8/13/2019 Augustus Wylde - Modern Abyssinia http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/augustus-wylde-modern-abyssinia 1/575 This is a digital copy of a book that was preserved for generations on library shelves before it was carefully scanned by Google as part of a project to make the world’s books discoverable online. It has survived long enough for the copyright to expire and the book to enter the public domain. A public domain book is one that was never subject to copyright or whose legal copyright term has expired. Whether a book is in the public domain may vary country to country. Public domain books are our gateways to the past, representing a wealth of history, culture and knowledge that’s often difficult to discover. Marks, notations and other marginalia present in the original volume will appear in this file - a reminder of this book’s long journey from the publisher to a library and finally to you. Usage guidelines Google is proud to partner with libraries to digitize public domain materials and make them widely accessible. Public domain books belong to the public and we are merely their custodians. Nevertheless, this work is expensive, so in order to keep providing this resource, we have taken steps to prevent abuse by commercial parties, including placing technical restrictions on automated querying. We also ask that you: + Make non-commercial use of the files We designed Google Book Search for use by individuals, and we request that you use these files for personal, non-commercial purposes. + Refrain from automated querying Do not send automated queries of any sort to Google’s system: If you are conducting research on machine translation, optical character recognition or other areas where access to a large amount of text is helpful, please contact us. We encourage the use of public domain materials for these purposes and may be able to help. + Maintain attribution The Google “watermark” you see on each file is essential for informing people about this project and helping them find additional materials through Google Book Search. Please do not remove it. + Keep it legal Whatever your use, remember that you are responsible for ensuring that what you are doing is legal. Do not assume that just because we believe a book is in the public domain for users in the United States, that the work is also in the public domain for users in other countries. Whether a book is still in copyright varies from country to country, and we can’t offer guidance on whether any specific use of any specific book is allowed. Please do not assume that a book’s appearance in Google Book Search means it can be used in any manner anywhere in the world. Copyright infringement liability can be quite severe. About Google Book Search Google’s mission is to organize the world’s information and to make it universally accessible and useful. Google Book Search helps readers discover the world’s books while helping authors and publishers reach new audiences. You can search through the full text of this book on the web at http://books.google.com/
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This is a digital copy of a book that was preserved for generations on library shelves before it was carefully scanned by Google as part of a project
to make the world’s books discoverable online.It has survived long enough for the copyright to expire and the book to enter the public domain. A public domain book is one that was never subject
to copyright or whose legal copyright term has expired. Whether a book is in the public domain may vary country to country. Public domain books
are our gateways to the past, representing a wealth of history, culture and knowledge that’s often difficult to discover.
Marks, notations and other marginalia present in the original volume will appear in this file - a reminder of this book’s long journey from the
publisher to a library and finally to you.
Usage guidelines
Google is proud to partner with libraries to digitize public domain materials and make them widely accessible. Public domain books belong to the
public and we are merely their custodians. Nevertheless, this work is expensive, so in order to keep providing this resource, we have taken steps to
prevent abuse by commercial parties, including placing technical restrictions on automated querying.
We also ask that you:
+ Make non-commercial use of the files We designed Google Book Search for use by individuals, and we request that you use these files for
personal, non-commercial purposes.
+ Refrain from automated querying Do not send automated queries of any sort to Google’s system: If you are conducting research on machine
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use of public domain materials for these purposes and may be able to help.
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+ Keep it legal Whatever your use, remember that you are responsible for ensuring that what you are doing is legal. Do not assume that just
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force would have been weather-bound during the rainyseason. ,
From the official Government accounts, he following arethe amounts of supplies brought in in one month at Antaloby the inhabitants and bought by the commissariat; thistotal is irrespective of rvhat was purchased by private in-dividuals, and does not include live stock,poultry, etc:-Bread2g,3ZS bs", lour 22r,334 lbs. , grain 86,89r lbs. , hay rJ5,ooolbs., f irewood 3o,ooo lbs., sunirie.s t4,/oo Ibs., 50 bullocksand r5oo sheep,or in weight equivalent to z3o tons or z8oomule loads. This was for one station alone. Along ther,vlrole oad from Senafe to the Tacazze valley at Wandach,
large quantit ies of supplies were obtained, saving muchtransport, which was as usual with the English the weakpoint of the expedition. I mention these supply figures toshow firstly, the ferti l i ty of the country; and secondly,as allthese goods were purchased and not requisit ioned,what agood name the English have left behind them, which ti l l thisday I am huppy to say sti l l exists; and no doubt shouldevents happen in the future which made it necessary forEngland to interfere in Abyssinian polit ics,we should again
be received with open arms by the cultivators and lo'nrerclassof the community. This was the late Ras Aloula's opinion,a man that knew the country better than any other official,and the best native general and strategist that Africa hasperhaps produced in modern times.
