Departure from Kolobeng, 1st June,
1849 Companions Our Route
Abundance of Grass Serotli, a Fountain in
the Desert Mode of digging Wells The
Eland Animals of the Desert The
Hyaena The Chief Sekomi Dangers The
wandering Guide Cross Purposes Slow
Progress Want of Water Capture
of a Bushwoman The Salt-pan at Nchokotsa The
Mirage Reach the River Zouga The
Quakers of Africa Discovery of Lake Ngami,
1st August, 1849 Its Extent Small
Depth of Water Position as the Reservoir
of a great River System The Bamangwato
and their Chief Desire to visit Sebituane,
the Chief of the Makololo Refusal of Lechulatebe
to furnish us with Guides Resolve to return
to the Cape The Banks of the Zouga Pitfalls Trees
of the District Elephants New
Species of Antelope Fish in the Zouga.
Such was the desert which we were
now preparing to cross a region formerly
of terror to the Bechuanas from the numbers of serpents
which infested it and fed on the different kinds of
mice, and from the intense thirst which these people
often endured when their water-vessels were insufficient
for the distances to be traveled over before reaching
the wells.
Just before the arrival of my companions,
a party of the people of the lake came to Kolobeng,
stating that they were sent by Lechulatebe, the chief,
to ask me to visit that country. They brought
such flaming accounts of the quantities of ivory to
be found there (cattle-pens made of elephants’
tusks of enormous size, &c.), that the guides of the
Bakwains were quite as eager to succeed in reaching
the lake as any one of us could desire. This
was fortunate, as we knew the way the strangers had
come was impassable for wagons.
Messrs. Oswell and Murray came at
the end of May, and we all made a fair start for the
unknown region on the 1st of June, 1849. Proceeding
northward, and passing through a range of tree-covered
hills to Shokuane, formerly the residence of the Bakwains,
we soon after entered on the high road to the Bamangwato,
which lies generally in the bed of an ancient river
or wady that must formerly have flowed N. to S. The
adjacent country is perfectly flat, but covered with
open forest and bush, with abundance of grass; the
trees generally are a kind of acacia called “Monato”,
which appears a little to the south of this region,
and is common as far as Angola. A large caterpillar,
called “Nato”, feeds by night on
the leaves of these trees, and comes down by day to
bury itself at the root in the sand, in order to escape
the piercing rays of the sun. The people dig
for it there, and are fond of it when roasted, on
account of its pleasant vegetable taste. When
about to pass into the chrysalis state, it buries
itself in the soil, and is sometimes sought for as
food even then. If left undisturbed, it comes
forth as a beautiful butterfly: the transmutation
was sometimes employed by me with good effect when
speaking with the natives, as an illustration of our
own great change and resurrection.
The soil is sandy, and there are here
and there indications that at spots which now afford
no water whatever there were formerly wells and cattle
stations.
Boatlanama, our next station, is a
lovely spot in the otherwise dry region. The
wells from which we had to lift out the water for our
cattle are deep, but they were well filled. A
few villages of Bakalahari were found near them, and
great numbers of pallahs, springbucks, Guinea-fowl,
and small monkeys.
Lopepe came next. This place
afforded another proof of the desiccation of the country.
The first time I passed it, Lopepe was a large pool
with a stream flowing out of it to the south; now
it was with difficulty we could get our cattle watered
by digging down in the bottom of a well.
At Mashue where we found
a never-failing supply of pure water in a sandstone
rocky hollow we left the road to the Bamangwato
hills, and struck away to the north into the Desert.
Having watered the cattle at a well called Lobotani,
about N.W. of Bamangwato, we next proceeded to a real
Kalahari fountain, called Serotli. The country
around is covered with bushes and trees of a kind
of leguminosae, with lilac flowers. The soil
is soft white sand, very trying to the strength of
the oxen, as the wheels sink into it over the felloes
and drag heavily. At Serotli we found only a
few hollows like those made by the buffalo and rhinoceros
when they roll themselves in the mud. In a corner
of one of these there appeared water, which would
have been quickly lapped up by our dogs, had we not
driven them away. And yet this was all the apparent
supply for some eighty oxen, twenty horses, and about
a score of men. Our guide, Ramotobi, who had
spent his youth in the Desert, declared that, though
appearances were against us, there was plenty of water
at hand. We had our misgivings, for the spades
were soon produced; but our guides, despising such
new-fangled aid, began in good earnest to scrape out
the sand with their hands. The only water we
had any promise of for the next seventy miles that
is, for a journey of three days with the wagons was
to be got here. By the aid of both spades and
fingers two of the holes were cleared out, so as to
form pits six feet deep and about as many broad.
Our guides were especially earnest in their injunctions
to us not to break through the hard stratum of sand
at the bottom, because they knew, if it were broken
through, “the water would go away.”
