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- $Unique_ID{how02340}
- $Pretitle{}
- $Title{Impressions Of South Africa
- Chapter XVI - From Fort Salisbury To The Sea, Part I}
- $Subtitle{}
- $Author{Bryce, James}
- $Affiliation{}
- $Subject{even
- miles
- like
- native
- now
- rock
- still
- three
- africa
- country}
- $Date{1897}
- $Log{}
- Title: Impressions Of South Africa
- Book: Part III - A Journey Through South Africa
- Author: Bryce, James
- Date: 1897
-
- Chapter XVI - From Fort Salisbury To The Sea, Part I
-
- Manicaland And The Portuguese Territories
-
- In Africa, moisture is everything. It makes the difference between
- fertility and barrenness; it makes the difference between a cheerful and a
- melancholy landscape. As one travels northeastward from Palapshwye to
- Bulawayo, and from Bulawayo to Fort Salisbury, one passes by degrees from an
- arid and almost rainless land to a land of showers and flowing waters. In
- Bechuanaland there are, except for three months in the year, no streams at
- all. In Matabililand one begins to find brooks. In Mashonaland there are at
- last rivers, sometimes with rocky banks and clear, deep pools, which (like
- that just mentioned) tempt one to bathe and risk the terrible snap of a
- crocodile's jaws. Thus eastern Mashonaland is far more attractive than the
- countries which I have described in the last two chapters. It has beautiful
- and even striking scenery. The soil, where the granitic rocks do not come too
- near the surface, is usually fertile, and cultivation is easier than in the
- regions to the southwest, because the rains are more copious. There are many
- places round Fort Salisbury and on the way thence to Mtali and Massikessi
- where a man might willingly settle down to spend his days, so genial and so
- full of beauty is the nature around him. And as the land is high, it is also
- healthful. Except in a few of the valley bottoms, fever need not be feared,
- even after the rains.
-
- From Fort Salisbury to the Indian Ocean at Beira it is a journey of three
- hundred and seventy miles, of which the first one hundred and fifty-five are
- in British, the rest in Portuguese, territory. When the railway, which now
- (May, 1897) runs inland for one hundred and fifty-eight miles from Beira, has
- been completed to Fort Salisbury, this distance, which at present requires at
- least eight days' travel, will become a trifle. But those who will then hurry
- through this picturesque region behind the locomotive will lose much of the
- charm which the journey, by far the most attractive part of a South African
- tour, now has for the lover of nature.
-
- For the first forty miles southeastward from Fort Salisbury the track
- runs through a wooded country, diversified by broad stretches of pasture. Here
- and there we found a European farm, marked in the distance by the waving tops
- of the gum-trees, with the low wooden house festooned by the brilliant mauve
- blossoms of the climbing Bougainvillea, and the garden inclosed by hedges of
- grenadilla, whose fruit is much eaten in South Africa. Vegetables raised on
- these farms fetch enormous prices in the town, so that a man who understands
- the business may count on making more by this than he will do by "prospecting"
- for gold-mines or even by floating companies. We found the grass generally
- fresh and green, for some showers had fallen, and the trees, though still
- small, were in new leaf with exquisite tints of red. Now and then, through
- gaps between the nearer hills, there are glimpses of dim blue mountains. As
- one gets farther to the southeast the hills are higher, and on either side
- there rise fantastic kopjes of granite. Their tops are cleft and riven by
- deep fissures, and huge detached blocks are strewn about at their base, or
- perched like gigantic tables upon the tops of pillars of rock, poised so
- finely that one fancies a blast of wind might overthrow them. These "perched
- blocks," however, have not, like the blocs perches of western Europe, been
- left by ancient glaciers or icebergs, for it seems still doubtful whether
- there has been a glacial period in South Africa, and neither here nor in the
- mountains of Basutoland could I discover traces of ancient moraines. They are
- due to the natural decomposition of the rock on the spot. The alternate heat
- of the day and cold of the night - a cold which is often great, owing to the
- radiation into a cloudless sky - split the masses by alternate expansion and
- contraction, make great flakes peel off them like the coats of an onion, and
- give them these singularly picturesque shapes. All this part of the country
- is as eminently fit for a landscape-painter as Bechuanaland and the more level
- parts of Matabililand are unfit, seeing that here one has foregrounds as well
- as backgrounds, and the colors are as rich as the forms are varied. For I
- must add that in this region, instead of the monotonous thorny acacias of the
- western regions, there is much variety in the trees; no tropical luxuriance, -
- the air is still too dry for that, - but many graceful outlines and a great
- diversity of foliage. Besides, the wood has a way of disposing itself with
- wonderful grace. There is none of the monotony either of pine forests, like
- those of northern and eastern Europe, or of such forests of deciduous trees as
- one sees in Michigan and the Alleghanies, but rather what in England we call
- "park-like scenery," though why nature should be supposed to do best when she
- imitates art, I will not attempt to inquire. There are belts of wood
- inclosing secluded lawns, and groups of trees dotted over a stretch of rolling
- meadow, pretty little bits of detail which enhance the charm of the ample
- sweeps of view that rise and roll to the far-off blue horizon.
