.
+
+Shekka was advised that, as we knew how to defend ourselves when
+attacked, he had better send word to Bumbireh and to Antari that we did
+not seek trouble, but were desirous of establishing peaceful relations
+between the Wangwana and the natives. Three of the ordinary natives of
+Bumbireh, who had been brought with Shekka and his two chiefs, were
+therefore permitted to depart with the king of Iroba and his friends.
+
+_July 28._—At 9 A.M. the king of Iroba appeared again, this time with
+gifts of milk, honey, bananas, and a fat kid, which kindness we
+liberally reciprocated, not without much politic ostentation for the
+advantage of Shekka and the natives.
+
+At noon he reappeared with three large canoes, containing twenty men
+each, from Ihangiro, under the command of Antari’s chief elder. They
+were permitted to land, though they were numerically superior to the
+garrison on the island. But before I had given them permission to that
+effect, Frank was requested to hold thirty men under arms to prevent
+treachery and surprise.
+
+Our greeting was friendly, though there was a certain proud reserve in
+their manner.
+
+“What says the king Antari?” I asked through Lukanjah.
+
+“Antari asks, ‘Why have you come to his waters and camped on his
+island?’”
+
+“We have come because we must pass through to Uganda, and have rested on
+Mahyiga to wait for our people. As I have not sufficient canoes to carry
+my people and property in one passage, I must leave some here, while I
+proceed to Uganda with the first half of the party. I wish to be assured
+by Antari that in my passage by Bumbireh we shall not be attacked, nor
+the party which must be left in my absence on this island be molested.
+What say you?”
+
+“Antari says he is a great and strong king. All the mainland which you
+see from Rumondo to Kytawa’s is his, so are all these islands and
+waters. He has never seen strangers before travelling by sea; they
+always went by land. He says, ‘You must go back.’”
+
+“We cannot go back, tell him,” I replied. “This water belongs to every
+stranger, as much as the wind. The island may be his, but no one dwells
+on Mahyiga, and we will not injure the rocks.”
+
+“Antari says he will make peace only if you go back. He sends these
+three bunches of bananas to you, and this woman and child.”
+
+“We do not deal in slaves, and three bunches of bananas are of no use to
+us. We want permission to pass quietly and peacefully through to Uganda,
+and if Antari will send many bananas to us, we will buy them, as we have
+many mouths with us.”
+
+“Then Antari says he will make war on you, and kill you all.”
+
+“Ah, does he say those words?”
+
+“Yes, Antari says those words.”
+
+I whispered to Frank to bring Shekka, who was immediately brought to
+their presence. When they saw him, they all rose to a man with
+threatening actions. We all rose also, in a prepared attitude, which
+convinced them that violence was useless. I said to the elders—
+
+“Sit down, and carry my words to Antari. Open your ears wide, and
+understand. Antari is Mtesa’s slave; I am Mtesa’s friend. Antari’s
+people rob and try to murder Mtesa’s friend, but he escapes, and has now
+come back on his way to Mtesa. Again, Antari and his people are busy
+preparing war against Mtesa’s—Antari’s master’s—friend. He sends many
+canoes and hundreds of men to Bumbireh. He also sends three canoes to
+tell me that he is about to fight me, and perhaps—you know best—to
+rescue Shekka, who is my means for securing my safety. Tell Antari that
+the white man is not a woman, and that lying words will not be swallowed
+by him. He means to go to Uganda, whether Antari will let him or not. If
+Antari fights, tell him to remember how the white man escaped from
+Bumbireh. The white man wants peace, but he is not afraid of Antari. Now
+go, and carry every word to Antari, and to-morrow, by noon, I must have
+his answer, or I shall carry Shekka and his two chiefs to Uganda, and
+deliver them up to Mtesa.”
+
+Without giving them time to consider further, we urged them towards
+their canoes, not violently, but firmly. When the principal elder had
+recovered his senses, which he did not until he felt himself safe in his
+canoe, it seemed to dawn on his mind that I was purposely avoiding
+violence, and he said—
+
+“Let the white man rest in peace. You have Antari’s son, Shekka, in your
+hands. Antari will not fight you. I will speak to him truly, and when
+the sun is high I shall return with words of peace.”
+
+“It is well. Tell Antari his son shall not be hurt, and will be
+delivered over to his people as soon as we shall have passed Bumbireh
+safely.”
+
+Those were days which required caution, for the first false or weak step
+would have ensured the destruction of the Expedition, the members of
+which I was bound by every principle of honour to protect and defend to
+the best of my ability. They had pledged themselves to me only upon the
+condition that I should secure their safety, and they looked to me to
+watch and guard their lives with paternal care. In my opinion,
+considering all the circumstances, I could not have better avoided
+trouble than—while the savages were actively preparing and offensively
+boasting—by acting as I did.
+
+About 4 P.M. a small fleet of six beautiful canoes, painted a brown
+colour, were seen approaching us, having travelled mid-channel between
+Bumbireh and Ihangiro. We soon made them out to be Waganda, and when the
+chief, who was received with loud and warm greetings, had landed, he
+gave his name as Sabadu.
+
+He soon informed us that he was on a double errand, one of which was to
+proceed to Kagehyi in Usukuma to convey the Arab Sungoro to Uganda, and
+the other was to hunt up news of myself. He said also that I had been
+reported by the long-lost Magassa, on his return to Uganda, to have been
+either murdered by the savages of Bumbireh or to have foundered in the
+lake. He had returned with the oars and drum to Mtesa, who was much
+shocked at the sight of them, for he believed that, as the oars were our
+“feet,” we were murdered. But as nothing else was found, such as traces
+or parts of the boat, Mtesa was in doubt; he had therefore enjoined
+Sabadu to make strict inquiries at all points about me, and had
+despatched Magassa with a strong force by land to Uzongora and Ihangiro,
+and a Mtongoleh, called M’kwanga, with a fleet of eight canoes, to
+prosecute a more rigid search by water along all the coasts. Sabadu said
+also that, while he was at Kytawa’s with M’kwanga, on the mainland, he
+had heard of our danger, and had hurried up to assist us, and that
+M’kwanga would appear on the morrow with eight canoes, manned by
+Waganda, and five canoes manned by Kytawa’s people under two chiefs,
+who, by their influence with Antari, might negotiate a successful peace.
+
+Sabadu, upon delivering his news, was, as may well be imagined, heartily
+welcomed, and was readily induced, upon my taking the responsibility, to
+remain with me, to assist in the transport of the Expedition to Uganda,
+for which his canoes, with those of M’kwanga and Kytawa, would prove
+amply sufficient. He was also informed in his turn of the state of
+affairs at Bumbireh and Ihangiro, at which he expressed great
+indignation; but both he and Bugomba—a youth of sixteen, the brother of
+the Katekiro, or Premier, of Uganda—were confident that, when they
+should proceed to Bumbireh to treat with the natives through the
+assistance of Kytawa’s chiefs, they would be able to persuade them to
+abandon their hostile attitude. My experience of the people of Bumbireh,
+however, would not permit me to entertain this feeling of assurance.
+
+_July 29._—About 11 A.M. M’kwanga’s search expedition, consisting
+of eight large canoes, accompanied by five of a smaller size, under
+two chiefs of Kytawa, arrived at Mahyiga Island, containing about 250
+Waganda and 50 Wazongora. Including the crews of Sabadu’s canoes, the
+garrison of Mahyiga, and the natives of Komeh and Ukerewé, I had now a
+force of 470 men. There was no fear of the issue of an attack on the
+island now, but a fear of famine remained.
+
+The king of Iroba was appealed to, and for an adequate remuneration he
+promised to supply the Waganda with bananas; while we possessed
+sufficient grain upon which the Wangwana might subsist for a few days
+longer. The king of Iroba again confirmed the information that Antari
+was collecting a large force of canoes, and about sunset a single canoe,
+powerfully manned, dashed up opposite our camp, and one man stood up
+with spear and shield, and delivered a stout defiance, after which the
+canoe as hastily departed for Bumbireh, without paying any attention to
+Kytawa’s chiefs.
+
+It was apparent that our departure for Uganda would be hotly contested,
+but of the result there could be but one opinion. What kind of canoes
+Antari possessed I knew by the specimens which Kytawa, who was neighbour
+to him, sent to us at Mahyiga. Their number would be probably a hundred,
+which, with a crew of ten men in each, would amount to a thousand.
+Allowing six bowmen in each canoe, this would make the fighting force
+about 600 strong, against which I could offer 70 guns and about 350
+effective spearmen of Uganda.
+
+_August 2._—However, it was my duty to persist in avoiding the bloody
+conflict, as it would assuredly be by water, and employ all my efforts
+towards bringing Antari and the natives of Bumbireh to a sense of the
+inutility of hostile demonstrations. Messages of a peaceful nature
+accordingly passed between us. Antari’s elders visited us once more, on
+the 2nd of August, this time with an assurance that we should not be
+molested, as a proof of which they said that Antari had given orders to
+the people of Bumbireh to sell us provisions upon the condition that we
+should deliver Shekka, Antari’s son, and two other chiefs to Kytawa, the
+day we should arrive on the mainland.
+
+This news was received with shouts of applause by all, and no one was
+more sincerely glad that the trouble was over than myself, though there
+was something in the manner of the delivery, in the sly exchange of
+looks between Antari’s elders and the prisoners, that I did not like. It
+may have been that a slight suspicion still lurked in my mind, but I did
+not permit any sign of doubt to escape me, but treated the elders
+affably and courteously.
+
+Sabadu—who was of a sanguine disposition—and young Bugomba were for
+testing the truth of this manifestation of friendship at once, but I
+restrained them for this day, as we possessed sufficient food for the
+time being. The Waganda also were eager to remind me that they were a
+people decidedly averse to scarcity, and they obtained my promise that
+next morning they should have cloths and beads wherewith to purchase
+food.
+
+_August 3._—Accordingly the next day Sabadu was despatched with beads,
+cowries, and cloths to Kajurri, from the cove of which we had made our
+escape in April. They were absent about six hours, during which time I
+was very anxious, as the event would decide our future.
+
+“What is the news, Sabadu?” I asked eagerly as he stepped on the shore
+near our camp with gloomy looks. “Anything wrong?”
+
+“Ah,” he sighed; “the people of Bumbireh are bad, wicked people. We
+went on shore at Kajurri, saw some twenty people there, and Kytawa’s
+chief talked with them. They said we might go and cut as many bananas
+as we wanted, and they would talk afterwards about the price we should
+have to pay. The Waganda left their spears, and, taking only their
+_mundu_—bill-hooks—proceeded to cut the fruit while I remained in the
+canoe. Suddenly I heard a shout and a rustling in the banana grove, and
+the Waganda came running back, and pushing the canoes into the water,
+plunged in, and got on board. Kytawa’s chief had his left arm chopped
+clean off, and then they cut him on the head, which killed him. Eight
+of the Waganda[18] have been badly hurt. They will be carried on shore
+presently, and you shall see them. Bumbireh! ah, ah! Bumbireh is bad!”
+he said emphatically.
+
+The wounded men were brought on shore with ghastly wounds from spears,
+and one or two from arrows, at the sight of which a grand rush was made
+upon the captives by two or three hundred excited Waganda and Wazongora,
+but with the aid of the Wangwana and Frank we saved them.
+
+“Gently, gently, friends,” we cried; “these men are not they who are
+guilty of this deed. Do not ill-use them; they are innocent.”
+
+M’kwanga, the chief of the search expedition of Waganda, was furious. He
+seized his shield and three spears, and called his men together, telling
+them to arm, as he would lead them through and through Bumbireh, and
+then would proceed to Antari and slay him in his house, would cut down
+every banana, burn down every hut, and scorch Ihangiro to a cinder, &c.
+
+But M’kwanga was persuaded to be patient, and not foolishly throw more
+lives away. We should, I told him, consult together, and if I found,
+after consideration, that my duty was to avenge this deed, I should do
+it.
+
+Said he: “If you do not assist me to punish this treachery, you need
+never expect to see Mtesa’s face or Uganda again. The Waganda came to do
+you service; they came to seek you while Mtesa believed you were lost.
+The Waganda, with myself and Sabadu, promised to stand by you when we
+heard you were in danger. The Waganda left your camp with your consent
+to go and get food for you as well as for us. Kytawa’s chief is dead,
+and here are eight wounded men. What will you do?”
+
+“Only what I think is right, and after proper consideration. If I do not
+assist you, it will not prevent you from going to fight them to-morrow.”
+
+“But,” said M’kwanga, “if I go to fight to-morrow by myself, I shall
+never return to Mahyiga.”
+
+He stalked away sullenly, and the Waganda became cold and distant
+towards us, as though we were to blame for the sad event. The Wazongora
+bewailed their chief aloud, and the strangely mournful tones of their
+lamentations produced a powerful impression on all who heard them.
+
+Before many minutes had elapsed, I had manned my boat and five canoes,
+and was on my way to Iroba before the intelligence could be spread,
+simply with the view to ascertain how far the king of Iroba was involved
+in this affair. I found him to be perfectly innocent of all knowledge of
+anything that had occurred at Bumbireh since morning. Upon asking him if
+any natives of Ihangiro were there, he answered that one of Antari’s
+youngest sons was there. We proceeded to the hut, and the young man was
+secured and conveyed into the boat, and the king of Iroba was instructed
+to convey the intelligence to Bumbireh to the chiefs of Antari’s people,
+and to tell them that, if they intended to make peace, they must be
+quick, and send me word of it before noon of the next day, as I should
+not be able to restrain the Waganda or defer my departure another day.
+
+The arrival of messengers from the post of observation on the summit of
+the island announcing that the canoes of the Expedition were seen coming
+from the south, distracted the attention of all for a period, and soon
+the summit was lined with the figures of the anxious Wangwana, some of
+whom had wives and children, besides relatives and friends in the little
+fleet that was bearing towards the island with miniature sails set.
+
+By sunset they were answering their safe arrival close to us with cheer
+after cheer, and soon had landed amid hearty greetings.
+
+But Manwa Sera, to cap the day’s dismal and tragic record, had to report
+the loss of two men, who were drowned by the collapse of one of the
+rotten canoes, which added another cause for grief. The riding asses
+also were in a pitiable condition, for the poor things, being obliged to
+be bound in the small canoes, were terribly chafed even to the quick,
+and could scarcely stand. The rest of the force were in good condition,
+and no property had been lost or other accident occurred.
+
+That evening, while the sorrowing Wazongora made the camp doleful with
+their loud mournful cries for the dead chief, Frank and all the Wangwana
+chiefs were summoned to my tent to discuss our future. I only wished to
+hear their views, to discover their sentiments, not to disclose my own.
+The unanimous opinion of the party was that we were bound to fight. All
+I could say on the other side availed nothing to shake the decision they
+had arrived at. Then they were dismissed with a promise that I should
+impart my resolution in the morning. I also enjoined on Frank to double
+the guard over the captives, lest they might be injured during the
+night.
+
+Alone with myself, I began to discuss seriously the strict line of duty.
+If it were a military Expedition that I commanded, duty would have
+pointed out the obvious course to follow; but though the Expedition was
+governed for its own well-being after military principles, it was an
+expedition organized solely for the purposes of exploration, with a view
+to search out new avenues of commerce to the mutual advantage of
+civilization and such strange lands as we found suitable for commercial
+and missionary enterprise. But whatever its character, its members
+possessed the privilege of self-defence, and might justly adopt any
+measures, after due deliberation, for self-protection. The principles of
+right and justice every educated Christian professes to understand, and
+may be credited with a desire to observe, but in addition to these, it
+was desirable in a person in my position—knowing how frequently it is
+necessary to exercise them in barbarous lands—to remember charity and
+forbearance, in order to ensure the objects in view, and to create good
+impressions for the benefit of those who might succeed the pioneer.
+
+Thirteen days had elapsed since our arrival at Mahyiga, and the
+thirteenth day was signalized by this bloody attack upon people
+entrapped to their death maliciously, and evidently by a preconcerted
+arrangement between Antari’s elders and the chiefs of Bumbireh. Sabadu
+said also that the last words he had heard as the Waganda paddled away
+from Bumbireh were, “Look out for mischief to-morrow,” which no doubt
+meant that the war “shauri” was nearly terminated, and that all were by
+this time worked up into proper fighting spirit.
+
+The Expedition was now ready to move towards Uganda, but the water-way
+had first to be opened; whatever plot was on hand must be frustrated,
+and treachery punished; otherwise impunity would inspire an audacity
+which might be dangerous to our safety.
+
+Apart, therefore, from a duty owing to the wounded Waganda and the dead
+chief of Kytawa, as well as to our respect for and gratitude to Mtesa
+and Kytawa—apart from the justice which, according to all laws human and
+divine, savage and civilized, demands that blood shall atone for blood,
+especially when committed with malice prepense, and the memory of our
+narrow escape from their almost fatal wiles, and the days of agony we
+had suffered—there lay the vital, absolute, and imperative necessity of
+meeting the savages lest they should meet us. For they were by this time
+reinforced by about 2000 auxiliaries from the mainland; they were
+flushed with triumph at their success in the snare they had set for the
+unsuspecting Waganda, and the sight of their dead victim would only
+inspire them with a desire for more blood.
+
+As I could not see any way to avoid the conflict, I resolved to meet
+them on their own island, and by one decisive stroke break this
+overweening savage spirit. I should, however, wait the result of my last
+message, for it might be that the capture of one of Antari’s sons might
+induce them to embrace peaceful proposals.
+
+_August 4._—Accordingly next morning a couple of ammunition boxes were
+opened, and twenty rounds distributed to each man who bore a ride or
+musket; 230 spearmen and fifty musketeers were detailed for a fighting
+party, and eighteen canoes were prepared to convey them to Bumbireh.
+
+I waited until noon, having gazed through a field-glass many times in
+the direction of Bumbireh, but nothing was observed approaching Mahyiga.
+
+The force was therefore mustered, and I addressed it to this effect—
+
+“My friends and Wangwana,—We must have the sea clear. Whatever mischief
+these people have meditated must be found out by us, and must be
+prevented. I am about to go and punish them for the treacherous murder
+of our friends. I shall not destroy them, therefore none of you are to
+land unless we find their canoes, which we must break up. We must fight
+till they or we give in, for it can only be decided in this manner.
+While in the fight you will do exactly as I tell you, for I shall be
+able to judge whether their fierce spirit is broken, or whether we shall
+have to fight on land.”
+
+As the distance between Bumbireh and Mahyiga was about eight miles, we
+did not arrive until 2 P.M. before the former island. It was evident
+that the savages had expected us, for the heights of the hilly ridge
+were crowded with large masses, and every point was manned with
+watchmen.
+
+Through my field-glass I observed messengers running fast to a thick
+plantain grove which crowned the southernmost hill, and commanded a view
+of all approach to a cove that penetrated to its base. It was clear that
+the main force of the natives was ready in the shadows of the grove.
+Calling the canoes together, I told the chiefs to follow my boat, and to
+steer exactly as I did. We made a feint of entering into this cove, but
+when near the point, perceiving that we were hidden by the lofty hill
+from the observation of those in the grove and of the look-outs, we
+swerved to the left, and, clinging to the land, pulled vigorously until
+we came to a cape, after rounding which we came in view of a fine and
+noble bay to our right.
+
+By this manœuvre the enemy was revealed in all his strength. The savages
+were massed behind the plantains as I had suspected, and from their
+great numbers proved much too strong to be attacked under cover. All the
+eastern and northern sides of the bay were surrounded by lofty hills,
+which sloped steeply to within a few feet of the water’s edge, and were
+covered with small shingly rocks and thin short grass. The low shelf of
+land that lay between the hill base and the water was margined with tall
+cane-grass.
+
+We steered straight east towards the more exposed hill slopes. The
+savages, imagining we were about to effect a landing there, hurried from
+their coverts, between 2000 and 3000 in number. I examined the shores
+carefully, to see if I could discover the canoes which had conveyed this
+great number of warriors from the mainland. Meanwhile we pulled slowly,
+to afford them time to arrange themselves.
+
+Arrived within 100 yards of the land, we anchored in line, the stone
+anchors being dropped from midships that the broadsides might front the
+shore. I told Lukanjah of Ukerewé to ask the men of Bumbireh if they
+would make peace, whether we should be friends, or whether we should
+fight.
+
+“Nangu, nangu, nangu!” (“No, no, no!”) they answered loudly, while they
+flourished spears and shields.
+
+“Will they not do anything to save Shekka?”
+
+“Nangu, nangu! Keep Shekka; he is nobody. We have another M’kama”
+(king).
+
+“Will they do nothing to save Antari’s son?”
+
+“Nangu, nangu. Antari has many sons. We will do nothing but fight. If
+you had not come here, we should have come to you.”
+
+“You will be sorry for it afterwards.”
+
+“Huh,” incredulously. “Come on; we are ready.”
+
+Further parley was useless; so each man having taken aim was directed to
+fire into a group of fifty or thereabouts. The result was several killed
+and wounded.
+
+The savages, perceiving the disastrous effect of our fire on a compact
+body, scattered, and came bounding down to the water’s edge, some of the
+boldest advancing until they were hip-deep in water; others, more
+cautious, sought the shelter of the cane-grass, whence they discharged
+many sheaves of arrows, all of which fell short of us.
+
+We then moved to within 50 yards of the shore, to fire at close
+quarters, and each man was permitted to exercise himself as he best
+could. The savages gallantly held the water-line for an hour, and slung
+their stones with better effect than they shot their arrows. The spirit
+which animated them proved what they might have done had they succeeded
+in effecting a landing at Mahyiga by night, but here, however, the
+spear, with which they generally fight, was quite useless.
+
+Perceiving that their spirit was abating, we drew the canoes together,
+and made a feint as though we were about to make a precipitate landing,
+which caused them to rush forward by hundreds with their spears on the
+launch. The canoes were then suddenly halted, and a volley was fired
+into the spearmen, which quite crushed their courage, causing them to
+retreat up the hill far away from the scene. Our work of chastisement
+was complete.
+
+The Waganda spearmen (230 strong), who had been, up to this time, only
+interested spectators, now clamoured loudly to be permitted to land and
+complete the work of vengeance. M’kwanga was fierce in his demands; the
+Wangwana seconded the Waganda, and in their hot ardour several of the
+canoes rushed on the shore, but as this extremity was not my object, I
+resisted them, and when, despite my refusal, they persisted in their
+attempts to land, I threatened to fire upon the first man, Mgwana or
+Mgwanda, who set foot upon the shore, and this threat restored order.
+
+Lukanjah was again told to warn the natives of Bumbireh that, if they
+had not had enough of fighting, we should return next day, but that we
+would allow them a night to think over it.
+
+It was dark when we arrived at our camp; but we did not omit, while
+passing Iroba, to comfort the friendly king with the assurance that he
+need not fear trouble, as he was not involved in the atrocious acts of
+Bumbireh.
+
+_August 5._—Having thus shown sufficient boldness in meeting the enemy
+and demonstrated our ability for the encounter, it was now clear that
+the passage of the channel, with the women and children and property of
+the Expedition, might be performed without danger. Accordingly, on the
+5th of August, at early dawn, we began the embarkation. The fourteen
+Kiganda canoes were large, with ample storage room, and all the goods,
+ammunition, and asses, and all the timid, men, women, children, and
+Wanyamwezi, were placed in these. Our eighteen canoes of Ukerewé and
+Komeh and five lent us by generous Kytawa proved sufficient to transport
+the remainder, consisting of the more active members of the party, who
+were directed, in the event of trouble, to range on either side.
+
+At the tap of M’kwanga’s drum, without which no party of Waganda march,
+and a cheery blast from Hamadi’s bugle, the thirty-seven canoes and
+boat, containing 685 souls, departed from our island cove towards
+Bumbireh.
+
+About 9 A.M. we were abreast of Bumbireh, and when, on coming to the
+bay, we saw hundreds of people lining the topmost ridges, I deemed it
+expedient to make a demonstration once more in order to discover the
+effect of the previous day’s engagement. On arriving near the shore, a
+shot was fired, the effect of which was to cause about a hundred to
+scamper away hastily. Others, whom we distinguished as elders, after
+hailing us, came down towards us.
+
+Lukanjah was requested to ask, “If we were to begin the fight again?”
+
+“Nangu, nangu, M’kama.” (“No, no, king.”)
+
+“The trouble is over then?”
+
+“There are no more words between us.”
+
+“If we go away quietly, will you interfere with us any more?”
+
+“Nangu, nangu.”
+
+“You will leave strangers alone in future?”
+
+“Yes, yes.”
+
+“You will not murder people who come to buy food again?”
+
+“Nangu, nangu.”
+
+I then told them that, having murdered one and wounded eight of Mtesa’s
+people, it would be my duty to convey Shekka and his friends to him, but
+I should intercede for them, and they would probably be back in two
+moons. Advantage was also taken to point out the contrast between the
+conduct of Bumbireh and that of Ukerewé, Komeh, Itawagumba, Kytawa, and
+Kamiru, and to adorn the brief speech with a moral.
+
+Turning away, we coasted along the much indented shores of the savage
+island, and several times had opportunities of distinguishing the
+altered demeanour of the natives and to observe that their fierce temper
+had abated.
+
+King Kamiru received us with princely magnificence. The Wazongora who
+were with us extolled me as a father and begged his permission to
+accompany me to Uganda. Kamiru, a bluff, hearty old man, kindly
+consented, and furnished us with canoes to replace four of the most
+rotten of the vessels from Ukerewé, which required constant caulking and
+baling to prevent their foundering. The generous king supplied Frank and
+myself with such a quantity of milk and honey that several potfuls
+broke, and a section of the boat was a couple of inches deep with the
+luscious mixture, which the boat’s crew licked up with broad grins of
+satisfaction.
+
+A bay separates Ihangiro from King Kamiru’s land. We were encamped on
+the north side, which belongs to Kamiru; had we ventured on the south
+side, we should have been in the enemy’s country. Desirous of showing
+some kindness to Shekka and his friends, I made proposals to Kamiru to
+accept them on behalf of Mtesa and to negotiate with Antari for their
+release, but the king peremptorily refused, saying that he would be
+unable to protect them, and that as they were Mtesa’s subjects, they
+ought to be given up to him.
+
+_August 8._—On the 8th of August we arrived once more on the little
+island of Musira, whither we had before been driven by the natives of
+Makongo, in King Kytawa’s country. The elders of all the villages along
+his coast greeted us with acclamation. Makongo outdid the generosity of
+Kamiru, for it sent four oxen besides 200 bunches of bananas. Kytawa
+despatched quite a little army to bear his salaams and gifts of
+provisions and messages, thanking me for avenging the death of his
+chief, and making an offer of twenty canoes if I were short of vessels.
+
+Inspired by the effect on the Wazongora which the punishment of the
+natives of Bumbireh had created, Sabadu hinted that it would be
+desirable to threaten Kyozza, the king of northern Uzongora, but he was
+speedily made to understand that white men only fought in self-defence.
+
+As we proceeded by Kyozza’s villages, Kagya, Weza, and Bugavu, the
+inhabitants lined the shores without arms and loudly greeted us; and
+when we stopped for our midday meal at a village near Weza, a messenger
+from Kyozza came and promised us ten oxen if we would wait for that day
+and accept his hospitalities. We returned a courteous reply, but
+refused, upon the ground that we were in a hurry to proceed to Uganda.
+
+_August 12._—We halted at Mezinda, and on the 12th of August, passing by
+the mouth of the Alexandra Nile and Chawasimba Point, directed our
+course for Dumo, in Uganda, at which place we arrived in the afternoon
+without further incident of interest.
+
+The next day was devoted to preparing a camp, arranging for supplies
+with the neighbouring Watongoleh of Mtesa during my absence, and writing
+letters to the _Daily Telegraph_ and _New York Herald_, giving in brief
+an account of the events which are described in detail in this chapter,
+a copy of which was left with Frank to send to the coast by way of
+Karagwé and Unyanyembé.
+
+A score of small matters employed my attention until midnight, of a
+similar nature to those arranged before setting out from Kagehyi on the
+exploration by circumnavigation of Lake Victoria in March. Before
+retiring, messengers arrived in camp from Magassa—the dilatory admiral
+of the canoe fleet despatched as my convoy in April—entreating me to
+wait a couple of days for him before setting out for the capital of
+Uganda. But as every hour was now precious, I was not able to defer my
+departure.
+
+-----
+
+# 15:
+
+ This island has since had attached to it a sad interest. At Wezi,
+ Lieutenant Shergold Smith, and Mr. O’Neil, of the Church Missionary
+ Society, together with Sungoro the Arab, and many of their followers,
+ lately lost their lives while endeavouring to remove the Arab’s women—
+ among whom was Lukongeh’s young sister—from Ukerewé, without the
+ king’s permission or consent.
+
+# 16:
+
+ On page 32, vol. i., ‘Last Journals,’ Livingstone says:—“It may have
+ been for the best that the English are thus known as people who can
+ hit hard when unjustly attacked, as we on this occasion most certainly
+ were.” Other instances could be cited from his books to prove Dr.
+ Livingstone’s views on such occasions.
+
+# 17:
+
+ Antari, or “the lion,” is a favourite name with the Wahuma tribes.
+
+# 18:
+
+ Six of these died subsequently to our arrival in Uganda, from the
+ effects of these wounds.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII.
+
+We find Mtesa at war—“Jack’s Mount”—Meeting with Mtesa—The Waganda army
+ in camp and on the march—The imperial harem—In sight of the enemy—The
+ Waganda fleet—Preliminary skirmishing—The causeway—The massacre of
+ Mtesa’s peace party—“What do you know of angels?”—Mtesa’s education
+ proceeds in the intervals of war—Translating the Bible—Jesus or
+ Mohammed?—Mtesa’s decision—The royal proselyte.
+
+
+_August 13._—At Dumo rumour and gossip were busy about a war and a
+mighty preparation which Mtesa, the Emperor of Uganda, was making for an
+expedition against the Wavuma. He had not been as yet actually engaged,
+it was said, though it was expected he would be shortly. In the hope,
+then, of finding him at his capital, I resolved to be speedy in reaching
+him, so that, without much delay, I might be able to return and
+prosecute my journey to Lake Albert.
+
+The first day, favoured by a gale from the north-west, the _Lady Alice_
+left the fastest of the Waganda canoes far behind, but, obliged to halt
+for her company, put in for the night among the mosquito-haunted papyrus
+of Bwiru. The next day, after sailing across Sessé Channel, and passing
+the mouth of the Katonga, we rested at Jumba’s Cove in Unjaku. From this
+cove runs a wide road constructed by Mtesa about two years before, when
+he undertook to invade Ankori and punish Mtambuko, the king of that
+shepherd state. Though untouched during two years, it is still
+sufficiently clear of grass to define its width and illustrate the
+energy of Mtesa when aroused.
+
+_August 18._—On the 18th of August we sailed to Ntewi, where we learned
+two reliable facts. The king had already marched towards Usoga, and had
+an engagement with his enemies, the Wavuma. When I heard this news, I
+felt more than half inclined to turn back, for I knew by experience that
+African wars are tedious things, and I was not in the humour to be
+delayed long; but on reflection, and after much importunity from the
+Waganda, I adhered to the first intention, by which I thought that
+probably, though delayed, I might reach the Albert Nyanza by a short
+route, which would in a manner balance the delay occasioned by visiting
+Mtesa.
+
+We also heard that the Wavuma were abroad on the lake in hundreds of
+canoes searching for prey, and, not wishing the _Lady Alice_, which had
+already done me such good service, to fall into their hands, we conveyed
+the boat into the centre of the village, where we stored her and her
+appurtenances—oars, sails, rudder, &c. I also heard that the oars, which
+Magassa had received from Bumbireh, were in the chief of Ntewi’s house,
+and had the satisfaction of seeing them once more under the charge of
+the boat-keeper. We halted at Ntewi one day, by which I was enabled not
+only to house the boat properly and to receive the oars, but to meet the
+two soldiers left as guard of honour with Magassa and to receive salaams
+from Mtesa, and more guards to ensure my welcome and comfort _en route_
+to him.
+
+_August 20._—Under the auspices of a considerable addition to our
+convoy, we left Ntewi, and, paddling vigorously during the afternoon of
+the 20th, arrived at Nankuma, in the bay of Buka. Here we left the
+canoes, and the next day prosecuted our journey overland to avoid the
+Wavuma, and camped at Ziba, at the base of “Jack’s Mount.”
+
+This name is derived from a fatal accident to my faithful companion
+Jack, a bull-terrier of remarkable intelligence and affection which
+accompanied me from England. A wild cow given by the Mtongoleh for the
+subsistence of the king’s stranger, being rather obstreperous in her
+behaviour, was assaulted by Jack, but the cow in her turn tossed the
+unfortunate dog and gored him to death. He died “regretted by all who
+knew his many good qualities.” His companion, “Bull,” the last of five
+English dogs, when he beheld his poor mate stretched out still and dead,
+also expressed, as clearly as canine nature would allow, his great
+sorrow at his lamentable fate. Grave and deliberate from years and long
+travel, he walked round the body two or three times, examining it
+carefully, and then advanced to me with his honest eyes wide open as if
+to ask, “What has caused this?” Receiving no answer, he went aside and
+sat down with his back to me, solemn and sad, as though he were
+ruminating despondingly on the evils which beset dog and man alike in
+this harsh and wicked world.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ [_To face page 234._
+
+[Illustration: VIEW OF RIPON FALLS FROM THE UGANDA SIDE.]
+
+(_From a photograph by the Author._)
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+_August 22._—The next day, marching in an east by north direction from
+Jack’s Mount, we crossed the Zedziwa, a stream rising at the base of a
+hill situated but two miles from the north-western extremity of
+“Grant[19] Bay,” which I believe to be the “Luajerri,” a stream Speke
+sketched on his map as issuing from the Victoria and forming a second
+outlet into the Nile.
+
+Having explored by water all the coast washed by the Victoria Nyanza and
+having since travelled on foot the entire distance between Nakaranga
+Cape and Buku Bay, I can state positively that there is but one outlet
+from the lake, viz. the Ripon Falls. There are three rivers, one on the
+Usoga side of Napoleon Channel, called the Nagombwa, and two on the
+Uganda side—the Zedziwa, rising in Makindo near Grant Bay, and the
+Mwerango, rising west of Mtesa’s capital—any of which, seen by
+travellers journeying at a little distance from the lake, might be
+supposed by them to be outlets of Lake Victoria. The Nagombwa empties
+into the Victoria Nile not far from Urondogani; the Zedziwa empties into
+the Victoria Nile near Urondogani, and the Mwerango flows into the
+Mianja, the Mianja flows into the Kafu, and the Kafu into the Victoria
+Nile, somewhere in the neighbourhood of Rionga’s Island.
+
+At Makindo I received the Emperor’s salaams for the fifth time since
+arriving in Uganda, and his walking-stick,[20] as a token that it really
+was Mtesa who sent the repeated messages of welcome. By sea and by land
+his messengers of welcome had met me, and each stage was supplied with
+an “augmented greeting” with many manifestations of his regard. I was
+well convinced, from the repeated expeditions sent by land and water to
+hunt up news of me when Magassa reported me as dead, that the friendship
+conceived for me by Mtesa was something more than in name.
+
+_August 23._—Arriving next day at Ugungu, opposite Jinja, or the Ripon
+Falls, two more messengers came up breathless from the imperial camp—
+which I could see covering many miles of ground—with yet an additional
+welcome, and pointed out on the opposite side Mtesa and his chiefs, most
+picturesque in their white dresses and red caps, with a large concourse
+of attendants, waiting to see my party cross the channel. Five large
+canoes were in readiness at the ferry, and also soldiers of the royal
+guard to escort us through the vast crowds on the other side of the
+channel.
+
+Far different was the scene on this day around the Falls to that which
+Speke had gazed upon in 1863, and to that which I had seen five months
+before when I entered this channel after a skirmish with the Wavuma. For
+now the channel swarmed with large canoes, and the shores of Ugungu and
+Jinja were covered with thousands of men, women, and children; while
+then all was silent and lonely, and the monotonous noise of falling
+waters was the only sound that was heard.
+
+Crossing the channel amid the noise and bustle of many thousands, we
+soon found ourselves in the midst of the vast army that Mtesa had
+collected from all parts of his empire. Natives of Karagwé, lean,
+lank-bodied, and straight-nosed, with their deficiencies of calf made
+up for by a preposterous fulness of ankle, caused by hundreds of
+coils of fine iron wire, gathered round us with as much curiosity as
+the ferocious Wakedi, who intruded their bodies, naked as when they
+were born, among the clean-robed Waganda, reckless of the laughter
+and jeering which their nudity provoked. The vain Wasoga also seemed
+to forget, while they gazed on us, that they were as much objects of
+curiosity to the rustic yet unabashed natives of Sessé, who stood
+by them, as we were to them; for, indeed, look where I might, the
+undisguised vanity of the Wasoga made them extremely conspicuous.
+Though amidst such a large army of sable warriors, a solah topee,
+European complexion, and boots wonderfully created of some kind of
+leather, might well be deemed curiosities; yet lambskins of all
+colours, stuffed with grass, and standing erect on men’s heads, and
+long white-haired goat-skin for robes and loin coverings, were not a
+whit less curious to the canoe-building natives of Sessé, who until now
+had never, it seemed, witnessed such things. But, taking advantage of
+the quiet complacency with which we permitted these warriors to gaze on
+us, they began to press on us more closely than was convenient, until
+they were scattered by the mighty sticks of the guards, who felled
+them to right and left without remorse, and Wasoga, Wanyambu, Wakedi,
+Wazongora, and Waganda were compelled to be more careful of their bones
+than curious to see us.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ [_To face page 236._
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ THE OUTFALL OF THE VICTORIA NYANZA: RIPON FALLS, WHICH GIVE BIRTH TO
+ THE VICTORIA NILE.
+ CAMP OF REAR GUARD ON HILL.
+ (_From a photograph taken by the Author, from the Usoga side._)
+]
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+A short time afterwards, near the imperial quarters, I met the great
+chiefs of Uganda with whom I had struck up an acquaintance on my first
+visit, among whom I recognized tall and handsome Chambarango, the king’s
+steward Kauta, Sambuzi, and lastly the Katekiro—the Premier—brilliant in
+his scarlet robe, white dress, and fez, attended by a retinue almost
+regal. They all expressed their satisfaction at seeing me alive and
+safe, and were all anxious to hear how we had escaped from Bumbireh.
+
+_August 24._—The next day at the usual levee hour of Mtesa—8 A.M.—the
+drums announced the levee as begun, and half an hour later the pages
+came to conduct me to the presence of Mtesa. The imperial quarters
+covered an area of about 200 yards square, and though but temporarily
+put up, few Europeans could have constructed such commodious houses and
+neat courts with such means, as the Waganda had prepared for their
+sovereign.
+
+The gates of the outer court were thronged with representatives of many
+countries, anxious to get a glimpse of the great monarch in his state;
+but the guards were merciless, and with gunstock and baton rudely thrust
+or beat back the intrusive nameless, and were as flint-hearted in their
+office as London policemen are on a similar occasion. For me the pages
+sufficed. Their presence cleared a broad road to the gate, which was
+drawn widely open to allow our procession to go by. One court was
+passed, and when the gate of the levee court was drawn back, a most
+picturesque scene was disclosed. In the centre rose a conical hut, at
+the broad doorway of which sat a silent figure; on either side were
+standard-bearers and the hereditary guards, while, forming a broad
+crescent in the front rank, were the chiefs and important captains of
+the Empire seated on mats. In the background the bodyguards of Mtesa
+stood at “shoulder arms” in double ranks; in one corner were arranged
+the drummers and musicians, while scattered here and there in the open
+space before the monarch stood groups of claimants and courtiers.
+
+As I advanced, Mtesa rose, and came to the edge of the leopard-rug, on
+which his feet rested while seated, and there was even greater warmth in
+this greeting than on the former occasion at Usavara. After a short
+pause, Sabadu, the chief who had conducted me from Bumbireh, was called
+forward to relate the incidents of our meeting, our fight with Bumbireh,
+and other events of the journey, which he did with a most wonderful
+minuteness of detail. He then in my name presented the captives of
+Bumbireh to the king, with an intercession that he would not slay them,
+but keep them in durance until their ransom was paid by Antari. Mtesa
+was then informed of the purpose of my coming, which was to obtain the
+guides he had promised me on my first visit, to show me the road to Muta
+Nzigé; and I begged he would furnish them without much delay, as I had
+already lost considerable time from his canoes having failed me.
+
+Mtesa replied that he was now engaged in a war with the rebellious
+people of Uvuma, who insolently refused to pay their tribute, harassed
+the coast of Chagwé, and abducted his people, “selling them afterwards
+for a few bunches of bananas,” and that it was not customary in Uganda
+to permit strangers to proceed on their journeys while the _Kabaka_ was
+engaged in war, but that the war would soon be over, when, if I would
+wait, he would send a chief with an army to conduct me to the Nyanza
+(Muta Nzigé) by the shortest road.
+
+“Besides,” said he, “a small force cannot reach that lake. Kabba Rega of
+Unyoro is at present at war with the whites of Kaniessa (Gondokoro), and
+the people of Ankori do not admit strangers into their territory for
+trade or otherwise, and all the roads to the lake run through their
+countries.”
+
+After this intelligence I saw that I had either to renounce the project
+of exploring the Albert, and proceed at once to the Tanganika—which,
+after coming so far out of the way, would perhaps have been regarded in
+Europe as madness—or to wait patiently until the war was over, and then
+make up by forced marches for lost time. But being again assured that
+the war would not last long, I resolved to stay and witness it as a
+novelty, and to take advantage of the time to acquire information about
+the country and its people.
+
+_August 27._—On the 27th of August, Mtesa struck his camp, and began the
+march to Nakaranga, a point of land lying within 700 yards of the island
+of Ingira, which had been chosen by the Wavuma as their depôt and
+stronghold. He had collected an army numbering 150,000 warriors, as it
+was expected that he would have to fight the rebellious Wasoga as well
+as the Wavuma. Besides this great army must be reckoned nearly 50,000
+women, and about as many children and slaves of both sexes, so that at a
+rough guess, after looking at all the camps and various tributary
+nations which at Mtesa’s command had contributed their quotas, I
+estimated the number of souls in Mtesa’s camp to be about 250,000!
+
+This large total may seem startling, but not more so to those acquainted
+with the customs and population of Uganda and the nature and extent of
+Mtesa’s authority, than the five millions and a quarter said to have
+started with Xerxes in his invasion of Greece. I myself, though I saw
+the vast area which the several camps occupied, did not believe it
+possible, until one day I asked Mtesa, for the sake of satisfying my
+curiosity, to permit me to make a muster-roll of his chiefs. Always
+affable and willing to please white men, for whom he entertains profound
+respect, he called together all his principal chiefs and officers (who
+in Uganda are distinguished by the titles of Wakungu and Watongoleh),
+and commanded them to bring the respective numbers of their sub-chiefs.
+The following is the muster-roll of the generals and colonels made at
+the time:—
+
+ Names of Generals. Number of
+ Sub-chiefs or
+ Colonels.
+
+ 1. Pokino, the Katekiro, Chief of Uddu, and Premier of
+ Uganda 6
+
+ 2. Chambarango, Chief of Usiro 6
+
+ 3. Kaeema 6
+
+ 4. Kitunzi, Chief of the Katonga valley 2
+
+ 5. Sekebobo, Chief of Chagwé 24
+
+ 6. Mkwenda 19
+
+ 7. Kasuju, guardian of the imperial family 5
+
+ 8. Kagu 5
+
+ 9. Kangau 18
+
+ 10. Kimbugwé 24
+
+ 11. Katambalé 2
+
+ 12. Nana Masurie, Mtesa’s mother 10
+
+ 13. Sabaganzi, Mtesa’s uncle 4
+
+ —— 131
+
+ Emperor’s personal bodyguard 23
+
+ ——
+
+ Total 154
+
+These sub-chiefs command followers numbering from 50 to 3000, and
+Mtesa’s bodyguard, though claiming twenty-three Watongoleh, must not be
+estimated at a less number than 3000 in the aggregate. Now, roughly
+calculating the native Waganda force at 125,000, we have to add the
+quotas furnished by Karagwé, Uzongora, Ukedi, Usoga, Sessé, and the
+islands of the lake, Irwaji, Lulamba, Kiwa, Uziri, Kibibi, &c., also all
+the Arabs and Wangwana guests who came with their guns to assist Mtesa,
+and 25,000 seems to me to be a reasonable estimate of the force drawn
+from these sources.
+
+The advance-guard had departed too early for me to see them, but,
+curious to see the main body of this great army pass, I stationed myself
+at an early hour at the extreme limit of the camp.
+
+First with his legion came Mkwenda, who guards the frontier between the
+Katonga valley and Willimiesi against the Wanyoro. He is a stout, burly
+young man, brave as a lion, having much experience of wars, and cunning
+and adroit in their conduct, accomplished with the spear, and
+possessing, besides, other excellent fighting qualities. I noticed that
+the Waganda chiefs, though Muslimized, clung to their war-paints and
+national charms, for each warrior, as he passed by on the trot, was most
+villainously bedaubed with ochre and pipe-clay. The force under the
+command of Mkwenda might be roughly numbered at 30,000 warriors and
+camp-followers, and though the path yesterday was a mere goat-track, the
+rush of this legion on the half-trot soon crushed out a broad avenue.
+
+The old general Kangau, who defends the country between Willimiesi and
+the Victoria Nile, came next with his following, their banners flying,
+drums beating and pipes playing, he and his warriors stripped for
+action, their bodies and faces daubed with white, black, and ochreous
+war-paint.
+
+Next came a rush of about 2000 chosen warriors, all tall men, expert
+with spear and shield, lithe of body and nimble of foot, shouting as
+they trotted past their war-cry of “Kavya, kavya” (the two last
+syllables of Mtesa’s title when young—_Mukavya_, “king”), and rattling
+their spears. Behind them at a quick march came the musket-armed
+bodyguard of the Emperor, about two hundred in front, a hundred on
+either side of the road, enclosing Mtesa and his _Katekiro_, and two
+hundred bringing up the rear, with their drums beating, pipes playing,
+and standards flying, and forming quite an imposing and warlike
+procession.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ [_To face page 240._
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ THE VICTORIA NILE, NORTH OF RIPON FALLS, RUSHING TOWARDS UNYORO, FROM
+ THE USOGA SIDE OF THE FALLS.