They are quite correct, for the water seems to lie
on this flooring of incipient sandstone. The
value of the advice was proved in the case of an Englishman
whose wits were none of the brightest, who, disregarding
it, dug through the sandy stratum in the wells at Mohotluani:
the water immediately flowed away downward, and the
well became useless. When we came to the stratum,
we found that the water flowed in on all sides close
to the line where the soft sand came in contact with
it. Allowing it to collect, we had enough for
the horses that evening; but as there was not sufficient
for the oxen, we sent them back to Lobotani, where,
after thirsting four full days (ninety-six hours),
they got a good supply. The horses were kept
by us as necessary to procure game for the sustenance
of our numerous party. Next morning we found the
water had flowed in faster than at first, as it invariably
does in these reservoirs, owing to the passages widening
by the flow. Large quantities of the sand come
into the well with the water, and in the course of
a few days the supply, which may be equal to the wants
of a few men only, becomes sufficient for oxen as
well. In these sucking-places the Bakalahari
get their supplies; and as they are generally in the
hollows of ancient river-beds, they are probably the
deposits from rains gravitating thither; in some cases
they may be the actual fountains, which, though formerly
supplying the river’s flow, now no longer rise
to the surface.
Here, though the water was perfectly
inaccessible to elands, large numbers of these fine
animals fed around us; and, when killed, they were
not only in good condition, but their stomachs actually
contained considerable quantities of water.
I examined carefully the whole alimentary
canal, in order to see if there were any peculiarity
which might account for the fact that this animal
can subsist for months together without drinking, but
found nothing. Other animals, such as the duiker
(’Cephalopus mergens’) or puti (of the
Bechuanas), the steinbuck (’Tragulus rupestris’)
or puruhuru, the gemsbuck (’Oryx capensis’)
or kukama, and the porcupine (’Hystrix cristata’),
are all able to subsist without water for many months
at a time by living on bulbs and tubers containing
moisture. They have sharp-pointed hoofs well
adapted for digging, and there is little difficulty
in comprehending their mode of subsistence. Some
animals, on the other hand, are never seen but in
the vicinity of water. The presence of the rhinoceros,
of the buffalo and gnu (’Catoblépas gnu’),
of the giraffe, the zebra, and pallah (’Antilope
melampus’), is always a certain indication of
water being within a distance of seven or eight miles;
but one may see hundreds of elands (’Boselaphus
oreas’), gemsbuck, the tolo or koodoo (’Strepsiceros
capensis’), also springbucks (’Gazella
euchore’) and ostriches, without being warranted
thereby in inferring the presence of water within
thirty or forty miles. Indeed, the sleek, fat
condition of the eland in such circumstances would
not remove the apprehension of perishing by thirst
from the mind of even a native. I believe, however,
that these animals can subsist only where there is
some moisture in the vegetation on which they feed;
for in one year of unusual drought we saw herds of
elands and flocks of ostriches crowding to the Zouga
from the Desert, and very many of the latter were
killed in pitfalls on the banks. As long as there
is any sap in the pasturage they seldom need water.
But should a traveler see the “spoor”
of a rhinoceros, or buffalo, or zebra, he would at
once follow it up, well assured that before he had
gone many miles he would certainly reach water.
In the evening of our second day at
Serotli, a hyaena, appearing suddenly among the grass,
succeeded in raising a panic among our cattle.
This false mode of attack is the plan which this cowardly
animal always adopts. His courage resembles closely
that of a turkey-cock. He will bite, if an animal
is running away; but if the animal stand still, so
does he. Seventeen of our draught oxen ran away,
and in their flight went right into the hands of Sekomi,
whom, from his being unfriendly to our success, we
had no particular wish to see. Cattle-stealing,
such as in the circumstances might have occurred in
Caffraria, is here unknown; so Sekomi sent back our
oxen, and a message strongly dissuading us against
attempting the Desert. “Where are you going?
You will be killed by the sun and thirst, and then
all the white men will blame me for not saving you.”
This was backed by a private message from his mother.
“Why do you pass me? I always made the
people collect to hear the word that you have got.
What guilt have I, that you pass without looking at
me?” We replied by assuring the messengers that
the white men would attribute our deaths to our own
stupidity and “hard-headedness” (tlogo,
e thata), “as we did not intend to allow our
companions and guides to return till they had put
us into our graves.” We sent a handsome
present to Sekomi, and a promise that, if he allowed
the Bakalahari to keep the wells open for us, we would
repeat the gift on our return.
After exhausting all his eloquence
in fruitless attempts to persuade us to return, the
under-chief, who headed the party of Sekomi’s
messengers, inquired, “Who is taking them?”
Looking round, he exclaimed, with a face expressive
of the most unfeigned disgust, “It is Ramotobi!”
Our guide belonged to Sekomi’s tribe, but had
fled to Sechele; as fugitives in this country are
always well received, and may even afterward visit
the tribe from which they had escaped, Ramotobi was
in no danger, though doing that which he knew to be
directly opposed to the interests of his own chief
and tribe.
All around Serotli the country is
perfectly flat, and composed of soft white sand.
There is a peculiar glare of bright sunlight from a
cloudless sky over the whole scene; and one clump of
trees and bushes, with open spaces between, looks
so exactly like another, that if you leave the wells,
and walk a quarter of a mile in any direction, it is
difficult to return. Oswell and Murray went out
on one occasion to get an eland, and were accompanied
by one of the Bakalahari. The perfect sameness
of the country caused even this son of the Desert to
lose his way; a most puzzling conversation forthwith
ensued between them and their guide. One of the
most common phrases of the people is “Kia itumela”,
I thank you, or I am pleased; and the gentlemen were
both quite familiar with it, and with the word “metse”,
water. But there is a word very similar in sound,
“Kia timela”, I am wandering; its perfect
is “Ki timetse”, I have wandered.