The late l(ing Johannes, nown then as Prince Kassai ofTigr6, came of a good family; his father was Dedjatch Mercha,the chief of the Tembien district, one of the provinces ofTigr6. Tembien is one of the richest and most healthyparts of the whole of Abyssinia; it is watered by the Werriand Ghiva rivers, and has Abbi-Addi for its principal town.Prince l(assai's mother was the daughter of Dedjatch Dimtsuof Enderta province, chief town Macalle, the neighbouringprovince to the east of Ternbien. Dimtsu married a sisterof Sabagardis, he ruler of Agam6, the next northern province,chief town Adigrat, and was therefore related to all the bestfamilies in the north of Abyssinia. Sabagardis eventuallybecame King of Tigr6, and Prince l(assai being a grandchildof the sister of Sabagardis,was thereforerelated to the King
of Tigr6 on the maternal side. He, however,won his r,vaybythe sword to the throne in spite of all opposition,and wascrowned King of Kings of Ethiopia at the old historicalchurch at Axum under the name of lohannes.
g:?.yirr: rmportan.."by being..re_told y so many peopleuntrl the original tale can hardly be recog'isea n rrl f";;it reaches hem. Mrs so-and-so,an old' acquaintancenin some ar off village,hashad a baby,
"Uoyor a girl, and
pe$1ns.by the timE the newsreachei his vi l lag.A; h;;had both.or perhaps hree. Miss Desta oi Mi.o'Miri;;-l;gorng o be married o Mr Hagos or Mr welcraGorgis, nJ
:.:Til:1ng' ladywho was sweeton the sameyoung man
wrll makenastyremarks. Someother prettyyoung rafy has
lunaway-_tohe coast
to better hersel{, nj the"eroJ,o ifemaleswill remarkwhat a luckyyoungp;.;;; J. iii"'t;;got the chance, nd that shewili .oofr b" bu.k *ith pl.ni"of money,.real gold and sirver, ewelreiy ;;J'^"r.;'. il,h.iand then all the bestmen of the iountrysla. *irr n"
"il;;;h;{j.o1swretch,and until she mal<es er choiceno attentionyitl ug pa-id o them. They will go back
-home una J"ii
their femalerelations,and the ,,.*i of the market will beagaindiscussed nd added to by sunday morning.*lr.n t[.qT_:ill:ong"regale under ttre tre-esn the
churchfar;:-
'Ti;;
Abyssiniau emales.areust as fond of gossip".
ih"i, sistersin other parts of the .world, ancl humJn na'ture n .y-
""_erience is very nearly trre same everywherebe it i"nii.,red,brown or blacl<.
If the farmer..isa fairly rich man,his wife and perhaosIti. daug.hters itl not clo very h;rJ ;;;k; ;;i;;l)ru;J;inte'd the household. They may be able ro read andwri,ter. aving learnt to do .o fro- ro.. priest, rvho ,rr"a daily visit to
,the^
house,and they williass
part oftheday in re^adjnghe Scriptuies-, ospj o"J F ur-i or D;ft;
or any of the scantystock of the iountry,s iterature. Therest of the day will be spent n giving"
gln;i"t ,up".rri.ioiover he female_erva'ts a'd p.ihlgJh"l;Gio prepare hebetter sorts of bread and cafes yq'i9h A;i;. a rigrrthancr,and favouritestews of meat or chicken for thei'i-,"t. ,.i"1tions. Thev oerfectlyunderstandhe utility
"r" r""Ji"s iir.
beast with a nicedinner to keep him good-tempered,ndwhat I have seen of..T"ny of iliese y"i"g-r"ai" ir,"y-J"
i:::f$g-, F.y possibly. an to -"1* . irnn r,nppy,'"nJDelnggooct-tempered,ol] l gir ls they seldom ,nag,;"na
nowonder the southern talian-shave iaken a likinf fo, trr.n',and find themselvgs prfecjlyhappy in their socieTy. Wi;;tl.y ha-ve uperinteno.a he coo'rii;g-.,r;;k'-th;ywill occupythemselves nritt embroidery,gen&ally in fr";;'^,;lk
-;i
native made cotton which' tttiy turn into cuffs, .ir"ir,
out a little hand to be shaken,snatching t awayagain asoonas therrhave ouchedone,s.fiG;:""I huu. got on withhe childr.n rreryweil,"nJ
iound th?m-molt-u-rring, and in short time, l:1" is campinsrgr ..""t"i Juy, n.u, a v'raselthev .vilt ssoo' as t e"G-ri;h;';;id?1;.h ri.l'"*Elichickens ndvegetabresor'rul., a"ndhey r" n..n bargainers.r never ound t[em steal anything, uni i- n.u., missed hemallestor most insignificantartici., .,,r.r
"nempty jam pot,bottle or tin hasnevel been or..,i-*ith;; i.r-,r'or,.