+ (_From a photograph by the Author._)
+]
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Mtesa marched on foot, bare-headed, and clad in a dress of blue check
+cloth, with a black belt of English make round his waist, and—like the
+Roman emperors, who, when returning in triumph, painted their faces a
+deep vermilion—his face dyed a bright red. The _Katekiro_ preceded him,
+and wore a dark grey cashmere coat, which M. de Bellefonds had given
+him. I think this arrangement was made to deceive any assassin who might
+be lurking in the bushes. If this was the case, the precaution seemed
+wholly unnecessary, as the march was so quick that nothing but a gun
+would have been effective, and the Wavuma and Wasoga have no such
+weapons.
+
+After Mtesa’s bodyguard had passed by, chief after chief, legion after
+legion, followed, each distinguished to the native ear by its different
+and peculiar drum-beat. They came on at an extraordinary pace, more like
+warriors hurrying up into action than on the march, and it is their
+custom, I am told, to move always at a trot when on an enterprise of a
+warlike nature.[21]
+
+About two hours after the main body began its march, Kasuju, the
+guardian of the young princes and Mtesa’s women, preceded by a thousand
+spears and followed by a similar number, trotted by. The women numbered
+about 5000, but not more than 500 can be styled the Emperor’s
+concubines; the others were for the duties of the household.
+
+If beautiful women of sable complexion are to be found in Africa, it
+must, I thought, be in the household of such a powerful despot as Mtesa,
+who has the pick of the flower of so many lands. Accordingly I looked
+sharply amongst the concubines, that I might become acquainted with the
+style of pure African beauty. Nor was I quite disappointed, though I had
+imagined that his wives would have all been of superior personal charms.
+But Mtesa apparently differs widely from Europeans in his tastes. There
+were not more than twenty out of all the five hundred worthy of a glance
+of admiration from a white man with any eye for style and beauty, and
+certainly not more than three deserving of many glances. These three,
+the most comely among the twenty beauties of Mtesa’s court, were of the
+Wahuma race, no doubt from Ankori. They had the complexion of quadroons,
+were straight-nosed and thin-lipped, with large lustrous eyes. In the
+other graces of a beautiful form they excelled, and Hafiz might have
+said with poetic rapture that they were “straight as palm-trees and
+beautiful as moons.” The only drawback was their hair—the short crisp
+hair of the negro race—but in all other points they might be exhibited
+as the perfection of beauty which Central Africa can produce. Mtesa,
+however, does not believe them to be superior, or even equal, to his
+well-fleshed, unctuous-bodied, flat-nosed wives: indeed, when I pointed
+them out to him one day at a private audience, he even regarded them
+with a sneer. Speke, if I remember rightly, declares that fatness in
+womankind is synonymous with beauty in Uganda. This may once have been
+the case, but it is certainly not so now, for in few women regarded with
+favour by Mtesa or his chiefs have I seen any gross corpulence of body.
+Naturally, where there is abundance of good digestible food, and the
+climate is agreeable, humanity of the respectable class will generally
+be found to be well clothed in flesh, be it in Uganda or in England, but
+it is somewhat unreasonable to state that the respectable class
+therefore considers superfluous rotundity to be an element of beauty.
+
+After the royal harem followed Mtesa’s uncle, ancient and well-featured
+Sabaganzi, whom, as regards the multitude of women that followed him, I
+looked upon for a long time as a very Solomon among the Waganda, until
+one day I learned that large possessions of womankind mean wealth in
+Uganda, for all of them have a market value, and are saleable for wares
+of any kind, be they cloth, cows, beads, or guns. Still I cannot quite
+acquit the old gentleman of the imputation of gallantry, for one night,
+at Nakaranga, he slew with his own hand a lover who had come to serenade
+one of his numerous Dulcineas. Besides the character I have credited him
+with, I must dub him as a jealous, vindictive, choleric old pagan,
+despite his fine features and smooth tongue.
+
+Wearied with gazing on the vast multitude, which rolled by steadily
+in wave after wave, a living tide of warriors, and having gained
+sufficient insight into their numbers and method of travel, I left
+my post of observation and struck into the line of march behind
+Sabaganzi’s rear-guard, where, to say the least, I was much annoyed by
+the rush of hurrying warriors, all of whom thought it necessary to push
+on to the front in spite of all obstacles. The guards given to me by
+Mtesa to conduct me on the road did their utmost to check the furious,
+persistent impetuosity of the on-coming warriors, and used their stout
+staffs with angry violence. The blows, however, were quite harmless, as
+they were warded off by ample shields of wood and cane.
+
+Perceiving it useless to contend against such a weight of numbers and
+such well-established custom, I submitted to the annoyance patiently, as
+the march to Nakaranga would not occupy more than two or three days.
+
+At Mpani, where we camped that night, we learned that the Wavuma, soon
+after our departure from Jinja, or the “Stones,” had paid a visit to it,
+and set the abandoned imperial quarters and the camp on fire, besides
+spearing some five or six unfortunates before the chief appointed to
+guard the camp was aware of their presence. At sunset we saw the canoes
+of the Wavuma, some two or three hundred in number, returning in triumph
+to their island.
+
+_Sept. 1._—Four days afterwards, or on the 1st of September, the army of
+Mtesa occupied Nakaranga, where it commenced to construct its camp, each
+chief surrounded by the men of his own command in the position assigned
+to him by the Katekiro.
+
+The legion commanded by the officers of the queen-mother occupied the
+ground east of Cape Nakaranga; the chief Ankori and his fantastically
+dressed Wasoga camped north of Nana Masurie’s people; to the gallant
+Mkwenda with his formidable legion was assigned the entire north of the
+camp; and to the redoubtable Sekebobo, when he should arrive from
+Namagongo Point, was appointed the lake side, from Mkwenda to the end of
+Nakaranga Cape. The imperial quarters occupied an area of 400 yards
+square in the centre of the vast camp, and was jealously guarded by the
+bodyguard, the legions of the Katekiro, Chambarango, and Kimbugwé, by
+Kasuju with the guard of the imperial family, and the bluff, outspoken
+Kitunzi, chief of the Katonga valley.
+
+The following rough sketch may assist the reader to understand better
+the locality which at this period was of such importance to Uganda. By
+sunset the army was comfortably housed in some 30,000 dome-like huts,
+above which here and there rose a few of a conical shape and taller than
+the rest, showing the temporary residences of the various chiefs.
+
+Amid all the hurry and bustle the white stranger “Stamlee” (as all the
+Waganda now called me) was not forgotten. Commodious quarters were
+erected and allotted to him and his boat’s crew, by express orders from
+Mtesa, near the great broadway which the Katekiro constructed, leading
+from the imperial quarters to the point of Cape Nakaranga.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Anxious to see what chances Mtesa possessed of victory over his
+rebellious subjects, I proceeded along the road over the mountain to a
+position which commanded a clear view of Ingira Island, whither the
+rebels had betaken themselves, their families, and a few herds of
+cattle. Considered as being in possession of some twenty thousand
+savages, whose only weapons of war were the spear and the sling, Ingira
+Island presented no very formidable obstacle to a power such as the
+Emperor of Uganda had amassed on this cape, only 700 yards from it. In
+length it was barely a mile, and only half a mile in width from the base
+of the mountain which confronted the cape to the water’s edge on the
+Uvuma side. The mountain rose on all sides with rather a steep slope,
+but was easy of ascent to the nimble-footed and deep-chested natives.
+The Wavuma, however, were not without allies to assist them in averting
+the punishment that Mtesa threatened them with, and the common danger,
+as well as a common hate of the dread monarch, had drawn together, for
+one strong effort to win their freedom, the inhabitants of Ugeyeya and
+Utamba Islands, as well as Kitenteh—famous in the annals of Uganda for
+its long but unfortunate struggle with the Emperor Suna, the father of
+Mtesa.
+
+The people of the entire coast of Usoga from Nakaranga to Uganda had
+voluntarily enlisted in the cause of Uvuma, and had despatched over 150
+large canoes fully manned to the war. The confederates, in arranging
+their plan of action, had chosen Ingira Island as the rendezvous of the
+united fleets of canoes. Mtesa’s plan was to capture this island, and to
+cross over from Ingira to the next, and then to Uvuma, when, of course,
+only immediate and complete submission would save them; and I rejoiced
+that I was present, for I was in hopes that at such a period my
+influence might be sufficient to avert the horrors that generally attend
+victory in Africa. Though I had no reason to love the Wavuma, and for
+the time was a warm ally of Mtesa, I was resolved that no massacre of
+the submissive should take place while I was present.
+
+The redoubtable Sekebobo, commanding twenty-four Watongoleh, or
+colonels, and a force of about 50,000, occupied Namagongo, and the fleet
+of Mtesa was under his charge, waiting orders to cross the bay with
+them.
+
+The Uganda war fleet numbered 325 large and small canoes, out of which
+only 230 might be said to be really effective for war. One-half of these
+were manned by Wasessé, natives of the large island of Sessé; the other
+half by the courageous natives of the Irwaji and Lulamba Islands, by
+picked men collected from the coast between Usavara and Buka Bay under
+the command of Chikwata, the Vice-Admiral, by crews of Unjaku under
+Vice-Admiral Jumba, and by the naval brigade of Gabunga, the Admiral of
+the Fleet.
+
+Gabunga, though entitled to be called Grand Admiral of the Fleet,
+because under his charge were placed all the canoes of Uganda, numbering
+perhaps 500 altogether, must not be supposed to exercise supreme command
+in action. His duty was simply to convey the orders of the fighting
+general to his captains and lieutenants, for the sailors, as in England
+in former times—except in desperate extremity—seldom fight.
+
+The fighting men of each canoe owe obedience only to their
+General-in-chief; the sailors or paddlers obey Gabunga, the Grand
+Admiral of the Fleet, who, again, is controlled by the General-in-chief.
+
+Many readers, unless detained to consider the naval force of Mtesa,
+might be contented with the mere figures giving the numerical strength
+of his war-vessels. But let us for the sake of curiosity calculate the
+number of men required to man these 230 effective war-canoes.
+
+The largest canoe seen by me in this fleet measured 72 feet in length, 7
+feet 3 inches in breadth, and was four feet deep within, from keel to
+gunwale. The thwarts were 32 in number, to seat 64 paddlers besides the
+pilot. There were probably over 100 canoes between 50 and 70 feet in
+length, and about 50 between 30 and 50 feet long; the remaining 80
+fighting-boats were of all sizes, from 18 to 30 feet long. The rest, of
+the fleet consisted of small boats fit only to carry from three to six
+men.
+
+The largest class—100 in number—would require on an average fifty men
+each to man them, which would be equal in the aggregate to 5000. The
+second class would require on an average forty men each, or 2000 to man
+the fifty canoes. The third class would average twenty men each, and
+being eighty in number, would require 1600 men to man them, the sum
+total standing therefore at 8600.
+
+A very respectable figure for a naval force, most men would think. But
+in a battle on the lake, or for such an occasion as the present, when
+the resources of the empire were mustered for an important war, they
+would be further required to carry a strong force to assault Ingira
+Island. The canoes for the assault would therefore be crammed with
+fighting men, the largest class carrying from 60 to 100 men exclusive of
+their crews; so that the actual fact is that Mtesa can float a force of
+from 16,000 to 20,000 on Lake Victoria for purposes of war.
+
+Of the spirit with which the Wavuma intended to fight the Waganda, we
+had proof enough on the second day of our arrival. They dashed up close
+to the shore, and back again into the lake, three or four times, before
+the Waganda remembered that they had means at hand in the shape of
+muskets to purge them of this bravado. As the shots were fired at the
+canoes, most of the Wavuma bent their heads low and paddled their canoes
+with one hand, but a few of the boldest stood up exhibiting for our
+benefit their dexterity in the use of the spear, and to show how well
+they could maintain their footing on the thwarts of their narrow canoes.
+Their bravado was not without its effect on many of the Waganda, for I
+heard several remark that the Wavuma would be hard to conquer.
+
+On the third morning Sekebobo, having been instructed during the night,
+began to cross the bay of Nakaranga with the imperial fleet. Mtesa had
+sent a messenger to inform me that the chief was about to start, and I
+hastened up to the beach to witness the sight. I found that almost all
+the Waganda were animated with the same curiosity, for the beach was
+lined for three or four miles with dense masses of people, almost all
+clad in the national brown, bark-cloth robes.
+
+The Wavuma meanwhile kept their eyes on Sekebobo, and from the summit of
+their mountain island discerned, almost as well as if they had been told
+by Mtesa, what was about to be done; and to frustrate this, if possible,
+or at least to gather booty, they hastily manned 100 canoes or
+thereabouts, and darted out like so many crocodiles towards Namagongo.
+Before Sekebobo could arrange the fleet in order, the Wavuma were in the
+middle of the bay to dispute his passage, and calmly awaiting his coming
+into deep water.
+
+A hundred canoes against 325 was rather an unequal contest, and so the
+Wavuma thought, for as the fleet of Mtesa approached in a compact,
+tolerably well-arranged mass, the Wavuma opened their line to right and
+left, and permitted their foe to pass them. The Waganda, encouraged
+by this sign, began to cheer, but scarcely had the first sounds of
+self-gratulation escaped them when the Wavuma paddles were seen to
+strike the water into foam, and, lo! into the midst of the mass
+from either flank the gallant islanders dashed, sending dismay and
+consternation into the whole Uganda army.
+
+What work those desperate Wavuma might have done, I know not, but Mtesa
+at the sight leaped up high, and shouted his war-cry, “Kavya, kavya!”
+and the army, men, women, and children, screamed “Kavya, kavya!” and the
+approaching fleet, hearing the cry, echoed it fiercely, and turned
+itself on the enemy with spirit. But the Wavuma, having made fourteen
+good prizes, did not wish, so unequally matched, to meet the Waganda in
+a pitched fight, and accordingly hastened away—contented for the time—
+into deeper water, whither, strangely enough, the Waganda fleet did not
+dare to follow them.
+
+This short but spirited scene caused me to reflect deeply, and to ask
+myself why, if the Wavuma were so courageous, I was permitted to escape
+from their hands; and why one boat and a double-barreled elephant-rifle
+were sufficient to release us, in our voyage of discovery, from thirteen
+well-manned Wavuma canoes. Some answers to this question were derived
+subsequently from observation of events.
+
+A pause of two or three days without incident followed the arrival of
+Sekebobo’s legion and Mtesa’s fleet. Then Mtesa sent for me, and was
+pleased to impart some of his ideas on the probable issue of the war to
+me, in something like the following words:—
+
+“Stamlee, I want your advice. All white men are very clever, and appear
+to know everything. I want to know from you what you think I may expect
+from this war. Shall I have victory or not? It is my opinion we must be
+clever, and make headwork take that island.”
+
+Smiling at his naïve, candid manner, I replied that it would require a
+prophet to be able to foretell the issue of the war, and that I was far
+from being a prophet; that headwork, were it the best in the world,
+could not take Ingira Island unassisted by valour.
+
+He then said, “I know that the Waganda will not fight well on the water;
+they are not accustomed to it. They are always victorious on land, but
+when they go in canoes, they are afraid of being upset; and most of the
+warriors come from the interior, and do not know now how to swim. The
+Wavuma and Wasoga are very expert in the water, and swim like fish. If
+we could devise some means to take the Waganda over to the island
+without risking them in the canoes, I should be sure of victory.”
+
+I replied, “You have men, women, and children here in this camp as
+numerous as grass. Command every soul able to walk to take up a stone
+and cast into the water, and you will make a great difference in its
+depth; but if each person carries fifty stones a day, I will warrant you
+that in a few days you will walk on dry land to Ingira.”
+
+Mtesa at this slapped his thighs in approval, and forthwith commanded
+the Katekiro to muster two legions and set them to work, and very soon
+the face of the rocky mountain was covered with about 40,000 warriors,
+or about a sixth of the multitude at the cape, toiling at the unusual
+work of making a rocky causeway to connect Nakaranga with Ingira Island.
+After they had been at work three hours, I proceeded to view the
+progress they were making, and saw that they were expending their
+energies in making a causeway about 100 feet wide. I told the Katekiro
+that it would take a year to finish such a work, but if he would limit
+the width to 10 feet, and form the people into rows, he would have the
+satisfaction of setting foot on Ingira Island without danger. But though
+the Premier and first lord of Uganda lost none of his politeness, and
+never forgot that Mtesa, his master, was pleased to call me his friend,
+I was not slow in perceiving that he would not accept friendly advice
+from a stranger and a foreigner. It was not by words, or even a hint or
+unfriendly gesture, that the fact was betrayed, but simply by
+inattention to my advice. The most courtly European could not have
+excelled the Uganda Premier. He offered in the same friendly manner a
+gourdful of the honey-sweet wine of the plantain, talked sociably upon
+various matters, invited verbal sketches of European life, and smiled in
+an aristocratically insolent manner. Nevertheless, under this urbane
+mask, I detected a proud spirit, unbending as steel. With such an
+unruffled, composed, smiling patrician of Uganda, what could I do but
+groan inwardly that good, brave, excellent Mtesa should be served by
+such men? At the same time, I could not help smiling at the diplomatic
+insouciance of this man, who indeed represented in only a too perfect
+degree the character of the Waganda chiefs.
+
+For two days the work was carried on in the way I had described, namely,
+with rocks, and then Mtesa thought that filling the passage with trees
+would be a speedier method, and the Katekiro was so instructed. For
+three days the Waganda were at work felling trees, and a whole forest
+was levelled and carried to Nakaranga Point, where they were lashed to
+one another with bark-rope, and sunk.
+
+On the morning of the fifth day Mtesa came down to the point to view the
+causeway, and was glad to see that we were nearer by 130 yards to Ingira
+Island. While viewing the island, he asked me what I thought of sending
+a peace party over to ascertain the feeling of the Wavuma. I replied
+that it would be a good and wise thing in Europe, but not in Central
+Africa, as I feared the Wavuma would massacre the entire party. Mtesa,
+however, advised by the chiefs or one of the Wagwana, persisted in the
+idea, and a favourite page, named Webba, was about to be sent in a large
+canoe with fifty men to open negotiations for peace with the Wavuma,
+when I entreated that he would listen to me, and send a small, rotten
+canoe instead. He listened to me so far as to send a canoe manned with
+only fifteen men. As they were paddling on, unthinking and undreading
+danger, I cried out to Mtesa, who was about twenty yards from me, “Say
+farewell to Webba, for you will see little Webba no more.”
+
+The Katekiro and two or three of his chiefs smiled as if this was most
+absurd. I felt precisely at this moment as I felt the first time I saw a
+bull-fight: a cold shiver of horror crept over me. I was helpless and
+unable to avert the tragedy which instinct warned me would be enacted.
+
+The entire Uganda army was concentrated on the slope of Nakaranga
+mountain, and the eyes of the vast multitude were fastened upon this
+scene; and no doubt they thought as I did, that it was a moment of
+thrilling interest. The men of the Uganda canoe fleet were in their
+camps, and the canoes were all beached near them.
+
+The peace party held on its way until near Ingira, when one of them
+opened a conversation with the Wavuma, the result of which was an
+invitation to take their canoe in-shore. As they paddled the canoe
+gently in among the rushes that lined the island, I observed that all
+the Wavuma gathered together near the place where the Waganda were
+expected to land, and that several Wavuma canoes pushed out in order
+that the Waganda might have no chance of escape.
+
+We waited only a few seconds for what was about to happen. The canoe of
+the peace party had scarcely touched their island before we heard the
+shrieks of the unfortunates pealing across the water, and then the
+triumphant shouts of the Wavuma; and soon we saw men rushing to the
+point of their island nearest the causeway, and with jeers and scoffing
+they showed the bloody heads of the unfortunates to Mtesa, and tossed
+them into the lake. Mtesa rose gloomy and disconcerted, and returned to
+his quarters much depressed in spirits, but he gave instructions to his
+Katekiro to continue the work on the causeway.
+
+The Katekiro, placidly obedient, instructed two chiefs, the two chiefs
+instructed their Watongoleh, the Watongoleh instructed their men, and
+the result of these several instructions was, that about 100 men out of
+150,000 were seen lounging idly on the causeway and that was all, for
+the novelty of the idea had now worn off.
+
+Nothing more was heard of the bridge, for Mtesa had conceived a new
+idea, which was, to be instructed in the sciences of Europe. I was
+to be a scientific encyclopædia to him. Not wishing to deny him, I
+tried, during the afternoon of the massacre, to expound the secrets of
+nature and the works of Providence, the wonders of the heavens, the
+air, and the earth. We gossiped about the nature of rocks and metals,
+and their many appliances, which the cunning of the Europeans had
+invented to manufacture the innumerable variety of things for which
+they are renowned. The dread despot sat with wide-dilated eyes and
+an all-devouring attention, and, in deference to his own excitable
+feelings, his chiefs affected to be as interested as himself, though I
+have no doubt several ancients, such as Kangau and Sabaganzi, thought
+the whole affair decidedly tedious, and the white man a “bore.” The
+more polite and courtly Katekiro, Chambarango, and Kauta vied with
+each other in expressing open-mouthed and large-eyed interest in this
+encyclopædic talk. I drifted from mechanics to divinity, for my purpose
+in this respect was not changed. During my extemporised lectures, I
+happened to mention angels. On hearing the word, Mtesa screamed with
+joy, and to my great astonishment the patricians of Uganda chorused,
+“Ah-ah-ah!” as if they had heard an exceedingly good thing. Having
+appeared so learned all the afternoon, I dared not condescend to
+inquire what all this wild joy meant, but prudently waited until the
+exciting cries and slapping of thighs were ended.
+
+The boisterous period over, Mtesa said, “Stamlee, I have always told my
+chiefs that the white men know everything, and are skilful in all
+things. A great many Arabs, some Turks, and four white men have visited
+me, and I have examined and heard them all talk, and for wisdom and
+goodness the white men excel all the others. Why do the Arabs and Turks
+come to Uganda? Is it not for ivory and slaves? Why do the white men
+come? They come to see this lake, our rivers and mountains. The Arabs
+bring cloth, beads, and wire, to buy ivory and slaves; they also bring
+powder and guns; but who made all these things the Arabs bring here for
+trade? The Arabs themselves say the white men made them, and I have seen
+nothing yet of all they have brought that the white men did not make.
+Therefore, I say, give me the white men, because if you want knowledge,
+you must talk with them to get it. Now, Stamlee, tell me and my chiefs
+what you know of the angels.”
+
+Verily the question was a difficult one, and my answer would not have
+satisfied Europeans. Remembering, however, St. Paul’s confession that he
+was all things to all men, I attempted to give as vivid a description of
+what angels are generally believed to be like, and as Michael Angelo and
+Gustave Doré have laboured to illustrate them, and with the aid of
+Ezekiel’s and Milton’s descriptions I believe I succeeded in satisfying
+and astonishing the king and his court; and in order to show him that I
+had authority for what I said, I sent to my camp for the Bible, and
+translated to him what Ezekiel and St. John said of angels.
+
+This little incident, trivial as it may appear, had very interesting
+results. Encyclopædic talk was forgotten in the grander and more sublime
+themes which Scripture and divinity contributed. The Emperor cast
+covetous eyes on the Bible and my Church of England Prayer Book, and
+perceiving his wish, I introduced to him a boy named Dallington, a pupil
+of the Universities Mission at Zanzibar, who could translate the Bible
+into Kiswahili for him, and otherwise communicate to him what I wished
+to say.
+
+Henceforth, during the intervals of leisure that the war gave us, we
+were to be seen—the king, court, Dallington, and I—engaged in the
+translation of an abstract of the Holy Scriptures. There were readers
+enough of these translations, but Mtesa himself was an assiduous and
+earnest student.
+
+Having abundance of writing-paper with me, I made a large book for him,
+into which the translations were fairly copied by a writer called Idi.
+When completed, Mtesa possessed an abridged Protestant Bible in
+Kiswahili, embracing all the principal events from the Creation to the
+Crucifixion of Christ. St. Luke’s Gospel was translated entire, as
+giving a more complete history of the Saviour’s life.
+
+When the abridged Bible was completed, Mtesa called all his chiefs
+together, as well as the officers of his guard, and when all were
+assembled, he began to state that when he succeeded his father he was a
+Mshensi (a heathen), and delighted in shedding blood because he knew no
+better, and was only following the customs of his fathers; but that when
+an Arab trader, who was also a Mwalim (priest), taught him the creed of
+Islam, he had renounced the example of his fathers, and executions
+became less frequent, and no man could say, since that day, that he had
+seen Mtesa drunk with pombé. But there were a great many things he could
+not understand, such as, why circumcision was necessary to gain
+Paradise, and how it was possible that men having died could enjoy
+earth’s pleasures in heaven, and how men could walk along a bridge of
+the breadth of a hair, for such were some of the things the sons of
+Islam taught. He could not comprehend all these things, as his sense
+condemned them, and there was no one in Uganda able to enlighten him
+better. But as it was in his heart to be good, he hoped God would
+overlook his follies and forgive him, and send men who knew what was
+right to Uganda. “Meanwhile,” said he with a smile, “I refused to be
+circumcised, though the Arabs say it is the first thing that should be
+done to become a true son of Islam. Now, God be thanked, a white man,
+‘Stamlee,’ has come to Uganda with a book older than the Koran of
+Mohammed, and Stamlee says that Mohammed was a liar, and much of his
+book taken from this; and this boy and Idi have read to me all that
+Stamlee has read to them from this book, and I find that it is a great
+deal better than the book of Mohammed, besides, it is the first and
+oldest book. The prophet Moses wrote some of it a long, long time before
+Mohammed was even heard of, and the book was finished long before
+Mohammed was born. As Kintu, our first king, was a long time before me,
+so Moses was before Mohammed. Now I want you, my chiefs and soldiers, to
+tell me what we shall do. Shall we believe in Isa (Jesus) and Musa
+(Moses) or in Mohammed?”
+
+Chambarango replied, “Let us take that which is the best.”
+
+The Katekiro said, “We know not which is the best. The Arabs say their
+book is the best, and the white men say their book is the best—how then
+can we know which speaks the truth?”
+
+Kauta, the imperial steward, said, “When Mtesa became a son of Islam, he
+taught me, and I became one; if my master says he taught me wrong,
+having got more knowledge, he can now teach me right. I am waiting to
+hear his words.”
+
+Mtesa smiled and said, “Kauta speaks well. If I taught him how to become
+a Muslim, I did it because I believed it to be good. Chambarango says,
+‘Let us take that which is best.’ True, I want that which is the best,
+and I want the true book; but Katekiro asks, ‘How are we to know which
+is true?’ and I will answer him. Listen to me: The Arabs and the white
+men behave exactly as they are taught by their books, do they not? The
+Arabs come here for ivory and slaves, and we have seen that they do not
+always speak the truth, and that they buy men of their own colour, and
+treat them badly, putting them in chains and beating them. The white
+men, when offered slaves, refuse them, saying, ‘Shall we make our
+brothers slaves? No; we are all sons of God.’ I have not heard a white
+man tell a lie yet. Speke came here, behaved well, and went his way home
+with his brother Grant. They bought no slaves, and the time they were in
+Uganda they were very good. Stamlee came here, and he would take no
+slaves. Abdul Aziz Bey (M. Linant Bellefonds) has been here, and is
+gone, and he took no slaves. What Arab would have refused slaves like
+these white men? Though we deal in slaves, it is no reason why it should
+not be bad; and when I think that the Arabs and the white men do as they
+are taught, I say that the white men are greatly superior to the Arabs,
+and I think therefore that their book must be a better book than
+Mohammed’s, and of all that Stamlee has read from his book I see nothing
+too hard for me to believe. The book begins from the very beginning of
+this world, tells us how it was made, and in how many days; gives us the
+words of God Himself, and of Moses, and the prophet Solomon, and Jesus,
+the son of Mary. I have listened to it all well pleased, and now I ask
+you, shall we accept this book or Mohammed’s book as our guide?”
+
+To which question, no doubt seeing the evident bent of Mtesa’s own mind,
+they all replied, “We will take the white man’s book”; and at hearing
+their answer a manifest glow of pleasure lighted up the Emperor’s face.
+
+In this manner Mtesa renounced Islamism, and professed himself a convert
+to the Christian Faith, and he now announced his determination to adhere
+to his new religion, to build a church, and to do all in his power to
+promote the propagation of Christian sentiments among his people, and to
+conform to the best of his ability to the holy precepts contained in the
+Bible.
+
+I, on the other hand, proud of my convert, with whom I had diligently
+laboured during three months, promised that, since Dallington wished it,
+I would release him from my service, that he might assist to confirm him
+in his new faith, that he might read the Bible for him, and perform the
+service of a Bible reader until the good people of Europe should send a
+priest to baptize him and teach him the duties of the Christian
+religion.
+
+“Stamlee,” said Mtesa to me, as we parted, nearly two months after the
+massacre of the peace party, “say to the white people, when you write to
+them, that I am like a man sitting in darkness, or born blind, and that
+all I ask is that I may be taught how to see, and I shall continue a
+Christian while I live.”
+
+-----
+
+# 19:
+
+ So called after Colonel James Augustus Grant, the amiable and
+ chivalrous companion of Speke.
+
+# 20:
+
+ This custom of sending walking-sticks also obtains in Dahomey.
+
+# 21:
+
+ The war-cries of the Waganda begin by shouting the full title of their
+ respective chiefs, and end with the last syllables, thus:—
+
+ “Mukavya, kavya, kavya!”
+ “Chamburango, ango, ango!”
+ “Mkwenda, kwenda, kwenda!”
+ “Sekibobo, bobo, bobo!”
+ “Kitunzi, tunzi, tunzi!”
+
+ This perhaps explains why Speke spelt _thanks_ “N’yanzig,” for Waganda
+ return thanks by first saying, “Twiyanzi-yanzi-yanzi,” and this, when
+ repeated rapidly, sounds like “N’yanzig.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+
+The war-drum beaten—The wizards play their part—In full war-paint—
+ Bullets against spears—The Wavuma baulked—Mtesa’s fury—Victory or the
+ stake!—Hard fighting—The captive chief: a struggle between the pagan
+ and the Christian—A floating mystery—“Return, O spirit! the war is
+ ended!”—The camp on fire: a race for life.
+
+
+_Sept. 14._—On the 14th of September the Emperor of Uganda decided to
+give battle to the Wavuma, who were daily becoming bolder and more
+boastful. In the morning, in accordance with Mtesa’s orders, forty
+Waganda canoes sallied out from the beach in front of our camps to
+Nakaranga Point, where they formed in line of battle before the
+causeway, with the sterns of their canoes fronting Ingira, and their
+bows towards Nakaranga Point.
+
+Mtesa was followed by about three-fourths of his army when he proceeded
+to the point to view the battle, and with him went the great war-drums,
+to the number of fifty or thereabouts, and fifes about a hundred, and a
+great number of men shaking gourds filled with pebbles, and the court
+criers and mad charmers against evil were not wanting to create din and
+noise, and celebrate victory.
+
+A hut of ample size had been erected on the mountain slope overlooking
+the strait, into which Mtesa and his favourite women retired. When the
+Emperor was seated, the “prophets of Baal,” or the priests or
+priestesses of the Muzimu, or witchcraft, came up, more than a hundred
+in number, and offered the charms to Mtesa one after another in a most
+tedious, ceremonious way, and to all of them Mtesa condescended to point
+his imperial forefinger.
+
+The chief priest was a most fantastically dressed madman. It is
+customary before commencing a battle to carry all the potent medicines
+or charms of Uganda (thus propitiating the dreadful Muzimu or evil
+spirits) to the monarch, that he may touch or point his forefinger at
+them. They consist of dead lizards, bits of wood, hide, nails of dead
+people, claws of animals, and beaks of birds, a hideous miscellany, with
+mysterious compounds of herbs and leaves carefully enclosed in vessels
+ornamented with vari-coloured beads.
+
+During the battle these wizards and witches chant their incantations,
+and exhibit their medicines on high before the foe, while the
+gourd-and-pebble bearers sound a hideous alarum, enough to cause the
+nerves of any man except an African to relax at once.
+
+Mtesa and his army were in full war-paint, and the principal men wore
+splendid leopard skins over their backs, but the Wasoga bore the palm
+for splendour of dress and ornate equipments.
+
+Ankori the chief and his officers were wonderfully gay. Snow-white
+ostrich plumes decorated their heads, and lion and leopard skins covered
+their backs, while their loins were girded with snow-white, long-haired
+monkey and goat skins; even the staves of their lances were ornamented
+with feathers and rings of white monkey skin.
+
+There was ample time afforded to observe all these things, and to be
+exceedingly amused and interested in what promised to be an animating
+scene, before all attention was drawn to and engaged by the battle. The
+spectators were seated, safe from harm or danger, on the slope of
+Nakaranga mountain, from the water’s edge to the mountain summit, tier
+above tier, and rank above rank, in thousands upon thousands.
+
+The canoes, having formed line, slowly moved sternwise towards Ingira.
+The Wavuma were not inactive spectators of this manœuvre, but as yet
+their warriors had not embarked. They were busy mustering, while those
+appointed to garrison the island, with the women and children, several
+thousands in number, sate down on the slopes of the opposite mountain of
+Ingira Island. The rushes and weeds lining the water’s edge were too
+tall and thick to enable us to estimate exactly the number of the
+enemy’s war-canoes, but the brown-coloured prows, long and curving, of a
+great many were seen thrust out from among the vivid green banana
+plantations, or arranged on the rising beach of the island beyond its
+reedy margin.
+
+Having advanced with the utmost regularity of line, near enough to the
+island to make their “Brown Bess” muskets effective, the Waganda began
+to open fire in a steady, deliberate manner, and succeeded after a while
+in annoying the foe and arousing him to action. At a given signal from
+their chiefs, forth from the reeds and rushes shot the prows of the
+Wavuma canoes; and then, giving utterance to most shrill war-cries, the
+rowers impelled them from all quarters, to the number of 194, with an
+extraordinary velocity upon the Waganda line, which now began to retire
+slowly towards the causeway.
+
+On the causeway at its farthest extremity were assembled a force of a
+hundred musketeers and four small boat howitzers under the command of
+the Katekiro and Mtesa’s factotum Tori.
+
+The furious advance of the Wavuma soon caused the Waganda to hurry their
+movements, and on approaching the causeway they parted their line,
+rushing on either side of it, giving the Katekiro and Tori ample
+opportunity to wreak their will on the pursuers. But owing to the want
+of skill of the cannoniers, and the nervousness of the musketeers, very
+little damage was inflicted on the Wavuma, but the noise and whirring of
+lead and iron sufficed to check them, and caused them to withdraw with
+much of the baffled aspect of hungry crocodiles cheated of their prey.
+This was all the battle—but, short as it was, it had sufficed to prove
+to me that Mtesa would be unable to take Ingira Island, garrisoned and
+defended as it was by such a determined foe. After a while Mtesa
+withdrew from the scene, the army returned to its quarters, and the
+canoes of the Waganda, closely hugging the Nakaranga shore, went back to
+their rendezvous, leaving the Wavuma masters of the situation.
+
+During the afternoon of this day Mtesa held a grand levee, and when all
+were assembled, he addressed them publicly to the effect that in a few
+days another battle would be fought, but as he had heard very important
+news, he intended to wait a while to ascertain if it was true.
+
+Work progressed but languidly at the causeway. It was very tedious
+waiting, but my time was principally occupied in teaching Mtesa and his
+principal chiefs, and in gleaning such information as might enable me to
+understand the complicated politics of the empire.
+
+_Sept. 18._—Suddenly on the 18th of September, at early dawn, orders
+were communicated to the chiefs to prepare for battle. The first
+intelligence of it that I received was from the huge war-drums which
+summoned both sailors and warriors to action.
+
+But first a burzah, or council, was held. Though eager to learn the
+news, I dared not appear too much interested in the war. Sabadu, who
+would be present on guard, would be sure to relate to me all the details
+of whatever transpired.
+
+At night, though I interpolate it here for the benefit of the narrative,
+gossipy Sabadu, whose retentive brain I knew I could trust, conveyed to
+me a faithful report of the proceedings; and I cannot do better than
+give it to the reader in Sabadu’s language.
+
+“Ah! master, you have missed a sight. I never saw Mtesa as he was
+to-day. Oh, it was awful! His eyes were as large as my fists. They
+jumped from their sockets, and they were glowing as fire. Didn’t the
+chiefs tremble! They were as children, whimpering and crying for
+forgiveness. He said to them, ‘Wherein have I been unkind to you, that
+you will not fight for me, for my slaves who were sent to Usoga have
+returned saying there was not a man but either had joined me or had
+already joined the Wavuma? Who gave you those clothes that you wear?
+Who gave you those guns that you have? Was it not I? Did Suna my father
+give his chiefs such fine things as I give? No; yet they fought for
+him, and the boldest of them would not have dared to advise him to fly,
+as you have done me. Am I not _Kabaka_? Is this not Uganda, as well
+as my capital? Have I not my army here? And you, Katekiro, were you
+not a peasant before I dressed you and set you up as a chief of Uddu?
+And you, Chambarango, who made you a chief? And you, Mkwenda, and you,
+Sekebobo, and you, Kimbugwé, Kitunzi, Kaeema, Kangau, Kagu, speak, was
+it not Mtesa who made you chiefs? Were you princes, that you came to be
+made chiefs, or peasants whom it was my pleasure to make chiefs? Ah,
+ha! I shall see to-day who will not fight; I will see to-day who dares
+to run away from the Wavuma. By the grave of my father, I will burn the
+man over a slow fire who runs away or turns his back, and the peasant
+who distinguishes himself to-day shall eat his land. Look out for
+yourselves, chiefs. I will sit down to-day and watch for the coward,
+and the coward I will burn. I swear it.’ Instantly the Katekiro fell on
+his face to the earth, and cried, ‘Kabaka’ (emperor), ‘send me to-day
+to fight, watch my flag, and if I turn my back to the Wavuma, then take
+and burn me or cut me to little pieces.’ The example of the Katekiro
+was followed by the other chiefs, and they all swore to be desperately
+brave.”
+
+About 8.30 A.M., while I was at the point of Nakaranga, the sound of
+drums approached me, and I knew that the council was ended, and that the
+battle would soon begin. Mtesa appeared anything but a Christian,
+judging from his looks. Fires of fury shot from his eyes; and pages,
+women, chiefs, and all seemed awe-stricken. I was then ignorant of what
+had taken place, but when I observed the absence of Chambarango, and
+several of the great Wakungu, or generals, I felt assured that Mtesa had
+lately been in the midst of a scene.
+
+Presently other drums sounded from the water-side, and soon the
+beautiful canoes of Uganda appeared in view. The entire war-fleet of 230
+vessels rode gracefully on the calm grey waters of the channel.
+
+The line of battle, I observed, was formed by Chambarango, in command of
+the right flank, with fifty canoes; Sambuzi, Mukavya, Chikwata, and
+Saruti, all sub-chiefs, were ranged with 100 canoes under the command of
+Kauta, the imperial steward, to form the centre; the left flank was in
+charge of the gallant Mkwenda, who had eighty canoes. Tori commanded a
+force of musketeers, and with his four howitzers was stationed on the
+causeway, which was by this time 200 yards from the shore.
+
+In the above manner the fleet of vessels, containing some 16,000 men,
+moved to the attack upon Ingira. The centre, defended by the flanks,
+which were to menace the rear of the Wavuma should they approach near
+the causeway, resolutely advanced to within thirty yards of Ingira, and
+poured in a most murderous fire among the slingers of the island, who,
+imagining that the Waganda meant to carry the island by storm, boldly
+stood exposed, resolved to fight. But they were unable to maintain that
+courageous behaviour long. Mkwenda then moved up from the left, and
+attacked with his musketeers the Wavuma on the right, riddling their
+canoes, and making matters specially hot for them in that quarter.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ [_To face page 260._
+
+[Illustration: ONE OF THE GREAT NAVAL BATTLES BETWEEN THE WAGANDA AND
+THE WAVUMA, IN THE CHANNEL BETWEEN INGIRA ISLAND AND CAPE NAKARANGA.]
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+The Wavuma, seeing matters approaching a crisis, and not wishing to die
+tamely, manned their canoes, and 196 dashed impetuously, as at first,
+from the rushes of Ingira with loud shrill yells, and the Waganda lines
+moved backward to the centre of the channel, where they bravely and
+coolly maintained their position. As the centre of the Uganda line
+parted in front of the causeway and disclosed the hotly advancing enemy,
+Tori aimed the howitzers and fired at a group of about twenty canoes,
+completely shattering more than half of them, and reloading quickly, he
+discharged several bolts of iron three inches long among them with
+terrible effect. Before this cool bearing of the Waganda, the Wavuma
+retired to their island again, and we saw numbers of canoes discharging
+their dead and wounded, and the Waganda were summoned to Nakaranga shore
+to receive the congratulations of the Emperor and the applause of the
+vast multitude. Mtesa went down to the water’s edge to express his
+satisfaction at their behaviour.
+
+“Go at them again,” said he, “and show them what fighting is.” And the
+line of battle was again formed, and again the Wavuma darted from the
+cover of the reeds and water-cane, with the swiftness of hungry sharks;
+beating the water into foam with their paddles, and rending the air with
+their piercing yells. It was one of the most exciting and animating
+scenes I ever beheld; but, owing to the terror of the stake with which
+their dread monarch had threatened them, the Waganda distinguished
+themselves for coolness and method, and the Wavuma, as on a former
+occasion, for intrepidity and desperate courage.
+
+A third time the Waganda were urged to the battle, and a third time the
+unconquerable and desperate enemy dashed on them, to be smitten and
+wounded sore in a battle where they had not the least chance of
+returning blow for blow without danger of being swept by the cannon and
+muskets on the causeway.
+
+A third battle was fought a few days after between 178 Wavuma canoes and
+122 Waganda; but had the Waganda possessed the spirit and dash of their
+enemies, they might have decided the war on this day, for the Wavuma
+were greatly dispirited.
+
+A fourth battle was fought the next day by 214 Waganda canoes and 203
+Wavuma canoes, after the usual delay and premonitory provocation. The
+Wavuma obtained the victory most signally, chasing the Waganda within 40
+yards of Nakaranga Cape, and being only driven from their prey by the
+musketeers and the howitzers on the causeway, which inflicted great
+execution on them at such close quarters. The Waganda did not attempt a
+second trial this day, for they were disorganized and dispirited after
+the signal defeat they had experienced.
+
+The fleet of the Waganda returned to their rendezvous with the jeers and
+scoffs of the intrepid Wavuma ringing in their ears. On enquiring into
+the cause of the disaster, I learned that Mtesa’s gunpowder was almost
+exhausted, and that he had scarcely a round left for each musket. This
+fact alarmed him, and compelled him to request me to lend him my powder
+in the camp at Dumo, which was refused in such a decided tone that he
+never repeated the request.
+
+_Oct. 5._—It was now the 5th of October, and I had left my camp on the
+12th of August. It was necessary that I should participate in some
+manner in the war and end it. Yet I scarcely knew how I should act
+effectively to produce results beneficial to all parties. For though my
+own interests and the welfare of the Expedition were involved and in a
+manner staked on the success of the Waganda, and though a passive
+partisan of Mtesa, yet the brave Wavuma, by their magnificent daring and
+superb courage, had challenged my fullest sympathies. My energies and
+thoughts were bent, therefore, upon discovering a solution of the
+problem how to injure none, yet satisfy all.
+
+It was clear that the Wavuma would not surrender without a frightful
+waste of life; it was equally evident that Mtesa would not relax his
+hold upon them without some compensation or satisfaction, nor assist me
+in my projects of exploration unless I aided him in some manner.
+
+At length I devised a plan which I thought would succeed; but before I
+was enabled to perfect my scheme an incident occurred which called for
+my immediate intervention.
+
+Mtesa, by means of his scouts, had succeeded in capturing one of the
+principal chiefs of the Wavuma, and his Wakungu and principal strangers
+had been invited to be present to witness the execution of this chief at
+the stake.
+
+When I arrived at the scene, a large quantity of faggots had already
+been collected to burn him. By this mode of punishment, Mtesa thought he
+would be able to strike terror into the souls of the Wavuma.
+
+Mtesa was in high glee when I entered the council: he was unable to hide
+the triumph he felt at the terrible vengeance he was about to take for
+the massacre of Webba, his favourite page, and the peace party.
+
+“Now, Stamlee,” he said, “when the chief is at the stake,”—he was an old
+man of sixty or thereabouts—“you shall see how a chief of Uvuma dies. He
+is about to be burnt. The Wavuma will tremble when they hear of the
+manner of his death.”
+
+“Ah, Mtesa,” I said, “have you forgotten the words of the good book
+which I have read to you so often? ‘If thy brother offend thee, thou
+shalt forgive him many times.’ ‘Love thy enemies.’ ‘Do good to them that
+hate you.’ ‘Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.’ ‘Forgive us our
+trespasses, as we forgive them that trespass against us.’”
+
+“But this man is a native of Uvuma, and the Wavuma are at war with me.
+Have you forgotten Webba?”
+
+“No, I remember poor little Webba. I saw him die, and I was very sorry.”
+
+“Shall this man not die, Stamlee? Shall I not have blood for him,
+Stamlee?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“But I shall, Stamlee. I will burn this man to ashes. I will burn every
+soul I catch. I will have blood! blood! the blood of all in Uvuma.”
+
+“No, Mtesa! no more blood. It is time the war was ended.”
+
+“What!” said Mtesa, bursting into one of those paroxysms of fury which
+Sabadu had so graphically described. “I will slay every soul in Uvuma,
+will cut down every plantain, and burn every man, woman, and child on
+that island. By the grave of my father Suna, I will.”
+
+“No, Mtesa, you must stop this wild pagan way of thinking. It is only a
+pagan who always dreams of blood and talks of shedding blood as you do.