-
- Beyond Marandella's - the word sounds Italian, but is really the
- Anglicized form of the name of a native chief - the country becomes still more
- open, and solitary peaks of gneiss begin to stand up, their sides of bare,
- smooth gray rock sometimes too steep to be climbed. Below and between them
- are broad stretches of pasture, with here and there, on the banks of the
- streams, pieces of land which seem eminently fit for tillage. On one such
- piece - it is called Lawrencedale - we found that two young Englishmen had
- brought some forty acres into cultivation, and admired the crops of vegetables
- they were raising partly by irrigation, partly in reliance on the rains.
- Almost anything will grow, but garden-stuff pays best, because there is in and
- round Fort Salisbury a market clamorous for it. The great risk is that of a
- descent of locusts, for these pests may in a few hours strip the ground clean
- of all that covers it. However, our young farmers had good hopes of scaring
- off the swarms, and if they could do so their profits would be large and
- certain. A few hours more through driving showers, which made the weird
- landscape of scattered peaks even more solemn, brought us to the halting-place
- on Lezapi River, a pretty spot high above the stream, where the store which
- supplies the neighborhood with the necessaries of life has blossomed into a
- sort of hotel, with a good many sleeping-huts round it. One finds these
- stores at intervals of about twenty or thirty miles; and they, with an
- occasional farm like that of Lawrencedale, represent the extremely small
- European population, which averages less than one to a dozen square miles,
- even reckoning in the missionaries that are scattered here and there.
-
- From Lezapi I made an excursion to a curious native building lying some
- six miles to the east, which Mr. Selous had advised me to see. The heat of
- the weather made it necessary to start very early, so I was awakened while it
- was still dark. But when I stood ready to be off just before sunrise, the
- Kafir boy, a servant of the store, who was to have guided me, was not to be
- found. No search could discover him. He had apparently disliked the errand,
- perhaps had some superstitious fear of the spot he was to lead me to, and had
- vanished, quite unmoved by the prospect of his employer's displeasure and of
- the sum he was to receive. The incident was characteristic of these natives.
- They are curiously wayward. They are influenced by motives they cannot be
- induced to disclose, and the motives which most affect a European sometimes
- fail altogether to tell upon them. With great difficulty I succeeded in
- finding another native boy who promised to show me the way, and followed him
- off through the wood and over the pastures, unable to speak a word to him, and
- of course understanding not a word of the voluble bursts of talk with which he
- every now and then favored me. It was a lovely morning, the sky of a soft and
- creamy blue, dewdrops sparkling on the tall stalks of grass, the rays of the
- low sun striking between the tree-tops in the thick wood that clothed the
- opposite hill, while here and there faint blue smoke-wreaths rose from some
- Kafir but hut hidden among the brushwood. We passed a large village, and just
- beyond it overtook three Kafirs, all talking briskly, as is their wont, one of
- them carrying a gun and apparently going after game. A good many natives have
- firearms, but acts of violence seem to be extremely rare. Then, passing under
- some rocky heights, we saw, after an hour and a half's fast walking, the group
- of huts where the Company's native commissioner, whom I was going to find, had
- fixed his station. Some Kafirs were at work on their mealie-plots, and one of
- them, dropping his mattock, rushed across and insisted on shaking hands with
- me, saying "Moragos," which is said to be a mixture of Dutch and Kafir meaning
- "Good morning, sir." The commissioner was living alone among the natives, and
- declared himself quite at ease as to their behavior. One chief dwelling near
- had been restive, but submitted when he was treated with firmness; and the
- natives generally - so he told me - seem rather to welcome the intervention of
- a white man to compose their disputes. They are, he added, prone to break
- their promises, except in one case. If an object, even if of small value, has
- been delivered to them as a token of the engagement made, they feel bound by
- the engagement so long as they keep this object, and when it is formally
- demanded back they will restore it unharmed. The fact is curious, and throws
- light on some of the features of primitive legal custom in Europe.
