Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,077 pages of information about Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa.

Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,077 pages of information about Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa.

Monze came on Monday morning, and, on parting, presented us with a piece of a buffalo which had been killed the day before by lions.  We crossed the rivulet Makoe, which runs westward into the Kafue, and went northward in order to visit Semalembue, an influential chief there.  We slept at the village of Monze’s sister, who also passes by the same name.  Both he and his sister are feminine in their appearance, but disfigured by the foolish custom of knocking out the upper front teeth.

It is not often that jail-birds turn out well, but the first person who appeared to welcome us at the village of Monze’s sister was the prisoner we had released in the way.  He came with a handsome present of corn and meal, and, after praising our kindness to the villagers who had assembled around us, asked them, “What do you stand gazing at?  Don’t you know that they have mouths like other people?” He then set off and brought large bundles of grass and wood for our comfort, and a pot to cook our food in.

December 12th.  The morning presented the appearance of a continuous rain from the north, the first time we had seen it set in from that quarter in such a southern latitude.  In the Bechuana country, continuous rains are always from the northeast or east, while in Londa and Angola they are from the north.  At Pungo Andongo, for instance, the whitewash is all removed from the north side of the houses.  It cleared up, however, about midday, and Monze’s sister conducted us a mile or two upon the road.  On parting, she said that she had forwarded orders to a distant village to send food to the point where we should sleep.  In expressing her joy at the prospect of living in peace, she said it would be so pleasant “to sleep without dreaming of any one pursuing them with a spear.”

In our front we had ranges of hills called Chamai, covered with trees.  We crossed the rivulet Nakachinta, flowing westward into the Kafue, and then passed over ridges of rocks of the same mica schist which we found so abundant in Golungo Alto; here they were surmounted by reddish porphyry and finely laminated felspathic grit with trap.  The dip, however, of these rocks is not toward the centre of the continent, as in Angola, for ever since we passed the masses of granite on the Kalomo, the rocks, chiefly of mica schist, dip away from them, taking an easterly direction.  A decided change of dip occurs again when we come near the Zambesi, as will be noticed farther on.  The hills which flank that river now appeared on our right as a high dark range, while those near the Kafue have the aspect of a low blue range, with openings between.  We crossed two never-failing rivulets also flowing into the Kafue.  The country is very fertile, but vegetation is nowhere rank.  The boiling-point of water being 204 Deg., showed that we were not yet as low down as Linyanti; but we had left the masuka-trees behind us, and many others with which we had become familiar.  A feature common to the forests of Angola and Benguela, namely, the presence of orchilla-weed and lichens on the trees, with mosses on the ground, began to appear; but we never, on any part of the eastern slope, saw the abundant crops of ferns which are met with every where in Angola.  The orchilla-weed and mosses, too, were in but small quantities.

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Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.