+It is only the pagan boy Mtesa who speaks now. It is not the man Mtesa
+whom I saw, and whom I made a friend. It is not ‘Mtesa the Good,’ whom
+you said your people loved. It is not Mtesa the Christian, it is the
+savage. Bah! I have had enough of you, I know you now.”
+
+“Stamlee! Stamlee! Wait a short time, and you will see. What are you
+waiting for?” he said, suddenly turning round to the executioners, who
+were watching his looks.
+
+Instantly the poor old man was bound; but, suddenly rising, I said to
+Mtesa, “Listen to one word. The white man speaks but once. Listen to me
+for the last time. You remember the tale of Kintu which you told me the
+other day. He left the land of Uganda because it stank with blood. As
+Kintu left Uganda in the old, old days, I shall leave it, never to
+return. To-day Kintu is looking down upon you from the spirit-land, and
+as he rebuked Ma’anda for murdering his faithful servant, so is he
+rebuking you to-day through me. Yes, kill that poor old man, and I shall
+leave you to-day, unless you kill me too, and from Zanzibar to Cairo I
+shall tell every Arab I meet what a murderous beast you are, and through
+all the white man’s land I shall tell with a loud voice what wicked act
+I saw Mtesa do, and how the other day he wanted to run away because he
+heard a silly old woman say the Wasoga were marching upon him. How grand
+old Kamanya must have wept in the spirit-land when he heard of Mtesa
+about to run away. How the lion-hearted Suna must have groaned when he
+saw Mtesa shiver in terror because an old woman had had a bad dream.
+Good-bye, Mtesa. You may kill the Mvuma chief, but I am going, and shall
+not see it.”
+
+Mtesa’s face had been a picture wherein the passions of brutish fury and
+thirsty murder were portrayed most faithfully; but at the mention of
+Suna and Kamanya in the spirit-land looking down upon him, the tears
+began to well in his eyes, and finally, while they rolled in large drops
+down his face, he sobbed loudly like a child, while the chiefs and
+executioners, maintaining a deathly silence, looked very uncomfortable.
+Tori the cannonier and Kauta the steward, however, sprang up, and,
+unrolling their head-dresses, officiously wiped Mtesa’s face, while the
+poor wayward man murmured audibly as I walked away from the scene:—
+
+“Did not Stamlee talk about the spirit-land, and say that Suna was angry
+with me? Oh, he speaks too true, too true! Oh father, forgive me,
+forgive me.” After which, I was told he suddenly broke away from the
+council.
+
+An hour afterwards I was summoned by a page to his presence, and Mtesa
+said:—
+
+“Stamlee will not say Mtesa is bad now, for he has forgiven the Mvuma
+chief, and will not hurt him. Will Stamlee say that Mtesa is good now?
+And does he think Suna is glad now?”
+
+“Mtesa is very good,” and I clasped his hand warmly. “Be patient, all
+shall come out right, and Kintu and Suna must be glad when they see that
+Mtesa is kind to his guests. I have something to tell you. I have
+thought over your trouble here, and I want to finish this war for your
+good without any more trouble. I will build a structure which shall
+terrify the Wavuma, and make them glad of a peace, but you must give me
+plenty of men to help me, and in three days I shall be ready. Meantime
+shout out to the Wavuma from the causeway that you have something which
+will be so terrible that it will finish the war at once.”
+
+“Take everybody, do anything you like; I will give you Sekebobo and all
+his men.”
+
+_Oct. 6._—The next morning Sekebobo brought about 2000 men before my
+quarters, and requested to know my will. I told him to despatch 1000 men
+to cut long poles 1 inch thick, 300 to cut poles 3 inches thick and 7
+feet long, 100 to cut straight long trees 4 inches thick, and 100 to
+disbark all these, and make bark rope. Himself and 500 men I wished to
+assist me at the beach. The chief communicated my instructions and urged
+them to be speedy, as it was the Emperor’s command, and himself
+accompanied me to the canoe fleet.
+
+[Illustration: THE FLOATING FORTLET MOVING TOWARDS INGIRA.]
+
+I selected three of the strongest-built canoes, each 70 feet long and 6½
+feet wide, and, after preparing a space of ground near the water’s edge,
+had them drawn up parallel with one another, and 4 feet apart from each
+other. With these three canoes I began to construct a floating platform,
+laying the tall trees across the canoes, and lashing them firmly to the
+thwarts, and as fast as the 7-foot poles came, I had them lashed in an
+upright position to the thwarts of the outer canoes, and as fast as the
+inch poles arrived, I had them twisted in among these uprights, so that,
+when completed, it resembled an oblong stockade, 70 feet long by 27 feet
+wide, which the spears of the enemy could not penetrate.
+
+_Oct. 7._—On the afternoon of the second day, the floating fort was
+finished, and Mtesa and his chiefs came down to the beach to see it
+launched and navigated for a trial trip. The chiefs, when they saw it,
+began to say it would sink, and communicated their fears to Mtesa, who
+half believed them. But the Emperor’s women said to him: “Leave Stamlee
+alone; he would not make such a thing if he did not know that it would
+float.”
+
+_Oct. 8._—On receiving orders to launch it, I selected sixty paddlers
+and 150 musketeers of the bodyguard to stand by to embark as soon as it
+should be afloat, and appointed Tori and one of my own best men to
+superintend its navigation, and told them to close the gate of the fort
+as soon as they pushed off from the land. About 1000 men were then set
+to work to launch it, and soon it was floating in the water, and when
+the crew and garrison, 214 souls, were in it, it was evident to all that
+it rode the waves of the lake easily and safely—
+
+ “The invention all admired, and each how he
+ To be the inventor missed, so easy it seemed
+ Once found, which yet unfound most would have thought
+ Impossible”—
+
+and a burst of applause from the army rewarded the inventor.
+
+Several long blue Kaniki and white and red cloths were hoisted above
+this curious structure, which, when closed up all round, appeared to
+move of its own accord in a very mysterious manner, and to conceal
+within its silent and impenetrable walls some dread thing, well
+calculated to strike terror into the mind of the ignorant savage.
+
+_Oct. 13._—At eight o’clock on the morning of the 13th of October the
+army was assembled at Nakaranga with unusual display, and it was
+proclaimed across the strait from the extremity of the causeway that a
+terrible thing was approaching which would blow them into atoms if they
+did not make peace at once and acknowledge the power of Mtesa; and I
+believe that they declared that all the Muzimus and the charms of Uganda
+were within, for I heard something said about Muzimu and Uganda. The old
+Mvuma chief was also placed in prominent view, and induced to urge them
+to accept the terms which Mtesa offered, viz. pardon to all, provided
+they went through the form of submission. After this announcement, which
+was made with all gravity, the awful mysterious structure appeared,
+while the drums beat a tremendous sound, and the multitude of horns blew
+a deafening blast.
+
+It was a moment of anxiety to me, for manifold reasons. The fort,
+perfectly defensible in itself against the most furious assaults by men
+armed with spears, steadily approached the point, then steered direct
+for the island of Ingira, until it was within fifty yards.
+
+“Speak,” said a stentorian voice amid a deathly silence within. “What
+will you do? Will you make peace and submit to Mtesa, or shall we blow
+up the island? Be quick and answer.”
+
+There was a moment’s consultation among the awe-stricken Wavuma.
+Immediate decision was imperative. The structure was vast, totally
+unlike anything that was ever visible on the waters of their sea. There
+was no person visible, yet a voice spoke clear and loud. Was it a
+spirit, the Wazimu of all Uganda, more propitious to their enemy’s
+prayers than those of the Wavuma? It might contain some devilish, awful
+thing, something similar to the evil spirits which in their hours of
+melancholy and gloom their imagination invoked. There was an audacity
+and confidence in its movements that was perfectly appalling.
+
+“Speak,” repeated the stern voice; “we cannot wait longer.”
+
+Immediately, to our relief, a man, evidently a chief, answered, “Enough,
+let Mtesa be satisfied. We will collect the tribute to-day, and will
+come to Mtesa. Return, O spirit, the war is ended!” At which the
+mysterious structure solemnly began its return back to the cove where it
+had been constructed, and the quarter of a million of savage human
+beings, spectators of the extraordinary scene, gave a shout that seemed
+to split the very sky, and Ingira’s bold height repeated the shock of
+sound back to Nakaranga.
+
+Three hours afterwards a canoe came from Ingira Island, bearing fifty
+men, some of whom were chiefs. They brought with them several tusks of
+ivory, and two young girls, daughters of the two principal chiefs of
+Uvuma. These were the tribute. The ivory was delivered over to the
+charge of the steward, and the young girls were admitted to the harem of
+Mtesa, into the mystery of which no man dare penetrate and live. The old
+Mvuma chief was surrendered to his tribe, and thus the long war
+terminated on the evening of the 13th of October, 1875.
+
+Glad shouts from both sides announced all parties equally pleased. The
+same afternoon the canoe fleet of Uganda, which had by this time been
+reduced to 275 in number, was escorted as far as Jinja by twenty Wavuma
+canoes, and after it had departed and rounded Namagongo Point, releasing
+their late foe from all fear of treachery, the Wavuma canoes presented
+us with a peaceful exhibition of their dexterity, and gave us an
+opportunity of viewing them more distinctly than we had previously been
+able to do through the smoke of gunpowder.
+
+_Oct. 15._—We set out next morning, the 15th of October, at three
+o’clock. We were wakened by the tremendous “Jojussu,” the great king of
+war-drums. Instantly we began to pack up, but I was scarcely dressed
+before my people rushed up to me, crying that the immense camp was fired
+in a hundred different places. I rushed out of my hut, and was astounded
+to see that the flames devoured the grass huts so fast that, unless we
+instantly departed, we should be burnt along with them. Hastily
+snatching my pistols, I bade the Wangwana shoulder the goods and follow
+me as they valued their lives.
+
+The great road from Mtesa’s quarters to Nakaranga Point, though 100 feet
+wide, was rendered impassable by furious, overlapping waves of fire.
+There was only one way left, which was up the slope of Nakaranga
+mountain, and through the camp of the Wasoga. We were not alone in the
+attempt to escape by this way, for about 60,000 human beings had sought
+the same path, and were wedged into an almost solid mass, so great was
+the danger and the anxiety to be away from the cruel sea of fire below.
+
+It was a grand scene, but a truly terrible one; and I thought, as I
+looked down on it, that the Waganda were now avenging the dead Wavuma
+with their own hands, for out of a quarter of a million human beings
+there must have been an immense number of sick unable to move. Besides
+these, what numbers of witless women and little ones having lost
+presence of mind must have perished; and how many must have been
+trampled down by the rush of such a vast number to escape the
+conflagration! The wide-leaping, far-reaching tongues of flame
+voraciously eating the dry, tindery material of the huts, and blown by a
+strong breeze from the lake, almost took my breath away, and several
+times I felt as if my very vitals were being scorched; but with heads
+bent low we charged on blindly, knowing no guide save the instinct of
+self-preservation.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ [_To face page 268._
+
+[Illustration: THE NAPOLEON CHANNEL, LAKE VICTORIA, FROM THE HEIGHTS
+ABOVE THE RIPON FALLS. FLOTILLA OF THE EMPEROR OF UGANDA CROSSING FROM
+USOGA TO UGANDA.]
+
+ (_From a photograph by the Author._)
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+As soon as an opportunity permitted, I looked after the laggards of my
+party, and by dint of severity kept them together, but three or four
+were more than half inclined to give in before we breathed cooler air,
+and could congratulate ourselves upon our safety.
+
+Indignant at such a murderous course, for I mentally taxed Mtesa with
+this criminal folly, I marched my party far from the route of the
+Waganda army, and though repeatedly urged by Mtesa to attach myself to
+his party, I declined to do so until he should explain to me why he had
+commanded the camp to be fired without giving warning to his people or
+to myself, his guest. His messenger at once acquitted him of such gross
+recklessness, and declared that he had arrested several persons
+suspected of having fired the camp, and that he himself had suffered the
+loss of goods and women in the flames. I thereupon, glad that he was not
+the author of the catastrophe, sent my salaams, and a promise to rejoin
+him at Ugungu, on the Uganda side of the Ripon Falls, which I did on the
+18th of October.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ FISH FOUND IN LAKE VICTORIA.
+
+ Sama-Moa, in the Nyassa tongue; round, open-mouthed, scaled, and
+ pig-headed-looking creature, 20 inches long.
+]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+
+The Legend of the Blameless Priest—The heroes of Uganda—Chwa—Kimera, the
+ giant—Nakivingi—Kibaga, the flying warrior—Ma’anda—Wakinguru, the
+ champion—Kamanya, the conqueror of the Wakedi—Suna, the cruel—His
+ massacre of the Wasoga—Namujurilwa, the Achilles of Uganda—Setuba and
+ his lions—Kasindula the hero, peasant, and premier—Mtesa the mild-eyed.
+
+
+Having arrived safely in Uganda, through most extraordinary and novel
+scenes, I may be permitted to leave the direct narrative of our travels
+and our life in Uganda in order to inform the reader on certain points
+of the history of Mtesa’s country, beginning with Kintu, Priest,
+Patriarch, and first King of Uganda.
+
+Whatever of the incredible or marvellous may be discovered by the
+learned critic in this chapter must not be debited against the author,
+but against Sabadu and the elders who are responsible for the tale of
+Kintu, the wars of Kamanya, Suna, and Mtesa, and the feats of
+Namujurilwa, Setuba, and Kasindula the heroes, while Mtesa himself
+furnished me with the names of the kings his forefathers, with many
+other facts contained in this chapter.
+
+For my part I regret only that want of space compels me to compress what
+I have gathered of the history of this interesting country into a few
+pages, but brief as it is, I venture to believe that it will not be
+without interest to a large class of readers.
+
+Uganda, then, was first peopled by immigrants from the north, about the
+thirteenth or fourteenth century. But the date at which I thus fix the
+arrival of the patriarch Kintu may be wrong; he may have arrived at a
+much earlier period, and the names of a large number of his successors
+may have sunk into oblivion.
+
+Tradition, as well as it has been able, has faithfully preserved the
+memory of the acts of the first of these immigrants, though it has
+contemptuously omitted the acts of his successors, and, as usual, has
+contrived to endow its favourites, here as elsewhere, with marvellous
+power and extraordinary attributes.
+
+Kintu, the first immigrant and the founder of Uganda, came from the
+north, and perhaps derived his descent from some African Arab or
+ancient Ethiopic family. He was a mild, humane, and blameless man, and
+from his character was probably a priest of some old and long forgotten
+order. He brought with him one wife, one cow, one goat, one sheep,
+one banana-root, and a sweet potato; and, journeying in search of a
+suitable land to dwell in, established himself finally on the western
+bank of the Mwerango river, at Magonga,[22] near the present frontier
+of Unyoro. He found the country uninhabited, for not a single soul then
+dwelt in all the land lying between the lakes Victoria and Albert and
+Muta Nzigé. Usoga was a wilderness, Ukedi a desolate plain, and the
+fertile valleys of Unyoro were unpeopled.
+
+The priest Kintu was alone in his kingdom. But these countries were not
+destined to remain desolate long, for his wife was remarkably prolific.
+She brought forth four children at a birth each year, and each male
+issued into the world with an incipient beard and the powers of lusty
+prime youth; and the female children at two years of age bore children,
+who at an equally early age conceived and bore sons and daughters, until
+the land began to be fully peopled, the forests to be cut down, the land
+to be cultivated, and planted with bananas and corn.
+
+The single cow, goat, sheep, and chicken increased after their kind by
+some extraordinary manner, until they grew so numerous that each of the
+offspring of Kintu soon possessed large herds of cattle, and flocks of
+sheep and goats, and numerous chickens. The banana-root also, once
+planted in the soil of Uganda by the holy hands of Kintu, sprang up
+almost instantly into a stalk of vast girth, from the top of which hung
+pendent such a cluster of fruit as is not seen in Uganda nowadays, and
+the root spread itself over a large area, from which hundreds of bananas
+shot upward with great stalks and all the leafy luxuriance of a large
+plantation. The potato-plant also vied with the banana, for so great was
+its vitality that it appeared to crawl over the ground so fast was its
+growth.
+
+When his offspring had grown so numerous that they crowded Magonga,
+Kintu cut portions of the original banana-root and potato-plant and gave
+to each family a portion, and having taught them how “to sow the glebe
+and plant the generous vine,” bade them seek each a home, and establish
+themselves in the land round about him. Those who received the banana
+established their home south of Magonga, while those who received the
+sweet potato-plant migrated to the north of Magonga, and dwelt in the
+valleys of Unyoro. Hence it is that to this day the people of Uganda,
+south, and all about Magonga, prefer the banana for food, while the
+people of Wanyoro have such a predilection for sweet potatoes.
+
+Being a priest, Kintu entertained a special aversion to the shedding of
+blood, whether of man, animal, bird, or insect, but he did not instruct
+his offspring to abstain from shedding the blood of beasts. If any
+animal was to be slain for food, it was ordained that it should be taken
+far from the neighbourhood of his house, and if a man was to be executed
+for murder, the executioner dare not slay his victim near Kintu or his
+house or his garden, neither might the man of blood at any time approach
+the patriarch’s person. If the culprit on his way to execution could
+contrive to make his way to Kintu’s presence and touch his feet or his
+garments, or were the patriarch even to cast his eyes on him, his life
+was safe.
+
+When the good patriarch became old, his children forgot to follow his
+pious example, for from the banana they had discovered the art of making
+wine and strong drinks, with which they debauched themselves, and, being
+daily intoxicated, committed indecencies, became violent in language,
+reckless and hardened in impiety, and, worse than all, so rebellious as
+to threaten to depose and kill him. Kintu bore this conduct in his
+unloving children with meekness and sorrow for a long time, but warned
+them that their impiety and violence would be punished some day; but
+they heeded him not, for the wine had maddened them.
+
+After a time, finding his admonitions of no avail, he said to his wife,
+“See my sons whom I brought into this world have become wicked and hard
+of heart, and they threaten to drive their father away or kill him, for
+they say I am become old and useless. I am like a hateful stranger
+amongst my own children. They shed the blood of their brothers daily,
+and there is nothing but killing and bloodshed now, until I am sick of
+blood. It is time for us to get away and depart elsewhere. Come, let us
+go.” And in the night Kintu and his wife departed, taking with them
+their original cow, goat, sheep, chicken, a banana-root, and a sweet
+potato-plant.
+
+In the morning it became known that their father Kintu was not in his
+house, nor to be found anywhere, that he had left the country with all
+the things which he had brought thither when he first arrived. Then all
+were filled with sorrow, and great lamentation was made throughout the
+land.
+
+After three days, during which search was instituted far and wide for
+the lost patriarch, Chwa, the eldest son, took his spear and shield in
+his hand and said, “I am the first-born, and it is my right to sit in
+the place of my father. Now you, my brothers, be good and beware of my
+spear”; and Chwa being strong, his brothers feared him, and paid homage
+to him as their king.
+
+Chwa did not abandon the search for his father, though he had attained
+the regal power. He seems to have cherished a hope that in some distant
+country his father would be discovered, whither he might be able to
+proceed to him and ask his forgiveness.
+
+A rumour sometimes reached Chwa that his father had been seen, but none
+of his several messengers succeeded in seeing him, and he at last died
+without the hope being gratified.
+
+Chwa was succeeded by his son Kamiera, a name to this day retained by
+the members of the imperial family. Like his father Chwa, Kamiera
+searched for the patriarch Kintu until his own death, without success.
+
+Kamiera was succeeded by his gigantic son Kimera, who distinguished
+himself as a hunter. He first introduced dogs for the chase, and was so
+fond of them that he always led one by the cord wherever he went. It was
+from this king that his successors inherited their partiality for the
+canine race, and in the memory of many yet living Suna is remembered for
+his extraordinary attachment to dogs, for the special subsistence of
+which he surrendered whole districts. Mtesa was also seen by Speke
+showing great fondness for a dog, but the present monarch has long ago
+abandoned this traditional predilection, and he now prohibits their
+presence in his court.
+
+Kimera was of such size, strength, and weight that his feet made marks
+in rocks, and the impress of one of his feet is shown to this day by the
+antiquarians of Uganda in a rock situated not far from the capital,
+Ulagalla. It is said that this mark was made by one of his feet slipping
+while he was in the act of launching his spear at an elephant. Kimera
+also explored countries remote and near, searching all the forests, the
+wilderness, the plains, the fastnesses of the mountains, the summits of
+hills and the caves, and travelled along all the river-banks in vain
+quest for the lost Kintu.
+
+The fact seemed to be impressed on the minds of all that Kintu was only
+lost, not dead, that he was immortal, and Kimera, even more than his
+predecessors, was indefatigable in his efforts to verify this belief. He
+led in person large expeditions, and offered great rewards to peasants,
+promising to make him who discovered Kintu next to the king in power—the
+Katekiro of Uganda. But he likewise failed in the search, and finally
+died.
+
+Almass (which name, if Arabic, rendered into English, means “Diamond”)
+succeeded Kimera the hunter. This king’s name is a favourite one among
+the Arabs, which I take to be further evidence that the founder of the
+Uganda monarchy had Asiatic blood in his veins. Of Almass, tradition
+says nothing save that, like his father, he hoped to find Kintu. On his
+death he was succeeded by his son Tembo.
+
+After Tembo came Kigara, Wanpamba, Kaeema, and Nakivingi, the last being
+remembered for his heroic valour and many conquests.
+
+Nakivingi fought and subjected the Wanyoro, who, from their predilection
+for sweet potatoes, may have deemed themselves long ago a separate
+people from the Waganda, a theory by no means supported by the authority
+of venerable tradition.
+
+After Nakivingi we have a long list of kings, about whom tradition,
+fable, and history are all alike silent. Morondo succeeded Nakivingi—the
+Charlemagne of Uganda—and after him followed Sekamanya, Jemba, Suna I.,
+Kimbugwé, Katerega, Ntewi, and Juko. This last, it is said, had a
+headstrong, violent, and disobedient son, named Kyemba, whom he was
+obliged to pacify with the island of Uvuma, whence afterwards he
+appeared in Uganda, deposed his father Juko, and, slaying him, reigned
+in his stead.
+
+One of the heroes of Nakivingi was a warrior named Kibaga, who possessed
+the power of flying. When the king warred with the Wanyoro, he sent
+Kibaga into the air to ascertain the whereabouts of the foe, who, when
+discovered by this extraordinary being, were attacked on land in their
+hiding-places by Nakivingi, and from above by the active and faithful
+Kibaga, who showered great rocks on them, and by these means slew a vast
+number.
+
+It happened that among the captives of Unyoro Kibaga saw a beautiful
+woman, who was solicited by the king in marriage. As Nakivingi was
+greatly indebted to Kibaga for his unique services, he gave her to
+Kibaga as wife, with a warning, however, not to impart the knowledge of
+his power to her, lest she should betray him. For a long time after
+marriage his wife knew nothing of his power, but suspecting something
+strange in him from his repeated sudden absences and reappearances at
+his home, she set herself to watch him, and one morning as he left his
+hut she was surprised to see him suddenly mount into the air with a
+burden of rocks slung on his back. On seeing this she remembered the
+Wanyoro complaining that more of their people were killed by some means
+from above than by the spears of Nakivingi, and Delilah-like, loving her
+race and her people more than she loved her husband, she hastened to her
+people’s camp, and communicated, to the surprise of the Wanyoro, what
+she had that day learned.
+
+To avenge themselves on Kibaga, the Wanyoro set archers in ambush on the
+summits of each lofty hill, with instructions to confine themselves to
+watching the air and listening for the brushing of his wings, and to
+shoot their arrows in the direction of the sound, whether anything was
+seen or not. By this means on a certain day, as Nakivingi marched to the
+battle, Kibaga was wounded to the death by an arrow, and upon the road
+large drops of blood were seen falling, and on coming to a tall tree the
+king detected a dead body entangled in its branches. When the tree was
+cut down, Nakivingi saw to his infinite sorrow that it was the body of
+his faithful flying warrior Kibaga.
+
+Succeeding Kyemba came Tibandéké, Mdowra, Kaguru, Kikuruwé, and Ma’anda.
+It was the fortune of this last king to discover news of the lost Kintu,
+after a most remarkable and romantic manner.
+
+Though history and fable are silent respecting the acts of many of
+Ma’anda’s predecessors, we may well believe that each king made efforts
+to discover the missing Kintu, as the belief that he was still alive
+obtained as firm credence in the reign of Ma’anda as in the days of Chwa
+and Kimera. With Ma’anda this belief was very strong, and spurred by the
+hope that some day it would be his happy fortune to be successful, he
+was ardent in the chase, penetrating great forests, and traversing
+extensive plains and valleys, ostensibly to hunt game, but really to
+hunt up news of Kintu.
+
+It happened one day, after returning to his capital from one of these
+expeditions, that a peasant living not far off was compelled from
+lack of fuel for his family to enter a forest to cut wood. Having
+over-exerted himself, and being very much fatigued, and his home being
+far, he resolved to sleep in the forest, near his wood pile. For the
+sake of security and uninterrupted sleep he constructed a rude hut, and
+fenced it round with the branches of the prostrate trees, and when it
+was completed he laid himself down and slept.
+
+And a sound sleep it was, we may imagine, induced by hard labour and
+fatigue, though not a dreamless one. For in his sleep, it is said, he
+dreamed a strange dream, wherein he thought he heard a voice, which
+said, “Go to a place in this forest, where the trees are very thick,
+round an open space near a stream running by, and you will there see
+something which will give you great wealth, and make you a great chief.”
+Three times the dream was repeated. These words caused the heart of the
+sleeping peasant to bound for joy; so much so that it woke him, and then
+he began to regret that the good which was promised him was but a dream
+and a mockery. But reflecting that he knew the place described, for he
+had often been there, and that it was not very far off, he thought he
+might as well obey the voice in the dream, if only for the sake of
+satisfying his curiosity. He had dreamed the same dream thrice, and each
+time the voice had been emphatic and precise, and he thought that there
+might be something of truth conveyed in it.
+
+After a few hours’ hurried travel, he approached the place described,
+and his movements towards the spot became now very cautious, lest some
+event might occur quite the reverse of his hopes, as dreams sometimes go
+by contraries. He heard the murmur and gurgle of the stream, and the
+soughing of the branches of the forest overhead in such a solitary place
+filled his heart with awe. He began to feel frightened, though he knew
+not at what, and was more than half inclined to turn back. Yet this
+eerie feeling and alarm might be causeless; he therefore advanced into
+the open space, and suddenly he saw there a sight that almost petrified
+him.
+
+Ranged in two rows, on either side of a venerable man, who reclined on a
+kind of throne, were many warriors seated on mats. They held spears and
+shields in their hands, and the complexion of these men was so light as
+to resemble that of white men. The central figure on the throne was that
+of an old man, whose long beard was white with age, and his complexion
+was similar to the warriors seated on the mats. All were clothed in
+spotless white robes.
+
+For a time no man spoke, though all eyes were turned on the astonished
+and awed peasant, and regarded him with a stern and awful gaze. Finally,
+the silence was broken by the voice of the old man, which sounded to the
+peasant like that which he had heard in the dream, and it said,
+“Peasant, tell me what country this is.”
+
+The peasant answered, trembling, and perspiring through excessive fear,
+“Eh, don’t you know? This is Uganda.”
+
+“And who was the first king?” demanded the old man. “Come tell me his
+name?”
+
+“Kintu,” answered the peasant.
+
+“True,” said the old man. “Now tell me the name of the present king.”
+
+“Ma’anda,” replied the peasant.
+
+“Well then, depart instantly, and haste to Ma’anda the king, and bid him
+come to Kintu, who shall be here to meet him, for Ma’anda has long
+searched for Kintu, and Kintu has somewhat to tell Ma’anda. Bid him come
+hither accompanied only by his mother and thyself, and mark me, not even
+his dog must follow him. Haste and tell King Ma’anda all thou hast seen
+and heard, and if thou art faithful, thy reward shall be great.”
+
+The peasant needed to hear no more, but turned and fled away with the
+speed of an antelope, and early at dawn next day arrived at the capital,
+and proceeded direct to the Katekiro, to whom he said, “I have news to
+tell King Ma’anda, and no man else must hear it. Take me to the king
+without delay.”
+
+The man’s manner, though he was mean in appearance, was peremptory, and
+the Katekiro dared not refuse his request, but rose and conducted him to
+the king.
+
+It happened, strangely enough, that at the same moment Ma’anda was
+relating to his mother, whom he had sent for, the story of a strange
+dream he had dreamed during the night. He had scarcely finished its
+relation when the Katekiro was announced, who said to him, “King, here
+is a strange man, a peasant, I believe, who states that he has important
+news to tell thee, and thee alone,” which when the king heard, and had
+seen the peasant, he said to his mother, “Lo! now, this is the very man
+I saw in my dream, who told me such wonderful news.”
+
+Then turning eagerly to the peasant, he said to him, “Speak, man, what
+is it thou hast to say to me?”
+
+“O, king,” he replied, “I may not speak except to thee and thy mother,
+for so have I been commanded.”
+
+Then Ma’anda impatiently commanded the Katekiro to retire and, that they
+might not be disturbed, to set a guard at the outer gate, so that on no
+account either man, woman, or child might enter the inner court.
+
+When they were quite alone, the peasant began to unfold to Ma’anda his
+story from the beginning to the end, just as it is told here, concluding
+with the old man’s words: “Bid the king come with his mother and
+thyself, and, mark me, not even his dog must follow him.”
+
+On hearing this news, Ma’anda said, “Come, let us go, only us three, for
+so the old man said,” and taking his spear and shield, the king strode
+out of the inner court through a private gate followed by his mother and
+the peasant without communicating to a soul else whither he was going.
+
+Despite this secrecy, however, it soon became publicly known that King
+Ma’anda and his mother had left the palace, accompanied by a peasant,
+and that they had taken the direction of the forest, towards which they
+had been seen travelling with rapid steps by one who communicated the
+information to the Katekiro.
+
+This news plunged the principal chief of the kingdom into a state of
+perplexity. He was for a moment at a loss what to do, for had his master
+desired any other company he would undoubtedly have made it known; but,
+on the other hand, this conduct was inexplicable, and the king might
+have been lured by some cunning plausible tale to proceed in this
+manner, whereby he might be destroyed without detection.
+
+As the thought of treachery to the king flashed through his mind, he
+instantly resolved to follow him and watch after his safety, and should
+the peasant mean harm to him, he would be at hand, though unsuspected,
+to assist his master. He therefore seized his spear and shield, and sped
+away after the king in stealthy pursuit. Soon he discovered the king,
+the king’s mother, and the peasant, and, slackening his steps, sought
+only to keep them in view, and to elude the quick, searching glances
+which he saw the king frequently dart behind him. They travelled in this
+manner all that day and half of the next day, when the peasant informed
+the king that they were approaching the appointed place.
+
+The king, to assure himself that they had not been followed by any one,
+looked keenly around once more, and having satisfied himself that they
+were alone, he commanded the peasant to move on and point out the
+meeting-place. Gliding under the shadows of the dense grove surrounding
+the open space, they soon emerged from them, and were in front of the
+extraordinary assembly, who appeared to have preserved the same posture
+and attitude since the departure of the peasant on his errand to the
+king.
+
+As the three advanced near the extremity of the rows of seated warriors,
+the old man on the throne asked the king, who was in advance, and gazing
+on the scene with the greatest astonishment, “Who art thou?”
+
+“I am Ma’anda,” he replied.
+
+“Art thou the king?”
+
+“I am.”
+
+“And who is that woman with thee?” the old man demanded.
+
+“My mother,” the king answered.
+
+“It is well,” said he; “but how is it you did not observe what I
+commanded? Why came ye not alone?”
+
+“We have done exactly as we were told,” said the king. “There are only
+my mother and this peasant with me, for no one knew of my departure.”
+
+“But I have seen another man behind thee,” persisted the old man. “Tell
+me who he is?”
+
+“Rest assured,” said Ma’anda, “there is no man save this peasant with
+me, for yesterday and to-day I looked several times behind me to make
+sure that I was not followed.”
+
+“Who was the first king of Uganda?” suddenly asked the old man.
+
+“Kintu,” answered Ma’anda.
+
+“Thou sayest truly,” said the old man slowly and deliberately; “and
+Kintu was good. He injured no man, beast, bird, or insect, and no living
+thing had cause to complain of him. He never even struck a man with a
+stick, or caused him pain in any manner, for he loved his children like
+a kind father should; but his sons grew exceedingly wicked, headstrong,
+disobedient, and utterly unmanageable. They loved to shed blood. They
+first slaughtered beasts, and became so accustomed to blood that at last
+they slew their brothers and sisters. They became so madly in love with
+blood that they wished to shed that of their good father Kintu. Then
+Kintu saw that Uganda was no more a land for him, that it was unfit for
+him to live in, and, oh! when he looked on the face of the land at
+first, it was so fair and pure that it delighted his eyes, but when it
+became red and filthy with the blood of innocent men and women and
+children, it became hateful to Kintu, and he departed from the horrid,
+cruel land. From Chwa down to Ma’anda each king has sought to find
+Kintu, though in vain. Thou, Ma’anda, shalt see Kintu face to face, and
+thou shalt hear him speak; but first I have somewhat to tell thee from
+him. Listen, and mark well his words—but tell me who was that man that
+followed thee hither?” he suddenly asked.
+
+Ma’anda, well pleased that he of all his predecessors was selected to
+see and converse with Kintu, had become all attention, and every fibre
+and nerve quivered to hear the prelude to the introduction; but when
+interrogated by the old man again upon a subject already satisfactorily
+answered, he asked impatiently, “Why dost thou ask again when I have
+already told thee that no man followed me here, because no man could
+have known whither I went?”
+
+“But I,” said the old man calmly, “saw a man follow thee step by step.
+Why didst thou let him come, when I expressly told thee thou must come
+only with thy mother and this peasant?”
+
+The king’s mother and the peasant declared that Ma’anda had spoken
+truly, and that no man followed them.
+
+“I saw him behind that tree listening. Behold! there he stands,” said
+the old man, suddenly pointing to the Katekiro, who, perceiving that he
+was discovered, now came forward.
+
+The three turned their eyes on hearing the words of the old man, and at
+the sight of the Katekiro, Ma’anda grew desperately enraged, and with
+passionate fury he seized his spear, launched it, and pierced his
+faithful servant through the heart, who with a short, sharp shriek, fell
+dead at his feet.
+
+But, lo! when King Ma’anda and his companions turned to discover what
+effect this scene had upon the old man and the seated warriors, they
+found that they had vanished, and that not even the slightest trace of
+them was left; at which the three stared at one another in the wildest
+astonishment. Then the king, recovering from his surprise, fell upon the
+ground and wept aloud, calling upon the name of Kintu; and the king’s
+mother and the peasant added their cries to his, and wept as if their
+hearts would break. But no blood-hating Kintu answered to them, only the
+tall deep woods echoed their cries, “Kintu, Kintu-u, Kintu-u-u-u,” as if
+in mockery of their sorrow.
+
+All night they kept watch, breaking out now and then into moaning and
+wailings for the last loss of the great father of Uganda. But Kintu,
+after this scene, never more appeared in Uganda, and to this day he has
+not been seen or heard of by any man.
+
+After Ma’anda’s death succeeded Msangi, Namugara, and Chabagu. In the
+time of this latter king flourished Wakinguru, a hero, whose name
+history, cherished within the memories of admiring men, has preserved
+for his unparalleled deeds. When Chabagu invaded Usoga, it appears that
+the Wasoga were very numerous, and, having as yet never been reduced to
+submission by the Waganda, very bold and fearless. The people of Usoga
+mocked the victorious Waganda until Chabagu was roused to declare war
+upon them; and to show them the prowess of the people whom they had so
+insolently defied Chabagu permitted Wakinguru to cross over to Jinja
+alone, that he might exhibit the warlike qualities of his nation in his
+own person.
+
+Wakinguru, we are led to believe, was a man of herculean frame, and we
+may well suppose him gifted with more than common courage. He marched to
+the height of Jinja with a large bundle of spears on his back, and his
+shield was so ample and thick that it required two ordinary men to lift
+it.
+
+Arriving at a place where he could command a clear view of the Wasoga
+camp, he shouted out a bold challenge to any man, or to all at once, to
+approach him, that he might show them what manner of men were those who
+had been so frequently insulted by them. Several of the Wasoga,
+responding to the challenge, rushed up to try his mettle, but
+Wakinguru’s spears were so formidable, and his strength so great, that
+long before any of the foe came within distance permitting an ordinary
+man to launch his spear, they were all dead men. The hero then plucked
+his spears from the corpses, and prepared to meet the next party, who
+came up in hot haste to avenge the deaths of their friends. Again the
+redoubtable man launched his fatal spears, and again the Wasoga had to
+lament the deaths of their champions.
+
+Enraged by this, the Wasoga at length advanced in a body, and formed a
+large circle round him; but Wakinguru only laughed at this manœuvre, and
+continued remorselessly slaying, launching his whirring lengthy shafts
+with the most deadly effect; and then, picking up the spears of his
+enemies, with which the ground near him was plentifully strewn, he
+returned their own weapons to them, launching them with the swiftness
+and certainty of arrows. His strength sustained him in this unequal
+contest from sunrise to sunset, when it was discovered that Wakinguru
+had slain 600 men with his own hand! At night he crossed Jinja (or the
+Falls) to Ugungu unharmed, where he refreshed himself with the bananas
+and milk and water of Uganda, and where he received the warmest
+congratulations from King Chabagu and his army.
+
+Next morning Wakinguru renewed the battle, and it continued throughout
+the whole of the second day, during which time the hero slew a similar
+number; and on the third day also he fought with the same success, until
+at last the Wasoga confessed that they were unable to meet him.
+
+Then King Chabagu crossed the water above Jinja (Napoleon Channel), and
+completed the conquest of Usoga.
+
+After Chabagu succeeded Junju, Waseje, and Kamanya. This last king,
+grandfather of the present monarch, is remembered for his victories over
+the Wakedi, a most ferocious and warlike people occupying country north
+of Usoga. The Wakedi, it is said, wore armour, and employed in their
+wars an immense number of great dogs, as large as young lions. Besides,
+the country of the Wakedi was surrounded by broad rivers or small
+lakes,[23] and these several advantages had made the Wakedi rather
+feared by the Waganda. But vexed by the repeated forays made by them
+into the very heart of his country, and the impunity with which they
+carried them, Kamanya determined to prosecute a war against them until
+one side or the other should be declared beyond doubt the stronger. For
+this purpose he assembled his chiefs, and, having stated the advantages
+of situation which Ukedi enjoyed against attack, commanded them to
+advise him as to the means and ways of conducting the campaign.
+
+Stimulated by large rewards, the chiefs proposed various tactics for
+retaliating upon the enemy; but it was the plan of the grandfather of
+Sabadu the historian that was deemed the best. This person advised
+Kamanya to command 100 canoes to proceed by water to Jinja, where they
+might be taken to pieces and conveyed overland through Usoga to the
+Nagombwa river,[24] whence, after reconstruction, they could proceed to
+attack the Wakedi in the rear, while the king himself could proceed with
+his army to Urondogani, along the western bank of the Victoria Nile, and
+menace Ukedi from that side. This wise counsel was loudly applauded and
+at once adopted, the charge of the canoes being given to Sabadu’s
+grandfather himself.
+
+The Wakedi, as might be imagined, attacked in such an unlooked-for
+direction, were greatly surprised and discouraged. They fled for refuge
+to their fenced villages, leaving their cattle in the hands of the
+Waganda, who drove them across the Nagombwa to Usoga. The vengeance of
+the Waganda not being yet complete, they proceeded to attack the Wakedi
+in their fenced villages, using red-hot arrows wrapped in bark cloth, by
+which the straw huts were set on fire, and the inhabitants driven out to
+meet the spears of the Waganda.
+
+Perceiving that the presence of Kamanya on the opposite bank of the Nile
+was only a ruse, the Wakedi concentrated their forces to drive the
+Waganda who had come by way of the Nagombwa out of the country. When the
+two nations met, a desperate battle ensued, rather to the disadvantage
+of the Waganda, for the enemy wore iron armour, which their spears could
+not penetrate.
+
+After consultation, it was decided by the Waganda that at the next
+battle they would not waste their time in launching their spears, but
+would rush on the foe with naked hands and capture and bind them.
+
+Having received large reinforcements, the Waganda resumed the battle,
+but instead of throwing their spears they simply defended their bodies
+with their shields, and rushing on their encumbered adversaries, seized
+and bound them with cords. Perceiving that affairs were becoming
+desperate for them, the Wakedi mustered all their war-hounds, which,
+while the Waganda were engaged with their masters, rushed upon them from
+all sides, with their large mouths wide open, barking tremendously, and
+bit and tore them in such a manner that the Waganda became stricken with
+panic, and fled to their canoes. The hounds, with their fury unappeased,
+rushed after the canoes into the water, where an immense number of them
+were easily slaughtered by the Waganda, whose senses, it appears, were
+by this time collected. Fearing that they would lose all their faithful
+war-hounds, the Wakedi recalled their dogs, paid tribute, and
+acknowledged the superiority and supremacy of the Waganda, and to this
+day the Wakedi have been true to their allegiance.
+
+As we arrive nearer our own times, the history of Uganda becomes,
+of course, more precise and trustworthy. Thus, when we come to Suna
+II., the son of Kamanya, and predecessor and father of Mtesa, we are
+told that he was about sixteen years of age when he succeeded to his
+father, and about forty when he died, and that he reigned, therefore,
+twenty-four years. As Mtesa ascended the throne in his nineteenth year,
+and as he has already reigned fifteen years (up to 1875), Suna must
+have been born in 1820, begun to reign in 1836, and died in 1860.
+
+Suna, so his intimate friends still alive told me, was short of stature
+and of very compact build, most despotic and cruel, but brave and
+warlike.
+
+He had a peculiar habit, it is said, of sitting with his head bent low,
+seldom looking up. His attitude seemed to be that of one intently
+tracing designs on the ground, though in reality he was keenly alive to
+all that was transpiring around him. He frequently beheaded his people
+by hundreds. It is reported that one day he executed 800 people of
+Uganda for a single crime committed. Other punishments which he
+inflicted were dreadful, such as gouging out eyes, and slitting ears,
+noses, and lips. It is said that he so seldom lifted his eyes from the
+ground that whenever he did look up at a person, the executioners,
+called “Lords of the Cord,” understood it as a sign of condemnation.
+
+Any messenger arriving with news was compelled to crawl on his knees,
+and in this position to whisper it into the king’s ears. Whenever he
+passed along a path, the announcement, “Suna is coming,” sufficed to
+send the people flying in a panic from the neighbourhood.
+
+To strangers from other countries he was most liberal and hospitable,
+and many Arab traders have had cause to bless the good fortune that
+conducted them to Uganda in the days of Suna.
+
+This Emperor, or _Kabaka_, as the rulers of Uganda, after their vast
+conquest, were styled, was also exceedingly fond of dogs. For the
+sustenance of one of his pets he caused an entire district to be
+cultivated and planted with the sweet potato, which was its favourite
+diet; and when it died, he caused each chief to contribute bark-cloths
+for its burial.
+
+He also kept a lion and a leopard, and another animal which, from its
+description, I take to have been either a species of wolf or lynx; the
+two former became quite tame, but the latter was so incorrigibly fierce
+that he finally ordered it to be destroyed.
+
+From such a disposition as that of Suna, it was natural that he should
+engage in frequent wars, and from his determined and resolute character
+we cannot be surprised to hear that they were most bloody and terrible.
+He conquered Ankori, overran Unyoro and Usoga, and was the first to
+conquer the united nations of Uzongora. The lion-hearted Wavuma owned
+him as their liege lord; even distant Ruanda heard of his name, tried
+him in battle, and became convinced of his greatness. The details of the
+two last wars in which Suna was engaged I have collected, and present
+them here, as told by Sabadu, from which the reader may perceive for
+himself the character of this monarch and the general nature of wars in
+Central Africa.
+
+Suna heard that Usoga had rebelled and refused to pay tribute to him,
+whereupon, after rendering homage and dues to the Muzimu, or
+spirits,[25] he levied a vast army and marched to Jinja, or the rocks
+overlooking the Ripon Falls, where he rested four days. The Wasoga, upon
+Suna’s advance, fled to Kitenteh Island (situate in the channel between
+Uvuma and Usoga, about seven miles from Nakaranga Cape). On this island
+the Wasoga placed their women and children, and large herds of cattle,
+and it was evident from the measures they adopted that they intended to
+make a desperate and prolonged resistance.
+
+After marching through Usoga, he camped on the mainland, about half a
+mile from Kitenteh Island. The Wavuma, responding to his command to
+muster their canoes for the war, supplied him with over 100, manned by
+natives of Uziri, Wema, and Kibibi; Lulamba, Irwaji, and Sessé Islands
+supplied him with 200; while from the Uganda coast he obtained 200 more;
+so that, in all, Suna had 500 canoes for the war.
+
+Usoga, an extensive country of itself, did its best to meet the monarch
+of Uganda with a large and powerful fleet, and, assisted by its islands,
+Namungi and Neygano; as also by Usuguru, Chaga, Muiwanda, and Ugana, was
+able to match Suna’s fleet, canoe for canoe.
+
+But the spirit which animated the warriors of the two nations differed
+greatly. On the one side was the determination to win freedom; on the
+other a monarch resolved to retain in subjection, but lacking people to
+meet the Wasoga on the water, and only able to compel his warriors to
+fight at all on that element by the most horrible threats and the
+inspiration of terror.
+
+Having assembled his fleet, Suna ordered the assault; but the Wasoga met
+the Waganda in the channel, and after a desperate battle drove the
+Waganda in precipitate retreat to the mainland. For the period of a
+month repeated efforts were made to effect a landing on the island, but
+the Wasoga, with great spirit and bravery, repelled the Waganda with
+severe loss. The Wasoga also, adding insult to injury, were accustomed
+to approach the mainland and taunt the king with bitter words, telling
+him to seek the graves of Kaguru and Kamanya, and bury himself there for
+very shame.[26] At length, enraged by these taunts, Suna called his
+chiefs to him, and in assembly assailed them with bitter reproaches, and
+asking them if he was not the Emperor, and if Emperor, why the Wasoga
+were permitted to taunt him, and stung to frenzy by the memory of the
+insults lately received, commanded his chiefs to man their canoes on the
+morrow and assault the island, threatening them, if they failed, with
+roasting, decapitation, and utter destruction.