The party had been roaming about, perfectly lost,
till the sun went down; and, through their mistaking
the verb “wander” for “to be pleased”,
and “water”, the colloquy went on at intervals
during the whole bitterly cold night in somewhat the
following style:
“Where are the wagons?”
Real answer. “I
don’t know. I have wandered. I never
wandered before. I am quite lost.”
Supposed answer. “I
don’t know. I want water. I am glad,
I am quite pleased. I am thankful to you.”
“Take us to the wagons, and
you will get plenty of water.”
Real answer (looking vacantly
around). “How did I wander? Perhaps
the well is there, perhaps not. I don’t
know. I have wandered.”
Supposed answer. “Something
about thanks; he says he is pleased, and mentions
water again.” The guide’s vacant stare
while trying to remember is thought to indicate mental
imbecility, and the repeated thanks were supposed
to indicate a wish to deprecate their wrath.
“Well, Livingstone has
played us a pretty trick, giving us in charge of an
idiot. Catch us trusting him again. What
can this fellow mean by his thanks and talk about
water? Oh, you born fool! take us to the wagons,
and you will get both meat and water. Wouldn’t
a thrashing bring him to his senses again?”
“No, no, for then he will run away, and we shall
be worse off than we are now.”
The hunters regained the wagons next
day by their own sagacity, which becomes wonderfully
quickened by a sojourn in the Desert; and we enjoyed
a hearty laugh on the explanation of their midnight
colloquies. Frequent mistakes of this kind occur.
A man may tell his interpreter to say that he is a
member of the family of the chief of the white men;
“Yes, you speak like A chief,”
is the reply, meaning, as they explain it, that a
chief may talk nonsense without any one daring to contradict
him. They probably have ascertained, from that
same interpreter, that this relative of the white
chief is very poor, having scarcely any thing in his
wagon.
I sometimes felt annoyed at the low
estimation in which some of my hunting friends were
held; for, believing that the chase is eminently conducive
to the formation of a brave and noble character, and
that the contest with wild beasts is well adapted
for fostering that coolness in emergencies, and active
presence of mind, which we all admire, I was naturally
anxious that a higher estimate of my countrymen should
be formed in the native mind. “Have these
hunters, who come so far and work so hard, no meat
at home?” “Why, these men are
rich, and could slaughter oxen every day of their
lives.” “And yet they come here,
and endure so much thirst for the sake of this dry
meat, none of which is equal to beef?” “Yes,
it is for the sake of play besides” (the idea
of sport not being in the language). This produces
a laugh, as much as to say, “Ah! you know better;”
or, “Your friends are fools.” When
they can get a man to kill large quantities of game
for them, whatever he may think of himself or
of his achievements, they pride themselves in
having adroitly turned to good account the folly of
an itinerant butcher.
The water having at last flowed into
the wells we had dug in sufficient quantity to allow
a good drink to all our cattle, we departed from Serotli
in the afternoon; but as the sun, even in winter, which
it now was, is always very powerful by day, the wagons
were dragged but slowly through the deep, heavy sand,
and we advanced only six miles before sunset.
We could only travel in the mornings and evenings,
as a single day in the hot sun and heavy sand would
have knocked up the oxen. Next day we passed
Pepacheu (white tufa), a hollow lined with tufa, in
which water sometimes stands, but it was now dry;
and at night our trocheamer showed that we had made
but twenty-five miles from Serotli.
Ramotobi was angry at the slowness
of our progress, and told us that, as the next water
was three days in front, if we traveled so slowly we
should never get there at all. The utmost endeavors
of the servants, cracking their whips, screaming and
beating, got only nineteen miles out of the poor beasts.
We had thus proceeded forty-four miles from Serotli;
and the oxen were more exhausted by the soft nature
of the country, and the thirst, than if they had traveled
double the distance over a hard road containing supplies
of water: we had, as far as we could judge, still
thirty miles more of the same dry work before us.
At this season the grass becomes so dry as to crumble
to powder in the hands; so the poor beasts stood wearily
chewing, without taking a single fresh mouthful, and
lowing painfully at the smell of water in our vessels
in the wagons. We were all determined to succeed;
so we endeavored to save the horses by sending them
forward with the guide, as a means of making a desperate
effort in case the oxen should fail. Murray went
forward with them, while Oswell and I remained to
bring the wagons on their trail as far as the cattle
could drag them, intending then to send the oxen forward
too.