-
- The commissioner took me to the two pieces of old building - one can
- hardly call them ruins - which I had come to see. One (called Chipadzi's) has
- been already mentioned. It is a bit of ancient wall of blocks of trimmed
- granite, neatly set without mortar, and evidently meant to defend the most
- accessible point on a rocky kopje, which in some distant age had been a
- stronghold. It has all the appearance of having been constructed by the same
- race that built the walls of Dhlodhlo and Zimbabwye (though the work is not so
- neat), and is called by the natives a Zimbabwye. Behind it, in the center of
- the kopje, is a rude low wall of rough stones inclosing three huts, only one
- of which remains roofed. Under this one is the grave of a famous chief called
- Makoni, - the name is rather an official than a personal one, and his personal
- name was Chipadzi, - the uncle of the present Makoni, who is the leading chief
- of this district. ^1 On the grave there stands a large earthenware pot, which
- used to be regularly filled with native beer when, once a year, about the
- anniversary of this old Makoni's death, his sons and other descendants came to
- venerate and propitiate his ghost. Five years ago, when the white men came
- into the country, the ceremony was disused, and the poor ghost is now left
- without honor and nutriment. The pot is broken, and another pot, which stood
- in an adjoining hut and was used by the worshipers, has disappeared. The
- place, however, retains its awesome character, and a native boy who was with
- us would not enter it. The sight brought vividly to mind the similar
- spirit-worship which went on among the Romans and which goes on today in
- China; but I could not ascertain for how many generations back an ancestral
- ghost receives these attentions - a point which has remained obscure in the
- case of Roman ghosts also.
-
- [Footnote 1: He was the restive chief mentioned on the last preceding page,
- who joined in the rising of 1896, and was, I believe, taken prisoner and
- shot.]
-
- The other curiosity is much more modern. It is a deserted native village
- called Tchitiketi ("the walled town"), which has been rudely fortified with
- three concentric lines of defense, in a way not common among the Kafirs. The
- huts, which have now totally disappeared, stood on one side of a rocky
- eminence, and were surrounded by a sort of ditch ten feet deep, within which
- was a row of trees planted closely together, with the intervals probably
- originally filled by a stockade. Some of these trees do not grow wild in this
- part of the country, and have apparently been planted from shoots brought from
- the Portuguese territories. Within this outmost line there was a second row
- of trees and a rough stone wall, forming an inner defense. Still farther in
- one finds a kind of citadel, formed partly by the rocks of the kopje, partly
- by a wall of rough stones, ten feet high and seven to eight feet thick,
- plastered with mud, which holds the stones together like mortar. This wall is
- pierced by small apertures, which apparently served as loopholes for arrows,
- and there is a sort of narrow gate through it, only four and a half feet high,
- covered by a slab of stone. Within the citadel, several chiefs are buried in
- crevices of the rock, which have been walled up; and there are still visible
- the remains of the huts wherein, upon a wicker stand, were placed the pots
- that held the beer provided for their ghosts. Having ceased to be a royal
- residence or a fortress, the spot remains, like the Escurial, a place of royal
- sepulture. The natives remember the names of the dead chiefs, but little
- else, and cannot tell one when the fortress was built nor why it was forsaken.
- Everything is so rude that one must suppose the use of loopholes to have been
- learned from the Portuguese, who apparently came from time to time into these
- regions; and the rudeness confirms the theory that the buildings at the Great
- Zimbabwye were not the work of any of the present Bantu tribes, but of some
- less barbarous race.
-
- It is not easy to find one's way alone over the country in these parts,
- where no Kafir speaks English, and where the network of native foot-paths
- crossing one another soon confuses recollection. However, having a distant
- mountain-peak to steer my course by, I succeeded in making my way back alone,
- and was pleased to find that, though the sun was now high in heaven and I had
- neither a sun-helmet nor a white umbrella, its rays did me no harm. A
- stranger, however, can take liberties with the sun which residents hold it
- safer not to take. Europeans in these countries walk as little as they can,
- especially in the heat of the day. They would ride, were horses attainable,
- but the horse-sickness makes it extremely difficult to find or to retain a
- good animal. All traveling for any distance is of course done in a wagon or
- (where one can be had) in a Cape cart.