+
+The chiefs prostrated themselves one after another, and swore to set
+their feet on Kitenteh Island the next day. The morrow came, and each
+chief was in his canoe with his most chosen warriors. The battle ensued,
+but only four chiefs were true to their promise—the Katekiro,
+Namujurilwa (Majwara’s father[27]), and two others of equal bravery and
+eminence. The Katekiro on landing killed two with his spear at one
+thrust, so great was the throng of Wasoga who rushed against him.
+Namujurilwa’s spear was plunged through three at a time, but unable to
+draw his weapon out, he was attacked by a Msoga, who with his javelin
+pinned both his arms, and he was only saved by a rush of his own men,
+who bore him away to his canoe. The two other chiefs slew two men each,
+and were obliged to retire, being unsupported by their people. Many
+other chiefs distinguished themselves, and many died fighting in the
+attempt to land on the island.
+
+The Wasoga had formed themselves into four ranks on this day. The first
+comprised the slingers, and the second the spearmen, the third, on
+higher ground, slingers again, and the fourth a reserve of spearmen, for
+the final and supreme struggle.
+
+For three successive days the chiefs of Uganda led in person the Waganda
+to the assault, until finally the queen’s father requested Suna not to
+sacrifice all his chiefs while the peasants were standing idle
+spectators. Suna yielded to his request, and perceiving that bravery was
+of no avail against the desperate Wasoga, he adopted the plan of
+surrounding the island day and night with his canoes, and starving the
+rebels into submission. What food the unfortunate Wasoga were able to
+obtain was inadequate for their wants, and cost them much trouble and
+many lives, both on shore, in distant parts of the coast, and in the
+channel, for Suna had constructed large camps along the coast of Usoga,
+and his canoes kept strict watch and ward over Kitenteh Island.
+
+For two months the Wasoga endured this state of things, but at the end
+of that period, being reduced to the verge of absolute starvation, four
+of their chiefs approached the camp of Suna with offers of submission.
+Suna refused to see them, but gave them thirty head of cattle to convey
+to the island, with a request to the chiefs to eat, and think well first
+of what they offered, promising that, if on the fourth day they were
+still of the same mind, he would be willing to talk with them.
+
+At the end of the fourth day twenty chiefs came over from Kitenteh
+Island, stating that they were willing to submit to Suna, to pay
+tribute, and to render service. He received them graciously, and ordered
+them to commence the next day, with the assistance of his own canoes,
+the transportation of the Wasoga to his camp, in order that they might
+all render their submission to him.
+
+For three days, it is said, the Waganda and Wasoga canoes were engaged
+in this service, and as fast as the Wasoga arrived they were conducted
+to a large stockade erected expressly for them during the night of
+the surrender. On the fourth day, his late enemies being all in his
+camp, surrounded by his own people, he called their chiefs and told
+them he would be gratified if they and their warriors would perform
+their war-dance before him next day. Unsuspecting evil, they willingly
+promised.
+
+Suna after their departure to the stockade instructed the Waganda chiefs
+to bring all their people, early next morning, each man supplied with a
+cord, and to form them in two ranks four deep, and when he gave the
+signal, to fall upon the Wasoga and bind them. On the morning of the
+fifth day the Waganda were all drawn up as instructed, and the Wasoga,
+seeing nothing in this but Suna’s desire of showing his power and pomp,
+and without the least idea what this war-dance portended to them,
+marched within the fatal lines, armed only with sticks, as had been
+agreed—upon the cunning plea that the Waganda might take offence at
+seeing them play with edged weapons before Suna. They were the more
+completely thrown off their guard by the kindness shown to them by the
+Emperor and by the liberal supplies of cattle and bananas supplied to
+them since their surrender.
+
+We can imagine how the unhappy Wasoga advanced smiling into Suna’s
+presence on this great day, and how, wishing to please the fearful
+despot, they danced to the best of their power. But on a sudden, while
+they were exerting their voices (30,000 is the number given) into a
+grand swelling chorus at the triumphal finale of the fictitious war
+which they had been representing, Suna gave the signal, and 100,000
+Waganda warriors fell upon them, and despite their fearful, desperate
+struggles—when all too late the treachery of Suna became apparent—bound
+them hand and foot.
+
+Out of this immense number of prisoners, sixty of the principal chiefs
+were selected and placed before Suna, who said to them:—“For three
+months you have kept me and my people waiting for your submission; you
+rebelled against my authority, and attempted to throw off your
+allegiance; you have slain more than half of my principal chiefs, and
+you have vexed me with taunts, telling me to go and seek the graves of
+Kaguru and Kamanya, and to hide myself there for shame. You have mocked
+me—me! who am called Suna—Suna, the Emperor (_Kabaka_). I go to my grave
+by-and-by, but by the grave of my father Kamanya you shall die to-day,
+and you may tell your fathers that Suna the Emperor sent you to them.”
+
+Then turning to the Waganda, he fiercely shouted, “Cut them to little
+pieces, and pile their remains on the plain without the camp.” As Suna
+commanded, so was it done, and the Waganda were employed on this
+monstrous work for five days, for they obeyed his command literally,
+and, beginning at the legs and arms, hacked their victims to pieces
+without taking the trouble to despatch them first.
+
+Usoga, upon hearing of this terrible deed, sent all its principal men
+and chiefs to implore pardon and proffer submission and allegiance,
+which Suna was pleased to accept. This event closed the war, and Suna
+returned to his palace in Uganda with a train of 5000 female captives
+and 8000 children.
+
+Soon after his return to Uganda the Wasoga rebelled a second time under
+the leadership of Rura, chief of Nakaranga, upon hearing which Suna
+smiled grimly and said, “Rura has taken much time to make up his mind;
+since he has waited so long let him wait a little longer, and I will
+show him who his master is.”
+
+Meantime Namujurilwa, chief of Uddu, after returning to visit his home,
+heard that his neighbour the king of Ankori or Usagara was preparing to
+invade his country with a mighty force. Ever prompt for mischief and
+war, Namujurilwa did not wait to meet the Wasagara on his own soil, but
+beat his war-drum, and, mustering his followers, marched through Bwera
+and penetrated into the very heart of Ankori, and there surprised his
+enemies, assembled under five princes, in their own camp.
+
+Namujurilwa fell upon them with a ferocity and vigour that the numerical
+superiority of his enemies could not equal. For five hours the battle
+lasted without intermission or advantage to either side, when
+Namujurilwa was accidentally met by one of the princes of Ankori.
+
+“Not dead yet, Namujurilwa?” cried the prince. “Wait a little for me,”
+saying which he took a bow from one of his servants and shot an arrow
+which hit the border of the tough double bull-hide shield which the
+chief of Uddu generally carried.
+
+Namujurilwa did not wait for a second arrow, but bounded forward, crying
+out, “No, not dead yet, prince” (_Mlangira_), “and shall not die until I
+have killed you,” and forthwith launched his dirk-pointed spear, which
+pinned both the shield and body of the unfortunate youth.
+
+Another prince coming up and observing his brother fall, shot an arrow,
+and pierced the leopard-skin of the Uddu chief, who returned the
+compliment with one of his long spears, which penetrated his body and
+protruded far through his back. The death of these two princes decided
+the battle, for the Wasagara became panic-stricken and fled, leaving a
+vast spoil of cattle and effects in the conqueror’s hands.
+
+Upon returning to Uddu from the war, the victorious chief sent 300
+women, 600 children of both sexes, and 1000 head of cattle to the
+Emperor Suna, as his share of the spoil, who on viewing the magnificent
+gift said to his chiefs in assembly, “Truly, Namujurilwa is brave, there
+is none like him in Uganda.”
+
+Setuba, a great chief, holding under Suna an extensive tract of
+country[28] bordering upon Unyoro, whispered to his neighbour, “H’m, you
+hear how Suna praises Namujurilwa; let us go to Unyoro and show Suna
+that he has other chiefs as brave as Namujurilwa.”
+
+Requesting and obtaining leave of the Emperor to visit his own country,
+Setuba soon left the capital, and after arriving at his chief village,
+beat his war-drum and summoned his people to war.
+
+Taking with him 300 head of cattle, he crossed the frontier of Unyora,
+where he slew his cattle and made his followers eat beef to make
+themselves strong. Having devoured the meat, his people informed Setuba
+that they were now as strong as lions and all prepared for war.
+
+Setuba smiled and said to them, “I have given you 300 head of my own
+cattle; go and bring me 3000 head and I shall consider that you have
+paid me for what you have eaten.”
+
+The warriors responded to Setuba’s words with a shout, and at once set
+out to collect spoil from the Wanyoro, while Setuba and a chosen band
+remained in camp. The Waganda, however, were promptly met by the Wanyoro
+in considerable numbers, and after a few hours were defeated and pursued
+as far as Setuba’s camp.
+
+The chief received the fugitives sternly and said, “Where are those
+lions whom I lately fed with my cattle? Are you about to return to
+Uganda with empty hands? Yes, go on, and as you fly proclaim that
+Setuba, your chief, is dead.” Saying which Setuba seized his spears and
+shield, and followed by his chosen band bounded out of his camp to meet
+the advancing Wanyora.
+
+Fired with indignation and shame, Setuba soon met the Wanyora, and began
+flinging his spears with splendid effect. With his first spear he killed
+three, with the second he slew two more. The fugitives, seeing the
+vigour and courage of their chief, halted, and began to ask of one
+another, “Who dares go and tell Suna that Setuba is dead? Let us fight
+and die with Setuba.”
+
+The word “Setuba, tuba, tuba!” became a war-cry, echoed fiercely far and
+near, turning the fugitives on their pursuers, who in a short time
+became the pursued. For two days the Waganda rioted in the blood of the
+now terror-stricken Wanyora, who were finally compelled to fly to the
+summit of the mountains for refuge, leaving their families and cattle in
+the valleys to be swept away by the fierce Waganda.
+
+On returning to Uganda Setuba sent 2000 women, 4000 children, and 2000
+heads of cattle, besides goats and sheep without number, to the Emperor
+as his share, and Setuba heard Suna declare proudly that he knew of no
+monarch who could show heroes to equal Setuba and Namujurilwa, and that
+his heart was big with pride.
+
+There stood that day, when the Emperor publicly mentioned with praise
+the names of Setuba and Namujurilwa, a young man listening to him, who
+from that moment resolved to eclipse both chiefs. His name was
+Kasindula, a sub-chief or Mtongoleh of the great Sekebobo’s country of
+Chagwe, who had neither pride of birth nor riches to boast of. He was a
+mere worthy young fellow, who had distinguished himself in a few
+engagements under Sekebobo, for which the old chief had promoted him
+from a peasant (_kopi_) to be a sub-chief (_mtongoleh_).
+
+A few days after the great levee of Suna, Kasindula proceeded to
+Sekebobo, and requested him to ask permission of the Emperor that he
+should be allowed to rebuild his majesty’s camp at Jinja, as many of the
+huts were in a most ruinous state, and many of Suna’s women were
+compelled to sleep in the open air.
+
+Sekebobo introduced Kasindula to the Emperor, and preferred his request
+to him, who graciously acceded to it, adding that it was not every day
+that men came to ask leave to do him a service: they generally asked him
+for some gift or other.
+
+Kasindula was profuse in his thanks, and then departed with 2000 men
+from Sekebobo to assist him in the work of reconstructing the imperial
+camp at Jinja, and the kind old chief also gave him several large
+canoes, to transport the working force across Napoleon Channel.
+
+The young chief lost no time after his arrival at Jinja, but
+industriously set to work, and in a few days had entirely rebuilt the
+houses, and surrounded them with their respective courts, and had
+cleared the whole camp from much accumulated rubbish, until the camp
+would have pleased even fastidious Suna himself.
+
+He then caused the war-drum to be sounded, and, responding to its
+ominous call, all who were capable of lifting the spear, dwelling in the
+neighbourhood of Jinja, gathered round Kasindula, who said:—
+
+“Warriors of Uganda and children of Suna, listen to me. You know how,
+after Suna slew the rebellious Wasoga before Kitenteh Island, that the
+chiefs of Usoga all came and swore allegiance to him; and how, when Suna
+had returned to Uganda, the Wasoga chief Rura headed another rebellion,
+and challenged Suna to return to Usoga to fight him. When Suna heard the
+challenge of the boastful Rura, he only smiled, and said, ‘Let him wait
+a little.’ Suna is too great to fight with Rura, for Kasindula, a
+Mtongoleh of Sekebobo, is sufficient for him. To-night we march to
+Nakaranga, and to-morrow morning before sunrise Rura shall sleep with
+his brothers who died before Kitenteh. Warriors, prepare yourselves!”
+
+Though Nakaranga was fully thirty miles from Jinja, Kasindula had
+reached about midnight the principal village of the chief, and after
+surrounding it with his people, fired the huts at daybreak, thus
+expelling the sleeping Wasoga from them, to fall by the spears of the
+ambushed Waganda. Having made clean work of all Rura’s district,
+Kasindula gathered the spoil, and long before noon was far on his return
+to Jinja.
+
+The Usoga confederacy, hearing of this raid and of the death of Rura and
+his sons, hurried to Nakaranga to avenge the slaughter, but they found
+only black desolation and emptiness in Rura’s district, while the
+raiders had escaped in safety to Jinja, whither they dared not follow
+them, and accordingly returned, each chief to his own district.
+
+After a few days’ rest Kasindula made another raid in a totally
+different direction with similar results, and again the Wasoga hurried
+up, only to find the houses all consumed, the warriors all dead, and the
+women and children and cattle all deported away.
+
+“What manner of man is this,” asked the astonished Wasoga of one
+another, “who comes in the night, like a hyena, and vanishes with the
+daylight, with his maw gorged with blood?” Consoling themselves,
+however, with a vow to be revenged on him at a fitting opportunity, they
+returned again to their own districts.
+
+But hard upon their heels followed the wary and resolute Kasindula; and
+again he destroyed an entire district, with all its males, and carried
+the women and children into captivity. This news was too disheartening
+to the Wasoga, for now they began to dread that they would be utterly
+destroyed in detail, whereupon, perceiving that their principal chiefs
+were all dead, they sent an embassy to Suna, with a tribute of the most
+comely women and a large quantity of maramba, asking his forgiveness.
+
+Kasindula, meanwhile, finding his hands full of spoil, collected all
+together, and drove his captives and cattle, by forced marches, to Suna,
+who, warned of his approach, prepared to receive him in state and in a
+full assembly of the chiefs.
+
+Having arranged the women and children by thousands before him, and
+parked the cattle in full view of the Emperor, Kasindula, clad in a
+humble and dingy bark cloth, prostrated himself before him and said:—
+
+“Great Kabaka, I went to Jinja, and built your camp, and housed your
+women as you commanded me; and hearing how Namujurilwa and Setuba had
+avenged you on the Wasagara and Wanyoro, I thought myself strong enough
+to answer the challenge sent by Rura and his friends to you.
+
+“My dear lord, Namujurilwa and Setuba are great chiefs, and stand in
+your presence daily, but I am only a Mtongoleh under Sekebobo. I have
+neither farm nor house, wife nor child, and my only wealth consists of
+my spear and my shield, and my only cloth is this rotten _mbugu_.
+Namujurilwa and Setuba brought slaves and cattle by hundreds, but the
+_kopi_ Kasindula brings his thousands to Suna. Behold where they stand!
+Kasindula brings them all to Suna.” And putting his hands together, he
+cried aloud, “Twiyanzi, yanzi, yanzi, yanzi!” with all the fervour of
+one having received a bountiful gift.
+
+The Emperor, upon inquiring the number of the spoil, was told that it
+amounted to 7000 slaves, 2000 cows and oxen, 3000 goats, and 500 sheep;
+upon which he said, “Kasindula has spoken truly; he has brought more
+than either Namujurilwa or Setuba. In return, I make him now a chief of
+the first rank, with land, cattle, and slaves of his own.” And Kasindula
+was immediately invested with white cloths, and with all the honours,
+privileges, and greatness of a _Mkungu_ of Uganda.
+
+After this turbulent epoch there were some months of tranquillity, when
+one day there came a challenge from Kytawa, the mighty king of Uzongora,
+who had made an alliance with the kings Kyozza, Kamiru, and Rugomero,
+and with Antari, king of Ihangiro, against Suna.
+
+The Emperor sent the messenger of Kytawa back to him with a bullet and a
+hoe, saying, “Give these to Kytawa; tell him to choose whether he will
+take the bullet and have war, or whether he will keep the hoe and
+cultivate his fields in peace; and bring his answer to me.”
+
+Kytawa imagined himself and his allies strong enough to meet Suna
+in war, and kept the bullet. When the messenger returned with this
+answer, Suna commanded his Katekiro to make up 300 man-loads of hoes
+and old iron and to send them to Kytawa, and to say to him, “Suna
+sends these hoes and iron to you, for may be that you are short of
+spears, arrow-heads, and hatchets. Make war weapons for your people in
+abundance during three months, and prepare for war, for in the fourth
+month you shall see me and my people in your country, and I shall eat
+it up clean, and there shall nothing be left alive in it.”
+
+This was the last war in which Suna was engaged. After three days’
+desperate fighting the Wazongora and their allies were defeated, and
+Kytawa and the confederate kings were compelled to fly for refuge to the
+island of Kishakka, where they were besieged, until all the kings
+implored forgiveness, and swore to become tributary to him.
+
+Falling ill from small-pox, the Emperor accepted their oaths, and,
+raising the siege, departed for Uganda. When he perceived that he was
+about to die, he called his chiefs together and commanded them to make
+Kajumba, his eldest son, his successor.
+
+This Kajumba, the Prince Imperial, however, was no favourite with the
+Waganda, for he appears to have been a violent, headstrong youth of
+gigantic size and strength. These qualities recommended him strongly to
+Suna, who thought that with such a successor Uganda would retain its
+prestige and supremacy, and apprehended nothing of danger to his own
+people in a person of such violent passions; and, indeed, it is to be
+doubted whether, after exercising with the utmost licence his own
+undisputed authority, he even thought them worthy of consideration.
+
+Kajumba was Suna’s favourite, and the war-loving father on his death-bed
+pointed out with pride to his chiefs the heroic qualities of the prince,
+reminded them how when a mere boy he had slain a buffalo with a club and
+an elephant with a single spear, and assured them with his latest breath
+that Kajumba would become more renowned than either lion-like Kimera or
+renowned Nakivingi.
+
+After his father’s death Prince Kajumba seized his weighty spear and
+ample shield and proclaimed himself his father’s successor and choice,
+and announced his determination to uphold his dignity to the death. The
+chiefs, however, fearing Kajumba’s violence, laid hands on him, and
+bound him hand and foot, and selected the mild-spoken, large-eyed boy
+Mtesa, and made him Emperor of Uganda by acclamation.
+
+Suna was then buried with all the usual pomp attending such ceremonies
+in Uganda; and the young Emperor, having paid all honour to his father’s
+remains, and feeling himself firmly established in power, began to
+reveal the true spirit which had been masked by the fair speech and
+large eyes.
+
+He soon found reasons for slaying all his brothers, and, having disposed
+of them, turned upon the chiefs, who had elected him Emperor of Uganda,
+and put them to death, saying that he would have no subject about him to
+remind him that he owed his sovereignty to him.
+
+According to his father’s custom, he butchered all who gave him offence,
+and that lion in war, Namujurilwa, as also the Katekiro, he caused to be
+beheaded. Frequently, when in a passion, he would take his spear in hand
+and rush to his harem, and spear his women until his thirst for blood
+was slaked.
+
+It is probable that Mtesa was of this temper when Speke saw him, and
+that he continued in it until he was converted by the Arab Muley bin
+Salim into a fervid Muslim. After this, however, he became more humane,
+abstained from the strong native beer which used to fire his blood, and
+renounced the blood-shedding custom of his fathers.
+
+Mtesa’s reign, like that of his predecessor, has been distinguished by
+victories over many nations, such as the Wanyankori, Wanyoro, Wasui,
+Wazongora, and Wasoga, and his Katekiro has carried his victorious flag
+to Ruanda and to Usongora on the Muta Nzigé. He has likewise sent
+embassies to the Khedive’s pasha of Gondokoro, to Sultans Majid and
+Barghash of Zanzibar, and, having entertained most hospitably Captains
+Speke and Grant, Colonel Long of the Egyptian army, myself, and M.
+Linant de Bellefonds, is now desirous of becoming more intimate with
+Europe, to introduce specie into his country, and to employ European
+artisans to teach his people.
+
+For the interesting facts of the preceding pages, the world is indebted
+to the gossip Sabadu, for until his revelations, as herein recorded,
+Uganda and a large portion of Equatorial Africa were (to use the words
+of ancient Pistol) liked a closed oyster, but which now, with his aid,
+we have partly opened, thus obtaining glimpses, however unsatisfactory,
+into the origin, custom, and history of the country. An epic poem might
+be written upon the legend of the search for the lost patriarch, or a
+prose romance, for there is material enough for a great work in the tale
+Sabadu told me.
+
+If we begin to speculate as to who this Kintu, the blameless priest,
+really was, and whether the legend does not bear some dim and vague
+resemblance to the histories of Adam or Noah, handed down from
+generation to generation through remote times among an unlettered
+people, we may easily become lost in a maze of wild theories and
+conjectures. There is, however, just as much ground for building such
+suppositions, and to plausibly demonstrate them to be actualities and
+facts, as there is for many other fables now generally accepted as
+verities.
+
+It is impossible, while reading the tale of Kintu, the Blameless Priest,
+not to be reminded at one time of Adam, at another of Noah—for both Adam
+and Noah found the earth void and uninhabited, as Kintu is said to have
+found Uganda and the neighbouring lands. In the gigantic Kimera, “the
+mighty hunter,” we remember Nimrod, and in the wicked children of the
+patriarch can suspect a faint resemblance to the shameless Ham. The
+prolific wife, and no less prolific cow, goat, sheep, and the wonderful
+banana-plant, have their counterparts in the traditions of every people
+under the sun. And do we not ourselves believe
+
+ “That all began
+ In Eden’s shade, and one created man”?
+
+The ingenious mind can also find the prototype of the miraculously
+flying Kibaga in the angel that destroyed the first-born of Egypt, or
+that other who smote the host of Assyria; and Nakivingi, or Chabagu and
+his mighty warrior Wakinguru, might stand for David and his champions,
+and the final disappearance of Kintu may be taken to represent the end
+of the age of miracles. But speculation on these points will only lead
+one into wild and vain theories: and it is enough for the purposes of
+this book to accept the tale of Kintu as a simple tradition of Central
+Africa.
+
+There is great reason to believe, however, that Kintu, if not a myth, is
+a far more ancient personage than Mtesa’s list of kings would lead us to
+suppose. At any rate, from other sources I have collected the names of
+three kings of Uganda omitted by him. These are Semi-kokiro, Karago, and
+Kimguvu.
+
+That the reader may be able to estimate the duration of the Uganda
+monarchy, I append in a tabular form the list of the kings, including
+the names of the three kings not mentioned by Mtesa:—
+
+ 1. Kintu.
+ 2. Chwa.
+ 3. Kamiera.
+ 4. Kimera.
+ 5. Almass.
+ 6. Tembo.
+ 7. Kigara.
+ 8. Wanpamba
+ 9. Kaeema.
+ 10. Semi-kokiro.
+ 11. Karago.
+
+ 12. Nakivingi.
+ 13. Morondo.
+ 14. Sekamanya.
+ 15. Kimguvu.
+ 16. Jemba.
+ 17. Suna I.
+ 18. Kimbugwé.
+ 19. Katerega.
+ 20. Ntewi.
+ 21. Juko.
+ 22. Kyemba.
+ 23. Tiwandeké.
+ 24. Mdowra.
+
+ 25. Kaguru.
+ 26. Kikuruwé.
+ 27. Ma’anda.
+ 28. Msangi.
+ 29. Namugara.
+ 30. Chabagu.
+ 31. Junju.
+ 32. Wasejé.
+ 33. Kamanya.
+ 31. Suna II.
+ 35. Mtesa.
+
+The above forms a very respectable list of kings for a country in
+Central Africa, and proves Uganda to be a monarchy of no mean antiquity,
+if the number of names may be taken as any indication. Many names may
+also have been forgotten—to be resuscitated perhaps by some future
+traveller with the patience and time at command to rescue them from
+oblivion.
+
+-----
+
+# 22:
+
+ Some of the Waganda believe, however, that Kintu, or Ham, as Mtesa now
+ believes him to be, was buried at Magonga; but I prefer to adhere to
+ the legend as it was related to me.
+
+# 23:
+
+ I have been struck at the frequent geographical hints thrown out by
+ Sabadu.
+
+# 24:
+
+ Another geographical hint, which has been verified by investigation. I
+ have no doubt the Nagombwa will turn out to be the Asua.
+
+# 25:
+
+ I have observed that Sabadu’s narrative contains many interesting
+ ethnological facts. Perhaps the reader needs to be informed that I
+ stenographed Sabadu’s story as he related it to me before my camp fire
+ at Nakaranga.
+
+# 26:
+
+ In almost exactly the same manner the Wavuma daily taunted Mtesa.
+
+# 27:
+
+ Majwara is the little boy who alone watched the last hours of Dr.
+ Livingstone.
+
+# 28:
+
+ Each Mkungu is invested with a barony or county upon attaining this
+ high rank, and with absolute authority over the people and their
+ effects, upon condition of rendering service to his sovereign whenever
+ required. The least dereliction of duty would entail a forfeiture of
+ lands, and often of life.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV.
+
+Life and manners in Uganda—The Peasant—The Chief—The Emperor—The Land.
+
+
+To behold the full perfection of African manhood and beauty, one must
+visit the regions of Equatorial Africa, where one can view the people
+under the cool shade of plantains, and amid the luxuriant plenty which
+those lands produce. The European traveller, after noting the great
+length and wondrous greenness of the banana fronds, the vastness of
+their stalks and the bulk and number of the fruit, the fatness of the
+soil and its inexhaustible fertility, the perpetual springlike verdure
+of the vegetation, and the dazzling sunshine, comes to notice that the
+inhabitants are in fit accord with these scenes, and as perfect of their
+kind as the bursting-ripe mellow bananas hanging above their heads.
+
+Their very features seem to proclaim, “We live in a land of butter and
+wine and fulness, milk and honey, fat meads and valleys.” The vigour of
+the soil, which knows no Sabbath, appears to be infused into their
+veins. Their beaming lustrous eyes—restless and quick glancing—seem to
+have caught rays of the sun. Their bronze-coloured bodies, velvety
+smooth and unctuous with butter, their swelling sinews, the tuberose
+muscles of the flanks and arms, reveal the hot lusty life which animates
+them.
+
+Let me try to sketch one of these robust people, a Kopi or peasant of
+Uganda, at home.
+
+THE “KOPI” OR PEASANT.
+
+Were it not for one thing, it might be said that the peasant of Uganda
+realises the ideal happiness all men aspire after and would be glad to
+enjoy. To see him in the imagination, you must discard from your mind
+the inebriated, maudlin, filthy negro surrounded by fat wives and a
+family of abdominous brats. He may be indolent if you please, but not so
+indolent as to be unmindful of his own interests. For his gardens are
+thriving, his plants are budding, and his fields are covered with grain.
+His house has just been built and needs no repairs, and the fenced
+courts round it are all in good condition.
+
+Roll the curtain up and regard him and his surroundings!
+
+He steps forth from his hut, a dark-brown-coloured man in the prime and
+vigour of manhood, a cleanly, decent creature, dressed after the custom
+of his country in a clay-coloured robe of bark cloth, knotted at the
+shoulder and depending to his feet—apparently a contented, nay, an
+extremely happy man, for a streak of sunshine having caught his face, we
+have a better view of it and are assured it reflects a felicitous
+contentment.
+
+He saunters—while arranging his robe with due respect to decency—to his
+usual seat near the gate of the outer court, above which a mighty banana
+towers, shading it with its far-reaching fronds.
+
+In the foreground, stretched before him, is his garden, which he views
+with placid satisfaction. It is laid out in several plats, with curving
+paths between. In it grow large sweet potatoes, yams, green peas, kidney
+beans, some crawling over the ground, others clinging to supporters,
+field beans, vetches and tomatoes. The garden is bordered by castor-oil,
+manioc, coffee, and tobacco plants. On either side are small patches of
+millets, sesamum, and sugar-cane. Behind the house and courts, and
+enfolding them, are the more extensive banana and plantain plantations
+and grain crops, which furnish his principal food, and from one of which
+he manufactures his wine and from the other his potent pombé.
+Interspersed among the bananas are the umbrageous fig-trees, from the
+bark of which he manufactures his cloth. Beyond the plantations is an
+extensive tract left for grazing, for the common use of his own and his
+neighbours’ cattle and goats.
+
+It is apparent that this man loves privacy and retirement, for he has
+surrounded his own dwelling and the huts of his family—the cones of
+which are just visible above—with courts enclosed by tall fences of
+tough cane. While we leave the owner contemplating his garden, let us
+step within and judge for ourselves of his mode of life.
+
+Within the outer court we come to a small square hut, sacred to the
+genius of the family, the household Muzimu. This genius, by the dues
+paid to him, seems to be no very exacting or avaricious spirit, for the
+simplest things, such as snail-shells, moulded balls of clay, certain
+compounds of herbs, small bits of juniper wood, and a hartebeest horn
+pointed with iron and stuck into the earth, suffice to propitiate him.
+
+Proceeding from the outer court, we enter the inner one by a side
+entrance, and the tall, conical hut, neatly constructed, with its broad
+eaves overshadowing the curving doorway, which has a torus consisting of
+faggots of cane running up and round it, stands revealed.
+
+It is of ample circumference, and cosy. On first entering we find it is
+rather dark, but as the eye becomes accustomed to the darkness, we begin
+to distinguish objects. That which first arrests observation is the
+multitude of poles with which the interior is crammed for the support of
+the roof, until it resembles a gloomy den in the middle of a dense
+forest. These poles, however, serve to guide the owner to his cane bunk,
+but their number would confuse a nocturnal marauder or intruding
+stranger. The rows of poles form, in fact, avenues by which the inmates
+can guide themselves to any particular spot or object.
+
+The hut, we observe also, is divided into two apartments, front and
+rear, by a wall of straight canes, parted in the centre, through which
+the peasant can survey—himself being unseen—any person entering.
+
+In the rear apartment are bunks arranged round the walls for the use of
+himself and family. Over the doorway of the hut within may be observed a
+few charms, into whose care and power the peasant commits the
+guardianship of his house and effects.
+
+A scarcity of furniture is observable, and the utensils are few in
+number and of poor quality. Under the former title may be classed a
+couple of carved stools and a tray for native backgammon; under the
+latter, some half-dozen earthenware pots and a few wicker and grass
+basins. Some bark cloth, a few spears, a shield, a drum, a bill-hook or
+two, a couple of hoes, some knobsticks and pipe stems, and a trough for
+the manufacture of banana wine, complete the inventory of the household
+effects.
+
+Behind the peasant’s own dwelling are two huts of humbler pretensions,
+also surrounded by courts, where we may behold the females of the family
+at work. Some are busy kneading the bananas to extract their juice,
+which, when fermented, is called _maramba_—delicious in flavour when
+well made; others are sorting herbs for broth-food, medicines, or some
+cunning charm; others, again, are laying out tobacco-leaves to dry,
+whilst the most elderly are engaged in smoking from long-stemmed pipes,
+retailing between the leisure-drawn draughts of smoke the experiences of
+their lives.
+
+Such is the kopi at home.
+
+If the picture is not a faithful one of all his class, it may be
+attributed to his own indolence, or to some calamity lately befallen
+him. From it will be seen that the average native of Uganda has an
+abundance and a variety of good food, that he is comfortably lodged, as
+far as his wants require, is well and often married, and is secure from
+enemies so far as a powerful sovereign and warlike multitudes can
+command security. Still, there is one thing more that is necessary for
+his happiness—protection from his sovereign.
+
+THE “MKUNGU” OR CHIEF.
+
+It might be supposed that, if a peasant’s lot appears so enviable in
+that land, a Mkungu’s or chief’s of the first rank would be happier a
+thousandfold. That such is not always the case will be seen from the
+following sketch of the present Premier, or Katekiro, of Uganda, whose
+name originally, now almost forgotten, was Magassa. It may be proper to
+state here that all Waganda, from the Emperor to the peasant, change
+their names according as they advance in popular estimation.
+
+About the time that Mtesa succeeded his father and beheaded the senior
+chiefs of Uganda, there was observed at the court a smart, clever,
+cleanly looking lad, assiduous in his attendance on the monarch, and
+attentive to his smallest wishes. He was the son of a Mtongoleh or
+sub-chief, and his name was Magassa. To his other desirable qualities
+might be added a fine set of white teeth, bright eyes, and general good
+looks. Mtesa became enamoured of him, and made him guardian over the
+imperial lavatory, an office of great trust in Uganda.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+[Illustration: HUTS OF EAST CENTRAL AFRICA.]
+
+ 1. Wangwana hut in camp.
+ 2. Do. do.
+ 3. Unyamwei hut.
+ 4. Hut of Karagwé Uddu.
+ 5. Hut of Uganda.
+ 6. Small tembé of Ugogo.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+As Mtesa grew to man’s estate, Magassa the boy also became a young
+man, for he was about the same age as his master, and, retaining
+and improving those qualities which first attracted the monarch’s
+eyes, was promoted in time to be a Mtongoleh of the body-guard, and
+a double-barrelled gun was put into his hands, with the power of
+gunpowder, and a few bullets and percussion caps, which caused the
+heart of young Magassa to bound with joy. Perhaps he was even prouder
+in the possession of a gun than he was of his rank, for frequently the
+Mtongoleh of the body-guard has only the empty name to boast of.
+
+However, being Mtongoleh (or colonel), he was liable to be despatched at
+a moment’s notice to distant parts of the Empire on special service, and
+the day came finally when Magassa was chosen.
+
+Imagine a young British subaltern despatched by the Queen’s command,
+specially chosen by the Queen for special service. How the young heart
+palpitates, and the nerves tingle with delight! He spurns the ground,
+and his head aspires to the stars! If a young British officer feels so
+joyful at a constitutional sovereign’s choice, what must the elect of a
+despotic autocrat like the Emperor of Uganda, feel?
+
+No sooner has he left the imperial presence with the proud command
+ringing in his ears than his head seems to swell, and almost burst from
+delirious vertigo. His back, hitherto bent through long servile dread,
+has suddenly become rigid and straight as the staff of his spear, and an
+unusual sternness of face has somehow replaced the bland smiles which
+hitherto decked it. For is he not “Kabaka” while on the Emperor’s
+errand? Do not his soldiers respond to him when summoned with aweful
+alacrity, saying, “‘Kabaka’ (Emperor), behold us”?
+
+Woe to the party from whom offence came if young Magassa was sent with
+his warriors to them! And woe to the warrior who committed any breach of
+discipline when under Magassa’s command, or even to him who crossed his
+humour when on the march on special service! Magassa’s spear was sharp
+and swift, and his hands were at all times quick to gather spoil, and
+soon it was observed that the poor Magassa was getting rich in slaves,
+waxing great in name, and becoming exceedingly influential at court.
+
+Promotions rewarded his adroitness and quick execution of commands,
+lands of his own and bounties of slaves and cattle were bestowed upon
+him, until Magassa became a Mkungu, or chief, of the second order.
+
+Such a spirit as Magassa possessed, however, could not long remain
+satisfied with this, while many above him could not boast of a tithe of
+his deftness and ability, and were blind to observe and forestall the
+humours of the despotic monarch; and a day came when a Mkungu of the
+first order, named Pokino, offended Mtesa.
+
+Casting his eyes about for a fit man to succeed him, Mtesa’s eyes
+lighted on the sparkling, bright face of Magassa, and his decision was
+at once made.
+
+“Here, Magassa,” cried the Emperor, and the accomplished courtier fell
+at his feet to the ground, to hear his command. “Haste, Magassa, take
+men and eat up Pokino’s land and name, for old Pokino has forgotten me.”
+
+“Twiyanzi, yanzi!” he cried and moaned, “Twiyanzi, yanzi, yanzi!” each
+time more emphatic, and rubbing his cheeks in the dust; and then,
+springing to his feet, he seized his spear, and, holding it aloft, as if
+in the act of launching it, he proclaimed aloud, “By the Emperor’s
+orders, I go to eat up Pokino. I will eat him clean out of land and
+name, and Magassa shall become Pokino. Emperor behold me!” and again he
+fell to the ground, screaming his thankful Twiyanzis, and loyally
+abasing himself in the dust.
+
+After the levee was over, Magassa, eager to change his name for
+Pokino’s, beat his war-drum, unfolded his banner, and mustered his
+followers, and, like the fell leopard, pounced upon purblind Pokino,
+whom he quickly deprived of life, land, and name, and in place of their
+former owner became their master. But with even old Pokino’s vast
+estates and large possessions the young Pokino was apparently
+discontented. Shortly afterwards the Emperor commanded him to “eat up”
+Namujurilwa, the Achilles of Uganda, and it is owing to young Pokino’s
+thirst for power and riches that Majwara, an infant son of that great
+chief, became a slave to Njara of Unyanyembé, from whom I purchased his
+freedom in 1871. I afterwards sent him to Livingstone, to whom young
+Majwara ministered faithful service until that great traveller’s death.
+
+With the fall of Namujurilwa, young Pokino became Lord of all Uddu, from
+the Katonga valley to the Alexandra Nile, a district embracing over 3000
+square miles, with twenty sub-chiefs recognizing him as their master,
+possessing two great capitals, Namujurilwa’s at Masaka, and Pokino’s,
+hundreds of women-slaves, and thousands of youthful slaves of both
+sexes, with cattle also by the thousand, and chief of a population
+numbering over 100,000. What a change this—from the keeper of the
+lavatory to the Lord of Uddu!
+
+Pokino’s life at his capital of Uddu, Masaka, is almost regal. He has
+“eaten up” the lands of two great chiefs, old Pokino and the lion-like
+Namujurilwa, and now out of the eater cometh forth meat, and out of the
+strong cometh forth sweetness. His sub-regal court is crowded with
+applicants and claimants for bounties, and slaves requiring to be fed,
+and good offices are given with a liberal hand, and cattle are
+slaughtered by hundreds, until Pokino’s open hand and large heart is
+published throughout Uganda. By this politic liberality he secures the
+affection of the natives of Uddu, the friendship of the great chiefs at
+the court, and the approbation of the Emperor.
+
+Is Pokino satisfied? Not yet, for there remains one more office which
+Mtesa can give; but he must wait awhile for this.
+
+The Emperor hears there is a country called Usongora, west of
+Gambaragara[29] somewhere, rich in vast herds of cattle, and he commands
+Pokino to go and gather some of them. Immediately the great war-drum of
+Masaka sounds the call to war, and the natives from the banks of the
+Alexandra Nile, the slopes of Koki plateau, and all the lake shore from
+the Alexandra to the Katonga respond to it by thousands, for it is a
+call to them to gather spoil, and when did a peasant of Uganda linger at
+such a summons?
+
+When Pokino begins his journey, he discovers he has a vast army at his
+command, for other chiefs also are represented here by columns. Kitunzi
+of the Katonga valley has sent Sambuzi, and Mkwenda, Kangau, and
+Kimbugwé have also sent sub-chiefs with hundreds of warriors. Before
+Pokino’s great army the people of Gambaragara retire up the slopes of
+their lofty snow mountain, and, pursuing them as far as prudence will
+permit, Pokino’s eyes view from afar the rolling grassy plateau of
+Usongora, and an immense lake stretching beyond, which he is told is
+Muta Nzigé.
+
+Descending from the slopes of the snow mountain, he marches with
+incredible speed to Usongora, sweeps in with long sure arms large herds
+of cattle, despite the frantically brave natives, collects thousands of
+straight-nosed, thin-lipped, and comely women and children, and drives
+them towards Uganda.
+
+Several difficulties present themselves in the way. The plain of
+Usongora is covered with salt and alkali, which, intemperately eaten,
+causes many deaths; and in the valleys sprout up mud-springs, and from
+the summits of conical hills strange fire and smoke issue, and now and
+then the very earth utters a rumbling sound, and appears to shake.
+
+The Wanyoro, also, by thousands, combine with the natives of Gambaragara
+to dispute his return. They lay ambuscades for him, and obstinately
+harass him night and day. But Pokino’s spirit is up in arms. He defies
+the supernatural noises of that Land of Wonders, Usongora, and by skill
+and sagacity avoids the meshes laid to entrap him, and, when opportunity
+affords, snares his ambushed enemies and annihilates them, and finally
+appears in Uganda at the imperial capital with a spoil of cattle and
+slaves fit to gladden even the imperial heart.
+
+The Emperor appoints a day to receive him and his warriors, and, that
+meed may be given only to the brave, has caused to be brewed immense
+potfuls of potent pombé, which shall serve as a test to point out the
+brave and the coward.
+
+The day arrives. The Emperor is seated in unusual state, with his harem
+behind him, his chiefs on either hand in order of rank, his musketeers
+on guard, and his drummers and musicians close by, while aloft wave the
+crimson-and-white-barred standards adopted by the empire. Before the
+Emperor are arranged the pots of test-beer.
+
+Pokino advances, prostrates himself in the dust, and begins to relate
+his adventures and his doings in Usongora, while the heroes of the great
+raid are enmassed in view and within hearing of his words.
+
+After the conclusion of the story, the Emperor says briefly, “Drink, if
+thou darest.”
+
+Pokino rises, advances to the test-pots, receives the ladle, and dips it
+into the pombé; then taking it up, he holds it aloft, and, turning to
+the warriors who followed him, cries aloud, “Tekeh?” (“Am I worthy or
+not?”)
+
+“Tekeh!” (“Thou art worthy!”) responds the multitude with a shout.
+
+Again he asks “Tekeh?” and again “Tekeh!” is shouted with renewed
+acclamation, and, being found worthy, he drinks, utters his grateful
+Twiyanzis to the Emperor, and retires to permit others to advance and
+drink the test-beer. Those found worthy are rewarded, those unworthy are
+doomed to death by popular condemnation.
+
+Soon after this, Myanja, the Katekiro, was found guilty of the
+overweening pride of appropriating to himself the most beautiful of the
+female slaves without regarding his master’s right to select his
+allotment first, and the result of this was that Myanja was disgraced
+and shortly beheaded.
+
+The Premier’s place being now vacant, Pokino was appointed to fill it;
+and thus was the once humble Magassa elevated to be next in power to the
+Emperor, with the utmost of his ambition fulfilled.
+
+He is now daily seated on the carpet at the right hand of his sovereign,
+controls all things, commands all men, and, when leaving the presence of
+his master, he is escorted by all the chiefs to his own quarters,
+waylaid by multitudes on the road with profound greeting, has the pick
+of all females captured in war, the choicest of all cattle, and his
+shares of all cloths, beads, wine, and other gifts brought to Mtesa; for
+the Katekiro, alias Pokino, alias Magassa, is now Premier, First Lord,
+and Secretary of State! But what next?
+
+One day, while on a visit to my quarters, I permitted him to examine my
+store of medicines. On explaining the various uses of laudanum, he
+remarked, to my surprise, with a sigh, “Ah! that is the medicine I wish
+to have. Can you not spare some for me?”
+
+Poor Magassa! poor Pokino! poor Katekiro! He is already watching, while
+yet young, in the prime and vigour of manhood, for he knoweth not the
+hour when the Lord of the Cord may beckon to him.
+
+It is left for some future traveller to tell us of his interview with
+Kasuju, the chief executioner.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ [_To face page 308._
+
+[Illustration: RUBAGA, THE NEW CAPITAL OF THE EMPEROR MTESA.]
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ THE “KABAKA” OR EMPEROR.
+
+The curtain rolls up, and discloses a hill covered with tall conical
+huts, whose tops peep out above the foliage of plantains and bananas,
+and lofty fences of cane. Up the hill’s gradually ascending slopes run
+broad smooth avenues, flanked by cane palisades, behind which clusters
+of huts show grey under a blazing sun, amid the verdure of the leafy
+groves around them. The avenues are thronged by natives, clad in
+picturesque costumes. White clothes gleam in the sunshine, in strong
+contrast to red and brown. The people are wending their way to the
+imperial quarters on the summit of the hill. While no ingress is
+permitted, they crowd around the gates in social gossip, exchanging
+morning greetings.
+
+[Illustration: AUDIENCE HALL OF THE PALACE.]]
+
+Suddenly the murmur of voices ceases, and the long rumbling roll of a
+kettle-drum is heard, announcing that the monarch is seated on the
+burzah. The gates are at once drawn aside, and a multitude of chiefs,
+soldiers, peasants, strangers rush up tumultuously, through eight or ten
+courts, towards the audience-hall, and in their noisy haste we may see
+the first symptoms of that fawning servility characteristic of those who
+serve despots.
+
+The next scene we have is a section of a straw house, with a gable-roof—
+about 25 feet high, 60 feet long, and 18 feet in breadth.
+
+At the farther end, by the light afforded by the wide entrance, we
+perceive the figure of a man clad in an embroidered scarlet jacket and
+white skirt seated on a chair, guarded on either side by a couple of
+spearmen and two men bearing muskets. The chiefs and principal men now
+hastening through the gates bow profoundly before him; some, after the
+Muslim’s custom, kiss the palms and back of his right hand; others,
+adhering to the original customs of the country, prostrate themselves to
+the ground, and, throwing their hands towards him, exclaim, while
+kneeling, “Twiyanzi, yanzi!” after which they severally betake
+themselves to their respective seats in order of rank. Two long rows of
+seated men are thus formed along the caned walls of the hall of
+audience, facing towards the centre, which is left vacant for the advent
+of strangers and claimants, and the transaction of business, justice,
+&c.
