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CHAP. IV.

PALM WINE-SALT.

113

pleasant drink somewhat like Champagne, and not at all intoxicating; though, after standing a few hours, it becomes highly so. Sticks a foot long are driven into notches in the hard outside of the tree-the inside being soft or hollowto serve as a ladder; the top of the fruit-shoot is cut off, and the sap, pouring out at the fresh wound, is caught in an earthen pot, which is hung at the point. A thin slice is taken off the end, to open the pores, and make the juice flow every time the owner ascends to empty the pot. Temporary huts are erected in the forest, and men and boys remain by their respective trees day and night, the nuts, fish, and wine being their sole food. The Portuguese use the palm wine as yeast, and it makes bread so light that it melts in the mouth like froth.

Beyond the marsh the country is higher and has a much larger population. We passed a long line of temporary huts on a plain on the right bank, with crowds of men and women hard at work making salt. They obtain it by mixing the earth, which is here highly saline, with water, in a pot with a small hole in it, and then evaporating the liquid, which runs through, in the sun. From the number of women we saw carrying it off in bags, we concluded that vast quantities must be made at these works. It is worth observing that on soils like this, containing salt, the cotton is of larger and finer staple than elsewhere. We saw large tracts of this rich brackish soil both in the Shire and Zambesi valleys, and hence, probably, sea-island cotton would do well; a single plant of it, reared by Major Sicard, flourished and produced the long staple and peculiar tinge of this celebrated variety, though planted only in the street at Tette; and there also a salt efflorescence appears, probably from decomposition of the rock, off which the people scrape it for use.

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114

DAKANAMOIO ISLAND.

CHAP. IV.

Above the palm-trees a succession of rich low islands stud the river. Many of them are cultivated, and grow maize at all times of the year, for we saw it in different stages of growth; some patches ripe, and others half grown, or just sprouting out of the ground. The shores are adorned with rows of banana-trees, and the fruit is abundant and cheap. Many of the reedy banks are so intertwined with convol vulus and other creepers as to be absolutely impenetrable. They are beautiful to the eye, a smooth wall of living green rising out of the crystal water, and adorned with lovely flowers; but so dense, that, if capsized in the water, one could scarcely pass through to land.

The large village of the chief Mankokwe occupies a site on the right bank; he owns a number of fertile islands, and is said to be the Rundo, or paramount chief of a large district. Being of an unhappy, suspicious disposition, he would not see us; so we thought it best to move on rather than spend time in seeking his favor.

On the 25th of August we reached Dakanamoio Island, opposite the perpendicular bluff on which Chibisa's village stands; he had gone, with most of his people, to live near the Zambesi, but his head man was civil, and promised us guides and whatever else we needed. A few of the men were busy cleaning, sorting, spinning, and weaving cotton. This is a common sight in nearly every village, and each family appears to have its patch of cotton, as our own ancestors in Scotland had each his patch of flax. Near sunset an immense flock of the largest species of hornbill (Buceros cristatus) came here to roost on the great trees which skirt the edge of the cliff. They leave early in the morning, often before sunrise, for their feeding-places, coming and going in pairs. They are evidently of a loving disposition, and

CHAP. IV.

CHIBISA'S LOST CHILD.

115

strongly attached to each other, the male always nestling close beside his mate. A fine male fell to the ground, from fear, at the report of Dr. Kirk's gun; it was caught and kept on board; the female did not go off in the mornings to feed with the others, but flew round the ship, anxiously trying, by her plaintive calls, to induce her beloved one to follow her: she came again in the evenings to repeat the invitations. The poor disconsolate captive soon refused to eat, and in five days died of grief, because he could not have her company. No internal injury could be detected after death.