-
- From the Lezapi River onward the scenery grows more striking as one
- passes immediately beneath some of the tall towers of rock which we had
- previously admired from a distance. They remind one, in their generally gray
- hue and the extreme boldness of their lines, of some of the gneissose
- pinnacles of Norway, such as those above Naerodal, on the Sogne Fiord. One of
- them, to which the English have given the name of the Sugar Loaf, soars in a
- face of smooth sheer rock nearly 1000 feet above the track, the lichens that
- cover it showing a wealth of rich colors, greens and yellows varied here and
- there by long streaks of black rain-drip. Behind this summit to the
- northeast, eight to twelve miles away, rose a long range of sharp, jagged
- peaks, perfectly bare, and showing by their fine-cut lines the hardness of
- their rock. They were not very high, at most 2000 feet above the level of the
- plateau, which is here some 4000 feet above sea-level. But the nobility of
- their forms, and their clear parched sternness as they stood in the intense
- sunshine, made them fill and satisfy the eye beyond what one would have
- expected from their height. That severe and even forbidding quality which is
- perceptible in the aspect of the South African mountains, as it is in those of
- some other hot countries, seems to be due, in some degree at least, to the
- sense of their aridity and bareness. One feels no longing to climb them, as
- one would long to climb a picturesque mountain in Europe, because one knows
- that upon their scorching sides there is no verdure and that no spring breaks
- from beneath their crags. Beautiful as they are, they are repellent; they
- invite no familiarity; they speak of the hardness, the grimness, the silent
- aloofness of nature. It is only when they form the distant background of a
- view, and especially when the waning light of evening clothes their stern
- forms with tender hues, that they become elements of pure delight in the
- landscape.
-
- Some fifteen miles east of this range we came upon a natural object we
- had given up hoping to see in South Africa, a country where the element
- necessary to it is so markedly deficient. This was the waterfall on the Oudzi
- River, one of the tributaries of the great Sabi River, which falls into the
- Indian Ocean. The Oudzi is not very large in the dry season, nor so full as
- the Garry at Killiecrankie or the stream which flows through the Yosemite
- Valley. But even this represents a considerable volume of water for tropical
- East Africa; and the rapid - it is really rather a rapid than a cascade - must
- be a grand sight after heavy rain, as it is a picturesque sight even in
- October. The stream rushes over a ridge of very hard granite rock,
- intersected by veins of finer-grained granite and of green-stone. It has cut
- for itself several deep channels in the rock, and has scooped out many
- hollows, not, as usually, circular, but elliptical in their shape, polished
- smooth, like the little pockets or basins which loose stones polish smooth as
- they are driven round and round by the current in the rocky bed of a Scotch
- torrent. The brightness of the clear green water and the softness of the
- surrounding woods, clothing each side of the long valley down which the eye
- pursues the stream till the vista is closed by distant mountains, make these
- falls one of the most novel and charming bits of scenery even in this romantic
- land. One more pleasant surprise was in store for us before we reached Mtali.
- We had seen from some way off a mass of brilliant crimson on a steep hillside.
- Coming close under, we saw it to be a wood whose trees were covered with fresh
- leaves. The locusts had eaten off all the first leaves three weeks before,
- and this was the second crop. Such a wealth of intense yet delicate reds of
- all hues, pink, crimson, and scarlet, sometimes passing into a flushed green,
- sometimes into an umber brown, I have never seen, not even in the autumn woods
- of North America, where, as on the mountain that overhangs Montreal or round
- the Saranac Lakes, the forest is aflame with the glow of the maples. The
- spring, if one may give that name to the season of the first summer rains, is
- for South Africa the time of colors, as is the autumn in our temperate climes.