+
+Being privileged, we also enter, and take a seat on the right-hand side,
+near the Katekiro, whence we can scrutinize the monarch at our leisure.
+
+The features, smooth, polished, and without a wrinkle, are of a young
+man, who might be of any age between twenty-five and thirty-five. His
+head is clean-shaven and covered with a fez, his feet are bare and rest
+on a leopard-skin, on the edge of which rests a polished white tusk of
+ivory, and near this are a pair of crimson Turkish slippers. The long
+fingers of his right hand grasp a gold-hilted Arab scimitar; the left is
+extended over his left knee, reminding one of the posture of Rameses at
+Thebes. The only natural peculiarities of the face, causing it to differ
+from other faces around me, are the glowing, restless large eyes, which
+seem to take in everything at a glance. The character of the face,
+however, is seen to change rapidly; even in repose it lacks neither
+dignity nor power, but as cross thoughts flash through his mind the
+corners of the lips are drawn in, the eyes expand, the eyeballs project,
+his hands twitch nervously, and the native courtier begins to apprehend
+a volcanic outburst of rage. If pleased, however, the eyes appear to
+recede and contract, the lips relax their vigour, and soon a hearty
+laugh rings through the hall.
+
+But hush! here advance some ten or twelve people along the centre, and
+prostrate themselves before the Emperor, and begin through a spokesman
+to tell him of something to which, strangely enough, he does not seem to
+listen.
+
+By means of an interpreter we are informed that it is an embassy from
+the lawless bandit Mirambo, who, hearing that Mtesa was likely enough to
+send some 50,000 sharp spears to hunt him up, has sent these men with
+propitiating gifts, and a humble declaration that he has no cause of
+quarrel with Uganda. The gifts are unrolled to view and counted. So many
+cloths, so much wire, some half-dozen dinner plates of European make, an
+ample brass coffee tray, an Arab dagger silver-hilted, and a scarlet
+coat.
+
+Mtesa has been meanwhile carelessly talking to his chiefs while the
+embassy addressed him, but suddenly he turns on the embassy his large
+glowing eyes, and speaks quickly and with decision:—
+
+“Tell Mirambo from me that I do not want his gifts, but I must have the
+head of his man who slew my chief Singiri a year ago, as he was
+returning from Zanzibar to Uganda, or I will hunt him up with more
+Waganda than there are trees in his country. Go!”
+
+Another party now comes up. A chief is dead, and they wish to know who
+shall succeed him, and they have brought his sons along with them, that
+the Emperor may make his choice.
+
+Mtesa smiles and asks his chiefs to name the successor. One names
+Bugomba, another Taniziwa, another Kaseje, another Sempa. The chiefs
+fail to agree, and Mtesa asks playfully, “Which shall be chief?”
+whereupon the majority name Taniziwa as elected, after which we have to
+hear the “Twiyanzis” of the favoured one, and his ardent vows of
+allegiance to the Emperor.
+
+Just at this moment appears a long procession of females, old and young,
+at the sight of whom the Emperor rises to his feet, and his example is
+followed by all. Curious to know who they are, we ask, and are told that
+they are descendants of Kamanya and Suna, wards and members of the
+imperial family. These ladies, it appears, know when to time their
+visits, and contrive to enter the levee late, as European ladies, to
+attract attention, are supposed to enter church late.
+
+As these ladies advance to the carpet, Mtesa greets each with a kind
+word, and after they are seated proceeds to them, seats himself in their
+laps, and embraces one after another. In return for these imperial
+courtesies, they afterwards present him with live fowls, which he is
+compelled to receive with his own hands, and pass over to a chief to
+hold, that he may not appear to despise any of them. Surely if such a
+despotic monarch can condescend to be so affable and kind to females,
+there must be some good in him.
+
+But the Emperor on this morning has caught a cold, and the watchful
+chiefs have been observing the little uneasiness, and forthwith
+half-a-dozen rush forward prone on their knees, and offer their
+head-cloths, into which the imperial nose may relieve itself.
+
+The Emperor playfully draws back in his chair, and says, “Oh, I don’t
+want all these.”
+
+“Well, take mine,” says one.
+
+“No, take mine, Kabaka; mine is white, and of fine soft cloth;” and
+Mtesa, prevailed upon by the whiteness and softness of the texture,
+takes it, and relieves his afflicted nose, and then hands the cloth back
+to its owner, who rubs it together hard, as though he wished to punish
+well the cause of the affliction.
+
+Suddenly from some place in the hall is heard a hawking sound, as from
+some one likewise afflicted with a cold in the throat, and the eyes of
+the Emperor are quickly fixed on the person; but the chiefs cry out
+indignantly, “Out, out with you, quick!” and, peremptorily and sternly,
+half-a-dozen “lords of the cord” seize upon the unfortunate and eject
+him in no gentle manner.
+
+After this interruption the tones of the native harp are heard, and the
+Emperor calls to the minstrel and bids him play on his instrument, which
+the accomplished musician is nothing loth to do. But while we listen to
+the monotonous music, all are startled at the loud report of a gun!
+
+A dozen ejaculations are uttered, and as many chiefs rush out to enquire
+the cause; but they have been forestalled by the adroit and eager lords
+of the cord, who have thrown their nooses round the man’s neck and, half
+strangling him, drag him into the Presence, whose imperial nerves have
+been somewhat disturbed by the sudden discharge of gunpowder. The lords
+of the cord, kneeling, say that the man let his gun fall while on guard,
+and their eyes seem to ask, “What shall we do to him?” “Give him fifty
+blows with a stick,” cries the angry Emperor, and the unfortunate fellow
+is hauled away to receive such a punishment as will lame him for a
+month.
+
+There is now heard a lowing of cattle, of fat beeves and milch-cows, in
+the court before the audience-hall, and a man advances, and after
+prostration and “Twiyanzis” says he has brought a present from
+Mankorongo, king of Usui.
+
+“H’m. See to them, Katekiro, and give one to my steward Ka-uta to
+dress up, and let each chief have an ox to-day, and give ten to my
+bodyguard.” At this liberality all the chiefs rush forward, abase
+themselves in the dust, and cry aloud their fervid “Twiyanzis.”
+
+The chiefs resume their seats after this exhibition of their gratitude,
+and a messenger arrives from the banks of the Victoria Nile, and
+relates, to the monarch’s surprise, that Namionju, a petty prince near
+Unyoro, has cast off his allegiance to him, and opened negotiations with
+Kabba Rega, king of Unyoro.
+
+On hearing the messenger’s news, the Emperor exclaims, his eyes
+expanding widely, and projecting, “What! are all my people dead at
+Nakaranga? Have I no chief, no people left, that Namionju treats me so?”
+
+The answer is heard in the voices of the chiefs, who spring to
+their feet simultaneously and rush out before the entrance of the
+audience-hall, seize their spears or walking-sticks, and call aloud on
+the Emperor to behold and number his chiefs, and with wild impressive
+gestures toss their spears and arms on high until a stranger would
+fancy that a revolution had suddenly begun. The Emperor, however,
+calmly answers, “It is well,” upon which the chiefs leave their spears
+without and regain their seats.
+
+Then casting his eyes about him, he selects a fiery-looking young chief—
+Maoor-ugungu by name—who instantly darts forward from his seat, and
+prostrating himself exclaims, “_Kabaka_, I am here.”
+
+“Go, Maoor-ugungu, take five Watongoleh and their men, and eat up
+Namionju and his country.”
+
+Maoor-ugungu, prompt as tinder upon receiving such an order, utters many
+“Twiyanzis,” then springs to his feet, and, seizing a couple of spears
+and a shield, throws himself into a heroic attitude with all the ardour
+of a true son of Mars, and cries aloud:—
+
+“Emperor, behold me! The Emperor commands, and Namionju shall
+die, and I will gather the spoil. I will eat the land up clean.
+Twiyanzi-yanzi-yanzi-yanzi!” and so on _ad infinitum_.
+
+The Emperor rises. Tori the drummer beats the long roll on his drum, and
+all the chiefs, courtiers, pages, claimants, messengers and strangers,
+start to their feet. The Emperor—without a word more—retires by a side
+door into the inner apartments, and the morning burzah is ended.
+
+Those curious to know further of the Emperor’s life must pass through a
+multitude of sharp-eyed, watchful guards, pages, and executioners,
+thronging the court of the audience-hall, into the private courts, many
+of which they will find apparently of no use whatever except to ensure
+privacy, and to confuse a stranger.
+
+In one they may see Mtesa drilling his Amazons and playing at soldiers
+with his pets. They are all comely and brown, with fine virginal bosoms.
+But what strikes us most is the effect of discipline. Those timid and
+watchful eyes which they cast upon the monarch to discover his least
+wish prove that, though they may be devoted to him, it is evident that
+they have witnessed other scenes than those of love.
+
+In another court, perhaps, they may find Mtesa just sitting down to eat
+a slight noon meal, consisting of ripe bananas and curded milk; or they
+may find him laughing and chatting with his favourite wives and female
+children, who all sit around him, seeming to govern their faces
+according to the despot’s humour; or perhaps he may happen to be found
+with a favourite page examining the contents of the treasure-house,
+where the gifts of various travellers, European, Turkish, and Arabic,
+are stored; or he may be engaged with Tori, his factotum, planning some
+novelty, in the shape of a waggon, carriage, ship, or boat, or whatever
+the new fancy may be which has taken possession of his mind.
+
+THE LAND.
+
+Having learned somewhat through these sketches of the character of the
+peasant, the chief, and the monarch, it now remains for us to take a
+view of the land in order to understand its extent, nature, and general
+aspect.
+
+The form of the Empire governed by Mtesa may be best described as a
+crescent. Its length is about 300 geographical miles, and its breadth
+about 60, covering—with the islands of Sessé, Lulamba, Bufwe, Sadzi,
+Lulamha, Damba, Lukomeh, Iramba, Irwaji, Kiwa, Wema, Kibibi, Uziri,
+Wanzi, Uruma, Utamba, Mwama, Ugeyeya, Usamu, and Namungi—an area of
+30,000 square miles. If we reckon in also Unyoro, Ukedi, and Ankori,
+which recognize Mtesa’s power, and pay tribute to him, though somewhat
+irregularly, we must add a further area of 40,000 square miles, making
+the total extent of his empire about 70,000 square miles.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ [_To face page 314._
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ MTESA’S AMAZONS.
+ (_From a photograph by the Author._)
+]
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Some estimate of the population ought also to be offered. But it is to
+be understood that it is only a rough estimate, made by a traveller who
+has had to compile his figures by merely taking into consideration the
+number of the army assembled at Nakaranga, and enumerating districts and
+villages alone; the line of his travels.
+
+ Countries and Districts. Population.
+ Uganda proper (from Ripon Falls) to Katonga river 750,000
+ Uddu 100,000
+ Bwera 30,000
+ Koki 70,000
+ Usoga 500,000
+ Ukedi 150,000
+ Unyoro 500,000
+ Usagara or Ankori 200,000
+ Karagwé 150,000
+ Usui 80,000
+ Uzongora, including Ihangiro and Bumbireh 200,000
+ Sessé Island 20,000
+ Uvuma 15,000
+ All other islands 10,000
+ —————
+ 2,775,000
+ =========
+
+This number gives about thirty-eight persons to the square mile
+throughout the empire of Uganda.
+
+The productions of the land are of great variety, and, if brought
+within reach of Europeans, would find a ready market—ivory, coffee,
+gums, resins, myrrh, lion, leopard, otter, and goat[30] skins,
+ox-hides, snow-white monkey-skins, and bark cloth, besides fine cattle,
+sheep, and goats. Among the chief vegetable productions are the papaw,
+banana, plantain, yams, sweet potatoes, peas, several kinds of beans,
+melons, cucumbers, vegetable marrow, manioc, and tomatoes. Of grains,
+there are to be found in the neighbourhood of the capital wheat, rice,
+maize, sesamum, millets, and vetches.
+
+The soil of the lake coast region from the extremity of Usogo to the
+Alexandra Nile is of inexhaustible fertility. The forests are tall and
+dense, and the teak and cottonwood, tamarind, and some of the gum trees
+grow to an extraordinary height, while many of the lower uninhabited
+parts near the lake are remarkable for the density, luxuriance, and
+variety of their vegetation.
+
+The higher land, for the most part devoid of trees and covered with
+grass, appears better adapted for pasture, though the plantain and fig
+trees flourish on the summit of the hills with the same vigour as near
+the lake.
+
+Westward of the smooth, rolling, pastoral country which characterizes
+the interior of Usoga and Uganda, we observe that the land has lost its
+surface of pasture grass, and its gently undulating character, and
+heaves itself upwards into many-headed hills of rugged, abrupt forms,
+and as we penetrate farther, these hills become mountains of a
+stupendous type, with summits which, except on a fine clear day, the
+naked eye cannot define. Deep, deep valleys, from whose depths we hear
+the roar of resounding cataracts and falls, sunder these lofty
+mountains. Upon their lengthy slopes great masses of glistening white
+rock are seen half embedded in débris, where they have remained since
+they were severed from the parent mountain which raises its head so
+proudly into the sky above.
+
+Beyond this scene again we come to where the land appears to have
+concentrated itself, and fused all lesser mountains and hills into one
+grand enormous mass, the height and size of which dwarfs all hitherto
+seen, and which, disdaining vulgar observation, shrouds its head with
+snow and grey clouds.
+
+Indeed, so gradual is the transition and change in the aspect of
+the land from Lake Victoria to Beatrice Gulf that one may draw this
+one-hundred-miles-wide belt into five divisions of equal breadth,
+and class them according to the limits given above. Let us imagine
+a railway constructed to run from one lake to the other—what scenes
+unrivalled for soft beauty, luxuriance, fertility, and sublimity would
+be traversed!
+
+Starting from the sea-like expanse of the Victoria Lake, the traveller
+would be ushered into the depths of a tall forest, whose meeting tops
+create eternal night, into leafy abysms, where the gigantic sycamore,
+towering mvulé, and branchy gum strive with one another for room, under
+whose shade wrestle with equal ardour for mastery the less ambitious
+trees, bushes, plants, llianes, creepers, and palms. Out of this he
+would emerge into broad day, with its dazzling sunshine, and view an
+open rolling country, smooth rounded hills, truncated cones, and bits of
+square-browed plateaus, intersected by broad grassy meads and valleys
+thickly dotted with ant-hills overgrown with brushwood. Few trees are
+visible, and these, most likely, the candelabra or the tamarisk, with a
+sprinkling of acacia. As some obstructing cone would be passed, he would
+obtain glimpses of wide prospects of hill, valley, mead, and plain, easy
+swells and hollows, grassy basins, and grassy eminences, the whole
+suffused with fervid vapour.
+
+These scenes passed, he would find himself surrounded by savage hills,
+where he would view the primitive rock in huge, bare, round-backed
+masses of a greyish-blue colour, imparted to them by moss and lichens,
+or large fragments flung together as in some Cyclopean cairn, sundered
+and riven by warring elements. At their base lie, thickly strewn, the
+débris of quartz-veined gneiss and granite and iron-coloured rock, half
+choking the passage of some petty stream, which vents its petulance, as
+it struggles through it to gain the clear, disencumbered valley, and the
+placid river, guarded by banks of slender cane and papyrus.
+
+And then the traveller would observe that the valleys are gradually
+deepening, and the hills increasing in height until suddenly he
+would be ushered into the presence of that king of mountains, Mount
+Gordon-Bennett, which towers sheer up to the azure with a white veil
+about his crown, surrounded by clusters of savage heights and ridges,
+and before whose indisputable sublimity his soul seems to shrink.
+Escaping from the vicinity of this mountain monarch, he would be swept
+over a brown parched plateau for a short hour, and then, all suddenly,
+come to a pause at the edge of an awful precipice some 1500 feet in
+depth. At the bottom of this, slumbering serenely, and reflecting the
+plateau walls on its placid surface, lies the blue Muta Nzigé.
+
+ GENERAL REMARKS.
+
+I have still to add some details of interest. Mtesa, in the preceding
+introduction to the reader, playing the part of Emperor at a public
+burzah, has still only a vague and indistinct personality, and so, to
+complete the portrait, I venture to append the following remarks.
+
+On first acquaintance, as I have already said, he strikes the traveller
+as a most fascinating and a peculiarly amiable man, and should the
+traveller ever think of saving this pagan continent from the purgatory
+of heathendom, the Emperor must occur to him as of all men in Africa the
+most promising to begin with. For his intelligence and natural faculties
+are of a very high order, his professions of love to white men great,
+and his hospitality apparently boundless. Had he been educated in
+Europe, there can be little doubt but that he would have become a worthy
+member of society; but nursed in the lap of paganism, and graduate only
+in superstition and ignorance, he is to-day no more than an
+extraordinary African.
+
+Flattering as it may be to me to have had the honour of converting the
+pagan Emperor of Uganda to Christianity, I cannot hide from myself the
+fact that the conversion is only nominal, and that, to continue the good
+work in earnest, a patient, assiduous, and zealous missionary is
+required. A few months’ talk about Christ and His blessed work on earth,
+though sufficiently attractive to Mtesa, is not enough to eradicate the
+evils which thirty-five years of brutal, sensuous indulgence have
+stamped on the mind: this only the unflagging zeal, the untiring
+devotion to duty, and the paternal watchfulness of a sincerely pious
+pastor can effect. And it is because I am conscious of the insufficiency
+of my work, and his strong evil propensities, that I have not hesitated
+to describe the real character of my “convert.” The grand redeeming
+feature of Mtesa, though founded only on self-interest, is his
+admiration for white men.
+
+When the traveller first enters Uganda, his path seems to be strewn with
+flowers, greetings with welcome gifts follow one another rapidly, pages
+and courtiers kneel before him, and the least wish is immediately
+gratified, for to make a request of the Emperor is to honour him with
+the power of giving. So long as the stranger is a novelty, and his
+capacities or worth have not yet been sounded, his life in Uganda seems
+to be a sunshiny holiday.
+
+Meanwhile, however, the pages, pursuivants, messengers, and courtiers
+have been measuring him by rules and methods of their own. His faculties
+have been calculated, his abilities keenly observed and noted, and his
+general utility and value become accurately gauged, and all the time he
+has been entertained royally, and courted and favoured beyond all his
+expectations.
+
+But now approaches the time for him to make return, to fulfil the
+promise tacitly conveyed by his ready and friendly acceptance of gifts
+and favours. He is surprised by being asked if he can make gunpowder,
+manufacture a gun, cast a cannon, build a ship, or construct a stone or
+a brick house. If a priest ordained, and his garb and meek, quiet
+behaviour prove it, his work is ready cut for him; he has only to teach
+and preach. But if a soldier, why should he not know how to make guns,
+cannon, ships, brick houses, &c.? If he informs the Emperor that he is
+ignorant of these things, why then he must pay in other coin. He has
+guns with him, he must “give”; he has watches, “give”; he has various
+trifles of value, such as a gold pencil-case, or a ring, “give”; he
+wears good clothes, “give”; he has beads, cloth, wire, “Give, give,
+give”; and so “give” to his utter beggary and poverty. If he does not
+give with the liberality of a “Speki” or a “Stamlee,” who will
+henceforth be quoted to his confusion and shame, there will be found
+other ways to rid him of his superfluities. His men will be found
+unfaithful, and will desert, attracted by the rewards of Mtesa and
+glowing descriptions of his liberality, and one day, when he is about to
+congratulate himself that he is more fortunate than others, he will find
+himself suddenly bereft of half or three-fourths of his entire stock of
+goods. If the traveller states that he is acquainted with a few arts, he
+is expected to prove his words to the loss of his time and patience, and
+the waste of many precious months; even then what little he has been
+able to do with such lazy knaves as the Waganda will prove insufficient,
+and he also, by craft, will be relieved of a few guns and bales.
+
+From these exactions only the resident missionary would be exempt,
+because he will be able to make ample amends for all deficiencies by
+staying to teach and preach, and he in time would, in reality, be the
+Emperor. To him Mtesa would bend with all the docility of a submissive
+child, and look up with reverence and affection. The peculiar wayward,
+petulant, inconsistent nature would become moulded anew, or be re-born,
+to be presented henceforth to European travellers in an amiable, nay
+loveable, aspect. Mtesa is the most interesting man in Africa, and one
+well worthy of our largest sympathies; and I repeat that through him
+only can Central Africa be Christianized and civilized.
+
+It will be observed that I have styled Mtesa “Emperor” of Uganda, and
+not king, like my predecessors Speke and Grant. But my readers may
+remember that it has been mentioned in the brief sketch of the Premier
+given above that all the Waganda, from the Emperor to the peasant,
+change their titles and names according as they are estimated in the
+popular consideration.
+
+Before Suna’s death Mtesa was a Mlangira (prince); when he succeeded his
+father, being yet young, he received the title of Mukavya or Mkavya
+(king) of Uganda, but after he had distinguished himself in the conquest
+of other kings, and won the imperial right, this title was changed for
+Kabaka or Kawaka (Emperor). For the Empire of Uganda, as already
+described, embraces several countries besides Uganda proper.
+
+I was not aware of these several distinctions or grades until I had been
+a long time resident at the court. The title of Mkama, again, such as
+that of Mkama Rumanika of Karagwé, Mkama Mankorongo of Usui, is
+synonymous with viceroy or sub-king, though literally translated it
+means “lord.” Polite courtiers prone on the ground, abasing themselves
+in the dust before Mtesa, will often address him as “Mkama ange” (my own
+lord).
+
+The children of Mtesa are all styled Ulangira (princes). Below this
+title there seems to be no other designation of hereditary condition
+save Kopi (peasant). Wakungu and Watongoleh alike are peasants born, and
+therefore still peasants, though they may rank as chiefs and sub-chiefs,
+or governors and lieutenant-governors, or generals and colonels. Thus
+Mtesa at Nakaranga, when he was pleased to promise to reward him who
+first landed at Ingira Island with the place of Katekiro, asked the
+assembled chiefs, “For what is Pokino really? Is he not a peasant?”
+
+The moral character of the people is far below that of the Emperor.
+Indeed, if it were not for him, no stranger would dare to enter Uganda.
+They have no respect for human life or human rights. Among themselves
+they recognise only might, and Mtesa might even be pardoned for
+exercising greater severity than he does, for this fierce people
+requires to be governed with the almost unexampled severity of might and
+power which Suna so cruelly employed. They are crafty, fraudful,
+deceiving, lying, thievish knaves, taken as a whole, and seem to be born
+with an uncontrollable love of gaining wealth by robbery, violence, and
+murder, in which they resemble—except that they have the lawless
+instinct to a greater degree than most—nearly all African tribes. Owing,
+however, to their terror of punishment, the stranger is permitted to
+wander in almost certain safety throughout Uganda, and is hospitably
+treated as the “Emperor’s guest” (Mgeni). One has only to hear the word
+“Nganya” (spoil) given by a person in authority to be surprised at the
+greed there and then exhibited.
+
+The adage has long been accepted for true, “Like father like son,” and
+equally true would be the saying, “Like king like people.” The conduct
+of the chiefs proves that in Uganda at least it is true, for, like the
+Emperor, they adopt a despotic style, and require to be served by their
+inferiors with abject servility and promptitude. Like him, also, the
+chiefs are fond of pomp and display, and, as far as their rank and means
+permit, they exhibit this vanity to the utmost.
+
+Thus, the monarch has always about two score of drummers, a score of
+fifers, half a score of native guitar-players, several mountebanks,
+clowns, dwarfs, and albinoes, a multitude of errand-boys, pages,
+messengers, courtiers, claimants, besides a large number of bodyguards
+and two standard-bearers, either following or preceding him wherever he
+goes, to declare his state and quality. The chiefs, therefore, have also
+their followers, standard-bearers, and pages, and so on down to the
+peasant or cowherd, who makes an infantile slave trot after him to carry
+his shield and spears.
+
+In person the Waganda are tall and slender. I have seen hundreds of them
+above 6 feet 2 inches in height, while I saw one who measured 6 feet 6
+inches. Of course the native Waganda must be distinguished from
+strangers and slaves and their descendants imported from conquered
+lands, and generally they differ from these by their more pleasing looks
+and more agreeable features. This last, however, may be attributed to a
+general love of cleanliness, neatness, and modesty, which pervades all,
+from the highest to the lowest. A naked or immodest person is a
+downright abomination to a follower of Mtesa’s court, and even the
+poorest peasants frown and sneer at absolute nudity.
+
+It has been mentioned above that the Waganda surpass other African
+tribes in craft and fraud, but this may, at the same time, be taken as
+an indication of their superior intelligence. This is borne out by many
+other proofs. Their cloths are of finer make; their habitations are
+better and neater; their spears are the most perfect, I should say, in
+Africa, and they exhibit extraordinary skill and knowledge of that
+deadly weapon; their shields are such as would attract admiration in any
+land, while the canoes surpass all canoes in the savage world.
+
+The Waganda frequently have recourse to drawing on the ground to
+illustrate imperfect oral description, and I have often been surprised
+by the cleverness and truthfulness of these rough illustrations. When
+giving reasons firstly, secondly, and thirdly, they have a curious way
+of taking a stick and breaking it into small pieces. One piece of a
+stick delivered with emphasis, and gravely received by the listener in
+his palm, concludes the first reason, another stick announces the
+conclusion of the second reason, until they come to the “thirdly,” when
+they raise both hands with the palms turned from them, as if to say,
+“There, I’ve given you my reasons, and you must perforce understand it
+all now!”
+
+Nearly all the principal attendants at the court can write the Arabic
+letters. The Emperor and many of the chiefs both read and write that
+character with facility, and frequently employ it to send messages to
+one another, or to strangers at a distance. The materials which they use
+for this are very thin smooth slabs of cotton-wood. Mtesa possesses
+several score of these, on which are written his “books of wisdom,” as
+he styles the results of his interviews with European travellers. Some
+day a curious traveller may think it worth while to give us translations
+of these proceedings and interviews.
+
+The power of sight of these natives is extraordinary. Frequently a
+six-guinea field-glass was excelled by them. Their sense of hearing is
+also very acute.
+
+It is really wonderful into how many uses the ingenious savage of these
+regions can convert a simple plant. Regard the banana-plant, for
+instance. At first view, in the eyes of the untaught civilized man, it
+seems to be of no other use than to bear fruit after its kind, for the
+stalk of it cannot be employed as fuel, and its fronds soon fade and
+wither and rend, and unless the savage pointed out its various uses, I
+fear the civilized man would consider it of slight value. It is,
+however, of exceeding utility to the native of Uganda.
+
+1. Its fruit, green or ripe, forms his principal food. When green, the
+Waganda peels his bananas, folds them carefully up in the form of a
+parcel, enclosed in green banana-leaves, and, putting a small quantity
+of water in his pot, cooks them with the steam alone. This mode of
+cooking green bananas renders them floury in appearance, and, in taste,
+most sweet and palatable. When ripe, they form an admirable dessert,
+and, taken in the morning before coffee, serve with some constitutions
+as an agreeable laxative.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS.
+
+ 1. Kinauda. 2. Whistle of Ubujwe. 3. Caravan horn of guide.
+ 4. Drum of Uzimba. 5. Flute of kopi or peasant. 6. Drum of
+ Uganda. 7. Guitar of Usoga. 8. Great war-drum of Uganda.
+ 9. Guitar of Uganda. 10. One-stringed banjo of Unyamwezi.
+]
+
+Of the banana proper, there are several varieties, each distinguished by
+a special name, just as the European gardener distinguishes his several
+varieties of potatoes. Some are 3 inches in length, with deep green
+coats, and seem fat with matter. Others, 6 inches in length, and of a
+lighter green colour, are considered the best; others are short, plumpy
+fruit, great favourites also. There is another species, known by a dark
+point, rather bitter to the taste and unfit for food, but specially
+reserved for the manufacture of wine, for which it alone is adapted.
+
+2. The fruit of this latter species furnishes the natives with the
+maramba, a honey-sweet, cider-flavoured wine, and, when mixed with a
+little millet, sweet beer also. When fermented and perfect, the latter
+is a potent liquid, and a quart suffices to disturb the equilibrium of
+many men; but there are old topers, like Prince Kaduma, who would toss
+off a gallon and be apparently only slightly elated after it. A small
+draught of maramba taken at dawn I found beneficial to the system.
+
+3. The banana-fronds serve as thatch for houses, fences for enclosures,
+and as bedding. They are also used to protect milk, water, and flour
+vessels from dust and impurities, are employed as table-cloths, on
+which food is spread, and, like newspapers or brown paper, are used
+as wrappers for gifts of eatables, such as ripe bananas, butter,
+meat, eggs, fish, &c., while they serve daily and universally as
+pudding-cloths in the Kiganda households. The cool, thick shade
+afforded by a banana plantation is well known.
+
+4. The stems are sometimes used for fences and defensive enclosures;
+they are also frequently employed as rollers, to move heavy logs, or for
+the transportation of canoes overland from point to point, when the
+strategies of war demand it. The pith or heart of the stalk is scraped
+and made into sponges of a dough-cake pattern, and may be seen in almost
+all Kiganda lavatories. Frequently the indolent prefer to knead a fresh
+sponge-cake and make their ablutions with this to going to the river,
+lake, pond, or well, or troubling themselves to fetch a vessel of water.
+
+The fibres of the stalk are used as cord, and are adapted for almost
+every purpose for which cord is useful. The poorest peasants make rough
+but serviceable shields also from the stalk, while the fishermen of the
+lake make large sun-hats from it. Many other uses might be mentioned,
+but the above are sufficient to prove that, besides its cool agreeable
+shade, the banana-plant will supply a peasant of Uganda with bread,
+potatoes, dessert, wine, beer, medicine, house and fence, bed, cloth,
+cooking-pot, table-cloth, parcel-wrapper, thread, cord, rope, sponge,
+bath, shield, sun-hat, even a canoe—in fact almost everything but meat
+and iron. With the banana-plant, he is happy, fat, and thriving; without
+it, he is a famished, discontented, woe-begone wretch, hourly expecting
+death.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ NGOGO FISH.
+
+ 10 inches long, 3 inches deep; scaleless; horn at each shoulder; two
+ long thick filaments on upper lip, four on lower. Found in Speke
+ Gulf, Lake Victoria.
+]
+
+-----
+
+# 29:
+
+ This part of Pokino’s history was related to me by Pokino himself,
+ Kitunzi, Sambuzi, and his page.
+
+# 30:
+
+ The white goats of Usoga are like the famous Angora goats, with fine
+ silky hair from 4 to 8 inches in length.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+
+ TO MUTA NZIGÉ AND BACK TO UGANDA.
+
+The ladies of Mtesa’s family—Sambuzi ordered to take me to Muta Nzigé—My
+ last evening with Mtesa—_En route_ for Muta Nzigé—Sambuzi suffers from
+ “the big head”—We come to an understanding—The white people of
+ Gambaragara—War music—Through a deserted country—Sinister auguries—A
+ cowards’ council of war—Panic in the camp—Sambuzi announces his
+ intention of deserting me—The flight when none pursued—The “Spoiler”
+ eaten up—Mtesa tries to persuade me to return—At Kafurro.
+
+
+_Oct. 29._—On the 29th of October Mtesa and his grand army arrived at
+the old capital of Ulagalla. There was but little demonstration made to
+welcome the monarch from the war, except what was made by the females of
+the imperial household, who were mustered in strong force under the
+leadership of Nana Mazuri, the Emperor’s mother, a venerable old lady of
+decidedly masculine mind, and of a revengeful and fierce disposition.
+
+The Emperor honours his mother greatly, and bestowed hearty embraces
+on her and on the ancient relicts of Suna his father, who were also
+brought to meet him and to do him honour, and to receive the son of
+heroic Suna as became their respect for him and their awe of his rank
+and power. Lu-lu-luing and welcomes and fond smiles were the order of
+the day; a great drinking of maramba wine and potent beer followed; and
+musketry salutes, killing of beeves and goats, and interchanging of
+presents, closed the day of the return to the capital.
+
+After allowing a few days to transpire for rest, I began to recall to
+the Emperor’s mind the original purpose of my visit to him, and of his
+promise to conform to my request. He consented to my departure, and
+kindly permitted me to make my own choice out of his chiefs for the
+leader of the force which was to give its aid to our Expedition for the
+exploration of the country between Muta Nzigé and Lake Victoria. I
+selected Sambuzi, a young man of thirty years of age or thereabouts,
+whose gallantry and personal courage had several times been
+conspicuously displayed during the war with the Wavuma, and whose rank
+and station guaranteed a force strong enough to withstand, if well
+managed, a greater power than the king of Unyoro—then at war with Gordon
+Pasha—could conveniently despatch to oppose us.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ DESCRIPTION OF THE ILLUSTRATION.—1. East Manyema spear. 2. Urundi,
+ Karagwé, and Uhha spear. 3. Unyoro shield. 4. Uregga knife. 5. Rua
+ knife. 6. Uvuma and Usoga knife. 7. Manyema knife. 8. Uregga knife.
+ 9. Uganda knife. 10. Ukerewé knife. 11. Clubs and walking stick. 12.
+ Ordinary spear of Unyamwezi. 13. Uregga spear. 14. Uganda macheté.
+ 15. Manyema shield. 16. Uhyeya billhook. 17. Uganda shield. 18.
+ Unyamwezi billhook. 19. Usongora and Bumbireh shield. 20. Usongora
+ and Bumbireh macheté. 21. Manyema spear. 22. Uganda spear.
+]
+
+Mtesa, admitting that Sambuzi was a wise choice, stated with the usual
+exaggeration of an African or an Oriental that he should have 5000
+warriors, and all the chiefs at the levee concurred with him. On my
+request to him that he would repeat, clearly and within hearing of all,
+his commands to Sambuzi, Mtesa called the chief to him, who, while
+prostrate on the ground, received the following command in a loud and
+clear voice:—
+
+“Sambuzi, my guest Stamlee is going to Muta Nzigé. He has asked that you
+should lead the Waganda to the lake, and I have consented. Now listen to
+my words. Nearly all the white men who have accepted my people as escort
+complain that the Waganda gave great trouble to them. Let me not hear
+this of you. I shall send messengers to Kabba Rega to inform him of your
+object, and command him to abstain from molesting you. Now go, muster
+all your men, and I shall send four sub-chiefs with 1000 men each under
+Watongoleh to assist you. Do whatever Stamlee advises or suggests should
+be done, and by no means return to Uganda until you have absolutely
+performed my commands. If you do return without Stamlee’s letter
+authorizing you to abandon the project, you will dare my anger. I have
+said.”
+
+“Thanks, thanks, thanks, oh, thanks, my lord!” Sambuzi replied, rubbing
+his face in the dust. Then standing up, he seized his spears, and,
+levelling them, cried out: “I go at the Emperor’s command to take
+Stamlee to the Muta Nzigé. I shall take Stamlee through the heart of
+Unyoro to the lake. We shall build a strong boma, and stay there until
+Stamlee has finished his work. Who shall withstand me? My drum shall be
+sounded for the muster to-day, and I shall gather all the young men of
+the Katonga valley under my flag! When Sambuzi’s flag is seen, the
+Wanyora will fly and leave my road white and free, for it is _Kabaka_
+who sends him, and Sambuzi comes in the name of _Kabaka_! Thanks,
+thanks, oh, many thanks, my lord, my own dear lord!”
+
+The eve of my departure was spent in conversation with the Emperor, who
+seemed really sorry that the time had arrived for a positive and final
+leave-taking. The chief subject of conversation was the Christian
+church, which had just begun to be erected, where the rites of the
+Church were to be performed by Dallington after the style and manner
+shown to him by the Universities mission at Zanzibar, until one more
+worthy to take his place should arrive.
+
+We went together over the grounds of the Christian faith, and Mtesa
+repeated to me at my request as much as he knew of the advantages to be
+gained by the adoption of the Christian religion, and of its superiority
+to that of Islam, in which he had first been taught. By his remarks he
+proved that he had a very retentive memory, and was tolerably well
+posted in his articles of belief. At night I left him with an earnest
+adjuration to hold fast to the new faith, and to have recourse to prayer
+to God to give him strength to withstand all temptations that should
+tend to violate the commandments written in the Bible.
+
+Early next morning my convert sent me many presents as tokens of his
+esteem, such as four shields, sixteen spears, twelve knives, ten
+billhooks, six walking-sticks, twelve finely prepared skins and furs of
+wild animals, 20 lbs. of myrrh, four white monkey-skins, ten beeves,
+sixteen goats, bananas and beer and wine, and an escort of one hundred
+warriors to proceed by the lake to Dumo.
+
+For our mutual friend Lukongeh, king of Ukerewé, he sent at my request
+five long tusks of ivory, one comely virgin of fifteen as a wife
+suitable for a king, being of the beautiful race of Gambaragara, also 20
+lbs. of fine iron wire, six white monkey-skins, and one large new canoe,
+capable of carrying fifty men.
+
+For my friend the king of Komeh Island and the lake shore of Uzinja he
+sent the same, and distributed beeves among the ambassadors from the
+king, whom I had brought to receive these presents.
+
+From myself I sent to my kind friend Lukongeh one bale of assorted
+cloth, two coils of brass wire, 60 lbs. of fine beads, and two suits of
+blue and red flannel, besides a plush velvet rug.
+
+Happy that I had so prospered despite the vexatious delay which was
+unavoidable, and that I had been able to do even more than I had
+promised to the kings of Ukerewé and Komeh, I set out from Ntewi with
+twenty large canoes full of Waganda warriors, five canoes for my own
+special escort, two to escort the embassy of Ukerewé home, two to escort
+the embassy of Komeh home, and eleven to open trade by the lake route,
+with Unyanyembé viâ Kagehyi—also a suggestion of mine.
+
+On the same day that I set out from Ntewi, Sambuzi led a thousand men
+from Ulagalla overland to our rendezvous on the Katonga river, where he
+was to be joined by the Expedition from Dumo, and the four sub-chiefs
+Sekajugu, Mkoma, Kurji, and Ngezi.
+
+Our party proceeding by the lake were hospitably entertained at Nakavija
+by the grand admiral of Mtesa, Gabunga, and by Jumba, vice-admiral at
+Unjaku, with beeves, milk, wine, beer, bananas, tomatoes, and sweet
+potatoes.
+
+At Ujaju our india-rubber pontoon was condemned, and a new and light
+canoe was substituted for it, and named the _Livingstone_, to take to
+Muta Nzigé to assist the _Lady Alice_ in the exploration of that lake.
+
+After four days’ coasting we arrived at Dumo, and greeted the Expedition
+after an absence of three months and five days. Frank Pocock had enjoyed
+splendid health, and the soldiers showed by their robust forms that they
+had lived on the best in Uddu, and that the Emperor’s commands
+respecting them had not been neglected. All this time they had been
+sustained free of cost to me, and I could not find it in my heart to
+return the Waganda escort back to the Emperor without some token of my
+gratitude, and accordingly I made up a present of four bales of cloth,
+and 140 lbs. of choice beads, besides various other presents.
+
+A few days sufficed to reform the Expedition, repack all loads, and to
+prepare the boat, which had now seen nearly nine months of rough service
+on Lake Victoria, for transport overland to Muta Nzigé.
+
+The _Livingstone_ canoe was also taken to pieces, and made into portable
+loads for the journey. This canoe was 23 feet long, 34 inches wide, and
+2 feet deep, and was formed of four long planks and one keel-piece sewn
+together with cane fibre, which, with the thwarts and bow-piece, formed
+light portable loads for seven men.
+
+On the seventh day after my return to Dumo we began the march towards
+the general rendezvous of the exploring army on the Katonga river. We
+journeyed through Uddu in a north-north-westerly direction, until,
+striking the Kyogia river, we followed the course of that tributary of
+the Katonga river as far as Kikoma, when we crossed the stream and
+entered the country of Bwera, which lies parallel to Uddu, and extends
+from Koki westward of Uddu as far as the Katonga river.
+
+At Kikoma we were compelled to come to a halt until Sambuzi was informed
+of our arrival, and guides could be obtained from him to lead us to the
+rendezvous.
+
+Meanwhile I took advantage of the halt to hunt game and to obtain
+meat-provision for the expedition. During the five days of our halt
+here I was so fortunate as to shoot fifty-seven hartebeest, two zebra,
+and one water-buck. The abundance of game in this wild debatable
+district, and the immunity they enjoy from man—in consequence of the
+numerous lions and leopards, and also the neighbourhood of raiders
+from the hostile country of Ankori—was the principal cause of my great
+success. The first day I set out I bagged five fine animals within
+a few minutes, which astonished not only the Waganda body-guards of
+Mtesa, but also myself.
+
+We heard of lions as being abundant in the neighbourhood of Kikoma, but
+though I roved far into the wilderness west of Kikoma, I never saw the
+slightest trace of either lions or leopards.
+
+The arrival of guides from “General” Sambuzi broke up our halt, and
+caused us to resume our march, and the second day brought us to the
+Katonga river, or rather lagoon, for I could detect no running water.
+The bed of the Katonga is about half a mile wide, choked with spear
+grass and papyrus, with stagnant water 3, 4, and even 7 feet deep in
+some places.
+
+The crossing of the Katonga consumed an entire day, and was effected by
+means of the _Lady Alice_, which had to be forced through the dense
+reeds. At Ruwewa, on the north bank of the Katonga, Sambuzi’s delay
+caused us another halt of five days, which was a sore tax on my
+patience, and but little in accordance with either my hopes or Mtesa’s
+instructions. However, we were so far entered into the enterprise, and
+were now so remote from any other possible means of advance, that we had
+to console ourselves with the reflection that “what cannot be mended
+must be borne,” though mentally I cruelly condemned our dilatory
+general. The landscape between Dumo and the Katonga river presents
+smooth, rounded, hilly ridges separated by broad, grassy valleys dotted
+with ant-hills and scantily clothed with brushwood. It is a fine
+pastoral country, eminently suited for grazing, but in the absence of a
+sufficient population it is a famous haunt for noble game, so
+unsuspicious as to be easily accessible to a tolerable shot. In the
+uninhabited portions of the country few trees are seen, save the rugged
+euphorbiæ.
+
+The eye here commands many views of extensive prospects of rolling
+country, of grassy hills and grassy valleys, following one another in
+regular series.
+
+As we all enjoyed unusual good health during our journey through this
+country, one could not help fancying that it was to the far-receding
+prospects opening on every side that we owed much of our healthfulness.
+It was certain that the blood flowed quicker, that the eye kindled with
+brighter light, and that we breathed more freely when we stood on one of
+those high, commanding grassy ridges and somewhat fondly compared the
+land to others we had seen elsewhere, where fever and ague were not so
+prevalent.
+
+To describe Uddu and Bwera in detail would be a tedious task, for there
+is much sameness of outline in hill and valley, swell and hollow, ridge
+and basin, but viewed as a whole from the summit of any eminence, there
+is something really noble and grand in the survey.
+
+I observed that the parts inhabited by the Waganda are, as a rule, the
+ridges and tabular summits of the hills, and that the hollows and basins
+are left for grazing purposes to the roving Wahuma shepherds.
+
+On the sixth day after our arrival at Ruwewa, in the district of
+Kahwangau, we marched to Laugurwe, where we met—as courtiers had
+pre-informed us—General Sambuzi with a thousand men. We camped half
+a mile off from the general, occupying an entire village, from the
+plantations of which we were at liberty to help ourselves to our
+hearts’ content. Sambuzi’s force occupied the villages north of us.
+
+In the afternoon I called to pay my respects to the general, for common
+sense informed me that the best way of attaining the objects in view was
+to pay the utmost possible attention to the failings of this African
+general, and to observe all ceremony and politeness towards him.
+
+During the war with Uvuma, while I was a constant and honoured attendant
+at the morning levee of the Emperor, Sambuzi had occupied with his force
+the ground in rear of our detachment, and this chief had then courted my
+friendship most assiduously. This in fact was one of the reasons why I
+had made choice of him, and preferred his name to Mtesa. But when I now
+saw him, I found his behaviour to be an overacted imitation of the
+Emperor, without the monarch’s courtliness and kindliness of manner.
+
+As I entered the court, which had been constructed with a view to
+enhance his dignity, if space can be said to increase dignity, I
+observed that the general stood up from amongst his subordinates and
+stiffly maintained that position until I grasped him by the hand, when
+he managed to utter a faint greeting in response to mine.
+
+I was not altogether unprepared for this result of his promotion; still
+it chilled me, angered me a little, I must confess, and induced me to
+ask him if anything was wrong. “No,” he said, “nothing was wrong.”
+
+“Then why are you so stiff with your friend?” I asked. “Do you not like
+the idea of going to Muta Nzigé? If you regret your appointment, I can
+apply for another man.”
+
+“My liking or not liking the journey will not alter the command of
+_Kabaka_,” he replied. “I have received my commands to take you to Muta
+Nzigé, and I will take you there. I am not a child, I am a man, and my
+name is known pretty well in Unyoro, for the Wanyoro and Wasongora have
+felt the sharpness of my spear, and it is not likely that they can turn
+me back before I bring you to the lake. I stand in the place of _Kabaka_
+now, for I represent him here, and the army is under my command.
+Sambuzi, your friend at Uvuma, is changed now to Sambuzi the general.
+You understand me?”
+
+“Perfectly,” I answered. “I have a few words to say in reply, and you
+will then understand me as well as I understand you. I wish to go to
+Muta Nzigé lake. So long as you take me there and do exactly as the
+Emperor has commanded you, you shall have as much honour and respect
+from me as though you were the Emperor himself, and besides that you
+shall have so rich a reward that the Katekiro of Uganda himself will
+envy you. With your mode of marching and camping I have nothing to do so
+long as we are in Uganda, but when we enter Unyoro, I would advise you
+as a friend, since we are about to enter the country against the will of
+the people, that you keep the army together, that one camp be made and
+good positions occupied, and that when any trouble threatens us, you do
+not act without the advice of others, able and willing to give advice.
+That is all.”
+
+“It is well,” he said, “we understand one another now. We will march by
+slow degrees as far as the frontier, that the other chiefs may have time
+to come up, and you shall then judge for yourself whether the Waganda
+know how to march.”