The horses walked quickly away from
us; but, on the morning of the third day, when we
imagined the steeds must be near the water, we discovered
them just alongside the wagons. The guide, having
come across the fresh footprints of some Bushmen who
had gone in an opposite direction to that which we
wished to go, turned aside to follow them. An
antelope had been ensnared in one of the Bushmen’s
pitfalls. Murray followed Ramotobi most trustingly
along the Bushmen’s spoor, though that led them
away from the water we were in search of; witnessed
the operation of slaughtering, skinning, and cutting
up the antelope; and then, after a hard day’s
toil, found himself close upon the wagons! The
knowledge still retained by Ramotobi of the trackless
waste of scrub, through which we were now passing,
seemed admirable. For sixty or seventy miles beyond
Serotli, one clump of bushes and trees seemed exactly
like another; but, as we walked together this morning,
he remarked, “When we come to that hollow we
shall light upon the highway of Sekomi; and beyond
that again lies the River Mokoko;” which, though
we passed along it, I could not perceive to be a river-bed
at all.
After breakfast, some of the men,
who had gone forward on a little path with some footprints
of water-loving animals upon it, returned with the
joyful tidings of “metse”, water, exhibiting
the mud on their knees in confirmation of the news
being true. It does one’s heart good to
see the thirsty oxen rush into a pool of delicious
rain-water, as this was. In they dash until the
water is deep enough to be nearly level with their
throat, and then they stand drawing slowly in the long,
refreshing mouthfuls, until their formerly collapsed
sides distend as if they would burst. So much
do they imbibe, that a sudden jerk, when they come
out on the bank, makes some of the water run out again
from their mouths; but, as they have been days without
food too, they very soon commence to graze, and of
grass there is always abundance every where. This
pool was called Mathuluani; and thankful we were to
have obtained so welcome a supply of water.
After giving the cattle a rest at
this spot, we proceeded down the dry bed of the River
Mokoko. The name refers to the water-bearing stratum
before alluded to; and in this ancient bed it bears
enough of water to admit of permanent wells in several
parts of it. We had now the assurance from Ramotobi
that we should suffer no more from thirst. Twice
we found rain-water in the Mokoko before we reached
Mokokonyani, where the water, generally below ground
elsewhere, comes to the surface in a bed of tufa.
The adjacent country is all covered with low, thorny
scrub, with grass, and here and there clumps of the
“wait-a-bit thorn”, or ‘Acacia detinens’.
At Lotlakani (a little reed), another spring three
miles farther down, we met with the first Palmyra trees
which we had seen in South Africa; they were twenty-six
in number.
The ancient Mokoko must have been
joined by other rivers below this, for it becomes
very broad, and spreads out into a large lake, of which
the lake we were now in search of formed but a very
small part. We observed that, wherever an ant-eater
had made his hole, shells were thrown out with the
earth, identical with those now alive in the lake.
When we left the Mokoko, Ramotobi
seemed, for the first time, to be at a loss as to
which direction to take. He had passed only once
away to the west of the Mokoko, the scenes of his
boyhood. Mr. Oswell, while riding in front of
the wagons, happened to spy a Bushwoman running away
in a bent position, in order to escape observation.
Thinking it to be a lion, he galloped up to her.
She thought herself captured, and began to deliver
up her poor little property, consisting of a few traps
made of cords; but, when I explained that we only
wanted water, and would pay her if she led us to it,
she consented to conduct us to a spring. It was
then late in the afternoon, but she walked briskly
before our horses for eight miles, and showed us the
water of Nchokotsa. After leading us to the water,
she wished to go away home, if indeed she had any she
had fled from a party of her countrymen, and was now
living far from all others with her husband but
as it was now dark, we wished her to remain.
As she believed herself still a captive, we thought
she might slip away by night; so, in order that she
should not go away with the impression that we were
dishonest, we gave her a piece of meat and a good
large bunch of beads; at the sight of the latter she
burst into a merry laugh, and remained without suspicion.
At Nchokotsa we came upon the first
of a great number of salt-pans, covered with an efflorescence
of lime, probably the nitrate. A thick belt of
mopane-trees (a ‘Bauhinia’) hides this
salt-pan, which is twenty miles in circumference,
entirely from the view of a person coming from the
southeast; and, at the time the pan burst upon our
view, the setting sun was casting a beautiful blue
haze over the white incrustations, making the
whole look exactly like a lake. Oswell threw his
hat up in the air at the sight, and shouted out a
huzza which made the poor Bushwoman and the Bakwains
think him mad. I was a little behind him, and
was as completely deceived by it as he; but, as we
had agreed to allow each other to behold the lake
at the same instant, I felt a little chagrined that
he had, unintentionally, got the first glance.
We had no idea that the long-looked-for lake was still
more than three hundred miles distant. One reason
of our mistake was, that the River Zouga was often
spoken of by the same name as the lake, viz.,
Noka ea Batletli ("River of the Batletli").
The mirage on these salinas was marvelous.
It is never, I believe, seen in perfection, except
over such saline incrustations. Here
not a particle of imagination was necessary for realizing
the exact picture of large collections of water; the
waves danced along above, and the shadows of the trees
were vividly reflected beneath the surface in such
an admirable manner, that the loose cattle, whose thirst
had not been slaked sufficiently by the very brackish
water of Nchokotsa, with the horses, dogs, and even
the Hottentots ran off toward the deceitful pools.