Chibisa and his wife, with a natural show of parental feeling, had told the doctor, on his previous visit, that a few years before some of Chisaka's men had kidnapped and sold their little daughter, and that she was now a slave to the padre at Tette. On his return to Tette, the doctor tried hard to ransom and restore the girl to her parents, and offered twice the value of a slave; the padre seemed willing, but she could not be found. This padre was better than the average men of the country; and, being always civil and obliging, would probably have restored her gratuitously, but she had been sold, it might be, to the distant tribe Bazizulu, or he could not tell where. Custom had rendered his feelings callous, and Chibisa had to be told that his child would never return. It is this callous state of mind which leads some of our own blood to quote Scripture in support of slavery. If we could afford to take a backward step in civilization, we might find men among ourselves who would in like manner prove Mormonism or any other enormity to be . divine.

116

SET OUT FOR NYASSA.

CHAP. V.

CHAPTER V.

Leave the Vessel for Discovery of Lake Nyassa.-Manganja Highlands beautiful, well wooded, and well watered.-Pasturage.-Style of Introduction to the Manganja.-People Agriculturists, and Workers in Iron, Cotton, etc.— Foreign and indigenous Cotton.-The Pelele, or Lip-ring.-Possible Use for this Ornament.—Beer - drinkers. — Ordeal by Muave.-Mourning for the Dead.-Belief in a Supreme Being.-Pamalombe Lakelet.-Chief's Wife killed by a Crocodile.-Discovery of Lake Nyassa, 16th of September, 1859 -Its subsequent Discovery by Dr. Roscher.-The "Goree" or Slave-stick. -Several Modes by which the Slave-trade is supplied.-Ajawa.—Manganja. More suspicious than the Zambesi Tribes.-Zimika's lack of Hospitality. Fine and bracing Climate.-Great Influence to be gained by a steam er on Lake Nyassa.

WE left the ship on the 28th of August, 1859, for the discovery of Lake Nyassa. Our party numbered forty-two in all-four whites, thirty-six Makololo, and two guides. We did not actually need so many, either for carriage or defense, but took them because we believed that, human nature being every where the same, blacks are as ready as whites to take advantage of the weak, and are as civil and respectful to the powerful. We armed our men with muskets, which gave us influence, although it did not add much to our strength, as most of the men had never drawn a trigger, and in any conflict would in all probability have been more dangerous to us than to the enemy.

Our path crossed the valley in a northeasterly direction, up the course of a beautiful flowing stream. Many of the gardens had excellent cotton growing in them. An hour's march brought us to the foot of the Manganja Hills, up which lay the toilsome road. The vegetation soon changed;

CHAP. V.

CHITIMBA'S VILLAGE.

117 as we rose, bamboos appeared, and new trees and plants were met with, which gave such incessant employment to Dr. Kirk, that he traveled the distance three times over. Remarkably fine trees, one of which has oil-yielding seeds, and belongs to the mahogany family, grow well in the hollows along the rivulet courses. The ascent became very fatiguing, and we were glad of a rest. Looking back from an elevation of a thousand feet, we beheld a lovely prospect. The eye takes in at a glance the valley beneath, and the many windings of its silver stream Makubula, or Kubvula, from the shady hill-side, where it emerges in foaming haste, to where it slowly glides into the tranquil Shire; then the Shire itself is seen for many a mile above and below Chibisa's, and the great level country beyond, with its numerous green woods; until the prospect, west and northwest, is bounded far away by masses of peaked and dome-shaped blue mountains, that fringe the highlands of the Maravi country.

After a weary march we halted at Makolongwe, the vil lage of Chitimba. It stands in a woody hollow on the first of the three terraces of the Manganja Hills, and, like all other Manganja villages, is surrounded by an impenetrable hedge of poisonous euphorbia. This tree casts a deep shade, which would render it difficult for bowmen to take aim at the villagers inside. The grass does not grow beneath it, and this may be the reason why it is so universally used, for when dry the grass would readily convey fire to the huts inside; moreover, the hedge acts as a fender to all flying sparks. As strangers are wont to do, we sat down under some fine trees near the entrance of the village. A couple of mats, made of split reeds, were spread for the white men to sit on; and the head man brought a seguati, or present, of a small

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