+
+Considered as we would consider of things European, Sambuzi could not be
+blamed for assuming dignity, and I therefore excused what otherwise
+might be called gross behaviour on his part. Sambuzi’s force would be
+quite twenty times stronger in numbers than mine, and he was my only
+means of pushing through Unyoro. Prudence counselled me therefore not to
+let false pride be an obstacle to the accomplishment and success of the
+enterprise, and I determined to listen to its counsel.
+
+Our journey to Kawanga, on the frontier of Uganda, was along the north
+bank of the Katonga, through an open rolling country, cut up frequently
+by watercourses which feed the Katonga. These watercourses, though
+called rivers, show no running stream, but only river-like marshes or
+broad “rush drains,” choked with spear-grass and papyrus of the same
+nature as the Katonga. North or south of the Katonga, at the distance of
+ten miles or so, the land rises rapidly, and here numerous streams of
+clear, sweet water take their origin, but in their descent to the
+Katonga valley they become united and absorbed by great breadths of
+river-like marshes, the oozy contents of which are drained by the broad
+lagoon-like Katonga.[31] It maintains this character until near the base
+of a low hill which separates the feeders of Muta Nzigé from those of
+Lake Victoria. The crest of this hill is not more than 250 feet above
+the bed of the Katonga, and it is not more than two miles from its
+eastern to its western base, yet along the eastern base curves the bed
+of the Katonga from the north-west, and along the western rushes the
+Rusango, from the foot of Mount Lawson southward towards the Muta Nzigé.
+
+Except in the vicinity of the Katonga there is scarcely one square mile
+of level ground to be seen. Our eyes dwelt everywhere on grassy hollows,
+slopes, and ridges, and the prospect each day was bounded by lines of
+blue hills, which, as we progressed westward, assumed mountainous
+altitudes.
+
+At Kawanga, when Sambuzi’s force had been all collected, our army
+consisted of fighting-men as follows:—
+
+ The _Daily Telegraph and New York Herald_ expedition 180
+ Sambuzi, general 1000
+ Mkoma, colonel 250
+ Ngezi, colonel 250
+ Sekajugu, colonel 450
+ Mrowla, captain 100
+ Kurji, captain 40
+ ———
+ 2270
+ Mtesa’s bodyguards under Sabadu (sergeant) 20
+ ———
+ Total 2290
+
+Following this little army there were about 500 women and children,
+giving a grand total of nearly 2800 souls.
+
+With Colonel Sekajugu were four men of Gambaragara, who were of a
+remarkably light complexion, approaching to that of dark-faced
+Europeans, who differed altogether in habits and manners from the
+Waganda. They possessed their own milch-cows, and their diet appeared to
+consist entirely of milk. The features of these people, besides their
+complexion, were so regular and remarkable that my curiosity was aroused
+to the highest pitch concerning them. I had seen stray representatives
+of these people at the court of Mtesa, but I had not the opportunity
+then that I had now to enquire definitely about them. I here set down,
+as I was told, what I gathered respecting them, both from their own lips
+and those of Colonel Sekajugu, who was the best informed of the Waganda.
+
+These light-complexioned, regular-featured people are natives of
+Gambaragara—a country situated between Usongora and Unyoro. Gambaragara
+embraces all the immediate districts neighbouring the base of the lofty
+Mount Gordon-Bennett, upon the summit of which snow is often seen. We
+caught a view, as we travelled through Unyoro, of this lofty mountain,
+which lay north-westerly from Western Benga, in Unyoro; but the distance
+was too great for me to describe it exactly. It appeared to be an
+enormous and blunted cone about 14,000 or 15,000 feet high.
+
+According to Sekajugu, the mountain springs up in a series of terraces
+from a level plain; numerous waterfalls plunge down its steep slopes,
+and two days are usually occupied in the ascent to the highest summit.
+The king, Ny-ika, with his principal chiefs and their families, live
+during war-time on the highest part of the mountain, which appears to
+be, from report, something like an extinct crater. They described it to
+me as a hollow surrounded by high walls of rock, which contains a small
+round lake, from the centre of which rises a lofty columnar rock. It is
+very cold there, and snow frequently falls. The slopes, base, and summit
+are thickly populated, but though powerful in numbers, the courage and
+skill of the people in war are much derided by the Waganda, who speak of
+them as preferring to take refuge in caves, and on the summits of almost
+inaccessible rocks, to venturing into the open for a fair fight.
+
+Though probably inferior in courage to the Waganda, they must have
+distinguished themselves in war at one time, otherwise I cannot account
+for the brave and warlike people of Usongora being the subjects of
+Nyika, king of Gambaragara.
+
+This king possesses several villages in different parts of the mountain,
+and appears to move from one to another, as his numerous herds of cattle
+become stinted in their pasture. Milk being the principal diet of these
+people, it may be supposed that cattle are abundant in Gambaragara and
+Usongora. The Katekiro of Uganda in his great raid on this region is
+said to have collected “50,000” head of cattle. General Sambuzi
+accompanied him during that famous time, and has often amused my leisure
+hours with lively descriptions of his adventures.
+
+The people are a peculiarly formed race. At one time they are said to
+have been all white, and to have emigrated from Northern Unyoro, but at
+the present time the black and light-complexioned are about equal in
+numbers. The blacks are the result of successive wars during ancient
+times and intermarriages between the captors and captives, the result
+being a singularly long-limbed and slender-bodied people. The royal
+family and the chiefs’ families continue to preserve their
+exclusiveness, and hence it is that the original colour of the founders
+of the state has been preserved. The women are said to be singularly
+beautiful; I have seen several of them, and though I will not call them
+beautiful, as we understand the term in Europe and America, they are
+superior to any women I have seen in Africa, and have nothing in common
+with negroes except the hair. They are said also to be entrusted with
+the keeping of the charms of Kabba Rega, and to be endowed by hereditary
+right with the privilege of priests of the Muzimu of Unyoro.
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ [_To face page 336._
+
+[Illustration: MARCHING THROUGH UNYORO: MOUNT GORDON-BENNETT IN THE
+DISTANCE.]
+
+ ----------------------------------------------------------------
+
+To my disappointment I heard of nothing that would lead me to suppose
+they were superior to their less favoured neighbours in manners or
+customs or their ways and means of life.
+
+_Jan. 1._—On New Year’s Day, 1876, the exploring army, nearly 2800
+strong, filed out from under the plantain shades of Kawanga, each
+detachment under the flag of its respective leader, and each known by
+the particular style of music adopted by the great chief to whom it owed
+martial service. Thus Sambuzi’s own force could be distinguished at a
+great distance by a peculiar strain, which, as the Waganda explained,
+announced, “Mta-usa, Mta-usa is coming!” or, “The Spoiler, the Spoiler
+is coming!” Lukoma’s bands of music in the same way rang out, “Mkoma,
+Lukoma is near!” “Look out for Lukoma!” Sekajugu’s name, on the other
+hand, appeared after the style of ding-dong-bell, or drawn out into
+“Se-ka-ju-gu, Sekajugu!”
+
+On emerging from under the shelter of our plantain-embowered camp,
+we were drawn up in a long line along the narrow road. Sekajugu was
+appointed to take the advance, Lukoma the rear, Sambuzi and the
+Anglo-American Expedition the centre, while the smaller detachments,
+under Colonel Ngezi, Mrowla, and Kurji, took positions on the right
+and left, to keep the main column undisturbed by ambuscades. There was
+no time lost in these arrangements, and at sunrise the great drum of
+Sambuzi gave the signal for the march. At noon we occupied a deserted
+camp, known as the Salt Bunder, on the Nabutari river, which separated
+Unyoro from Uganda. The heights on the opposite side were observed to
+be manned by many Wanyoro.
+
+With the eastern bank of the Nabutari, or Nabwari, river terminated the
+soft pastoral scenes among which our route had lain ever since leaving
+Dumo, on Lake Victoria, for from the western bank began a more rugged
+country, which, as we proceeded westward, daily assumed a more
+mountainous character. The country resolved itself into mountain masses
+of great altitude—bare and serrated hilly ridges, isolated craggy hills,
+separated by a rolling country, whose surface often presented great
+sheets of ironstone rock, mixed with fragments of granite. Each day’s
+march presented two or three mountains of unusual height, which,
+dwarfing all others, became of great service to us in taking bearings
+and laying down a correct route.
+
+_Jan. 2._—On the 2nd of January we crossed the Nabutari, or Nabwari,
+river, and entered hostile Unyoro, and, undisturbed, made a march of ten
+miles, occupying at the end of it several villages in Southern Ruoko,
+Unyoro. Had we not been informed of the change, we should have
+recognised at once the fact that we had entered into a new country, by
+the difference in the construction of the huts, and in the vegetables
+which formed the principal subsistence of the natives. While in Uganda
+bananas formed our principal food—and very good, wholesome, and
+digestible they proved—throughout Unyoro our diet consisted of sweet
+potatoes and salt, varied with such other vegetables as foraging could
+obtain.
+
+It was an amusing scene to see the haste with which the several
+detachments rushed about to dig up their rations. It appeared at first
+glance as if we had brought the exploring army to recultivate Unyoro, so
+thickly strewn and so busy were the diggers over the village fields. The
+digging was continued until sunset, and such quantities of potatoes came
+to camp that I fancied something like a desire to plunder the Wanyoro
+animated our people.
+
+In the meantime our advance was unchecked, and our occupation of
+Southern Ruoko unmolested; Sambuzi and Sekajugu drew from this sinister
+auguries. “The Wanyoro,” said they, “must be mustering elsewhere to
+oppose us; for usually, when we make a raid on this country, the natives
+hail us from the hill-tops, to learn the motive of our coming; but now
+the country is all silent and deserted; not one native can be seen.”
+They therefore determined to send out spies in all directions, to
+ascertain the feeling of the natives respecting our strange invasion of
+their country; and in order to give time to obtain correct information,
+a halt was ordered for the next day.
+
+_Jan. 5._—On the 5th January the various musical bands and war-drums
+announced another march. The Waganda being unencumbered with baggage,
+except such bedding, mats, and superfluous robes as their women carried,
+marched quickly, and tasked the heavily loaded expedition greatly; but
+my people did not fail me; they had long ago been thoroughly drilled for
+such occasions as the present, and they kept step and pace with the
+lightly equipped Waganda. The men who carried the boat-sections and
+canoe raced like horses, and arrived soon after the advanced-guard at
+camp. Traversing the district of South Ruoko, we plunged into an
+uninhabited tract of mountain country, and, after a march of eleven
+miles, camped at Kazinga, in Eastern Benga.
+
+_Jan. 6._—The next day we crossed the Katonga, for our course was now
+westerly, and occupied Western Benga, from the summit of a tall hill in
+which we obtained a faint view of an enormous blue mass afar off, which
+we were told was the Great Mountain in the country of Gambaragara. I
+named it Gordon-Bennett, in honour of my American chief.
+
+[Illustration: MOUNT EDWIN ARNOLD.]
+
+Our foragers here obtained for the first time a sight and hearing of
+some natives, who shouted out that we might proceed without fear, though
+they doubted our ability to return, unless we took wings like birds and
+flew aloft. Some hiding-places of the natives were also discovered by
+accident amongst the tall grass beyond the fields. A little way from the
+village we found many deep pits, with small circular mouths, which
+proved, on examination, to lead by several passages from the mouth of
+the pit to more roomy excavations, like so many apartments. These
+underground dwellings are numerous in Southern Unyoro.
+
+_Jan. 8._—After a march of sixteen miles through a wild country we
+camped, on the 8th of January, on the east bank of the Mpanga river.
+This stream takes its rise near the base of Mount Gordon-Bennett, and,
+flowing a few miles to the east of the lofty hump of Mount Edwin Arnold,
+is met by the Rusango river, flowing north-west from Mount Lawson, in
+the district of Kibanga, in Ankori; the two streams then, united, rush
+with impetuous force a little north of west, and, after several falls,
+plunge into Beatrice Gulf. Mount Edwin Arnold, of an altitude of some
+9000 feet above the sea, stood west of our camp, on the Mpanga, at the
+distance of six miles.
+
+We had now left Unyoro proper and entered Ankori, or Usagara. An old
+dilapidated wooden enclosure denoted that this extreme corner of Ankori
+was sometimes visited by Wasagara herdsmen for the sake of pasture.
+
+The average altitude of our several camps since leaving the Victoria
+Lake did not exceed 4600 feet; but as we drew west, the nights were
+bitterly cold. On the night of the 7th the thermometer fell to 53°
+Fahr., and on the night of the 8th to 55° Fahr., this cold temperature
+being, no doubt, caused by night winds from Gordon-Bennett Mountain.
+Fogs, rivalling the famed November fogs in London, prevailed as a rule
+every morning, rendering the earlier part of each day damp,
+disagreeable, and cheerless. It was so thick that a man’s form could not
+be seen at the distance of fifty yards, and horn and drums alone guided
+us on our march. During the afternoons the atmosphere slightly cleared,
+and the sun, struggling in the western skies from behind deep banks of
+sullen clouds, endeavoured to announce to us that the day was far spent.
+
+_Jan. 9._—On the 9th of January, 1876, the drums sounded for the march
+two hours before sunrise, for we had a long journey before us, and
+Uzimba, the country of chief Ruigi, was to be entered on this day.
+
+Until daylight we journeyed along, or not far from, the Rusango, its
+many falls, rapids, and cascades telling of the rapid rush and furious
+plunge of the river towards Muta Nzigé. Dawn found us in a singularly
+wild and beautifully picturesque country, the Switzerland of Africa.
+
+Peaks, cones, mountain humps, and dome-like hills shot up in every
+direction, while ice-cold streams rolled between riven and dismantled
+rocks or escaped beneath natural bridges of rock, with furious roar.
+These gritty sandstone obstructions to the Rusango’s waters presented
+most distorted and eccentric forms, appearing often like masses of
+scoriæ. The traces of some agency, which long ago had convulsed this
+region, were visible in what appeared to be the wreck of mountains. The
+strata were perpendicular, seams of white quartz travelled along the lay
+of the strata in some places, and in others it appeared to have been
+encased in round moulds, which the impetuous waters, with their
+ceaseless wear and tear, had worn through, sweeping away the quartz, and
+leaving large hollows, cavities, and fissures in the sandstone. A small
+tributary of the Rusango from the south ran over a bed of polished
+basalt, which likewise contained large veins of quartz.
+
+Soon after noon the main column arrived at the centre of a dip in the
+Uzimba ridge, 5600 feet above the sea, whence, far below us, we viewed
+the fields, gardens, and villages of the populous country of King Ruigi.
+But the sudden advance of the vanguard amongst the surprised natives,
+with banners flying and drums beating, had depopulated for the time the
+fair, smiling country, and left a clear, open road for the main body.
+Had the natives known of our approach, they might have reaped a rich
+harvest of revenge amongst the laggards in the rear, for the long march
+of nineteen miles had irremediably dissolved the hitherto compact
+Expedition into small knots of dispirited and tired stragglers. One
+fellow, named Andrew, of the British Mission at Zanzibar, had thrown his
+load down, and plunged into the bushes to sleep his weariness off, and a
+rescue party of twenty men had to be sent back five miles from camp to
+hunt up news of him, and they, fortunately, saved him, though menaced by
+a band of natives. Some sick Waganda fell victims in the evening to the
+wrath of a roving party of the natives, who had been disturbed in mind
+by our presence.
+
+Our descent into the fields of Uzimba was so unexpected that the
+inhabitants were utterly ignorant of our character and country. As they
+ran away, they asked the advance guard why the king of Ankori had sent
+his people to their country, and warned them that the next day they
+would come to fight. At night, however, the great war-drum of General
+Sambuzi revealed far and wide the character of the force, and announced
+that the Waganda were amongst them.
+
+A council of all the chiefs and leaders of our Expedition was held next
+day, at which it was resolved to send out that night 200 men to capture
+a few prisoners, through whom we could communicate our intentions to
+Ruigi of Uzimba, and Kasheshé, king of Unyampaka, which country bordered
+the lake west of Uzimba. As the lake was only four miles distant, it
+became necessary to know how we were regarded by the natives, and
+whether we might expect peaceful possession of a camp for a month or so.
+
+Some ten prisoners were captured, and, after receiving gifts of cloth
+and beads, were released, to convey the news to their respective chiefs
+that the Waganda had brought a white man, who wished to see the lake,
+and who asked permission to reside in peace in the country a few days;
+that the white man intended to pay for all food consumed by the
+strangers; that he would occupy no village, and injure no property, but
+would build his camp separate from the villages, into which the natives,
+having food to sell, were requested to bring it, and to receive payment
+in cloth, beads, brass, or copper, assured that, so long as they offered
+no cause, and kept the peace, they should receive no annoyance. An
+answer, we said, was expected within two days.
+
+_Jan. 11._—On the 11th of January we left the villages of Uzimba, and
+marched to within a mile of the edge of the plateau,[32] at the base of
+which, about 1500 feet below, lay the lake. True to our promise, we
+occupied no village, but built our camp on the broad summit of a low
+ridge, whence we commanded a clear, open view of our neighbourhood. The
+Expedition occupied the lake end of the ridge, while the Waganda
+occupied the centre and eastern end. On the southern and northern sides
+the hill sloped down to open grassy hollows. No trees or other
+obstructions impeded our command of the approaches. The Waganda camps
+were surrounded by huts, the doors of which turned outwards, whence
+night and day the inmates could observe, without being observed.
+
+_Jan. 12._—The next day an answer was brought that the inhabitants were
+not accustomed to strangers, and did not like our coming into their
+country; that Uzimba and Unyampaka belonged to Unyoro; that as the king
+of Unyoro was fighting with white men, how could the white man come
+behind him and expect peace? that our words were good, but our purposes,
+they were assured, were none the less wicked; and that we must,
+therefore, expect war on the morrow.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ HOUSE AND WOODEN UTENSILS OF UZIMBA AND ANKORI.
+ 1. Wooden stool. 2. Wooden milking vessel. 3. Wooden stool. 4. Wooden
+ goblet. 5. Wooden porridge dish. 6. Wooden porridge plate. 7. Wooden
+ milking vessel of Ankori. 8. Wooden bowl. 9. Earthenware cooking
+ pot. 10. Earthenware cooking pot. 11. Earthenware water vessel. 12.
+ Wooden dish. 13. Wooden cup. 14. Wooden family banana and sweet
+ potato dish. 15. House in Uzimba. 16. Wooden water vessel of Uzimba.
+ 17. Wooden bowl of Uzimba.
+]
+
+This answer was brought by about three hundred natives, who, while they
+delivered their message, were observed to have taken precautions not to
+be caught at a disadvantage. Having announced their object, they
+withdrew in the direction of Mount Uzimba.
+
+This declaration of war unsettled the nerves of the Waganda chiefs,
+principally the inferior chiefs and the bodyguards of Mtesa, and a
+stormy meeting was the result. Sabadu and Bugomba, the brother of the
+Premier, used their utmost eloquence to persuade Sambuzi to return;
+while Sekajugu and Lukoma cunningly held out strong reasons why they
+should, return immediately. At the same time they said they were quite
+willing to stay by Sambuzi to the death.
+
+The danger of a panic was imminent, when I begged that Sambuzi would
+listen to a few words from me. I explained to him that, though we were
+only a bullet’s flight from the Nyanza, we had not yet seen the lake,
+and that Mtesa had ordered him to take me to the Nyanza; that, before we
+had even looked for a strong camp, we were talking of returning; that,
+if they were all resolved to return, I required them to give me two days
+only, at the end of which I would give them a letter to Mtesa, which
+would absolve them from all blame; that, in the meantime, five hundred
+of the Waganda and fifty of my people should be sent out to select a
+path to the lake by which the boat, canoe, and loads could be let down
+the plateau wall without injury, and to endeavour to discover, on their
+arrival at the lake, whether canoes were procurable, to embark the
+expedition. This advice pleased the chiefs; and, as no time was to be
+lost, at 8 A.M. five hundred Waganda and fifty of our Expedition were
+sent, under Lukoma and Manwa Sera, my captain, to the lake, with
+instructions to proceed cautiously, and by no means to alarm the natives
+of the lake shore. I also led a party of fifty men to explore the
+plateau edge for a feasible and safe descent to the lake. The lake lay
+below us like a vast mirror, tranquil and blue, except along the shore,
+which was marked with a thin line of spluttering surf. The opposite
+coast was the high ridge of Usongora, which I should judge to be about
+fifteen miles distant, though the atmosphere was not very clear.
+Usongora bounds Beatrice Gulf westward.
+
+At noon Lukoma and Manwa Sera returned from the lake and reported that
+it would be a difficult job to lower the boat down the precipice of 50
+feet, which marked the first descent to the lake, without long and
+strong ropes; that the natives in passing up from the salt market on the
+lake hoisted their salt-bags, well wrapped in bull-hides, up the
+precipice; that no man could either descend or ascend with a load on his
+back, as he required the use of both his hands for the climbing. They
+also reported that they could only find five small fishing canoes, which
+would be perfectly useless for the transport of men or goods on the
+lake. Great stores of salt had been seen, which had come from Usongora,
+and abundance of Indian corn, millet, sweet potatoes, bananas, and
+sugarcane had also been seen on the lake shore.
+
+This unwelcome news infused a fever in the minds of the Waganda to be
+gone on the instant. Large numbers of natives, posted on the summit of
+every hill around us, added to the fear which took possession of the
+minds of the Waganda, and rumours were spread about by malicious men of
+an enormous force advancing from the south for the next day’s fight.
+This urged the Waganda to pack up large stores of sweet potatoes for
+their return journey through the wilderness of Ankori. The members of
+the Expedition even caught the panic, and prepared in silence to follow
+the Waganda, as common-sense informed them, that, if a force of over
+2000 fighting men did not consider itself strong enough to maintain its
+position, our Expedition consisting of 180 men could by no means do so.
+They were observed openly preparing for flight, before any commands had
+been issued to that effect, or even the alternative had been discussed.
+Others wandered off to mix with gadding crowds of Waganda, well disposed
+in mind to participate in their fears.
+
+The Wangwana captains of the Expedition, extremely depressed in
+spirit, came to me in the afternoon, and requested to know what I had
+determined upon. I informed them that I hoped to be able to bribe
+Sambuzi with one-fourth of the entire property of the Expedition to
+stay by us two days, during which time I hoped to be able to lower the
+boat and canoe down the cliffs, and launch them on the Nyanza, by which
+I could free sixty soldiers from encumbrances, to act as guard for the
+land party. The boat and canoe would follow the coast line, to act as
+auxiliaries to the land party, in case of attack, or to transport them
+across rivers, until we should arrive in the neighbourhood of some
+uninhabited island, to which place of safety the Expedition might be
+conveyed, until exploration should discover more peaceable lands or
+other means of prosecuting our journey. The captains approved this
+method of meeting the danger which threatened us.
+
+At 5 P.M. a messenger from Sambuzi called me to a council, at which all
+of his chief men were present, to discuss what advantages we possessed
+for offence and defence, for meeting the danger or for flight. Sabadu
+the captain of the detachment of Mtesa’s bodyguard with us, was called
+upon to speak, which he did with all the cowardly malice of a Thersites.
+Every hint that could damp a virtuous resolution to obey Mtesa’s
+commands was thrown out with all the effect that his position as chief
+of the bodyguard and his supposed influence with the Emperor lent his
+opinions, and he confidently assumed the power to charm away the anger
+of his dread master, and turn it upon the head of Kabba Rega, the king
+of Unyoro. Bugomba, the brother of the Premier of Uganda, though only a
+lad of sixteen, having far more influence in this council, and far more
+ability than would possibly be believed by Europeans, seconded Sabadu in
+an assumed humble voice, and what Sabadu had neglected to urge, youthful
+Bugomba, the Emperor’s page, adroitly threw in, and thus clenched the
+argument for absolute and immediate flight.
+
+The council heard him with great approval, and many were of the opinion
+that it would be best to fly at once, without waiting for night or for
+morning. Lukoma and Sekajugu, the colonels under Sambuzi, gravely
+besought Sambuzi to think well of the numbers that would certainly
+oppose us in the battle next day; to remember that we were far from
+assistance, if overcome; that all the advantages of war were on the side
+of the enemy. The enemy would fight on his own soil, and mindful that he
+was fighting for his own home. If repulsed the first day the enemy would
+come again in greater numbers than ever, and each day, as the bruit of
+war should spread and time gained, the whole strength of Unyoro, a
+country as large as Uganda, would be drawn to dislodge and massacre us.
+However, Sambuzi, was their general and chief, and if he thought it best
+to stand by “Stamlee,” they would stand by their chief to the death.
+
+Sambuzi then asked me to speak. Wrath almost choked my speech, for I
+felt bitterly angry that I should be asked to speak when they were all
+so resolved to act contrary to the object and purpose of the journey
+that even fear of the Emperor was not sufficient to induce them to stay,
+and that a chief like Sambuzi, of such experience and acknowledged
+bravery, should stoop to listen to boys like Bugomba and such men as
+Sabadu. However, I summoned up my patience, and said: “I do not see much
+use in my saying anything, because I know you will act against all
+advice I can give; but, that you may not blame me for not giving the
+advice, and pointing out the danger you run into in returning, I will
+speak. You, Sambuzi, at Laugurwe, told me you were not a child, but a
+man. If you are a man how comes it that you allow a boy like Bugomba,
+whose fears have run away with his wits, to speak in a council of tried
+warriors such as I see here? Do you think that Bugomba can save your
+head when the Emperor hears of your cowardly flight? No; that boy’s love
+which he professes to have for you, will fly when he sees the frown on
+Mtesa’s face. Will the Katekiro stand by you because you love his
+brother Bugomba? No; the Premier will scourge Bugomba, and be the first
+to slay you. If you are a man and a chief, why is it that you listen to
+this slave Sabadu, who no more dares approach the footstool of Mtesa
+than he would dare meet the Wanyoro to-morrow in battle? Is Sabadu the
+chief and general of the Waganda, or is it Sambuzi, the chief who fought
+so well at Uvuma? If your chiefs, Lukoma and Sekajugu, advise you to run
+away, you do wrong to listen to them, for it is not they whom Mtesa will
+punish, but you. I therefore, as your friend, advise you to stay here
+two days, while I fix the boat and canoe. At the end of two days I will
+write a letter to Mtesa, which will absolve you from all blame; and if
+you so far concede to me two days, I will give one-fourth of my moneys—
+nay, I will give one-half of all beads, wire, and cloth I have to you,
+with which you may reward yourself and your friends. Be not afraid of
+the Wanyoro; to-night we can build a palisade so strong that, were Kabba
+Rega himself here, he could do nothing against us. There is no great
+danger in staying a couple of days, but in returning to Uganda without
+my letter you go to certain death. I have spoken.”
+
+After a little pause, during which he interchanged some remarks with
+his people, Sambuzi said: “Stamlee, you are my friend, the Emperor’s
+friend, and a son of Uganda, and I want to do my duty towards you as
+well as I am able to; but you must hear the truth. We cannot do what
+you want us to do. We cannot wait here two days, nor one day. We shall
+fight to-morrow, that is certain; and if you think I speak from fear,
+you shall see me handle the spear. These people know me from past
+times, and they are well aware that my spear is sharp and fatal. We
+shall fight to-morrow at sunrise, and we must cut our way through the
+Wanyoro to Uganda. We cannot fight and continue in camp; for once the
+war is begun, it is war which will last as long as we are alive—for
+these people take no slaves as the Waganda do. Then the only chance for
+our lives that I see is to pack up to-night, and to-morrow morning at
+sunrise to march and fight our way through them. Now tell me as your
+friend what you will do. Will you stop here, or go with us, and try
+another road? For I must tell you, if you do not know it and see it for
+yourself, that you will never put your boat and the canoe on the Nyanza
+at this place. How can you get your boat down the cliffs while you
+are fighting, and thousands pressing round you? Even if you reach the
+water’s edge, how can you work on her two days, and fight?”
+
+To his questions I replied:—“I knew what your decision would be from
+what the Waganda have done on former occasions. When Magassa was sent
+with me to Usukuma by the lake, he ran away and left me to fight
+Bumbireh alone. When the Waganda were sent with Abdul Assiz Bey (M.
+Linant de Bellefonds) to Gondokoro, they followed him as far as Unyoro,
+and when they saw the Wanyoro coming, they deserted him, and stole
+nearly all his boxes, and Abdul Assiz Bey had to fight his way to
+Gondokoro alone. We white men will soon learn that there is no man so
+cowardly as a native of Uganda. For your advice I thank you; to-night I
+will give you my answer.”
+
+As soon as I left the council, Sambuzi caused the great war-drum to be
+sounded for the morrow’s march and expected battle. It also announced to
+the anxious members of the Expedition that the Waganda had resolved to
+return. On arriving at camp, I saw looks of dismay on each face. I
+called Pocock and the captains of the Expedition, and proceeded to
+unfold our position and Sambuzi’s intention to return, described to them
+what dangers environed us, and what hopes were left, and then asked them
+to give their own opinion of the matter freely.
+
+After a long hesitation and silence the gallant and ever faithful
+Kachéché spoke and said:—“Master, I do not know what my brothers here
+think of the matter, but I see plainly that we have been brought to the
+edge of a deep pit, and that the Waganda will push us into it if we do
+not follow them. For my part, I have nothing further to say, except that
+I will do exactly as you command. Live or die, all is one to me. If you
+say, let us go on, and leave the Waganda to return without us, I say so
+also; if you say, return, I also say, return. That is my opinion. But I
+would like to ask you, if we determine to go on by ourselves, have we
+any chance at all of being able to start from this camp, because I see
+we are surrounded by natives bent on war? If all these Waganda with our
+help are not able to make our position good, how can such a small party
+as we are hope to do so? This is what is in my heart, and what I believe
+is the cause of the panic in the Expedition. And I will tell you one
+thing; when Sambuzi beats the drum to-morrow to march, more than half of
+this Expedition will follow him, and you cannot prevent it.”
+
+“Well,” I replied, “this is my decision. I was sent to explore this
+lake. When I started from Usukuma, I doubted if I could do it unaided by
+Waganda, because there are no people on this lake friendly to strangers;
+it was for this reason I requested Mtesa to lend me so large a body of
+men. As no friendly port could be found where you might rest while I
+navigated the lake in my boat, I thought of taking possession of a port
+for a month or two and holding it. The force I relied on now fails me,
+and the people are hostile; it therefore only remains for me to return
+with Sambuzi, and to try the lake by another road. If no other road can
+be found, we must even be content with what we have done.”
+
+The Wangwana outside heard the decision with joy, and shouted, “Please
+God, we shall find another road, and the next time we go on work of this
+kind we shall do it without Waganda.”
+
+Sambuzi was made acquainted with our resolution, and requested to send
+twenty men to assist our wearied men to carry the goods back to Uganda.
+At dawn we mustered our forces, and with more form and in better order
+than we had entered Unyampaka, prepared to quit our camp on the cliffs
+of Muta Nzigé. A thousand spearmen with shields formed the advanced
+guard, and a thousand spearmen and thirty picked Wangwana with shields
+composed the rear-guard. The goods and Expedition occupied the centre.
+The drums and fifes and musical bands announced the signal for the
+march.
+
+The natives, whom we expected would have attacked us, contented
+themselves with following us at a respectful distance until we were
+clear of Uzimba, when, perceiving that our form of march was too compact
+for attack, they permitted us to depart in peace.
+
+Our return route was to the southward of that by which we had entered
+the lake-land of Uzimba. It penetrated Ankori, and our camp that day was
+made at 4 P.M. on the banks of the Rusango river.
+
+_Jan. 15._—On the morning of the 15th, after crossing a low ridge, two
+miles in width, we crossed the Katonga coming from the north-west, and
+entered Unyoro once more. Our Expedition was the rear-guard this day,
+and when within a few miles of Kazinga, in Benga, a furious attack was
+made on our rear from an ambuscade, which was in a short time repulsed
+without loss to us.
+
+_Jan. 27._—On the 27th we were encamped at Kisossi, in Uganda, a little
+east of where Sambuzi had joined us with his force. At this camp we
+parted; Sambuzi, or Mta-usa, the Spoiler, to his own land close by, I to
+what fortune, or misfortune, had still reserved in store for me and
+mine. The “Spoiler” made his cognomen good, for on the road from the
+lake he despoiled me of 180 lbs. of variously assorted beads, by failing
+to return three loads of beads given him for carriage to Uganda, thus
+adding another reason to my dissatisfaction with him.
+
+I halted at Kisossi three days to give the Expedition a little of that
+rest they so well deserved. During this time I despatched Kachéché and
+two others with a letter to Mtesa, wherein I did not fail to report to
+him of the failure of Sambuzi to perform what he had promised me, of his
+theft of three bags of beads, and of the strange conduct of Sabadu and
+Bugomba.
+
+The effect of my letter on Mtesa and his court, Kachéché informed me a
+few days later, when he overtook us at Charugawa, was one of shame,
+surprise, and rage. Kachéché was called to the Durzah, and told to
+repeat in a loud voice all that had happened between Sambuzi and myself
+since we had met at Laugurwe, while Mtesa and his chiefs listened
+intently, the recital broken by violent exclamations and ominous
+ejaculations from the Emperor.
+
+When Kachéché had ended, Mtesa said, “Do you see now how I am shamed by
+my people? This is the third time I have been made to break my word to
+white men. But, by the grave of Suna” (a strong oath in Uganda), “my
+father, I will teach Sambuzi, and all of you, that you cannot mock
+Kabaka! Stamlee went to this lake for my good as well as for his own,
+but you see how I am thwarted by a base slave like Sambuzi, who
+undertakes to be more than I myself before my guest. When was it I dared
+to be so uncivil to my guest as this fellow has been to Stamlee? You,
+Saruti,” he said suddenly to the chief of his bodyguard, “take warriors,
+and eat up Sambuzi’s country clean, and bring him chained to me.”
+
+Saruti prostrated himself, and swore he would eat the “Spoiler’s” land
+clean, and become the “Spoiler” himself, and that Sambuzi should be
+brought to him chained like a slave. Yet let it be noted here that
+Saruti and Sambuzi were as loving at the Nakaranga camp as two sworn
+brothers.
+
+“And you, Katekiro,” said Mtesa, turning his glowing eyes on him, “how
+is it that your brother Bugomba—a mere little boy—plays the great man on
+duty? Tell me whence he obtained this ‘big head’ of his?”
+
+“My lord” (“Mkama ange”), “Bugomba is a child, and deserves a rod for
+this conduct, and I myself will see that he suffers for it.”
+
+“Very well, send for Bugomba, and that long-tongued Sabadu, and bring
+them to me at once, and I will see that they never use their tongues
+against a guest of mine again.”
+
+“Now, Kachéché,” said Mtesa, “what is Stamlee going to do now? Do you
+suppose that, if I give him 100,000 men, under Sekebobo and Mkwenda,
+that he will be induced to try the lake Muta Nzigé again?”
+
+“He may, Kabaka, but I do not think he will believe the Waganda again,
+for this is twice they have deceived him. Magassa ran away, and Sambuzi
+ran away, and he, perhaps, will say Sekebobo will do the same. The
+Waganda are very good before you, Kabaka, but when away from you they
+forget your commands, and steal people, cattle, and goats,” said
+plain-spoken Kachéché.
+
+Sekebobo and Mkwenda sprang to their feet before the Emperor, and said
+loudly, “Nay, let us go, Kabaka, and we will cut through the heart of
+Kabba Rega of Unyoro, or through Mtambuko, king of Ankori, to the Muta
+Nzigé, and all the nations round about shall not drive us back!”
+
+“It is well,” said the Emperor. “Now you, Dallington,” said he to the
+English mission pupil left at his court, “write a letter to Stamlee.
+Tell him to come to the Katonga once again, and Sekebobo and Mkwenda
+with 60,000, even 100,000, shall take him to Muta Nzigé, and stay there
+until he has finished his work. Tell him that if these fail him he shall
+execute his own pleasure on every chief that returns to Uganda.”
+
+At Charugawa, near the Alexandra Nile, I received Dallington’s letter,
+asking me to return and attempt the lake once more.[33] This letter
+plunged me into perplexity, but after long and calm deliberation I
+decided that it was not safe to trifle away time in this manner;
+besides, such an undisciplined force would be uncontrollable, and would
+no doubt entail misery on the people. I was also too far from Muta Nzigé
+now, and to return for an uncertainty, such as the character of the
+Waganda caused me to believe it to be, despite the protestation and
+promises of the Emperor, was in my opinion well deserving a fool’s cap.
+I accordingly wrote to this effect to Mtesa, and closed the letter with
+thanks for his kindness, and a friendly farewell.
+
+Kachéché, on returning from the capital with the Emperor’s letter met
+the unfortunate Sambuzi loaded with chains, and the blunt, plain-spoken
+soldier, far from pitying him, could not refrain from taunting him with,
+“Ah, ha, Sambuzi, you are not so fine as you were a while ago. You are
+going to Mtesa to play Kabaka before him; fare you well, Sambuzi.”
+
+Saruti, the “eater,” obtained great spoil, for he was now lord over 200
+wives and 300 milch-cows, besides a large, fat district in the Katonga
+valley, well populated with lusty, industrious peasants and warriors,
+all of whom were from henceforth subject to him.
+
+The final farewell letter to Mtesa terminated our intercourse with the
+powerful monarch of Uganda, and concluded our sojourn in that land of
+bananas and free entertainment. Henceforth the Expedition should be
+governed by one will only, and guided by a single man, who was resolved
+not to subject himself or his time to any other man’s caprice, power, or
+favour any more.
+
+As we neared the Alexandra Nile, at a place called Ndongo, this virtuous
+resolution came near being put to the test, for the unquiet immigrants
+settled here proclaimed that we should not pass through until we had
+paid something to the chief to obtain his good-will. But, after
+receiving a firm refusal they permitted us to cross the Alexandra Nile
+without molestation.
+
+Reports and rumours of the breadth and powerful current of the river
+called the “Kagera,” the “Kitangule,” and the “Ingezi,” received from
+representatives of Uganda, Kiziwa, and Karagwé, some of whom were very
+intelligent natives, and professed a perfect knowledge of its course,
+had created in me a constant desire to examine the river more carefully
+than I had previously done at its exit into Lake Victoria. At the
+crossing between bank and bank it was about 450 yards in width; but
+about 350 yards of this breadth flowed or oozed, with little current,
+amongst sedge, water-cane, and papyrus. The remaining 100 yards was a
+powerful and deep body of water, with a current of three knots and a
+half an hour. The water had a dull iron colour, yet extremely pure for a
+large river, and such as might proceed from some lake at no great
+distance off.
+
+The Waganda and Wanyambu of Rumanika’s court style this river the
+“Mother of the River at Jinga” (Victoria Nile), but the former have very
+wild ideas about its source. They say it issues from Muta Nzigé in
+Mpororo, and, flowing south, cuts Ruanda in halves, and, rounding
+Kishakka, runs north, dividing Karagwé from Ruanda.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ CANOES AND PADDLES OF AFRICA.
+ 1. Usukuma.
+ 2. Ujiji and Urundi.
+ 3. Unyampaka (Beatrice Gulf.)
+ 4. Manyema, on Luama river.
+ 5. Uganda.
+ 6. Ukerewé.
+ 7. Karagwé, on Alexandra Nile.
+ 8. Arab dhow at Ujiji.
+]
+
+Rumanika, king of Karagwé, is no less singular in his theory of the
+source of the Alexandra Nile, for he says it issues from Lake Tanganika,
+through Urundi. However, these and sundry other reports only roused my
+interest in the noble river, and created a greater inclination to pursue
+the subject to its ultimate end. For a very few soundings of it enabled
+me, after my circumnavigation of Lake Victoria, and on examination of
+the several streams emptying into it, to judge this to be the principal
+affluent and feeder of the lake.
+
+A journey of fourteen miles southerly across the valley of the Alexandra
+from its southern bank brought us to the base of the lofty ranges of
+Karagwé. This country comprises all the mountainous ridges between
+Usongora on the east and the Alexandra Nile to the west. It appears as
+if at a distant epoch these ridges had been connected with the uplands
+of Koki and Ankori north, and Ruanda west, but that, as Lake Victoria
+had channelled a way for its outlet through the clays and shale of Usoga
+and Uganda, and its altitude above the sea had subsided, the furious
+current of the Kagera or Alexandra had channelled a deeper course
+through the heart of what was formerly a lofty plateau, and that its
+thousands of petty tributaries then rushed down into the deep depression
+formed by it.
+
+On the 24th of February we were camped at Nakahanga, a village situated
+twelve miles west of south of Kiyanga, and the next day, after a march
+of thirteen miles, we entered the Arab depot of Kafurro, in Karagwé.
+
+-----
+
+# 31:
+
+ At the confluence of the Wakassi with the Katonga, boiling-point
+ showed an altitude of 4111 feet above the sea, only 18 feet higher
+ than Ripon Falls!
+
+# 32:
+
+ Our camp by boiling-point was at an altitude of 4724 feet above the
+ sea.
+
+# 33:
+
+ The following is the epistle verbatim:—
+
+ “MY DEAR SIR, H. M. STANLEY,
+
+ “What meant by his news that we see Sabadu coming without a letter in
+ time? He came first. I asked him, ‘Where is the letter that you
+ brought?’ So he answered me, ‘The letter is my mouth’; but I believed
+ not in his words. Then went I to the Sûltan and told him these things.
+ Then the Sûltan called Sabadu and asked him, ‘Where is the letter?’
+ and he answered, ‘There is no letter.’ So he send him to Pokino—the
+ Katekiro; but I who know in my heart that they been run away from you.
+ So now he send others people instead of them, and he go to punish
+ Sambuzi. It is far better for you to waite for Waganda to take you to
+ Mutanzige, because they see that Sambuzi been punished, and all the
+ others will obey the word of the king. I, Dallington, the servant of
+ wite men, I won’t tell you lie, but I will tell you the truth. The
+ Sûltan (Mtesa) is not bad. This letter I write it in a hurry, and send
+ me two or three papers to write the last to you.
+
+ “SEYYID MTESA.
+ “Son of Sûltan Suna of Uganda,
+ “January 30th, 1876.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+
+Kafurro and its magnates—Lake Windermere—Rumanika, the gentle king of
+ Karagwé—His country—The Ingezi—Among the mosquitoes—Ihema Island—The
+ triple cone of Ufumbiro—Double-horned rhinoceros—The hot springs of
+ Mtagata—The Geographical Society of Karagwé—The philosophy of noses—
+ Rumanika’s thesauron—Some new facts about the rhinoceros and elephant—
+ Uhimba—Paganus, _var._ esuriens—Retrospect.
+
+
+_Feb. 25._—Kafurro owes its importance to being a settlement of two or
+three rich Arab traders, Hamed Ibrahim, Sayid bin Sayf, and Sayid the
+Muscati. It is situated within a deep hollow or valley fully 1200 feet
+below the tops of the surrounding mountains, and at the spring source of
+a stream flowing east and afterwards north to the Alexandra Nile.
+
+Hamed Ibrahim is rich in cattle, slaves, and ivory. Assuming his own
+figures to be correct, he possesses 150 cattle, bullocks, and milch
+cows, forty goats, 100 slaves, and 450 tusks of ivory, the greater part
+of which last is reported to be safely housed in the safe keeping of his
+friend the chief of Urangwa in Unyamwezi.
+
+Hamed has a spacious and comfortable gable-roofed house. He has a number
+of concubines, and several children. He is a fine, gentlemanly-looking
+Arab, of a light complexion, generous and hospitable to friends, liberal
+to his slaves, and kind to his women. He has lived eighteen years in
+Africa, twelve of which have been spent in Karagwé. He knew Suna, the
+warlike Emperor of Uganda, and father of Mtesa. He has travelled to
+Uganda frequently, and several times made the journey between Unyanyembé
+and Kafurro. Having lived so long in Karagwé, he is friendly with
+Rumanika, who, like Mtesa, loves to attract strangers to his court.
+
+Hamed has endeavoured several times to open trade with the powerful
+Empress of Ruanda, but has each time failed. Though some of his slaves
+succeeded in reaching the imperial court, only one or two managed to
+effect their escape from the treachery and extraordinary guile practised
+there. Nearly all perished by poison.
+
+He informed me that the Empress was a tall woman of middle age, of an
+almost light Arab complexion, with very large brilliant eyes. Her son,
+the prince, a boy of about eighteen, had some years ago committed
+suicide by drinking a poisonous potion, because his mother had cast some
+sharp cutting reproaches upon him, which had so wounded his sensitive
+spirit that, he said, “nothing but death would relieve him.”
+
+Hamed is of the belief that these members of the imperial family are
+descendants of some light-coloured people to the north, possibly Arabs;
+“for how,” asked he, “could the king of Kishakka possess an Arab
+scimitar, which is a venerated heir-loom of the royal family, and the
+sword of the founder of that kingdom?”
+
+“All these people,” said he, “about here are as different from the
+ordinary Washensi—pagans—as I am different from them. I would as soon
+marry a woman of Ruanda as I would a female of Muscat. When you go to
+see Rumanika, you will see some Wanya-Ruanda, and you may then judge for
+yourself. The people of that country are not cowards. Mashallah! they
+have taken Kishakka, Muvari, and have lately conquered Mpororo. The
+Waganda measured their strength with them, and were obliged to retreat.
+The Wanya-Ruanda are a great people, but they are covetous, malignant,
+treacherous, and utterly untrustworthy. They have never yet allowed an
+Arab to trade in their country, which proves them to be a bad lot. There
+is plenty of ivory there, and during the last eight years Khamis bin
+Abdullah, Tippu-Tib, Sayid bin Habib, and I myself have attempted
+frequently to enter there, but none of us has ever succeeded. Even
+Rumanika’s people are not allowed to penetrate far, though he permits
+everybody to come into his country, and he is a man of their own blood
+and their own race, and speaks with little difference their own
+language.”
+
+Hamed Ibrahim was not opening out very brilliant prospects before me,
+nevertheless I resolved to search out in person some known road to this
+strange country that I might make a direct course to Nyangwé.
