said he, “they were of his family, or friends,
and would plough the land and live at their own expense;”
and he had replied, “The land is before you,
and I shall come and see you plough.” This
again was substantially what took place, when Mr. Moffat
introduced the missionaries to his old friend, and
shows still further that the notion of losing their
country by admitting foreigners does not come as the
first idea to the native mind. One might imagine
that, as mechanical powers are unknown to the heathen,
the almost magic operations of machinery, the discoveries
of modern science and art, or the presence of the
prodigious force which, for instance, is associated
with the sight of a man-of-war, would have the effect
which miracles once had of arresting the attention
and inspiring awe. But, though we have heard
the natives exclaim in admiration at the sight of
even small illustrations of what science enables us
to do—“Ye are gods, and not men”—the
heart is unaffected. In attempting their moral
elevation, it is always more conducive to the end
desired, that the teacher should come unaccompanied
by any power to cause either jealousy or fear.
The heathen, who have not become aware of the greed
and hate which too often characterize the advancing
tide of emigration, listen with most attention to the
message of Divine love when delivered by men who evidently
possess the same human sympathies with themselves.
A chief is rather envied his good fortune in first
securing foreigners in his town. Jealousy of
strangers belongs more to the Arab than to the African
character; and if the women are let alone by the traveller,
no danger need be apprehended from any save the slave-trading
tribes, and not often even from them.
We passed through a fertile country, covered with
open forest, accompanied by the friendly Bawe.
They are very hospitable; many of them were named,
among themselves, “the Baenda pezi,” or
“Go-nakeds,” their only clothing being
a coat of red ochre. Occasionally stopping at
their villages we were duly lullilooed, and regaled
with sweet new-made beer, which, being yet unfermented,
was not intoxicating. It is in this state called
Liting or Makonde. Some of the men carry large
shields of buffalo-hide, and all are well supplied
with heavy spears. The vicinity of the villages
is usually cleared and cultivated in large patches;
but nowhere can the country be said to be stocked
with people. At every village stands were erected,
and piles of the native corn, still unthrashed, placed
upon them; some had been beaten out, put into oblong
parcels made of grass, and stacked in wooden frames.
We crossed several rivulets in our course, as the
Mandora, the Lofia, the Manzaia (with brackish water),
the Rimbe, the Chibue, the Chezia, the Chilola (containing
fragments of coal), which did little more than mark
our progress. The island and rapid of Nakansalo,
of which we had formerly heard, were of no importance,
the rapid being but half a mile long, and only on
one side of the island. The island Kaluzi marks
one of the numerous places where astronomical observations
were made; Mozia, a station where a volunteer poet
left us; the island Mochenya, and Mpande island, at
the mouth of the Zungwe rivulet, where we left the
Zambesi.