A herd of zebras in the mirage looked so exactly like
elephants that Oswell began to saddle a horse in order
to hunt them; but a sort of break in the haze dispelled
the illusion. Looking to the west and northwest
from Nchokotsa, we could see columns of black smoke,
exactly like those from a steam-engine, rising to
the clouds, and were assured that these arose from
the burning reeds of the Noka ea Batletli.
On the 4th of July we went forward
on horseback toward what we supposed to be the lake,
and again and again did we seem to see it; but at last
we came to the veritable water of the Zouga, and found
it to be a river running to the N.E. A village
of Bakurutse lay on the opposite bank; these live
among Batletli, a tribe having a click in their language,
and who were found by Sebituane to possess large herds
of the great horned cattle. They seem allied
to the Hottentot family. Mr. Oswell, in trying
to cross the river, got his horse bogged in the swampy
bank. Two Bakwains and I managed to get over
by wading beside a fishing-weir. The people were
friendly, and informed us that this water came out
of the Ngami. This news gladdened all our hearts,
for we now felt certain of reaching our goal.
We might, they said, be a moon on the way; but we had
the River Zouga at our feet, and by following it we
should at last reach the broad water.
Next day, when we were quite disposed
to be friendly with every one, two of the Bamangwato,
who had been sent on before us by Sekomi to drive
away all the Bushmen and Bakalahari from our path,
so that they should not assist or guide us, came and
sat down by our fire. We had seen their footsteps
fresh in the way, and they had watched our slow movements
forward, and wondered to see how we, without any Bushmen,
found our way to the waters. This was the first
time they had seen Ramotobi. “You have
reached the river now,” said they; and we, quite
disposed to laugh at having won the game, felt no
ill-will to any one. They seemed to feel no enmity
to us either; but, after an apparently friendly conversation,
proceeded to fulfill to the last the instructions of
their chief. Ascending the Zouga in our front,
they circulated the report that our object was to
plunder all the tribes living on the river and lake;
but when they had got half way up the river, the principal
man sickened of fever, turned back some distance,
and died. His death had a good effect, for the
villagers connected it with the injury he was attempting
to do to us. They all saw through Sekomi’s
reasons for wishing us to fail in our attempt; and
though they came to us at first armed, kind and fair
treatment soon produced perfect confidence.
When we had gone up the bank of this
beautiful river about ninety-six miles from the point
where we first struck it, and understood that we were
still a considerable distance from the Ngami, we left
all the oxen and wagons, except Mr. Oswell’s,
which was the smallest, and one team, at Ngabisane,
in the hope that they would be recruited for the home
journey, while we made a push for the lake. The
Bechuana chief of the Lake region, who had sent men
to Sechele, now sent orders to all the people on the
river to assist us, and we were received by the Bakoba,
whose language clearly shows that they bear an affinity
to the tribes in the north. They call themselves
Bayeiye, i.e., men; but the Bechuanas call them
Bakoba, which contains somewhat of the idea of slaves.
They have never been known to fight, and, indeed,
have a tradition that their forefathers, in their
first essays at war, made their bows of the Palma
Christi, and, when these broke, they gave up fighting
altogether. They have invariably submitted to
the rule of every horde which has overrun the countries
adjacent to the rivers on which they specially love
to dwell. They are thus the Quakers of the body
politic in Africa.
A long time after the period of our
visit, the chief of the Lake, thinking to make soldiers
of them, took the trouble to furnish them with shields.
“Ah! we never had these before; that is the reason
we have always succumbed. Now we will fight.”
But a marauding party came from the Makololo, and
our “Friends” at once paddled quickly,
night and day, down the Zouga, never daring to look
behind them till they reached the end of the river,
at the point where we first saw it.
The canoes of these inland sailors
are truly primitive craft: they are hollowed
out of the trunks of single trees by means of iron
adzes; and if the tree has a bend, so has the canoe.
I liked the frank and manly bearing of these men,
and, instead of sitting in the wagon, preferred a
seat in one of the canoes. I found they regarded
their rude vessels as the Arab does his camel.
They have always fires in them, and prefer sleeping
in them while on a journey to spending the night on
shore. “On land you have lions,”
say they, “serpents, hyaenas, and your enemies;
but in your canoe, behind a bank of reed, nothing can
harm you.” Their submissive disposition
leads to their villages being frequently visited by
hungry strangers. We had a pot on the fire in
the canoe by the way, and when we drew near the villages
devoured the contents. When fully satisfied ourselves,
I found we could all look upon any intruders with
perfect complacency, and show the pot in proof of having
devoured the last morsel.
While ascending in this way the beautifully-wooded
river, we came to a large stream flowing into it.
This was the River Tamunak’le. I inquired
whence it came. “Oh, from a country full
of rivers so many no one can tell their
number and full of large trees.”
This was the first confirmation of statements I had
heard from the Bakwains who had been with Sebituane,
that the country beyond was not “the large sandy
plateau” of the philosophers. The prospect
of a highway capable of being traversed by boats to
an entirely unexplored and very populous region, grew
from that time forward stronger and stronger in my
mind; so much so that, when we actually came to the
lake, this idea occupied such a large portion of my
mental vision that the actual discovery seemed of but
little importance. I find I wrote, when the emotions
caused by the magnificent prospects of the new country
were first awakened in my breast, that they “might
subject me to the charge of enthusiasm, a charge which
I wished I deserved, as nothing good or great had ever
been accomplished in the world without it."
