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.
Trade with the tribes beyond the exclusive ones is much better.  Thirty brass rings cost 10s. at Senna, 1 Pound at Tete, and 2 Pounds beyond the tribes in the vicinity of Tete; these are a good price for a penful of gold-dust of the value of 2 Pounds.  The plantations of coffee, which, previous to the commencement of the slave-trade, yielded one material for exportation, are now deserted, and it is difficult to find a single tree.  The indigo (’Indigofera argentea’, the common wild indigo of Africa) is found growing every where, and large quantities of the senna-plant* grow in the village of Tete and other parts, but neither indigo nor senna is collected.  Calumba-root, which is found in abundance in some parts farther down the river, is bought by the Americans, it is said, to use as a dye-stuff.  A kind of sarsaparilla, or a plant which is believed by the Portuguese to be such, is found from Londa to Senna, but has never been exported.

   * These appear to belong to ‘Cassia acutifolia’, or true senna
   of commerce, found in various parts of Africa and India.—­Dr.
   Hooker.

The price of provisions is low, but very much higher than previous to the commencement of the war.  Two yards of calico are demanded for six fowls; this is considered very dear, because, before the war, the same quantity of calico was worth 24 fowls.  Grain is sold in little bags made from the leaves of the palmyra, like those in which we receive sugar.  They are called panjas, and each panja weighs between 30 and 40 lbs.  The panja of wheat at Tete is worth a dollar, or 5s.; but the native grain may be obtained among the islands below Lupata at the rate of three panjas for two yards of calico.  The highest articles of consumption are tea and coffee, the tea being often as high as 15s. a pound.  Food is cheaper down the river below Lupata, and, previous to the war, the islands which stud the Zambesi were all inhabited, and, the soil being exceedingly fertile, grain and fowls could be got to any amount.  The inhabitants disappeared before their enemies the Landeens, but are beginning to return since the peace.  They have no cattle, the only place where we found no tsetse being the district of Tete itself; and the cattle in the possession of the Portuguese are a mere remnant of what they formerly owned.

When visiting the hot fountain, I examined what were formerly the gold-washings in the rivulet Mokoroze, which is nearly on the 16th parallel of latitude.  The banks are covered with large groves of fine mango-trees, among which the Portuguese lived while superintending the washing for the precious metal.  The process of washing is very laborious and tedious.  A quantity of sand is put into a wooden bowl with water; a half rotatory motion is given to the dish, which causes the coarser particles of sand to collect on one side of the bottom.  These are carefully removed with the hand, and the process of rotation renewed until the whole of the sand is taken away, and the gold alone

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