[The Last Journals of David Livingstone, in Central Africa, from 1865 to His Death, Volume I (of 2), 1866-1868 by David Livingstone]@TWC D-Link book
The Last Journals of David Livingstone, in Central Africa, from 1865 to His Death, Volume I (of 2), 1866-1868

CHAPTER IV
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As the heat is great we were glad of the rest and beer, with which he very freely supplied us.
I saw the skin of a Phenembe, a species of lizard which devours chickens; here it is named Salka.

It had been flayed by a cut up the back--body, 12 inches; across belly, 10 inches.
After nearly giving up the search for Dr.Roscher's point of reaching the Lake--because no one, either Arab or native, had the least idea of either Nusseewa or Makawa, the name given to the place--I discovered it in Lessefa, the accentuated _e_ being sounded as our _e_ in _set_.
This word would puzzle a German philologist, as being the origin of Nussewa, but the Waiyau pronounce it Losewa, the Arabs Lussewa, and Roscher's servant transformed the _L_ and _e_ into _N_ and _ee_, hence Nusseewa.

In confirmation of this rivulet Lesefa, which is opposite Kotakota, or, as the Arabs pronounce it, Nkotakota, the chief is Mangkaka (Makawa), or as there is a confusion of names as to chief it may be Mataka, whose town and district is called Moembe, the town Pamoembe = Mamemba.
I rest content with Kingomango so far verifying the place at which he arrived two months after we had discovered Lake Nyassa.

He deserved all the credit due to finding the way thither, but he travelled as an Arab, and no one suspected him to be anything else.

Our visits have been known far and wide, and great curiosity excited; but Dr.Roscher merits the praise only of preserving his _incognito_ at a distance from Kilwa: his is almost the only case known of successfully assuming the Arab guise--Burckhardt is the exception.


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