Twelve days after our departure from
the wagons at Ngabisane we came to the northeast end
of Lake Ngami; and on the 1st of August, 1849, we
went down together to the broad part, and, for the
first time, this fine-looking sheet of water was beheld
by Europeans. The direction of the lake seemed
to be N.N.E. and S.S.W. by compass. The southern
portion is said to bend round to the west, and to
receive the Teoughe from the north at its northwest
extremity. We could detect no horizon where we
stood looking S.S.W., nor could we form any idea of
the extent of the lake, except from the reports of
the inhabitants of the district; and, as they professed
to go round it in three days, allowing twenty-five
miles a day would make it seventy-five, or less than
seventy geographical miles in circumference.
Other guesses have been made since as to its circumference,
ranging between seventy and one hundred miles.
It is shallow, for I subsequently saw a native punting
his canoe over seven or eight miles of the northeast
end; it can never, therefore, be of much value as
a commercial highway. In fact, during the months
preceding the annual supply of water from the north,
the lake is so shallow that it is with difficulty
cattle can approach the water through the boggy, reedy
banks. These are low on all sides, but on the
west there is a space devoid of trees, showing that
the waters have retired thence at no very ancient
date. This is another of the proofs of desiccation
met with so abundantly throughout the whole country.
A number of dead trees lie on this space, some of
them imbedded in the mud, right in the water.
We were informed by the Bayeiye, who live on the lake,
that when the annual inundation begins, not only trees
of great size, but antelopes, as the springbuck and
tsessebe (’Acronotus lunata’), are
swept down by its rushing waters; the trees are gradually
driven by the winds to the opposite side, and become
imbedded in mud.
The water of the lake is perfectly
fresh when full, but brackish when low; and that coming
down the Tamunak’le we found to be so clear,
cold, and soft, the higher we ascended, that the idea
of melting snow was suggested to our minds. We
found this region, with regard to that from which
we had come, to be clearly a hollow, the lowest point
being Lake Kumadau; the point of the ebullition of
water, as shown by one of Newman’s barometric
thermometers, was only between 207-1/2 Deg. and
206 Deg., giving an elevation of not much more
than two thousand feet above the level of the sea.
We had descended above two thousand feet in coming
to it from Kolobeng. It is the southern and lowest
part of the great river system beyond, in which large
tracts of country are inundated annually by tropical
rains, hereafter to be described. A little of
that water, which in the countries farther north produces
inundation, comes as far south as 20d 20’, the
latitude of the upper end of the lake, and instead
of flooding the country, falls into the lake as into
a reservoir. It begins to flow down the Embarrah,
which divides into the rivers Tzo and Teoughe.
The Tzo divides into the Tamunak’le and Mababe;
the Tamunak’le discharges itself into the Zouga,
and the Teoughe into the lake. The flow begins
either in March or April, and the descending waters
find the channels of all these rivers dried out, except
in certain pools in their beds, which have long dry
spaces between them. The lake itself is very
low. The Zouga is but a prolongation of the Tamunak’le,
and an arm of the lake reaches up to the point where
the one ends and the other begins. The last is
narrow and shallow, while the Zouga is broad and deep.
The narrow arm of the lake, which on the map looks
like a continuation of the Zouga, has never been observed
to flow either way. It is as stagnant as the
lake itself.
The Teoughe and Tamunak’le,
being essentially the same river, and receiving their
supplies from the same source (the Embarrah or Varrà),
can never outrun each other. If either could,
or if the Teoughe could fill the lake a
thing which has never happened in modern times then
this little arm would prove a convenient escapement
to prevent inundation. If the lake ever becomes
lower than the bed of the Zouga, a little of the water
of the Tamunak’le might flow into it instead
of down the Zouga; we should then have the phenomenon
of a river flowing two ways; but this has never been
observed to take place here, and it is doubtful if
it ever can occur in this locality. The Zouga
is broad and deep when it leaves the Tamunak’le,
but becomes gradually narrower as you descend about
two hundred miles; there it flows into Kumadau, a
small lake about three or four miles broad and twelve
long. The water, which higher up begins to flow
in April, does not make much progress in filling this
lake till the end of June. In September the rivers
cease to flow. When the supply has been more
than usually abundant, a little water flows beyond
Kumadau, in the bed first seen by us on the 4th of
July; if the quantity were larger, it might go further
in the dry rocky bed of the Zouga, since seen still
further to the east. The water supply of this
part of the river system, as will be more fully explained
further on, takes place in channels prepared for a
much more copious flow. It resembles a deserted
Eastern garden, where all the embankments and canals
for irrigation can be traced, but where, the main dam
and sluices having been allowed to get out of repair,
only a small portion can be laid under water.
In the case of the Zouga the channel is perfect, but
water enough to fill the whole channel never comes
down; and before it finds its way much beyond Kumadau,
the upper supply ceases to run and the rest becomes
evaporated. The higher parts of its bed even
are much broader and more capacious than the lower
toward Kumadau. The water is not absorbed so
much as lost in filling up an empty channel, from
which it is to be removed by the air and sun.