+
+_Feb. 28._—On the third day after arrival, the king having been informed
+of my intended visit, Hamed Ibrahim and Sayid bin Sayf accompanied me on
+an official visit to Rumanika, king of Karagwé, and a tributary of
+Mtesa, Emperor of Uganda.
+
+Kafurro, according to aneroid, is 3950 feet above the ocean. Ascending
+the steep slope of the mountain west of Kafurro, we gained an altitude
+of 5150 feet, and half an hour afterwards stood upon a ridge 5350 feet
+above the sea, whence we obtained a most grand and imposing view. Some
+600 feet below us was a grassy terrace overlooking the small Windermere
+Lake, 1000 feet below, its placid surface rivalling in colour the azure
+of the cloudless heaven. Across a narrow ridge we looked upon the broad
+and papyrus-covered valley of the Alexandra, whilst many fair, blue
+lakelets north and south, connected by the winding silver line of the
+Alexandra Nile, suggested that here exploring work of a most interesting
+character was needed to understand the complete relations of lake,
+river, and valley to one another.
+
+Beyond the broad valley rose ridge after ridge, separated from each
+other by deep parallel basins, or valleys, and behind these, receding
+into dim and vague outlines, towered loftier ridges. About sixty miles
+off, to the north-west, rose a colossal sugar-loaf clump of enormous
+altitude, which I was told was the Ufumbiro mountains. From their
+northern base extended Mpororo country and to the south, Ruanda.
+
+At the northern end of the Windermere Lake, an irregular range, which
+extends north to Ugoi, terminates in the dome-like Mount Isossi. South
+of where I stood, and about a mile distant, was the bold mount of
+Kazwiro, and about thirty miles beyond it I could see the irregular and
+confused masses of the Kishakka mountains.
+
+On the grassy terrace below us was situated Rumanika’s village, fenced
+round by a strong and circular stockade, to which we now descended after
+having enjoyed a noble and inspiriting prospect.
+
+Our procession was not long in attracting hundreds of persons,
+principally youths, all those who might be considered in their boyhood
+being perfectly nude.
+
+“Who are these?” I inquired of Sheikh Hamed.
+
+“Some of the youngest are sons of Rumanika, others are young
+Wanya-Ruanda,” he replied.
+
+The sons of Rumanika, nourished on a milk diet, were in remarkably good
+condition. Their unctuous skins shone as though the tissues of fat
+beneath were dissolving in the heat, and their rounded bodies were as
+taut as a drum-head. Their eyes were large, and beaming and lustrous
+with life, yet softened by an extreme gentleness of expression. The
+sculptor might have obtained from any of these royal boys a dark model
+for another statue to rival the classic Antinous.
+
+As we were followed by the youths, who welcomed us with a graceful
+curtesy, the appropriate couplet came to my mind—
+
+ “Thrice happy race! that innocent of blood,
+ From milk innoxious, seek their simple food.”
+
+We were soon ushered into the hut wherein Rumanika sat expectant, with
+one of the kindliest, most paternal smiles it would be possible to
+conceive.
+
+I confess to have been as affected by the first glance at this venerable
+and gentle pagan as though I gazed on the serene and placid face of some
+Christian patriarch or saint of old, whose memory the Church still holds
+in reverence. His face reminded me of a deep still well; the tones of
+his voice were so calm that unconsciously they compelled me to imitate
+him, while the quick, nervous gestures and the bold voice of Sheikh
+Hamed, seeming entirely out of place, jarred upon me.
+
+It was no wonder that the peremptory and imperious, vivid-eyed Mtesa
+respected and loved this sweet-tempered pagan. Though they had never
+met, Mtesa’s pages had described him, and with their powers of mimicry
+had brought the soft modulated tones of Rumanika to his ears as truly as
+they had borne his amicable messages to him.
+
+What greater contrasts can be imagined than the natures of the Emperor
+Mtesa and the King Rumanika? In some of his volcanic passions Mtesa
+seemed to be Fury personified, and if he were represented on the stage
+in one of his furious moods, I fear that the actor would rupture a
+blood-vessel, destroy his eyes, and be ever afterwards afflicted with
+madness. The Waganda always had recourse to action and gesture to
+supplement their verbal description of his raging fits. His eyes, they
+said, were “balls of fire and large as fists,” while his words were
+“like gunpowder.”
+
+Nature, which had endowed Mtesa with a nervous and intense temperament,
+had given Rumanika the placid temper, the soft voice, the mild
+benignity, and pleasing character of a gentle father.
+
+The king appeared to me, clad as he was in red blanket cloth, when
+seated, a man of middle size, but when he afterwards stood up, he rose
+to the gigantic stature of 6 feet 6 inches or thereabouts, for the top
+of my head, as we walked side by side, only reached near his shoulders.
+His face was long, and his nose somewhat Roman in shape; the profile
+showed a decidedly refined type.
+
+Our interview was very pleasing, and he took excessive interest in every
+question I addressed to him. When I spoke, he imposed silence on his
+friends, and leaned forward with eager attention. If I wished to know
+anything about the geography of the country, he immediately sent for
+some particular person who was acquainted with that portion, and
+inquired searchingly of him as to his knowledge. He chuckled when he saw
+me use my note-book, as though he had some large personal interest in
+the number of notes I took. He appeared to be more and more delighted as
+their bulk increased, and triumphantly pointed out to the Arabs the
+immense superiority of the whites to them.
+
+[Illustration: LUMANIKA’S TREASURE-HOUSE.]
+
+He expressed himself as only too glad that I should explore his country.
+It was a land, he said, that white men ought to know. It possessed many
+lakes and rivers, and mountains and hot springs, and many other things,
+which no other country could boast of.
+
+“Which do you think best, Stamlee—Karagwé or Uganda?”
+
+“Karagwé is grand, its mountains are high, and its valleys deep. The
+Kagera is a grand river, and the lakes are very pretty. There are more
+cattle in Karagwé than in Uganda, except Uddu and Koki; and game is
+abundant. But Uganda is beautiful and rich; its banana plantations are
+forests, and no man need to fear starvation, and Mtesa is good—and so is
+Father Rumanika,” I replied smiling to him.
+
+“Do you hear him, Arabs? Does he not speak well? Yes, Karagwé is
+beautiful,” he sighed contentedly. “But bring your boat up and place it
+on the Rweru (lake), and you can go up the river as far as Kishakka, and
+down to Morongo (the falls), where the water is thrown against a big
+rock and leaps over it, and then goes down to the Nianja of Uganda.
+Verily, my river is a great one; it is the mother of the river at Jinga
+(Ripon Falls). You shall see all my land; and when you have finished the
+river, I will give you more to see—Mtagata’s hot springs!”
+
+_March 6._—By the 6th of March, Frank had launched the boat from the
+landing at Kazinga village on the waters of the Windermere Lake,[34] or
+the Rweru of Rumanika, and the next day Rumanika accompanied me in state
+to the water. Half-a-dozen heavy anklets of bright copper adorned his
+legs, bangles of the same metal encircled his wrists, a robe of crimson
+flannel was suspended from his shoulders. His walking-staff was 7 feet
+in length, and his stride was a yard long. Drummers and fifers
+discoursing a wild music, and fifty spearmen, besides his sons and
+relatives, Wanya-Ruanda, Waganda, Wasui, Wanyamwezi, Arabs, and
+Wangwana, followed us in a mixed multitude.
+
+Four canoes manned by Wanyambu were at hand to race with our boat, while
+we took our seats on the grassy slopes of Kazinga to view the scene. I
+enjoined Frank and the gallant boat’s crew to exert themselves for the
+honour of us Children of the Ocean, and not to permit the Children of
+the Lakes to excel us.
+
+A boat and canoe race on the Windermere of Karagwé, with 1200
+gentle-mannered natives gazing on! An African international affair!
+Rumanika was in his element; every fibre of him tingled with joy at
+the prospective fun. His sons, seated around him, looked up into their
+father’s face, their own reflecting his delight. The curious natives
+shared in the general gratification.
+
+The boat-race was soon over; it was only for about 800 yards, to
+Kankorogo Point. There was not much difference in the speed, but it gave
+immense satisfaction. The native canoemen, standing up with their long
+paddles, strained themselves with all their energy, stimulated by the
+shouts of their countrymen, while the Wangwana on the shore urged the
+boat’s crew to their utmost power.
+
+_March 8._—The next day we began the circumnavigation of the Windermere.
+The extreme length of the lake during the rainy season is about eight
+miles, and its extreme breadth two and a half. It lies north and south,
+surrounded by grass-covered mountains which rise from 1200 to 1500 feet
+above it. There is one island called Kankorogo, situated midway between
+Mount Isossi and the extreme southern end. I sounded three times, and
+obtained depths of 48, 44, and 45 feet respectively at different points.
+The soil of the shores is highly ferruginous in colour, and, except in
+the vicinity of the villages, produces only euphorbia, thorny gum,
+acacia, and aloetic plants.
+
+_March 9._—On the 9th we pulled abreast of Kankorogo Island, and,
+through a channel from 500 to 800 yards wide, directed our course to the
+Kagera, up which we had to contend against a current of two knots and a
+half an hour.
+
+The breadth of the river varied from 50 to 100 yards. The average depth
+of all the ten soundings we made on this day was 52 feet along the
+middle; close to the papyrus walls, which grew like a forest above us,
+was a depth of 9 feet. Sometimes we caught a view of hippopotamus creeks
+running up for hundreds of yards on either side through the papyrus. At
+Kagayyo, on the left bank, we landed for a short time to take a view of
+the scene around, as, while in the river, we could see nothing except
+the papyrus, the tops of the mountain ridge of Karagwé, and the sky.
+
+We then learned for the first time the true character of what we had
+imagined to be a valley when we gazed upon it from the summit of the
+mountain between Kafurro and Rumanika’s capital.
+
+The Ingezi, as the natives called it, embraces the whole space from the
+base of the mountains of Muvari to that of the Karagwé ridges with the
+river called Kagera, the Funzo or the papyrus, and the Rwerus or lakes,
+of which there are seventeen, inclusive of Windermere. Its extreme width
+between the bases of the opposing mountains is nine miles; the narrowest
+part is about a mile, while the entire acreage covered by it from
+Morongo or the falls in Iwanda, north to Uhimba, south, is about 350
+square miles. The Funzo or papyrus covers a depth of from 9 feet to 14
+feet of water. Each of the several lakes has a depth of from 20 to 65
+feet, and they are all connected, as also is the river, underneath the
+papyrus.
+
+When about three miles north of Kizinga, at 5 P.M., we drew our boat
+close to the papyrus, and prepared for a night’s rest, and the Wanyambu
+did the same.
+
+The boat’s crew crushed down some of the serest papyrus, and, cutting
+off the broom-like tops, spread their mats upon the heap thus made,
+flattering themselves that they were going to have a cozy night of it.
+Their fires they kindled between three stalks, which sustained their
+cooking-pots. It was not a very successful method, as the stalks had to
+be replaced frequently; but finally their bananas were done to a turn.
+At night, however, mosquitoes of a most voracious species attacked them
+in dense multitudes, and nothing but the constant flip-flap of the
+papyrus tops mingled with complaints that they were unable to sleep were
+heard for an hour or two. They then began to feel damp, and finally wet,
+for their beds were sinking into the depths below the papyrus, and they
+were compelled at last to come into the boat, where they passed a most
+miserable night, for the mosquitoes swarmed and attacked them until
+morning with all the pertinacity characteristic of these hungry
+bloodsuckers.
+
+[Illustration: A NATIVE OF UHHA.]
+
+_March 10._—The next day, about noon, we discovered a narrow, winding
+creek, which led us to a river-like lake, five miles in length, out of
+which, through another creek, we punted our boats and canoes to the
+grazing island of Unyamubi.
+
+From a ridge which was about 50 feet above the Ingezi we found that we
+were about four miles from Kishakka and a similar distance due east from
+a point of land projecting from Muvari.
+
+_March 11._—The next day we ascended the Kagera about ten miles, and
+returning fourteen miles entered Ihema Lake, a body of water about 50
+square miles, and camped on Ihema Island, about a mile from Muvari.
+
+The natives of Ihema Island stated to me that Lake Muta Nzigé was only
+eleven days’ journey from the Muvari shores, and that the Wanya-Ruanda
+frequently visited them to obtain fish in exchange for milk and
+vegetables. They also stated that the Mworongo—or, as others called it,
+Nawarongo—river flows through the heart of Ruanda from the Ufumbiro
+mountains, and enters the Kagera in a south-west by west direction from
+Ihema: that the Akanyaru was quite a large lake, a three days’ journey
+round in canoes, and separated Ruanda, Uhha, and Urundi from each other;
+that there was an island in the midst, where canoes leaving Uhha were
+accustomed to rest at night, arriving in Ruanda at noon.
+
+They were a genial people those islanders of Ihema, but they were
+subject to two painful diseases, leprosy and elephantiasis. The island
+was of a shaly substructure, covered with a scant depth of alluvium. The
+water of the Lake Ihema was good and sweet to the taste, though, like
+all the waters of the Alexandra Nile, distinguished for its dull brown
+iron colour.
+
+We began from the extreme south end of the lake the next day to coast
+along the Muvari or Ruanda coast, and near a small village attempted to
+land, but the natives snarled like so many spiteful dogs, and drew their
+bows, which compelled us—being guests of Rumanika—to sheer off and leave
+them in their ferocious exclusiveness.
+
+Arriving at the Kagera again, we descended it, and at 7 P.M. were in our
+little camp of Kasinga, at the south end of Windermere.
+
+On the 11th we rowed into the Kagera, and descended the river as far as
+Ugoi, and on the evening of the 12th returned once more to our camp on
+Windermere.
+
+_March 13._—The next day, having instructed Frank to convey the boat to
+Kafurro, I requested Rumanika to furnish me with guides for the Mtagata
+hot springs, and faithful to his promise, thirty Wanyambu were detailed
+for the service.
+
+Our route lay north along the crest of a lofty ridge between Kafurro and
+Windermere. Wherever we looked, we beheld grassy ridges, grassy slopes,
+grassy mountain summits, and grassy valleys—an eminently pastoral
+country. In a few gorges or ravines the dark tops of trees are seen.
+
+When Windermere Lake and Isossi, its northern mount, were south of us,
+we descended into a winding grassy valley, and in our march of ten miles
+from Isossi to Kasya I counted thirty-two separate herds of cattle,
+which in the aggregate probably amounted to 900 head. We also saw seven
+rhinoceroses, three of which were white, and four a black brown. The
+guides wished me to shoot one, but I was scarce of ammunition, and as I
+could not get a certain shot, I was loath to wound unnecessarily, or
+throw away a cartridge.
+
+[Illustration: VIEW OF UFUMBIRO MOUNTAINS FROM MOUNT NEAR MTAGATA HOT
+SPRINGS.]
+
+_March 14._—The next day, at 8 A.M., near the end of the valley, we came
+to Meruré Lake, which is about two miles long, and thence, crossing
+three different mountains, arrived at Kiwandaré mountain, and from its
+summit, 5600 feet above the sea, obtained a tolerably distinct view of
+the triple cone of Ufumbiro, in a west-north-west direction, Mag. I
+should estimate the distance from Kiwandaré to Ufumbiro to be about
+forty-five miles, and about sixty miles from the mountain height above
+Rumanika’s capital. Several lines of mountains, with lateral valleys
+between, rose between the valley of the Alexandra Nile and Ufumbiro.
+
+From Kiwandaré we descended gradually along its crest to a lower
+terrace. About 5 P.M. one of our party sighted a dark brown
+double-horned rhinoceros, and as we had no meat, and the nature of the
+ground permitted easy approach, I crept up to within fifty yards of it
+unperceived and sent in a zinc bullet close to the ear, which bowled it
+over dead.
+
+The quantity of meat obtained from the animal was more than would supply
+the eighteen men, Wangwana, of my party; therefore, acceding to their
+wish, we camped on the spot, exposed to the chilly mountain winds, which
+visited us during the night. The men, however, continued to pick up
+abundance of fuel from a wooded gorge close by, and, engaged in the
+interesting and absorbing task of roasting meat before many blazing
+fires, did not suffer greatly.
+
+_March 15._—At 9 A.M. the next day we descended to the wooded gorge of
+Mtagata, having travelled thirty-five miles almost due north from
+Kafurro.
+
+This gorge is formed by an angle where the extreme northern end of
+Kiwandaré mountain meets a transverse ridge. It is filled with tall
+trees which have been nourished to a gigantic size and density of
+foliage by the warm vapours from the springs and the heated earth. A
+thick undergrowth of plants, llianes, and creepers of all sizes has
+sprung up under the shade of the aspiring trees, and the gloom thus
+caused within the gorge is very striking. I imagine a person would find
+it a most eerie place at night alone. Great baboons and long-tailed
+monkeys roared and chattered in the branches, causing the branches to
+sway and rustle as they chased one another from tree to tree.
+
+At the time of our visit the springs were frequented by invalids from
+Iwanda, Ngoi, Kiziwa, Usongora, and Usui, for, as may be believed, they
+have obtained a great repute throughout the districts of Karagwé and
+neighbouring countries.
+
+The springs are six in number, and at their extreme source they had,
+when I tested them, a temperature of 129½° Fahr. The bathing pools,
+which are about 12 feet in diameter, and from 2 to 5 feet deep, showed a
+temperature of 110° Fahr., except one on the extreme north, which was
+only 107° Fahr.
+
+I bottled eight ounces of water from one of these springs, and on
+arriving in London sent it to Messrs. Savory and Moore, the well-known
+chemists, 143 Bond Street, who in a few days kindly returned me the
+following analysis:—
+
+ “The fluid was clear, colourless, and odourless; on standing at rest,
+ a small quantity of red granular matter was deposited.
+
+ “Examined chemically, it was found to have a faint alkaline reaction,
+ and its specific gravity, corrected to 60° F., was 1004, water being
+ considered 1000.
+
+ “One hundred grammes evaporated left a white crystalline residue,
+ weighing ·37 of a gramme, and it was composed of sodium carbonate,
+ calcium carbonate, calcium sulphate and sodium chlorine; this order
+ represents their proportions, sodium carbonate being the chief
+ constituent, and the other salts existing in more minute quantities.
+
+ “The deposit was removed and examined microchemically: it was thus
+ found to consist of ferruginous sand, and two minute pieces of
+ vegetable cellulose.
+
+ “It was therefore a faintly alkaline water, and its alkalinity
+ depended on the presence of sodium carbonate possibly existing in
+ solution as bicarbonate, as the water held in solution carbonic acid
+ gas, and this gas was evolved by heating the water.”
+
+The natives praised the water of these springs so highly that I resolved
+to stay three days to test in my own person what virtues it possessed. I
+drank an enormous quantity of the water with a zealous desire to be
+benefited, but I experienced no good—on the contrary, much ill, for a
+few days afterwards I suffered from a violent attack of intermittent
+fever, occasioned, I fancy, by the malaria inhaled from the tepid
+atmosphere. It is true I luxuriated morning and evening in the bath
+which was reserved for me by Luajumba, son of Rumanika, but that was all
+the advantage that accrued to me.
+
+Patients suffering from cutaneous diseases profit rapidly from, I
+believe, the unusual cleanliness; and during the few days we camped here
+numbers of natives came and went, and merriment and cleansing, bathing
+and lounging, music and barbarous chanting, kept awake the echoes of the
+gorge.
+
+Our stay at the springs was cheered also by the presence of Luajumba,
+who, following the example of his father Rumanika, was hospitable and
+bland in his manners. An ox, two goats, ten fowls, besides bananas,
+sweet potatoes and flour, and fourteen large gourdfuls of maramba were
+received with thanks and paid for.
+
+_March 18._—On the 18th of March we set out on our return to Kafurro
+from the hot springs, and on the road I shot a white rhinoceros, which
+the people soon cut up to convey to their comrades. On the 19th we
+arrived at Kafurro, each of the Wangwana being loaded with over twenty
+lbs. of meat.
+
+_March 21._—After two days’ rest I paid another visit to Rumanika, where
+we had a great geographical discussion. It is unnecessary to describe
+the information I had to give Rumanika respecting the geographical
+distribution of tribes and races over the Dark Continent, but conscious
+that the geographical world will take an interest in what Rumanika and
+the native travellers at his court imparted, I here append, verbatim,
+the notes I took upon the spot.
+
+Hamed Ibrahim spoke and said:—
+
+ “My slaves have travelled far, and they say that the Ni-Nawarongo
+ River rises on the west side of Ufumbiro mountains, takes a wide sweep
+ through Ruanda, and enters Akanyaru, in which lake it meets the Kagera
+ from the south. United they then empty from the lake between Uhha and
+ Kishakka, and flowing between Karagwé and Ruanda, go into the Nianza
+ (Nyanza).
+
+ “The Rwizi River, also rising at the northern base of the Ufumbiro
+ cones, in Mpororo, flows through Igara, then Shema, then Ankori, into
+ the king of Koki’s (Luampula) lake, and becoming the Chibarré or
+ Kiwaré River, joins the Kagera below Kitangulé.
+
+ “If you proceed toward sunset from Mpororo, you will see Muta Nzigé,
+ the Nianza of Unyoro. There are many large islands in it. Utumbi is a
+ country of islands, and the natives are very good, but you cannot
+ proceed through Mpororo, as the people are Shaitans—devils—and the
+ Wanya-Ruanda are wicked; and because something happened when Wangwana
+ first tried to go there, they never tolerate strangers. A strange
+ people, and full of guile verily.
+
+ “West of Ruanda is a country called Mkinyaga, and there is a large
+ lake there, so I have heard—no Arabs have ever been there.”
+
+Then a native of Western Usui, at the request of Rumanika, said:—
+
+ “Mkinyaga is west of Kivu Lake or Nianja Cha Ngoma, from which the
+ Rusizi River flows into the lake of Uzigé (Tanganika). To reach
+ Mkinyaga, you must pass through Unyambungu first, then you will see
+ the great Lake of Mkinyaga. Lake Kivu has a connection with the lake
+ Akanyaru, though there is much grass, as in the Ingezi, below here. A
+ canoe could almost reach Kivu from Kishakka, but it would be hard
+ work.
+
+ “Akanyaru, which the Wahha call Nianja Cha-Ngoma, is very wide. It
+ will take a day and a half to cross, and is about two or three days’
+ canoe journey in length. It lies between Ruanda, Uhha, and Urundi. The
+ Kagera coming from between Uhha and Urundi flows into it. The
+ Nawarongo empties into the Ruvuvu between Ugufu and Kishakka. The
+ Ruvuvu between Kishakka and Karagwé enters the Kagera; the Kagera
+ comes into the Ingezi, and flows by Kitangulé into the Nianja of
+ Uganda; Kivu lake is west-south-west from Kibogora’s capital, in West
+ Usui. Kivu has no connection with Muta Nzigé, the lake of Unyoro.”
+
+Then a native of Zanzibar who had accompanied Khamis bin Abdallah to
+North-Western Uhha said:—
+
+ “I have been west of King Khanza’s Uhha, and I saw a large lake. Truly
+ there is much water there. Urundi was to my left. Ruanda fronted me
+ across, and I stood on Uhha.”
+
+Rumanika followed, and imparted at length all his information, of which
+I append only the pith:—
+
+ “Leaving Mpororo, you may reach by canoes Makinda’s, in Utumbi, in
+ half a day. The island is called Kabuzzi. Three hours will take a
+ canoe thence to Karara Island, and from Karara Island another half-day
+ will take you to Ukonju, where there is a tribe of cannibals.
+
+ “Mkinyaga is at the end of Ruanda, and its lake is Muta Nzigé, on
+ which you can go to Unyoro. There is a race of dwarfs somewhere west
+ of Mkinyaga called the Mpundu, and another called the Batwa or Watwa,
+ who are only two feet high. In Uriambwa is a race of small people with
+ tails.
+
+ “Uitwa, or Batwa—Watwa, is at the extreme south end of Uzongora.
+
+ “From Butwa, at the end of a point of land in Ruanda, you can see
+ Uitwa, Usongora.
+
+ “From Butwa, Mkinyaga is to the left of you about three days’ journey.
+
+ “Some of the Waziwa saw a strange people in one of those far-off lands
+ who had long ears descending to their feet; one ear formed a mat to
+ sleep on, the other served to cover him from the cold like a dressed
+ hide! They tried to coax one of them to come and see me, but the
+ journey was long, and he died on the way.”
+
+Dear old Rumanika, how he enjoyed presiding over the Geographical
+Society of Karagwé, and how he smiled when he delivered this last
+extraordinary piece of Münchhausenism! He was determined that he should
+be considered as the best informed of all present, and anticipated with
+delight the pleasure old and jaded Europe would feel upon hearing of
+these marvellous fables of Equatorial Africa. He was also ambitious to
+witness my note-book filled with his garrulity, and I fear he was a
+little disposed to impose upon the credulity of sober Christians.
+However, with this remark of caution to the reader, his fables may be
+rendered harmless, and we can accord him thanks for his interesting
+information.
+
+Since I am publishing these geographical items, I may as well append
+here, also in brief, some other information obtained elsewhere relating
+to Muta Nzigé from a native of Usongora, whom we found at Kawanga with
+Sekajugu, one of the Watongoleh who accompanied us to Beatrice Gulf.
+
+ “When you leave Ruoko in Unyoro, you will have Gambaragara to your
+ right, and Usagara or Ankori will be on your left. Uzimba, Ruigi’s
+ country, will be four days’ journey west of you.
+
+ “On reaching Uzimba, if you turn to the left you will reach Luhola.
+ Usongora will be on your right hand.
+
+ “On your left will also be Unyampaka, Kasita, Kishakka, Chakiomi,
+ Nyteré, Buhuju, Makara, Unyamururu, Munya Chambiro, and the Bwambu,
+ who are cannibals.
+
+ “If you go to your right from Ruigi’s, you reach Usongora, Mata, two
+ days after Nabweru, then Butwa. Standing at Butwa, you will see Ruanda
+ on the left hand.
+
+ “The country of Ruigi is called Uzimba.
+
+ “Kitagwenda is the name of the neighbouring country.
+
+ “Unyanuruguru lies between Ruanda and Usongora.
+
+ “All the Wasongora emigrated from Unyoro.”
+
+The following is information from a native of Unyampaka upon Muta
+Nzigé;—
+
+ “My king’s name is Bulema. Kashéshé is the great king of Uzimba. Ruigi
+ is dead. Usongora, as you look towards sunset, will lie before you, as
+ you stand at Kashéshé’s. To go to Usongora from Kashéshé’s, you go to
+ Nkoni Island, then to Ihundi Island, and then to Usongora.
+
+ “Far to your left, as you face the sunset, you have Utumbi, the
+ Mahinda, Karara, and Kabuzzi Islands.
+
+ “There is abundance of salt in Usongora, and we go from Unyampaka (my
+ country) to get salt, and sell it to all the country round. Ankori
+ country does not extend to Muta Nzigé. Buhuju and Unyanuruguru lie
+ between Ankori and the lake.
+
+ “Nyika is king of Gambaragara and Usongora. North of Gambaragara is
+ Toru, or Tori, country, a part of Unyoro. Kabba Rega is the great king
+ of all those lands. The medicines (charms) of Unyoro are kept by Nyika
+ on the top of his high mountain. There are as many white people there
+ as there are black. On the top there is a little Nianja, and a
+ straight rock rises high out from the middle. There is plenty of water
+ falling from the sides of the mountain, sometimes straight down, with
+ a loud noise. Herds upon herds of cattle, hundreds of them are in
+ Gambaragara and Usongora. The people of Usongora are great fighters,
+ they carry three spears and a shield each, and they live on nothing
+ but milk and potatoes.”
+
+I now proceed to give some “reflections” of a young philosopher of
+Uganda, one of the pages of Sambuzi, who had accompanied his master in
+the Katekiro’s great raid upon Usongora three years before.
+
+This young lad startled me out of the idea that philosophizing was not a
+common gift, or that only members of the white race were remarkable for
+their powers of observation, by the following question:—
+
+“Stamlee, how is it, will you tell me, that all white men have long
+noses, while all their dogs have very short noses,[35] while almost all
+black men have short noses, but their dogs have very long noses?”
+
+A youth of Uganda, thought I, who can propound such a proposition as
+that, deserves attention.
+
+“Speak,” I said, “all you know about Muta Nzigé and the Kagera.”
+
+ “Good; you see the Kagera, it is broad and deep and swift, and its
+ water though dark is clear. Where can it come from? There is an
+ enormous quantity of water in that river. It is the mother of the
+ river at Jinja, because were it not for this river our Niyanza would
+ dry up!
+
+ “Tell me where it can come from? There is no country large enough to
+ feed it, because when you reach Rumanika’s it is still a large river.
+ If you go to Kishakka, farther south, it is still large, and at
+ Kibogora’s it is still a large river. Urundi is not far, and beyond
+ that is the Tanganika.
+
+ “Tell me, where does the water of the Muta Nzigé go to? It goes into
+ the Kagera, of course; the Kagera goes into our Niyanza, and the river
+ at Jinja (Victoria Nile) goes to Kaniessa (Gondokoro). I tell you
+ truly that this must be the way of it. You saw the Rusango and Mpanga,
+ did you not, go to Muta Nzigé? Well, there must be many rivers like
+ that going to Muta Nzigé also. And what river drinks all those rivers
+ but the Kagera?” he asked triumphantly.
+
+ “Usongora is a wonderful land! Its people are brave, and when the
+ Katekiro, who was accompanied by Mkwenda and Sekebobo’s chiefs, and
+ some of Kitunzi’s, met them, they were different people from
+ Gambaragara. They are very tall, long-legged people, and are armed
+ with spears and shields. They tried every dodge with us. When we stood
+ on the banks of a river going north, through the Tinka-tinka, like
+ that in the Katonga, the Wasongora stood on the opposite side and
+ shouted out to us that they were ready. Sambuzi came near being killed
+ next day, and we lost many men, but the Katekiro, he does not fight
+ like other chiefs, he is exceedingly brave, and he wanted to please
+ Mtesa. We fought six days.
+
+ “The Wasongora had a number of large dogs also which they set upon us;
+ as we drove their cattle towards Gambaragara, the earth shook, springs
+ of mud leaped up, and the water in the plain was very bitter, and
+ killed many Waganda; it left a white thing around its borders like
+ salt.
+
+ “We first saw Muta Nzigé as we followed Nyika to the top of his big
+ mountain in Gambaragara. We could not quite get to the top, it was too
+ high.” (This is Mount Gordon-Bennett.) “But we could see Usongora, and
+ a great lake spreading all round it. When we came back with our spoil
+ to Mtesa, he sent us back a short time afterwards to Ankori, and from
+ the top of a high mountain near Kibanga (Mount Lawson) we saw Muta
+ Nzigé again spreading west of us. Oh, it is a grand lake, not so wide
+ as our Niyanza, but very long. We get all our salt from Usongora, as
+ Nyika pays tribute to us with so many bags, collected from the plains,
+ but it is unfit to eat, unless you wash it and clean it.”
+
+This young lad accompanied me to Karagwé, and by his intelligence and
+his restless curiosity extracted from the Wanyambu courtiers at King
+Rumanika’s information which he delivered to me in the following
+manner:—
+
+ “Master, I have been asking questions from many Wanyambu, and they say
+ that you can take a canoe from here to Ujiji, only a certain distance
+ you will have to drag your canoes by land. They say also that Ndagara,
+ Rumanika’s father, wishing to trade with the Wajiji, tried to cut a
+ canal or a ditch for his canoes to pass through. They say also that
+ Kivu is connected with Akanyaru, and that the Rusizi leaves Kivu and
+ goes to Tanganika through Uzigé, but the Kagera comes through Karagwé
+ towards Uganda. Do you believe it?”
+
+To close the interesting day, Rumanika requested Hamed Ibrahim to
+exhibit the treasure, trophies and curiosities in the king’s museum or
+armoury, which Hamed was most anxious to do, as he had frequently
+extolled the rare things there.
+
+The armoury was a circular hut, resembling externally a dome thatched
+neatly with straw. It was about 30 feet in diameter.
+
+The weapons and articles, of brass and copper and iron, were in perfect
+order, and showed that Rumanika did not neglect his treasures.
+
+There were about sixteen rude brass figures of ducks with copper wings,
+ten curious things of the same metal which were meant to represent
+elands, and ten headless cows of copper. Billhooks of iron, of really
+admirable make, double-bladed spears, several gigantic blades of
+exceedingly keen edge, 8 inches across and 18 inches in length,
+exquisite spears, some with blades and staves of linked iron; others
+with chained-shaped staves, and several with a cluster of small rigid
+rings massed at the bottom of the blade and the end of the staff;
+others, copper-bladed, had curious intertwisted iron rods for the staff.
+There were also great fly-flaps set in iron, the handles of which were
+admirable specimens of native art; massive cleaver-looking knives with
+polished blades and a kedge-anchor-shaped article with four hooked iron
+prongs, projecting out of a brass body. Some exquisite native cloths,
+manufactured of delicate grass, were indeed so fine as to vie with
+cotton sheeting, and were coloured black and red, in patterns and
+stripes. The royal stool was a masterpiece of native turnery, being
+carved out of a solid log of cotton-wood. Besides these specimens of
+native art were drinking-cups, goblets, trenchers and milk dishes of
+wood, all beautifully clean. The fireplace was a circular hearth in the
+centre of the building, very tastefully constructed. Ranged round the
+wall along the floor were other gifts from Arab friends, massive copper
+trays, with a few tureen lids of Britannia ware, evidently from
+Birmingham. Nor must the revolving rifle given to him by Captain Speke
+be forgotten, for it had an honoured place, and Rumanika loves to look
+at it, for it recalls to his memory the figures of his genial white
+friends Speke and Grant.
+
+The enormous drums, fifty-two in number, ranged outside, enabled us,
+from their very appearance, to guess at the deafening sounds which
+celebrate the new moon or deliver the signals for war.
+
+[Illustration: GROUND PLAN OF KING’S HOUSE.]
+
+My parting with the genial old man, who must be about sixty years old
+now, was very affecting. He shook my hands many times, saying each time
+that he was sorry that my visit must be so short. He strictly charged
+his sons to pay me every attention until I should arrive at Kibogora’s,
+the king of Western Usui, who, he was satisfied, would be glad to see me
+as a friend of Rumanika.
+
+_March 26._—On the 26th of March the Expedition, after its month’s rest
+at Kafurro, the whole of which period I had spent in exploration of
+Western Karagwé, resumed its journey, and after a march of five miles
+camped at Nakawanga, near the southern base of Kibonga mountain.
+
+The next day a march of thirteen miles brought us to the northern
+extremity of Uhimba lake, a broad river-like body of water supplied by
+the Alexandra Nile.
+
+_March 27._—On the 27th I had the good fortune to shoot three
+rhinoceroses, from the bodies of which we obtained ample supplies of
+meat for our journey through the wilderness of Uhimba. One of these
+enormous brutes possessed a horn 2 feet long, with a sharp dagger-like
+point below, a stunted horn, 9 inches in length. He appeared to have had
+a tussle with some wild beast, for a hand’s breadth of hide was torn
+from his rump.
+
+[Illustration: TREASURE HOUSE, ARMS, AND TREASURES OF RUMANIKA.]
+
+The Wangwana and Wanyambu informed me with the utmost gravity that the
+elephant maltreats the rhinoceros frequently, because of a jealousy that
+the former entertains of his fiery cousin. It is said that if the
+elephant observes the excrement of the rhinoceros unscattered, he waxes
+furious, and proceeds instantly in search of the criminal, when woe
+befall him if he is sulky, and disposed to battle for the proud
+privilege of leaving his droppings as they fall! The elephant in that
+case breaks off a heavy branch of a tree, or uproots a stout sapling
+like a boat’s mast, and belabours the unfortunate beast until he is glad
+to save himself by hurried flight. For this reason, the natives say, the
+rhinoceros always turns round and thoroughly scatters what he has
+dropped.
+
+Should a rhinoceros meet an elephant, he must observe the rule of the
+road and walk away, for the latter brooks no rivalry; but the former is
+sometimes headstrong, and the elephant then despatches him with his
+tusks by forcing him against a tree and goring him, or by upsetting him,
+and leisurely crushing him.
+
+At the distance of twenty-six miles from Kafurro we made our third camp
+near some wave-worn sheets and protruding humps of brown-veined
+porphyry, and close to an arm of the Uhimba lake, which swarmed with
+hippopotami.
+
+There were traces of water or wave action on this hard porphyry visible
+at about fifty feet above the present level. Some of these humps were
+exposed in the water also, and showed similar effects to those observed
+behind our camp.
+
+_March 27._—During the next two days we travelled twenty-seven miles
+south through a depression, or a longitudinal valley, parallel to Uhimba
+lake and the course of the Alexandra, with only an intervening ridge
+excluding the latter from our view. Tall truncated hill-cones rise every
+now and then with a singular resemblance to each other, to the same
+altitude as the grassy ridges which flank them. Their summits are flat,
+but the iron-stone faithfully indicates by its erosions the element
+which separated them from the ridges, and first furrowed the valley.
+
+Uhimba, placed by Rumanika in the charge of his sons Kakoko, Kananga,
+and Ruhinda, is sixty-eight miles south of his capital, and consists of
+a few settlements of herdsmen. It was, a few years ago, a debatable land
+between Usui and Karagwé, but upon the conquest of Kishakki by Ruanda,
+Rumanika occupied it lest his jealous and ill-conditioned rival,
+Mankorongo of Usui, should do so.
+
+At this place I met messengers from Mankorongo despatched by him to
+invite me to go and see him, and who, with all the impudence
+characteristic of their behaviour to the Arabs, declared that if I
+attempted to traverse any country in his neighbourhood without paying
+him the compliment of a visit, it would be my utter ruin.
+
+They were sent back with a peaceful message, and told to say that I was
+bound for Kibogora’s capital, to try and search out a road across Urundi
+to the west, and that if I did not succeed I would think of Mankorongo’s
+words; at the same time, Mankorongo was to be sure that if I was waylaid
+in the forest by any large armed party with a view to intimidation, that
+party would be sorry for it.
+
+I had heard of Mankorongo’s extortions from Arabs and Waganda, and how
+he had proved himself a worthy successor to the rapacious Swarora, who
+caused so much trouble to Speke and Grant.
+
+During the second day of our courteous intercourse with Kakoko, I
+ascended a mount some 600 feet high about three miles from camp, to
+take bearings of the several features which Kananga was requested
+to show me. Five countries were exposed to view, Karagwé, Kishakka,
+Ruanda beyond, Ugufu, and Usui. Parallel with Usui was pointed out King
+Khanza’s Uhha; beyond Uhha we were told was Urundi, beyond Urundi,
+west, the Tanganika and Uzigé, and then nobody knew what lands lay
+beyond Uzigé. Akanyaru stretched south of west, between Ruanda, Uhha,
+and Urundi; in a south-west direction was said to be Kivu; in a west by
+north Mkinyaga, and in the west Unyambungu. Ugufu was separated from
+Kishakka by the Nawarongo or Ruvuvu, and from Uhha and Usui by the
+Alexandra Nile which came from between Uhha and Urundi. A river of some
+size was also said to flow from the direction of Unyambungu into the
+Akanyaru.[36]
+
+_March 30._—The next day we entered Western Usui, and camped at
+Kafurra’s. In Usui there was a famine, and it required thirty-two doti
+of cloth to purchase four days’ rations. Kibogora demanded and obtained
+thirty doti, one coil of ware, and forty necklaces of beads as tribute;
+Kafurra, his principal chief, demanded ten doti and a quantity of beads;
+another chief required five doti; the queen required a supply of cloth
+to wear; the princes put in a claim; the guides were loud for their
+reward. Thus, in four days, we were compelled to disburse two bales out
+of twenty-two, all that were left of the immense store we had departed
+with from Zanzibar. Under such circumstances, what prospect of
+exploration had we, were we to continue our journey through Uhha, that
+land which in 1871 had consumed at the rate of two bales of cloth per
+diem? Twenty days of such experience in Uhha would reduce us to beggary.
+Its “esurient” Mutwarés and rapacious Mkamas and other extortionate
+people can only be quieted with cloth and beads disbursed with a
+princely hand. One hundred bales of cloth would only suffice to sustain
+a hundred men in Uhha about six weeks. Beyond Uhha lay the impenetrable
+countries of Urundi and Ruanda, the inhabitants of which were hostile to
+strangers.
+
+Kibogora and Kufurra were sufficiently explicit and amiably
+communicative, for my arrival in their country had been under the very
+best auspices, viz. an introduction from the gentle and beloved
+Rumanika.
+
+I turned away with a sigh from the interesting land, but with a
+resolution gradually being intensified, that the third time I sought a
+road west nothing should deter me.
+
+_April 7._—On the 7th of April we reluctantly resumed our journey in a
+southerly direction, and travelled five miles along a ravine, at the
+bottom of which murmured the infant stream Lohugati. On coming to its
+source we ascended a steep slope until we stood upon the summit of a
+grassy ridge at the height of 5600 feet by aneroid.
+
+Not until we had descended about a mile to the valley of Uyagoma did I
+recognize the importance of this ridge as the water-parting between one
+of the feeders of Lake Victoria and the source of the Malagarazi, the
+principal affluent of Lake Tanganika.
+
+Though by striking across Uhha due west or to the south-west we should
+again have reached the Alexandra Nile and the affluents of the Alexandra
+Lake, our future course was destined never to cross another stream or
+rivulet that supplied the great river which flows through the land of
+Egypt into the Mediterranean Sea.
+
+From the 17th of January, 1875, up to the 7th of April, 1876, we had
+been engaged in tracing the extreme southern sources of the Nile, from
+the marshy plains and cultivated uplands where they are born, down to
+the mighty reservoir called the Victoria Nyanza. We had circumnavigated
+the entire expanse; penetrated to every bay, inlet, and creek; become
+acquainted with almost every variety of wild human nature—the mild and
+placable, the ferocious and impracticably savage, the hospitable and the
+inhospitable, the generous-souled as well as the ungenerous; we had
+viewed their methods of war, and had witnessed them imbruing their hands
+in each other’s blood with savage triumph and glee; we had been five
+times sufferers by their lust for war and murder, and had lost many men
+through their lawlessness and ferocity; we had travelled hundreds of
+miles to and fro on foot along the northern coast of the Victorian Sea,
+and, finally, had explored with a large force the strange countries
+lying between the two lakes Muta Nzigé and the Victoria, and had been
+permitted to gaze upon the arm of the lake named by me “Beatrice Gulf,”
+and to drink of its sweet waters. We had then returned from farther
+quest in that direction, unable to find a peaceful resting-place on the
+lake shores, and had struck south from the Katonga lagoon down to the
+Alexandra Nile, the principal affluent of the Victoria Lake, which
+drains nearly all the waters from the west and south-west. We had made a
+patient survey of over one-half of its course, and then, owing to want
+of the means to feed the rapacity of the churlish tribes which dwell in
+the vicinity of the Alexandra Nyanza, and to our reluctance to force our
+way against the will of the natives, opposing unnecessarily our rifles
+to their spears and arrows, we had been compelled, on the 7th of April,
+to bid adieu to the lands which supply the Nile, and to turn our faces
+towards the Tanganika.
+
+I have endeavoured to give a faithful portrayal of nature, animate and
+inanimate, in all its strange peculiar phases, as they were unfolded to
+us. I am conscious that I have not penetrated to the depths; but then I
+have not ventured beyond the limits assigned to me, viz. the Exploration
+of the Southern Sources of the Nile, and the solution of the problem
+left unsolved by Speke and Grant—Is the Victoria Nyanza[37] one lake, or
+does it consist of five lakes, as reported by Livingstone, Burton, and
+others? This problem has been satisfactorily solved, and Speke has now
+the full glory of having discovered the largest inland sea on the
+continent of Africa, also its principal affluent, as well as the outlet.
+I must also give him credit for having understood the geography of the
+countries he travelled through better than any of those who so
+persistently assailed his hypothesis, and I here record my admiration of
+the geographical genius that from mere native report first sketched with
+such a masterly hand the bold outlines of the Victoria Nyanza.
+
+-----
+
+# 34:
+
+ This lake received this name from Captain Speke, because Colonel
+ Grant, his companion, thought it resembled the Windermere Lake in
+ England.
+
+# 35:
+
+ The young philosopher had observed the broad short noses of my British
+ bulldog and bull terrier “Jack,” and he had hastily arrived at the
+ conclusion that all white men’s dogs were pug-nosed.
+
+# 36:
+
+ I learned from Warundi and Wazigé, three months later, that the river
+ that came from the west was the Ruanda, flowing into the Rusizi,
+ thence into the Tanganika.
+
+# 37:
+
+ Speke’s hypothetic sketch made this lake 29,000 square miles in
+ extent. My survey of it has reduced it to 21,500 square miles.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+The twin rivers—Mankorongo baulked of his loot—Poor Bull! True to the
+ death—Msenna breaks out again—The Terror of Africa appears on the
+ scene—Mars at peace—“Dig potatoes, potatoes, potatoes”—Mirambo, the
+ bandit chief, and I make blood-brotherhood—Little kings with “big
+ heads”—Practical conversion of the chief of Ubagwé—The Watuta, the
+ Ishmaels of Africa—Their history—African nomenclature—From Msené
+ across the Malagarazi to Ujiji—Sad memories.
+
+
+_April 7._—Along the valley of Uyagoma, in Western Usui, stretches east
+and west a grass-covered ridge, beautiful in places with rock-strewn
+dingles, tapestried with ferns and moss, and bright with vivid foliage.
+From two such fair nooks, halfway down either slope, the northern and
+the southern, drip in great rich drops the sources of two impetuous
+rivers—on the southern the Malagarazi, on the other the Lohugati. Though
+nurtured in the same cradle, and issuing within 2000 yards of one
+another, the twin streams are strangers throughout their lives. Through
+the thick ferns and foliage, the rivulets trickle each down his
+appointed slope, murmuring as they gather strength to run their destined
+course—the Lohugati to the Victoria Lake, the Malagarazi to distant
+Tanganika.
