The River War eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 456 pages of information about The River War.

The River War eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 456 pages of information about The River War.

It was beyond the power of the new Governor of the Equatorial Province at once to destroy the slave-hunting confederacy.  Yet he struck heavy blows at the slave trade, and when in 1877, after a short visit to England, he returned to the Soudan as Governor-General and with absolute power, he assailed it with redoubled energy.  Fortune assisted his efforts, for the able Zubehr was enticed to Cairo, and, once there, the Government refused to allow their faithful ally and distinguished guest to go back to his happy-hunting grounds.  Although the slave dealers were thus robbed of their great leader, they were still strong, and Zubehr’s son, the brave Suliman, found a considerable following.  Furious at his father’s captivity, and alarmed lest his own should follow, he meditated revolt.  But the Governor-General, mounted on a swift camel and attired in full uniform, rode alone into the rebel camp and compelled the submission of its chiefs before they could recover from their amazement.  The confederacy was severely shaken, and when, in the following year, Suliman again revolted, the Egyptian troops under Gessi Pasha were able to disperse his forces and induce him to surrender on terms.  The terms were broken, and Suliman and ten of his companions suffered death by shooting [von Slatin, Baron Rudolf Karl.  Fire and sword in the Soudan, p.28.] The league of the slave dealers was thus destroyed.

Towards the end of 1879 Gordon left the Soudan.  With short intervals he had spent five busy years in its provinces.  His energy had stirred the country.  He had struck at the root of the slave trade, he had attacked the system of slavery, and, as slavery was the greatest institution in the land, he had undermined the whole social system.  Indignation had stimulated his activity to an extraordinary degree.  In a climate usually fatal to Europeans he discharged the work of five officers.  Careless of his methods, he bought slaves himself, drilled them, and with the soldiers thus formed pounced on the caravans of the hunters.  Traversing the country on a fleet dromedary—­on which in a single year he is said to have covered 3,840 miles—­he scattered justice and freedom among the astonished natives.  He fed the infirm, protected the weak, executed the wicked.  To some he gave actual help, to many freedom, to all new hopes and aspirations.  Nor were the tribes ungrateful.  The fiercest savages and cannibals respected the life of the strange white man.  The women blessed him.  He could ride unarmed and alone where a brigade of soldiers dared not venture.  But he was, as he knew himself, the herald of the storm.  Oppressed yet ferocious races had learned that they had rights; the misery of the Soudanese was lessened, but their knowledge had increased.  The whole population was unsettled, and the wheels of change began slowly to revolve; nor did they stop until they had accomplished an enormous revolution.

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The River War from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.