-
- Mtali - it is often written "Umtali" to express that vague half-vowel
- which comes at the beginning of so many words in the Bantu languages - is a
- pretty little settlement in a valley whose sheltered position would make it
- oppressive but for the strong easterly breeze which blows nearly every day
- during the hot weather. There is plenty of good water in the hills all round,
- and the higher slopes are green with fresh grass. The town, like other towns
- in these regions, is constructed of corrugated iron, - for wood is scarce and
- dear, - with a few brick-walled houses and a fringe of native huts, while the
- outskirts are deformed by a thick deposit of empty tins of preserved meat and
- petroleum. All the roofs are of iron, and a prudent builder puts iron also
- into the foundation of the walls beneath the brick, in order to circumvent the
- white ants. These insects are one of the four plagues of South Central
- Africa. (The other three are locusts, horse-sickness, and fever.) They
- destroy every scrap of organic matter they can reach, and will even eat their
- way through brick to reach wood or any other vegetable matter above or within
- the brick. Nothing but metal stops them. They work in the dark, constructing
- for themselves a kind of tunnel or gallery if they have to pass along an open
- space, as, for instance, to reach books upon a shelf. (I was taken to see the
- public library at Mtali, and found they had destroyed nearly half of it.) They
- are small, less than half an inch long, of a dull grayish white, the queen, or
- female, about three times as large as the others. Her quarters are in a sort
- of nest deep in the ground, and if this nest can be found and destroyed the
- plague will be stayed, for a time at least. There are several other kinds of
- ants. The small red ant gets among one's provisions and devours the cold
- chicken. We spent weary hours in trying to get them out of our food-boxes,
- being unable to fall in with the local view that they ought to be eaten with
- the meat they swarm over, as a sort of relish to it. There is also the large
- reddish-black ant, which bites fiercely, but is regarded with favor because it
- kills the white ants when it can get at them. But the white ant is by far the
- most pernicious kind, and a real curse to the country.
-
- At the end of 1896, when the construction of the Beira railway from
- Chimoyo to Fort Salisbury began to be energetically prosecuted, it was found
- that to take the line past Mtali would involve a detour of some miles and a
- heavy gradient in crossing a ridge at the Christmas Pass. Mr. Rhodes promptly
- determined, instead of bringing the railway to the town, to bring the town to
- the railway. Liberal compensation was accordingly paid to all those who had
- built houses at old Mtali, and new Mtali is now (1897) rising on a carefully
- selected site seven miles away.
-
- In 1895 there were about one hundred Europeans in the town of Mtali, all,
- except the Company's officials and the storekeepers, engaged in prospecting
- for or beginning to work gold-mines; for this is the center of one of the
- first-explored gold districts, and sanguine hopes have been entertained of its
- reefs. We drove out to see some of the most promising in the Penha Longa
- Valley, six miles to the eastward. Here three sets of galleries have been
- cut, and the extraction of the metal was said to be ready to begin if the
- machinery could be brought up from the coast. As to the value and prospects
- of the reefs, over which I was most courteously shown by the gentlemen
- directing the operations, I could of course form no opinion. They are
- quartz-reefs, occurring in talcose and chloritic schistose rocks, and some of
- them maintain their direction for many miles. There is no better place than
- this valley ^1 for examining the ancient gold-workings, for here they are of
- great size. Huge masses of alluvial soil in the bottom of the valley had
- evidently been worked over, and indeed a few laborers are still employed upon
- these. But there had also been extensive open cuttings all along the
- principal reefs, the traces of which are visible in the deep trenches
- following the line of the reefs up and down the slopes of the hills, and in
- the masses of rubbish thrown out beside them. Some of these cuttings are
- evidently recent, for the sides are in places steep and even abrupt, which
- they would not be if during many years the rains had been washing the earth
- down into the trenches. Moreover, iron implements have been found at the
- bottom, of modern shapes and very little oxidized. Probably, therefore, while
- some of these workings may be of great antiquity, others are quite recent -
- perhaps less than a century old. Such workings occur in many places over
- Mashonaland and Matabililand. They are always open; that is to say, the reef
- was worked down from the surface, not along a tunnel - a fact which has made
- people think that they were carried on by natives only; and they always stop
- when water is reached, as though the miners had known nothing of pumps.
- Tradition has nothing to say as to the workings; but we know that during the
- sixteenth and seventeenth centuries a good deal of gold was brought down to
- the Portuguese coast stations; and when the Mashonaland pioneers came in 1890,
- there were still a few Portuguese trying to get the metal out of the alluvial
- deposits along the stream banks. The reefs, which are now being followed by
- level shafts or galleries driven into the sides of the hills, are (in most
- cases at least) the same as those which the old miners attacked from above.
-
- [Footnote 1: It was here only, on the blanks of a stream, that I observed the
- extremely handsome arboraceous St. John's-wort (Hypericum Schimperi),
- mentioned in page 28.]
-
-