There is, I am convinced, no such thing in the country
as a river running into sand and becoming lost.
The phenomenon, so convenient for geographers, haunted
my fancy for years; but I have failed in discovering
any thing except a most insignificant approach to
it.
My chief object in coming to the lake
was to visit Sebituane, the great chief of the Makololo,
who was reported to live some two hundred miles beyond.
We had now come to a half-tribe of the Bamangwato,
called Batauana. Their chief was a young man
named Lechulatebe. Sebituane had conquered his
father Moremi, and Lechulatebe received part of his
education while a captive among the Bayeiye. His
uncle, a sensible man, ransomed him; and, having collected
a number of families together, abdicated the chieftainship
in favor of his nephew. As Lechulatebe had just
come into power, he imagined that the proper way of
showing his abilities was to act directly contrary
to every thing that his uncle advised. When we
came, the uncle recommended him to treat us handsomely,
therefore the hopeful youth presented us with a goat
only. It ought to have been an ox. So I
proposed to my companions to loose the animal and
let him go, as a hint to his master. They, however,
did not wish to insult him. I, being more of
a native, and familiar with their customs, knew that
this shabby present was an insult to us. We wished
to purchase some goats or oxen; Lechulatebe offered
us elephants’ tusks. “No, we can
not eat these; we want something to fill our stomachs.”
“Neither can I; but I hear you white men are
all very fond of these bones, so I offer them; I want
to put the goats into my own stomach.” A
trader, who accompanied us, was then purchasing ivory
at the rate of ten good large tusks for a musket worth
thirteen shillings. They were called “bones”;
and I myself saw eight instances in which the tusks
had been left to rot with the other bones where the
elephant fell. The Batauana never had a chance
of a market before; but, in less than two years after
our discovery, not a man of them could be found who
was not keenly alive to the great value of the article.
On the day after our arrival at the
lake, I applied to Lechulatebe for guides to Sebituane.
As he was much afraid of that chief, he objected,
fearing lest other white men should go thither also,
and give Sebituane guns; whereas, if the traders came
to him alone, the possession of fire-arms would give
him such a superiority that Sebituane would be afraid
of him. It was in vain to explain that I would
inculcate peace between them that Sebituane
had been a father to him and Sechele, and was as anxious
to see me as he, Lechulatebe, had been. He offered
to give me as much ivory as I needed without going
to that chief; but when I refused to take any, he
unwillingly consented to give me guides. Next
day, however, when Oswell and I were prepared to start,
with the horses only, we received a senseless refusal;
and like Sekomi, who had thrown obstacles in our way,
he sent men to the Bayeiye with orders to refuse us
a passage across the river. Trying hard to form
a raft at a narrow part, I worked many hours in the
water; but the dry wood was so worm-eaten it would
not bear the weight of a single person. I was
not then aware of the number of alligators which exist
in the Zouga, and never think of my labor in the water
without feeling thankful that I escaped their jaws.
The season was now far advanced; and as Mr. Oswell,
with his wonted generous feelings, volunteered, on
the spot, to go down to the Cape and bring up a boat,
we resolved to make our way south again.
Coming down the Zouga, we had now
time to look at its banks. These are very beautiful,
resembling closely many parts of the River Clyde above
Glasgow. The formation is soft calcareous tufa,
such as forms the bottom of all this basin. The
banks are perpendicular on the side to which the water
swings, and sloping and grassy on the other. The
slopes are selected for the pitfalls designed by the
Bayeiye to entrap the animals as they come to drink.
These are about seven or eight feet deep, three or
four feet wide at the mouth, and gradually decrease
till they are only about a foot wide at the bottom.
The mouth is an oblong square (the only square thing
made by the Bechuanas, for every thing else is round),
and the long diameter at the surface is about equal
to the depth. The decreasing width toward the
bottom is intended to make the animal wedge himself
more firmly in by his weight and struggles. The
pitfalls are usually in pairs, with a wall a foot
thick left uncut between the ends of each, so that
if the beast, when it feels its fore legs descending,
should try to save itself from going in altogether
by striding the hind legs, he would spring forward
and leap into the second with a force which insures
the fall of his whole body into the trap. They
are covered with great care. All the excavated
earth is removed to a distance, so as not to excite
suspicion in the minds of the animals. Reeds and
grass are laid across the top; above this the sand
is thrown, and watered so as to appear exactly like
the rest of the spot. Some of our party plumped
into these pitfalls more than once, even when in search
of them, in order to open them to prevent the loss
of our cattle. If an ox sees a hole, he carefully
avoids it; and old elephants have been known to precede
the herd and whisk off the coverings of the pitfalls
on each side all the way down to the water. We
have known instances in which the old among these
sagacious animals have actually lifted the young out
of the trap.
The trees which adorn the banks are
magnificent. Two enormous baobabs (’Adansonia
digitata’), or mowanas, grow near its confluence
with the lake where we took the observations for the
latitude (20d 20’ S.). We were unable to
ascertain the longitude of the lake, as our watches
were useless; it may be between 22 Deg. and 23
Deg. E. The largest of the two baobabs
was 76 feet in girth. The palmyra appears here
and there among trees not met with in the south.
