unhappy wives, and a number of little boys and
girls, who were his personal attendants. The
circumstance of a eunuch keeping a whole retinue of
wives, appeared to the Landers rather an extraordinary
one, for he appeared to treat them with all the jealousy
of a Turkish pacha towards his mistresses in his seraglio.
Of their fidelity or continency, however, could be
said, whenever an opportunity presented itself; but
do not require to travel as far as Africa for the
experience, when an opportunity of that kind is wanted,
it is not long before it is obtained. The eunuch
sent them a very fat sheep, as a further token of
his good will. On Friday May 14th, Richard Lander
accompanied by Ebo, and the other unwieldy eunuchs,
took a present to the king, which was pretty well received;
Mansolah, it was supposed out of compliment, remarked
that if they had not brought with them the value of
a single kowrie, they should have been favourably
received at Katunga, and well entertained at his own
expense. They had, previously to presenting themselves
before the king, consulted their friend Ebo, on the
subject of their journey to the Niger, and he strongly
advised them by no means even to hint at such an intention
to the king, whose suspicions, he assured them, would
immediately take the alarm, so that instead of being
forwarded on their way thither, they would either
be detained in the town for an indefinite time, or
sent back again to the coast. They therefore
conceived it prudent to give him the following statement
only:—“That the king of England,
anxious to procure the restoration of certain papers
which belonged to a countryman of theirs, who perished
at Boosa about twenty years ago, which papers were
supposed to be in the possession of the sultan of
Yaoorie, they had been despatched hither by their
sovereign, in the hope that the king of Katunga would
forward them to the latter state, for the purpose of
obtaining them from the sultan of Yaoorie, and taking
them back with them to England.”
Mansolah, with the natural indifference of the uncultivated
mind, displayed neither eager curiosity as to their
object in coming to his country, nor surprise when
they had informed him of it, but very promptly observed,
that in two days time, he would send a messenger to
Kiama, Wouwou, Boossa, and Yaoorie, for the purpose
of acquainting the rulers of those provinces of their
intention to pay them a visit, and that on the return
of the messenger, they should have his permission
to depart. This was promised after Richard Lander’s
repeated solicitations and importunities, that they
should not be detained here longer than necessary,
as in a very short time, the violent rains would render
the roads to those countries impassable, and, in consequence,
they would not be able to travel till the return of
the dry season. Their speedy departure was also
a matter of importance to them on account of their
health, which they found to be far better when they
were travelling, than when cooped up in a close unwholesome
hut, where ventilation appeared to be the object the
least attended to, or considered of no importance at
all.