+
+While the latter river is in its infancy, collecting its first tribute
+of waters from the rills that meander down from the mountain folds round
+the basin of Uyagoma, and is so shallow that tiny children can paddle
+through it, the people of Usui call it the Meruzi. When we begin our
+journey from Uyagoma, we follow its broadening course for a couple of
+hours, through the basin, and by that time it has become a river _nomine
+dignum_, and, plunging across it, we begin to breast the mountains,
+which, rising in diagonal lines of ridges from north-east to south-west
+across Usui, run in broken series into Northern Uhha, and there lose
+themselves in a confusion of complicated masses and clumps.
+
+The Meruzi wanders round and through these mountain masses in mazy
+curves, tumbles from height to height, from terrace to terrace,
+receiving as it goes the alliance of myriads of petty rivulets and
+threads of clear water, until, arriving at the grand forest lands of
+Unyamwezi, it has assumed the name of Lukoke, and serves as a boundary
+between Unyamwezi and Uhha.
+
+Meanwhile we have to cross a series of mountain ridges clothed with
+woods; and at a road leading from Kibogora’s land to the territory of
+the turbulent and vindictive Mankorongo, successor of Swarora, we meet
+an embassy, which demands in a most insolent tone that we should pass by
+his village. This means, of course, that we must permit ourselves to be
+defrauded of two or three bales of cloth, half-a-dozen guns, a sack or
+two of beads, and such other property as he may choose to exact, for the
+privilege of lengthening our journey some forty miles, and a delay of
+two or three weeks.
+
+The insolent demand is therefore not to be entertained, and we return a
+decided refusal. They are not satisfied with the answer, and resort to
+threats. Threats in the free, uninhabited forest constitute a _casus
+belli_. So the chiefs are compelled to depart without a yard of cloth on
+the instant, and after their departure we urge our pace until night, and
+from dawn next morning to 3 P.M. we continue the journey with unabated
+speed, until we find ourselves in Nyambarri, Usambiro, rejoiced to find
+that we have foiled the dangerous king.
+
+_April 13._—On the 13th of April we halted to refresh the people.
+Usambiro, like all Unyamwezi, produces sufficient grain, sesamum,
+millet, Indian corn, and vetches, besides beans and peas, to supply all
+caravans and expeditions. I have observed that lands producing grain are
+more easy of access than pastoral countries, or those which only supply
+milk, bananas, and potatoes to their inhabitants.
+
+At Nyambarri we met two Arab caravans fresh from Mankorongo, of whom
+they gave fearful accounts, from which I inferred that the extortionate
+chief would be by no means pleased when he came to understand how he had
+been baffled in his idea of spoliating our Expedition.
+
+Here the notorious Msenna for the third time ruptured the peace. He was
+reported to be inciting a large number of Wangwana and Wanyamwezi to
+desert in a body, offering himself as guide to conduct them to
+Unyanyembé; and several young fellows, awed by his ungovernable temper
+and brutal disposition, had yielded to his persuasions. Msenna was
+therefore reduced to the ranks, and instead of being entrusted with the
+captaincy of ten men, was sentenced to carry a box, under the watchful
+eye of Kachéché, for a period of six months.
+
+_April 14._—During the march from Nyambarri to Gambawagao, the chief
+village of Usambiro, ancient “Bull,” the last of all the canine
+companions which left England with me, borne down by weight of years and
+a land journey of about 1500 miles, succumbed. With bulldog tenacity he
+persisted in following the receding figures of the gun-bearers, who were
+accustomed to precede him in the narrow way. Though he often staggered
+and moaned, he made strenuous efforts to keep up, but at last, lying
+down in the path, he plaintively bemoaned the weakness of body that had
+conquered his will, and soon after died—his eyes to the last looking
+_forward_ along the track he had so bravely tried to follow.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ “BULL.”
+ (_From a photograph by the Author._)
+]
+
+Poor dog! Good and faithful service had he done me! Who more rejoiced
+than he to hear the rifle-shot ringing through the deep woods! Who more
+loudly applauded success than he with his deep, mellow bark! What long
+forest-tracts of tawny plains and series of mountain ranges had he not
+traversed! How he plunged through jungle and fen, morass and stream! In
+the sable blackness of the night his voice warned off marauders and
+prowling beasts from the sleeping camp. His growl responded to the
+hideous jabber of the greedy hyæna, and the snarling leopard did not
+dismay him. He amazed the wondering savages with his bold eyes and
+bearing, and by his courageous front caused them to retreat before him;
+and right bravely did he help us to repel the Wanyaturu from our camp in
+Ituru. Farewell, thou glory of thy race! Rest from thy labours in the
+silent forest! Thy feet shall no more hurry up the hill or cross mead
+and plain; thy form shall rustle no more through the grasses, or be
+plunging to explore the brake; thou shalt no longer dash after me across
+the savannahs, for thou art gone to the grave, like the rest of thy
+companions!
+
+The king of Usambiro exchanged gifts with us, and appeared to be a
+clever, agreeable young man. His people, though professing to be
+Wanyamwezi, are a mixture of Wahha and Wazinja. He has constructed a
+strong village, and surrounded it with a fosse 4 feet deep and 6 feet
+wide, with a stockade and “marksmen’s nests” at intervals round it. The
+population of the capital is about 2000.
+
+Boma Kiengo, or Msera, lies five miles south-south-east from the
+capital, and its chief, seeing that we had arrived at such a good
+understanding with the king, also exerted himself to create a favourable
+impression.
+
+_April 18._—Musonga lies twelve miles south-south-east of Boma Kiengo,
+and is the most northerly village of the country of Urangwa. On the 18th
+of April, a march of fifteen miles enabled us to reach the capital,
+Ndeverva, another large stockaded village, also provided with
+“marksmen’s nests,” and surrounded by a fosse.
+
+We were making capital marches. The petty kings, though they exacted a
+small interchange of gifts, which compelled me to disburse cloth a
+little more frequently than was absolutely necessary, were not insolent,
+nor so extortionate as to prevent our intercourse being of the most
+friendly character.
+
+But on the day we arrived at Urangwa, lo! there came up in haste, while
+we were sociably chatting together, a messenger to tell us that the
+phantom, the bugbear, the terror whose name silences the children of
+Unyamwezi and Usukuma, and makes women’s hearts bound with fear; that
+Mirambo himself was coming—that he was only two camps, or about twenty
+miles, away—that he had an immense army of Ruga-Ruga (bandits) with him!
+
+The consternation at this news, the dismay and excitement, the
+discussion and rapid interchange of ideas suggested by terror throughout
+the capital, may be conceived. Barricades were prepared, sharp-shooters’
+platforms, with thick bulwarks of logs, were erected. The women hastened
+to prepare their charms, the Waganga consulted their spirits, each
+warrior and elder examined his guns and loaded them, ramming the powder
+down the barrels of their Brummagem muskets with desperately vengeful
+intentions, while the king hastened backwards and forwards with
+streaming robes of cotton behind him, animated by a hysterical energy.
+
+[Illustration: SEROMBO HUTS.]
+
+I had 175 men under my command, and forty of the Arabs’ people were with
+me, and we had many boxes of ammunition. The king recollected these
+facts, and said, “You will stop to fight Mirambo, will you not?”
+
+“Not I, my friend; I have no quarrel with Mirambo, and we cannot join
+every native to fight his neighbour. If Mirambo attacks the village
+while I am here, and will not go away when I ask him, we will fight; but
+we cannot stop here to wait for him.”
+
+The poor king was very much distressed when we left the next morning. We
+despatched our scouts ahead, as we usually did when traversing troublous
+countries, and omitted no precaution to guard against surprise.
+
+_April 19._—On the 19th we arrived at one of the largest villages or
+towns in Unyamwezi, called Serombo or Sorombo. It was two miles and a
+half in circumference, and probably contained over a thousand large and
+small huts, and a population of about 5000.
+
+The present king’s name is Ndega, a boy of sixteen, the son of Makaka,
+who died about two years ago. Too young himself to govern the large
+settlement and the country round, two elders, or Manyapara, act as
+regents during his minority.
+
+We were shown to a peculiar-shaped hut, extremely like an Abyssinian
+dwelling. The height of the doorway was 7 feet, and from the floor to
+the top of the conical roof it was 20 feet. The walls were of interwoven
+sticks, plastered over neatly with brown clay. The king’s house was 30
+feet high from the ground to the tip of the cone, and 40 feet in
+diameter within; but the total diameter including the circular fence or
+palisade that supported the broad eaves, and enclosed a gallery which
+ran round the house, was 54 feet.
+
+Owing to this peculiar construction a desperate body of 150 men might
+from the circular gallery sustain a protracted attack from a vastly
+superior foe, and probably repel it.
+
+Ndega is a relative of Mirambo by marriage, and he soon quieted all
+uneasy minds by announcing that the famous man who was now advancing
+upon Serombo had just concluded a peace with the Arabs, and that
+therefore no trouble was to be apprehended from his visit, it being
+solely a friendly visit to his young relative.
+
+Naturally we were all anxious to behold the “Mars of Africa,” who since
+1871 has made his name feared by both native and foreigner from Usui to
+Urori, and from Uvinza to Ugogo, a country embracing 90,000 square
+miles, who, from the village chieftainship over Uyoweh, has made for
+himself a name as well known as that of Mtesa throughout the eastern
+half of Equatorial Africa, a household word from Nyangwé to Zanzibar,
+and the theme of many a song of the bards of Unyamwezi, Ukimbu,
+Ukonongo, Uzinja, and Uvinza.
+
+On the evening of our arrival at Serombo’s we heard his Brown Besses—
+called by the natives Gumeh-Gumeh—announcing to all that the man with
+the dread name lay not far from our vicinity.
+
+At dusk the huge drums of Serombo signalled silence for the town-criers,
+whose voices, preceded by the sound of iron bells, were presently heard
+crying out:—
+
+“Listen, O men of Serombo. Mirambo, the brother of Ndega, cometh in the
+morning. Be ye prepared, therefore, for his young men are hungry. Send
+your women to dig potatoes, dig potatoes. Mirambo cometh. Dig potatoes,
+potatoes, dig potatoes, to-morrow!”
+
+_April 20._—At 10 A.M. the Brown Besses, heavily charged and fired off
+by hundreds, loudly heralded Mirambo’s approach, and nearly all my
+Wangwana followed the inhabitants of Serombo outside to see the famous
+chieftain. Great war-drums and the shouts of admiring thousands
+proclaimed that he had entered the town, and soon little Mabruki, the
+chief of the tent-boys, and Kachéché, the detective, on whose
+intelligence I could rely, brought an interesting budget to me.
+
+Mabruki said: “We have seen Mirambo. He has arrived. We have beheld
+the Ruga-Ruga, and there are many of them, and all are armed with
+Gumeh-Gumeh. About a hundred are clothed in crimson cloth and white
+shirts, like our Wangwana. Mirambo is not an old man.”
+
+Kachéché said: “Mirambo is not old, he is young: I must be older than he
+is. He is a very nice man, well dressed, quite like an Arab. He wears
+the turban, fez, and cloth coat of an Arab, and carries a scimitar. He
+also wears slippers, and his clothes under his coat are very white. I
+should say he has about a thousand and a half men with him, and they are
+all armed with muskets or double-barrelled guns. Mirambo has three young
+men carrying his guns for him. Truly, Mirambo is a great man!”
+
+The shrill Lu-lu-lu’s, prolonged and loud, were still maintained by the
+women, who entertained a great respect for the greatest king in
+Unyamwezi.
+
+[Illustration: A “RUGA-RUGA,” ONE OF MIRAMBO’S PATRIOTS.]
+
+Presently Manwa Sera, the chief captain of the Wangwana, came to my hut,
+to introduce three young men—Ruga-Ruga (bandits), as we called them, but
+must do so no more lest we give offence—handsomely dressed in fine red
+and blue cloth coats, and snowy white shirts, with ample turbans around
+their heads. They were confidential captains of Mirambo’s bodyguard.
+
+“Mirambo sends his salaams to the white man,” said the principal of
+them. “He hopes the white man is friendly to him, and that he does not
+share the prejudices of the Arabs, and believe Mirambo a bad man. If it
+is agreeable to the white man, will he send words of peace to Mirambo?”
+
+“Tell Mirambo,” I replied, “that I am eager to see him, and would be
+glad to shake hands with so great a man, and as I have made strong
+friendship with Mtesa, Rumanika, and all the kings along the road from
+Usoga to Unyamwezi, I shall be rejoiced to make strong friendship with
+Mirambo also. Tell him I hope he will come and see me as soon as he
+can.”
+
+_April 22._—The next day Mirambo, having despatched a Ruga-Ruga—no, a
+patriot, I should have said—to announce his coming, appeared with about
+twenty of his principal men.
+
+I shook hands with him with fervour, which drew a smile from him as he
+said, “The white man shakes hands like a strong friend.”
+
+His person quite captivated me, for he was a thorough African
+_gentleman_ in appearance, very different from my conception of the
+terrible bandit who had struck his telling blows at native chiefs and
+Arabs with all the rapidity of a Frederick the Great environed by foes.
+
+I entered the following notes in my journal on April 22, 1876:—
+
+ “This day will be memorable to me for the visit of the famous Mirambo.
+ He was the reverse of all my conceptions of the redoubtable chieftain,
+ and the man I had styled the ‘terrible bandit.’
+
+ “He is a man about 5 feet 11 inches in height, and about thirty-five
+ years old, with not an ounce of superfluous flesh about him. A
+ handsome, regular-featured, mild-voiced, soft-spoken man, with what
+ one might call a ‘meek’ demeanour, very generous and open-handed.
+ The character was so different from that which I had attributed
+ to him that for some time a suspicion clung to my mind that I was
+ being imposed upon, but Arabs came forward who testified that this
+ quiet-looking man was indeed Mirambo. I had expected to see something
+ of the Mtesa type, a man whose exterior would proclaim his life and
+ rank; but this unpresuming, mild-eyed man, of inoffensive, meek
+ exterior, whose action was so calm, without a gesture, presented to
+ the eye nothing of the Napoleonic genius which he has for five years
+ displayed in the heart of Unyamwezi, to the injury of Arabs and
+ commerce, and the doubling of the price of ivory. I said there was
+ _nothing_; but I must except the eyes, which had the steady, calm
+ gaze of a master.
+
+ “During the conversation I had with him, he said he preferred boys or
+ young men to accompany him to war; he never took middle-aged or old
+ men, as they were sure to be troubled with wives or children, and did
+ not fight half so well as young fellows who listened to his words.
+ Said he, ‘They have sharper eyes, and their young limbs enable them to
+ move with the ease of serpents or the rapidity of zebras, and a few
+ words will give them the hearts of lions. In all my wars with the
+ Arabs, it was an army of youths that gave me victory, boys without
+ beards. Fifteen of my young men died one day because I said I must
+ have a certain red cloth that was thrown down as a challenge. No, no,
+ give me youths for war in the open field, and men for the stockaded
+ village.’
+
+ “‘What was the cause of your war, Mirambo, with the Arabs?’ I asked.
+
+ “‘There was a good deal of cause. The Arabs got the big head’ (proud),
+ ‘and there was no talking with them. Mkasiwa of Unyanyembé lost his
+ head too, and thought I was his vassal, whereas I was not. My father
+ was king of Uyoweh, and I was his son. What right had Mkasiwa or the
+ Arabs to say what I ought to do? But the war is now over—the Arabs
+ know what I can do, and Mkasiwa knows it. We will not fight any more,
+ but we will see who can do the best trade, and who is the smartest
+ man. Any Arab or white man who would like to pass through my country
+ is welcome. I will give him meat and drink, and a house, and no man
+ shall hurt him.’”
+
+Mirambo retired, and in the evening I returned his visit with ten of the
+principal Wangwana. I found him in a bell-tent, 20 feet high and 25 feet
+in diameter, with his chiefs around him.
+
+Manwa Sera was requested to seal our friendship by performing the
+ceremony of blood-brotherhood between Miramba and myself. Having caused
+us to sit fronting each other on a straw-carpet, he made an incision in
+each of our right legs, from which he extracted blood, and,
+interchanging it, he exclaimed aloud:—
+
+“If either of you break this brotherhood now established between you,
+may the lion devour him, the serpent poison him, bitterness be in his
+food, his friends desert him, his gun burst in his hands and wound him,
+and everything that is bad do wrong to him until death.”
+
+My new brother then gave me fifteen cloths to be distributed among my
+chiefs, while he would accept only three from me. But not desirous of
+appearing illiberal, I presented him with a revolver and 200 rounds of
+ammunition, and some small curiosities from England. Still ambitious to
+excel me in liberality, he charged five of his young men to proceed to
+Urambo—which name he has now given Uyoweh, after himself—and to select
+three milch-cows with their calves, and three bullocks, to be driven to
+Ubagwé to meet me. He also gave me three guides to take me along the
+frontier of the predatory Watuta.
+
+_April 23._—On the morning of the 23rd he accompanied me outside
+Serombo, where we parted on the very best terms with each other. An Arab
+in his company, named Sayid bin Mohammed, also presented me with a bar
+of Castile soap, a bag of pepper and some saffron. A fine riding-ass,
+purchased from Sayid, was named Mirambo by me, because the Wangwana, who
+were also captivated by Mirambo’s agreeable manners, insisted on it.
+
+We halted on the 23rd at Mayangira, seven miles and a half from
+Serombo, and on the 24th, after a protracted march of eleven miles
+south-south-east over flooded plains, arrived at Ukombeh.
+
+_April 24._—At Masumbwa, ten miles from Ukombeh, we encountered a very
+arrogant young chief, who called himself Mtemi, or king, and whose
+majesty claimed to be honoured with a donation of fifteen cloths—a claim
+which was peremptorily refused, despite all he could urge in
+satisfaction of it.
+
+Through similar flooded plains, with the water hip-deep in most places,
+and after crossing an important stream flowing west-south-west towards
+the Malagarazi, we arrived at Myonga’s village, the capital of southern
+Masumbwa.
+
+This Myonga is the same valorous chief who robbed Colonel Grant as he
+was hurrying with an undisciplined caravan after Speke. (See Speke’s
+Journal, page 159, for the following graphic letter:—
+
+ “In the Jungles, near M’yonga’s,
+ “16th Sept. 1861.
+
+ “MY DEAR SPEKE,—The caravan was attacked, plundered, and the men
+ driven to the winds, while marching this morning into M’yonga’s
+ country.
+
+ “Awaking at cock-crow, I roused the camp, all anxious to rejoin you;
+ and while the loads were being packed, my attention was drawn to an
+ angry discussion between the head men and seven or eight armed fellows
+ sent by Sultan M’yonga to insist on my putting up for the day in his
+ village. They were summarily told that as _you_ had already made him a
+ present, he need not expect a visit from _me_. Adhering, I doubt not,
+ to their master’s instructions, they officiously constituted
+ themselves our guides till we chose to strike off their path, when,
+ quickly heading our party, they stopped the way, planted their spears,
+ and _dared_ our advance!
+
+ “This menace made us firmer in our determination, and we swept past
+ the spears. After we had marched unmolested for some seven miles, a
+ loud yelping from the woods excited our attention, and a sudden rush
+ was made upon us by, say, two hundred men, who came down _seemingly_
+ in great glee. In an instant, at the caravan’s centre, they fastened
+ upon the poor porters. The struggle was short; and with the threat of
+ an arrow or spear at their breasts, men were robbed of their cloths
+ and ornaments, loads were yielded and run away with before resistance
+ could be organised; only three men of a hundred stood by me; the
+ others, whose only _thought_ was their lives, fled into the woods,
+ where I went shouting for them. One man, little Rahan—rip as he is—
+ stood with cocked gun, defending his load against five savages with
+ uplifted spears. No one else could be seen. Two or three were reported
+ killed, some were wounded. Beads, boxes, cloths, &c., lay strewed
+ about the woods. In fact, I felt wrecked. My attempt to go and demand
+ redress from the sultan was resisted, and, in utter despair. I seated
+ myself among a mass of rascals jeering round me, and insolent after
+ the success of the day. Several were dressed in the very cloths, &c.,
+ they had stolen from my men.
+
+ “In the afternoon about fifteen men and loads were brought me, with a
+ message from the sultan, that the attack had been a _mistake_ of his
+ subjects—that one man had had a hand cut off for it, and that all the
+ property would be restored!
+
+ “Yours sincerely,
+ “J. A. GRANT.”)
+
+Age had not lessened the conceit of Myonga, increased his modesty, or
+moderated his cupidity. He asserted the rights and privileges of his
+royalty with a presumptuous voice and a stern brow. He demanded tribute!
+Twenty-five cloths! A gun and five fundo of beads! The Arabs, my
+friends, were requested to do the same!
+
+“Impossible, Myonga!” I replied, yet struck with admiration at the
+unparalleled audacity of the man.
+
+“People have been obliged to pay what I ask,” the old man said, with a
+cunning twinkle in his eyes.
+
+“Perhaps,” I answered; “but whether they have or not, I cannot pay you
+so much, and, what is more, I will not. As a sign that we pass through
+your country, I give you one cloth, and the Arabs shall only give you
+one cloth.”
+
+Myonga blustered and stormed, begged and threatened, and some of his
+young men appeared to be getting vicious, when rising I informed him
+that to talk loudly was to act like a scolding woman, and, that, when
+his elder should arrive at our camp, he would receive two cloths, one
+from me and one from the Arabs, as acknowledgment of his right to the
+country.
+
+The drum of Myonga’s village at once beat to arms, but the affair went
+no further, and the elder received the reasonable and just tribute of
+two cloths, with a gentle hint that it would be dangerous to intercept
+the Expedition on the road when on the march, as the guns were loaded.
+
+Phunze, chief of Mkumbiro, a village ten miles south by east from
+Myonga, and the chief of Ureweh, fourteen miles and a half from
+Phunze’s, were equally bold in their demands, but they did not receive
+an inch of cloth; but neither of these three chiefs were half so
+extortionate as Ungomirwa, king of Ubagwé, a large town of 3000 people.
+
+_April 27._—We met at Ubagwé an Arab trader _en route_ to Uganda, and he
+gave us a dismal tale of robbery and extortion practised on him by
+Ungomirwa. He had been compelled to pay 150 cloths, five kegs or 50 lbs.
+of gunpowder, five guns double-barrelled, and 35 lbs. of beads, the
+whole being of the value of 625 dollars, or £125, for the privilege of
+passing unmolested through the district of Ubagwé.
+
+When the chief came to see me, I said to him:—
+
+“Why is it, my friend, that your name goes about the country as being
+that of a bad man? How is it that this poor Arab has had to pay so much
+for going through Ubagwé? Is Ubagwé Unyamwezi, that Ungomirwa demands so
+much from the Arabs? The Arab brings cloths, powder, guns into
+Unyamwezi. If you rob him of his property, I must send letters to stop
+people coming here, then Ungomirwa will become poor, and have neither
+powder, guns, nor cloths to wear. What has Ungomirwa to say to his
+friend?”
+
+“Ungomirwa,” replied he, “does no more than Ureweh, Phunze, Myonga,
+Ndega, Urangwa, and Mankorongo: he takes what he can. If the white man
+thinks it is wrong, and will be my friend, I will return it all to the
+Arab.”
+
+“Ungomirwa is good. Nay, do not return it all; retain one gun, five
+cloths, two fundo of beads, and one keg of powder; that will be plenty,
+and nothing but right. I have many Wanyamwezi with me, whom I have made,
+good men. I have two from Ubagwé, and one man who was born at Phunze’s.
+Let Ungomirwa call the Wanyamwezi, and ask them how the white man treats
+Wanyamwezi, and let him try to make them run away, and see what they
+will say. They will tell him that all white men are very good to those
+who are good.”
+
+Ungomirwa called the Wanyamwezi to him, and asked them why they followed
+the white man to wander about the world, leaving their brothers and
+sisters. The question elicited the following reply:—
+
+“The white people know everything. They are better than the black people
+in heart. We have abundance to eat, plenty to wear, and silver for
+ourselves. All we give to the white man is our strength. We carry his
+goods for him, and he bestows a father’s care on his black children. Let
+Ungomirwa make friends with the white man, and do as he says, and it
+will be good for the land of Unyamwezi.”
+
+To whatever cause it was owing, Ungomirwa returned the Arab nearly all
+his property, and presented me with three bullocks; and during all the
+time that I was his guest at Ubagwé, he exhibited great friendship for
+me, and boasted of me to several Watuta visitors who came to see him
+during that time; indeed, I can hardly remember a more agreeable stay at
+any village in Africa than that which I made in Ubagwé.
+
+Unyamwezi is troubled with a vast number of petty kings, whose
+paltriness and poverty have so augmented their pride, that each of them
+employ more threats, and makes more demands, than Mtesa, Emperor of
+Uganda.
+
+The adage that “Small things make base men proud” holds true in Africa
+as in other parts of the world. Sayid bin Sayf, one of the Arabs at
+Kafurro, begged me as I valued my property and peace of mind not to
+march through Unyamwezi to Ujiji, but to travel through Uhha. I
+attribute these words of Sayid’s to a desire on his part to hear of my
+being mulcted by kings Khanza, Iwanda, and Kiti in the same proportion
+that he was. He confessed that he had paid to Kiti sixty cloths, to
+Iwanda sixty cloths, and to King Khanza 138, which amounted in value to
+516 dollars, and this grieved the gentle merchant’s soul greatly.
+
+On my former journey in search of Livingstone, I tested sufficiently the
+capacity of the chiefs of Uhha to absorb property, and I vowed then to
+give them a wide berth for all future time. Sayid’s relation of his
+experiences, confirmed by Hamed Ibrahim, and my own reverses, indicated
+but too well the custom in vogue among the Wahha. So far, between
+Kibogora’s capital and Ubagwé, I had only disbursed thirty cloths as
+gifts to nine kings of Unyamwezi, without greater annoyance than the
+trouble of having to reduce their demands by negotiation.
+
+No traveller has yet become acquainted with a wilder race in Equatorial
+Africa than are the Mafitté or Watuta. They are the only true African
+Bedawi; and surely some African Ishmael must have fathered them, for
+their hands are against every man, and every man’s hand appears to be
+raised against them.
+
+To slay a solitary Mtuta is considered by an Arab as meritorious, and
+far more necessary, than killing a snake. To guard against these sable
+freebooters, the traveller, while passing near their haunts, has need of
+all his skill, coolness, and prudence. The settler in their
+neighbourhood has need to defend his village with impregnable fences,
+and to have look-outs night and day: his women and children require to
+be guarded, and fuel can only be procured by strong parties, while the
+ground has to be cultivated spear in hand, so constant is the fear of
+the restless and daring tribe of bandits.
+
+The Watuta, by whose lands we are now about to travel, are a lost tribe
+of the Mafitté, and became separated from the latter by an advance
+towards the north in search of plunder and cattle. This event occurred
+some thirty years ago. On their incursion they encountered the Warori,
+who possessed countless herds of cattle. They fought with them for two
+months at one place, and three months at another; and at last,
+perceiving that the Warori were too strong for them—many of them having
+been slain in the war and a large number of them (now known as the
+Wahehé, and settled near Ugogo) having been cut off from the main body—
+the Watuta skirted Urori, and advanced north-west through Ukonongo and
+Kawendi to Ujiji. It is in the memory of the old Arab residents at Ujiji
+how the Watuta suddenly appeared and drove them and the Wajiji to take
+refuge upon Bangwé Island.
+
+Not glutted with conquest by their triumph at Ujiji, they attacked
+Urundi; but here they met different foes altogether from the negroes
+of the south. They next invaded Uhha, but the races which occupy the
+intra-lake regions had competent and worthy champions in the Wahha.
+Battled at Uhha and Urundi, they fought their devastating path across
+Uvinza, and entered Unyamwezi, penetrated Usumbwa, Utambara, Urangwa,
+Uyofu, and so through Uzinja to the Victoria Nyanza, where they rested
+for some years after their daring exploit. But the lands about the lake
+were not suited to their tastes, and they retraced their steps as far
+as Utambara. Kututwa, king of Utambara, from policy, wooed the daughter
+of the chief of the Watuta, and as a dower his land was returned to
+him, while the Watuta moving south occupied the neighbouring country of
+Ugomba, situate between Uhha and Unyamwezi. It is a well-watered and a
+rich grazing country, therefore well adapted to their habits and modes
+of life. The Kinyamwezi kings of Serombo, Ubagwé, Ureweh, Renzeweh, and
+kings Mirambo and Phunze have contracted alliances with influential
+chiefs, and are on tolerably good terms with them; but stubborn old
+Myonga still holds aloof from the Watuta.
+
+It will be remembered by readers of ‘How I Found Livingstone’ how
+Mirambo appeared at Tabora with thousands of the Watuta free-lances,
+slaughtered Khamis bin Abdullah and five other Arabs, and ravaged that
+populous settlement. From the above sketch of these terrible marauders,
+they will now be able to understand how it was that he was able to
+obtain their aid, while the following paragraph explains how I obtained
+the facts of this predatory migration.
+
+[Illustration: ONE OF THE WATUTA.]
+
+The wife of Wadi Safeni—one of the Wangwana captains, and coxswain of
+the _Lady Alice_ during her cruise round the Victoria Nyanza—when
+proceeding one day outside the stockade of Ubagwé to obtain water,
+accidentally heard our Watuta visitors gossiping together. The dialect
+and accent sounding familiar to her, she listened, and a few moments
+afterwards she was herself volubly discussing with them the geography of
+the locality inhabited by the Mafitté between Lake Nyassa and Tanganika.
+It was mainly from this little circumstance—confirmed by other
+informants, Arab, Wangwana, and Wanyamwezi—that the above brief sketch
+of the wanderings of the Watuta has been obtained.
+
+“Mono-Matapa,” that great African word, which, from its antiquity and
+its persistent appearance on our maps—occupying various positions to
+suit the vagaries of various cartographers and the hypotheses of various
+learned travellers—has now become almost classic, bears a distant
+relation to the tribe of the Watuta.
+
+The industrious traveller, Salt, in his book on Abyssinia, dated 1814,
+says:
+
+ “This country is commonly called Monomatapa, in the accounts of which
+ a perplexing obscurity has been introduced, by different authors
+ having confounded the names of the districts with the titles of the
+ sovereigns, indiscriminately styling them Quitéve, Mono-matapa,
+ Benemotapa, Bene-motasha, Chikanga, Manika, Bokaranga and Mokaranga.
+ The fact appears to be that the sovereign’s title was Quitéve, and the
+ name of the country Motapa, to which Mono has been prefixed, as in
+ Monomugi, and many other names on the coast, that beyond this lay a
+ district called Chikanga, which contained the mines of Manica, and
+ that the other names were applicable solely to petty districts at that
+ time under the rule of the Quitéve.”
+
+Zimbaoa, the capital of this interesting land, was said to be fifteen
+days’ travel west from Sofala, and forty days’ travel from Senâ.
+
+Indefatigable and patient exploration by various intelligent travellers
+has now enabled us to understand exactly the meaning of the various
+names with which early geographers confused us. The ancient land of the
+Mono-Matapa occupied that part of South-East Africa now held by the
+Matabeles, and the empire embraced nearly all the various tribes and
+clans now known by the popular terms of Kaffirs and Zulus.
+
+The reputation which Chaka obtained throughout that upland, extending
+from the lands of the Hottentots to the Zambezi, roused, after his
+death, various ambitious spirits. His great captains, leading warlike
+hosts after them, spread terror and dismay among the tribes north,
+south, and west. Mosèlé-katzé overran the Transvaal, and conquered the
+Bechuanas, but was subsequently compelled by the Boers to migrate north,
+where his people, now known as the Matabeles, have established
+themselves under Lo Bengwella, his successor.
+
+Sebituané, another warlike spirit after the style of Chaka, put himself
+at the head of a tribe of the Basutos, and, after numerous conquests
+over small tribes, established his authority and people along the
+Zambezi, under the name of Makololo. Sebituané was succeeded by
+Sekeletu, Livingstone’s friend, and he by Impororo—the last of the
+Makololo kings.
+
+One of Chaka’s generals was called Mani-Koos. It ought to be mentioned
+here that Mani, Mana, Mono, Moeni, Muini, Muinyi, are all prefixes,
+synonymous with lord, prince, and sometimes son: for example,
+Mana-Koos, Mani-Ema, now called Man-yema and Mana-Mputu, lord of the
+sea; Mono-Matapa, Mana-Ndenga, Mana-Butti, Mana-Kirembu, Mana-Mamba,
+and so forth. In Uregga the prefix becomes Wana, or Wane, as in
+Wane-Mbesa, Wane-Kirumbu, Wane Kamankua, Wana-Kipangu, Wana-Mukwa,
+and Wana-Rukura; while in the Bateké and the Babwendé lands it is
+changed into Mwana, as Mwana-Ibaka, or Mwana-Kilungu, which title was
+given to the Livingstone river by the Babwendé, meaning “lord of the
+sea.” To return. This Mani-Koos, a general of Chaka’s, attacked the
+Portuguese at Delagoa Bay, Sofala, and Inhambané, and compelled them
+to pay tribute. The party then crossed the Zambezi river above Teté,
+the capital of the Portuguese territory, and, after ravaging the lands
+along the Nyassa, finally established itself north-west of the Nyassa,
+between that lake and the Tanganika. To-day they are known as the
+Manitu, Mafitté, or Ma-viti; and three offshoots of this tribe are—the
+Watuta in the neighbourhood of Zombé, south-east end of Lake Tanganika;
+the Wahehé, who cause such dire trouble to the Wagogo; and the Watuta,
+the allies of Mirambo, and called by the Wanyamwezi the Mwangoni.
+
+_May 4._—On the 4th of May, having received the milch cows, calves, and
+bullocks from my new brother Mirambo, we marched in a south-south-west
+direction, skirting the territory of the Watuta, to Ruwinga, a village
+occupying a patch of cleared land, and ruled by a small chief who is a
+tributary to his dreaded neighbours.
+
+_May 5._—The next day, in good order, we marched across a portion of the
+territory of the Watuta. No precaution was omitted to ensure our being
+warned in time of the presence of the enemy, nor did we make any delay
+on the road, as a knowledge of their tactics of attack assured us that
+this was our only chance of avoiding a conflict with them. Msené, after
+a journey of twenty miles, was reached about 2 P.M., and the king,
+Mulagwa, received us with open arms.
+
+The population of the three villages under Mulagwa probably numbers
+about 3500. The king of the Watuta frequently visits Mulagwa’s district;
+but his strongly fenced villages and large number of muskets have been
+sufficient to check the intentions of the robbers, though atrocious acts
+are often committed upon the unwary.
+
+Maganga, the dilatory chief of one of my caravans during the first
+Expedition, was discovered here, and, on the strength of a long
+acquaintance with my merits, induced Mulagwa to exert himself for my
+comfort.
+
+I saw a poor woman, a victim of a raid by the Watuta, who, having been
+accidentally waylaid by them in the fields, had had her left foot
+barbarously cut off.
+
+Ten miles south-west of Msené is Kawangira, a district about ten miles
+square, governed by the chief Nyambu, a rival of Mulagwa. Relics of the
+ruthlessness and devastating attacks of the Watuta are visible between
+the two districts, and the once populous land is rapidly resuming its
+original appearance of a tenantless waste.
+
+_May 9._—The next village, Nganda, ten miles south-west from Kawangira,
+was reached on the 9th of May. From this place, as far as Usenda
+(distant fourteen miles south-south-west), extended a plain, inundated
+with from 2 to 5 feet of water from the flooded Gombé which rises about
+forty miles south-east of Unyanyembé. Where the Gombé meets with the
+Malagarazi, there is a spacious plain, which during each rainy season is
+converted into a lake.
+
+We journeyed to the important village of Usagusi on the 12th, in a
+south-south-west direction. Like Serombo, Myonga’s, Urangwa, Ubagwé, and
+Msené, it is strongly stockaded, and the chief, conscious that the
+safety of his principal village depends upon the care he bestows upon
+its defences, exacts heavy fines upon those of his people who manifest
+any reluctance to repair the stockade; and this vigilant prudence has
+hitherto baffled the wolf-like marauders of Ugomba.
+
+I met another old friend of mine at the next village, Ugara. He was a
+visitor to my camp at Kuziri, in Ukimbu, in 1871. Ugara is seventeen
+miles west-south-west. I found it troubled with a “war,” or two wars,
+one between Kazavula and Uvinza, the other between Ibango of Usenyé and
+Mkasiwa of Unyanyembé.
+
+Twenty-five miles in a westerly direction, through a depopulated land,
+brought us to Zegi, in Uvinza, where we found a large caravan, under an
+Arab in the employ of Sayid bin Habib. Amongst these natives of Zanzibar
+was a man who had accompanied Cameron and Tippu-Tib to Utotera. Like
+other Münchhausens of his race, he informed me upon oath that he had
+seen a ship upon a lake west of Utotera, manned by black Wazungu, or
+black Europeans!
+
+Before reaching Zegi, we saw Sivué lake, a body of water fed by the
+Sagala river: it is about seven miles wide by fourteen miles long.
+Through a broad bed, choked by reeds and grass and tropical plants, it
+empties into the Malagarazi river near Kiala.
+
+Zegi village also swarmed with Rusunzu’s warriors. Rusunzu has succeeded
+his father, Nzogera, as king of Uvinza, and, being energetic, is
+disposed to combat Mirambo’s ambitious projects of annexation. I took
+care not to disclose our relationship with Mirambo, lest the warriors
+might have supposed we countenanced his designs against their beloved
+land.
+
+These warriors, perceiving that the word Ruga-Ruga, or bandits,
+influences weak minds, call themselves by that name, and endeavour to
+distinguish themselves by arresting all native travellers suspected of
+hostility or property. One of these unfortunates just captured was about
+to have his weasand cut, when I suggested that he had better be sold, as
+his corpse would be useless.
+
+“You buy him, then,” said the excited fellows; “give us ten cloths for
+him.”
+
+“White men don’t buy slaves; but rather than you should murder an
+innocent man, I will give you two for him.”
+
+After considerable discussion, it was agreed that he should be
+transferred to me for two cloths; but the poor old fellow was so injured
+from the brutal treatment he had undergone that he died a few days
+afterwards.
+
+Zegi, swarming with a reckless number of lawless men, was not a
+comfortable place to dwell in. The conduct of these men was another
+curious illustration of how “small things make base men proud.” Here
+were a number of youths suffering under that strange disease peculiar to
+vain youth in all lands which Mirambo had called “big head.” The manner
+in which they strutted about, their big looks and bold staring, their
+enormous feathered head-dresses and martial stride, were most offensive.
+Having adopted, from bravado, the name of Ruga-Ruga, they were compelled
+in honour to imitate the bandits’ custom of smoking banghi (wild hemp),
+and my memory fails to remind me of any similar experience to the wild
+screaming and stormy sneezing, accompanied day and night by the
+monotonous droning of the one-string guitar (another accomplishment _de
+rigueur_ with the complete bandit) and the hiccuping, snorting, and
+vocal extravagances which we had to bear in the village of Zegi.
+
+_May 18._—We paid a decent tribute of fifteen cloths to Rusunzu, out of
+the infamous “sixty” he had demanded through his Mutwaré or chief; and
+the Mutwaré received only four out of the twenty he had said should be
+paid to himself; and after the termination of the bargaining we marched
+to Ugaga, on the Malagarazi, on the 18th.
+
+_May 20._—The Mutwaré of Ugaga the next day made a claim of forty doti
+or cloths before giving us permission to cross the Malagarazi. I sent
+Frank with twenty men to a point three miles below Ugaga to prepare our
+boat; and meanwhile we delayed negotiations until a messenger came from
+Frank informing us that the boat was ready, and then after making a
+tentative offer of two cloths, which was rejected with every ludicrous
+expression of contempt, we gave four. The Mutwaré then said that Rusunzu
+the king had commanded that we should return to Zegi to fight his
+enemies, otherwise he withheld his permission to cross the river. At
+this piece of despotism we smiled, and marched towards the boat, where
+we camped. At 4 A.M. of the 20th of May I had eighty guns across the
+mile-wide[38] Malagarazi, and by 3 P.M. the entire Expedition, and our
+Arab friends whom we had met at Zegi, were in Northern Uvinza.
+
+_May 21._—The next day, avoiding the scorched plains of Uhha, of bitter
+memory to me, we journeyed to Ruwhera, eleven miles; thence to Mansumba,
+due west, nine miles and a half through a thin jungle; whence we
+despatched some Wanyamwezi across the frontier to Uhha to purchase corn
+for the support of the Expedition in the wilderness between Uvinza and
+Ujiji.
+
+Strange to say, the Wahha, who are the most extortionate tribute-takers
+in Africa, will not interfere with a caravan when once over the
+frontier, but will readily sell them food. About fifty Wahha even
+brought grain and fowls for sale to our camp at Mansumba. Though truth
+compels me to say that we should have fared very badly had we travelled
+through Uhha, I must do its people the justice to say that they are not
+churlish to strangers beyond their own limits.
+
+It is a great pity that the Malagarazi is not navigable. There is a
+difference of nearly 900 feet between the altitude of Ugaga and that of
+Ujiji. One series of falls are south-south-west from Ruwhera, about
+twenty-five miles below Ugaga. There is another series of falls about
+twenty miles from the Tanganika.
+
+_May 24._—At noon on the 24th we camped on the western bank of the
+Rusugi river. A small village, called Kasanga, is situated two miles
+above the ford. Near the crossing on either side are the salt-pans of
+Uvinza, which furnish a respectable revenue to its king. A square mile
+of ground is strewn with broken pots, embers of fires, the refuse of the
+salt, lumps of burnt clay, and ruined huts. As Rusunzu now owns all the
+land to within fifteen miles of Ujiji, there is no one to war with for
+the undisputed possession of the salt-pans.
+
+Through a forest jungle separated at intervals by narrow strips of
+plain, and crossing six small tributaries of the Malagarazi by the way,
+we journeyed twenty-three miles, to a camp near the frontier of the
+district of Uguru, or the hill country of Western Uhha.
+
+The northern slopes of these mountain masses of Uguru, about fifteen
+miles north of the sources of the Liuché, are drained by the southern
+feeders of the Alexandra Nile; the western, by the Mshala; the southern
+by the Liuché; and the eastern, by the Uhha tributaries of the
+Malagarazi. The boundaries of Uhha, Urundi, and Ujiji meet at these
+mountains, which are probably 6500 feet above the sea.
+
+We greeted our friend of Niamtaga, whom we had met in November in 1871,
+but, alas for him! two weeks later he was taken by surprise by Rusunzu,
+and massacred with nearly three-fourths of his people.
+
+_May 27._—At noon of the 27th of May the bright waters of the Tanganika
+broke upon the view, and compelled me to linger admiringly for a while,
+as I did on the day I first beheld them. By 3 P.M. we were in Ujiji.
+Muini Kheri, Mohammed bin Gharib, Sultan bin Kassim, and Khamis the
+Baluch greeted me kindly. Mohammed bin Sali was dead. Nothing was
+changed much, except the ever-changing mud tembés of the Arabs. The
+square or plaza where I met David Livingstone in November 1871 is now
+occupied by large tembés. The house where he and I lived has long ago
+been burnt down, and in its place there remain only a few embers and a
+hideous void. The lake expands with the same grand beauty before the
+eyes as we stand in the market-place. The opposite mountains of Goma
+have the same blue-black colour, for they are everlasting, and the
+Liuché river continues its course as brown as ever just east and south
+of Ujiji. The surf is still as restless, and the sun as bright; the sky
+retains its glorious azure, and the palms all their beauty: but the
+grand old hero, whose presence once filled Ujiji with such absorbing
+interest for me, was gone!
+
+-----
+
+# 38:
+
+ In the dry season the Malagarazi is only about 60 yards wide at Ugaga.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ---------------------------------------------------------
+
+ LONDON: PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED, STAMFORD STREET
+ AND CHARING CROSS.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ Transcriber’s Note
+
+The hyphenation of compound words is not always consistent. When such
+words appear midline, they are retained as printed. Where the
+hyphenation occurs on a line break, the hyphen is either removed or
+retained to agree with the preponderance of appearances elsewhere.
+
+Other errors deemed most likely to be the printer’s have been corrected,
+and are noted here. The references are to the page and line in the
+original.
+
+ 26.32 is very approp[r]iately termed Inserted.
+ 56.40 to observe th[r]oughout our journey Inserted.
+ 59.40 Living[s]tone’s discoveries Inserted.
+ 62.24 employment to abo[n/u]t 80 adults Inverted.
+ 70.4 D[n/u]doma[—] Transposed/Inserted.
+ 71.14 was di[s]covered Inserted.
+ 72.37 on every side[.] Restored.
+ 79.26 broad and dry sandy st[r]eam-bed Inserted.
+ 90.2 An imme[u/n]se area Inverted.
+ 93.6 [‘/“]I have seen the lake Replaced.
+ 114.3 chief of Kageh[y]i Inserted.
+ 116.33 making or repa[i]ring Inserted.
+ 117.26 the Wasuk[u]ma recruits Inserted.
+ 164.10 the [s/f]ew days Replaced.
+ 184.10 Safeni asked one [of] them, Supplied.
+ 188.19 combining to mu[l]tiply the terrors Inserted.
+ 190.27 in its veins[,/.] Replaced.
+ 191.19 besides three others[.] Restored.
+ 198.9 “Mohoro![”] [“]Eg sura?” Added.
+ 233.2 “Jack[’]s Mount” Added.
+ 233.5 [‘/“]What do you know Replaced.
+ 270.31 at a much earl[y/ier] period Replaced.
+ 307.44 he drinks[,] Added.
+ 326.2 Sambu[s/z]i ordered to take me Replaced.
+ 328.13 listen to my words[.] Added.
+ 349.43 the cliffs of Muta Nzig[è/é]. Replaced.
+ 350.10 to depart in peace[,/.] Replaced.
+ 351.34 what is Stamlee going to do now[./?] Replaced.
+ 368.7 and full of guile verily[.] Added.
+ 426.20 seconded Saba[b/d]u Replaced.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75926 ***