The mokuchong, or moshoma, bears an edible fruit of
indifferent quality, but the tree itself would be a
fine specimen of arboreal beauty in any part of the
world. The trunk is often converted into canoes.
The motsouri, which bears a pink plum containing a
pleasant acid juice, resembles an orange-tree in its
dark evergreen foliage, and a cypress in its form.
It was now winter-time, and we saw nothing of the
flora. The plants and bushes were dry; but wild
indigo abounded, as indeed it does over large tracts
of Africa. It is called mohetolo, or the “changer”,
by the boys, who dye their ornaments of straw with
the juice. There are two kinds of cotton in the
country, and the Mashona, who convert it into cloth,
dye it blue with this plant.
We found the elephants in prodigious
numbers on the southern bank. They come to drink
by night, and after having slaked their thirst in
doing which they throw large quantities of water over
themselves, and are heard, while enjoying the refreshment,
screaming with delight they evince their
horror of pitfalls by setting off in a straight line
to the desert, and never diverge till they are eight
or ten miles off. They are smaller here than
in the countries farther south. At the Limpopo,
for instance, they are upward of twelve feet high;
here, only eleven: farther north we shall find
them nine feet only. The koodoo, or tolo,
seemed smaller, too, than those we had been accustomed
to see. We saw specimens of the kuabaoba, or
straight-horned rhinoceros (’R. Oswellii’),
which is a variety of the white (’R. simus’);
and we found that, from the horn being projected downward,
it did not obstruct the line of vision, so that this
species is able to be much more wary than its neighbors.
We discovered an entirely new species
of antelope, called lèche or lechwi. It
is a beautiful water-antelope of a light brownish-yellow
color. Its horns exactly like those
of the ‘Aigoceros ellipsiprimnus’, the
waterbuck, or tumogo, of the Bechuanas rise
from the head with a slight bend backward, then curve
forward at the points. The chest, belly, and
orbits are nearly white, the front of the legs and
ankles deep brown. From the horns, along the
nape to the withers, the male has a small mane of
the same yellowish color with the rest of the skin,
and the tail has a tuft of black hair. It is
never found a mile from water; islets in marshes and
rivers are its favorite haunts, and it is quite unknown
except in the central humid basin of Africa. Having
a good deal of curiosity, it presents a noble appearance
as it stands gazing, with head erect, at the approaching
stranger. When it resolves to decamp, it lowers
its head, and lays its horns down to a level with the
withers; it then begins with a waddling trot, which
ends in its galloping and springing over bushes like
the pallahs. It invariably runs to the water,
and crosses it by a succession of bounds, each of which
appears to be from the bottom. We thought the
flesh good at first, but soon got tired of it.
Great shoals of excellent fish come
down annually with the access of waters. The
mullet (’Mugil Africanus’) is
the most abundant. They are caught in nets.
The ‘Glanis siluris’,
a large, broad-headed fish, without scales, and barbed called
by the natives “mosala” attains
an enormous size and fatness. They are caught
so large that when a man carries one over his shoulder
the tail reaches the ground. It is a vegetable
feeder, and in many of its habits resembles the eel.
Like most lophoid fishes, it has the power of retaining
a large quantity of water in a part of its great head,
so that it can leave the river, and even be buried
in the mud of dried-up pools, without being destroyed.
Another fish closely resembling this, and named ‘Clarias
capensis’ by Dr. Smith, is widely diffused throughout
the interior, and often leaves the rivers for the sake
of feeding in pools. As these dry up, large numbers
of them are entrapped by the people. A water-snake,
yellow-spotted and dark brown, is often seen swimming
along with its head above the water: it is quite
harmless, and is relished as food by the Bayeiye.
They mention ten kinds of fish in
their river; and, in their songs of praise to the
Zouga, say, “The messenger sent in haste is always
forced to spend the night on the way by the abundance
of food you place before him.” The Bayeiye
live much on fish, which is quite an abomination to
the Bechuanas of the south; and they catch them in
large numbers by means of nets made of the fine, strong
fibres of the hibiscus, which grows abundantly in
all moist places. Their float-ropes are made of
the ife, or, as it is now called, the ‘Sansevière
Angolensis’, a flag-looking plant, having a
very strong fibre, that abounds from Kolobeng to Angola;
and the floats themselves are pieces of a water-plant
containing valves at each joint, which retain the air
in cells about an inch long. The mode of knotting
the nets is identical with our own.
They also spear the fish with javelins
having a light handle, which readily floats on the
surface. They show great dexterity in harpooning
the hippopotamus; and, the barbed blade of the spear
being attached to a rope made of the young leaves
of the palmyra, the animal can not rid himself of
the canoe, attached to him in whale fashion, except
by smashing it, which he not unfrequently does by
his teeth or by a stroke of his hind foot.
On returning to the Bakurutse, we
found that their canoes for fishing were simply large
bundles of reeds tied together. Such a canoe would
be a ready extemporaneous pontoon for crossing any
river that had reedy banks.