r know of no race or .rrlJi.;'";# il; so sharp andntelligent,and much -i-g.hi pq a"n"-',"iirr1t," pr.rent risinseneration to gain a fiiendship. cilft;;"'th";'^i 'il;:
known on my former visits io_ ire .;il;-iirF;r;; ,,iwhen I iast""_-,1._d
t, a,rJlii"i h;;; ,;;;;il"red.me, saying:"You werehereso many y""r, ago,and you-useOo give meiscuitsand sweet:,."rd"yg,rr.{ro g'o_-,irt-.hootingand killhe birds flving which i"tv th. Eng-r-i.n.."'ao: other menhoot birds of ,'r. gtl.intil"
T .y seem to have retentivememories,nd,do.'ot forget ncideits "i l i ;; ch'dhood.Amusements hey hairevery r.*
"cuui^ rr.y would nodoubt soon take to outdoor games,such as cricket andfootball. Hockey seems o-n""u favourite-with ull grownlads and bo.ys.
. h sort of-gam" rike trap bat and balr isommon,nrvpraved ith tfr" hanirlr-" t"; th" ilrin.irsstruck with lhe,open.p"lT, il: trap consistingor a stonewhich has to be hit with the'bail afte; tn. nlrd.rs stop it; orf the ball is caughtbefore it str'<es h. ;;;lrrd, the playeris out. Thev clreit",na ngi ot.t thir ;;ftLtrt as much asnglish schoolboys o. fio.t.ygis played on a. ,.ery largescale; one villagewill
f-t:fagairist nJtt.r,"l lo.rhey maybe a mile or two rnires pait; in.-l"ri 'i." ,il ir.o anout equi_distanr,and the
.objectbr ttr. gare is to Jriu. the bail iirtothe adversarv's illige. perhafs r"ity"inlif
childrenof allizeswill be etrg"g.d'ir .uJ-d-,"nd
the ,r6rysmailestcanhelp,as theret rq such thing
?, oq side,and perhaps hesmallestboy of ail will mar.e-he winn;? nn for hii side.as the ba.llmay be strucr< loser rr;r,^""a?. *iri n"';;";i:;to get his stroke in befrrrea uig.g."i';;; ;;' prevent him.This, game is piayed on the roughestground, and in bush
,a_nons,grassi nd mustbe capitit
"*.i l .J."*Thebail used
f..g:":lilt1 ladeof india_rubblrprocured n the country" Inave never seen a kite flown
i? Abyssini", o, any of theuiet amusementsexcept knuckrl ;;;;;;'*lii.i r berieve slayed all over the worlb
272 MODERN ABYSSINIAThe shepherds build on the downs small houses and
stone enclosureswith walls about five feet high, in whichthe sheep are kept
?., rgtrt, and they have u.ry"good watch-do$s, like the usudl Eastern pariair, and rb'ou-t th" ."mesize. These d-ogshave good noses and make fair huntinedogs, and run by scent aJ rvell as by eye. They roo" l""i ito r,u,l cu'ning; one-or two when the.r.start an bribi, duikeror k l ipspr inger.wi l l
S l t 9ui in the bp. . and t .y ' t ; ; ; iahead of the animal, wtrich is, perhaps iunning thr:oujh it-;bush, followed by the other dogs giving tongie. rt?a"s,that try. to get ahead of the
"anielopEalw'ays run mure,
1tld it is very seldom that the pack^fails to'kil l. unlessthe shepherds follow quickly, t l iere is not much of thequarry left, as the.dogJ live-moslrv.by hunting. rrr.y r. i ljackals and foxes in. numbers,and ihe'largei d"ogswilf alsotackle the hye_na, hich often fails a pr.yig, their, brt th.tnever attack in, front, and always
try to bite at the thi;skin between the legs, or at the stomach underneath thelast ribs. The town-pariah contents himself by barki;g;;the hyena, and one can always tell when the dogs berong-insto the shepherds are bacl< at the villages, as ?r,.y urriuv?give chase to the hyena, who makes a
"terriblen6ir.- ;ih
his howls when he is bitten. The short neck of the hy;;;prevents him defending himself so well frorn- a rear atiack,and this the dog seems to know from experience. onebite from the hyena is quite suff icient to breal<a
dos,s legor make a wound which nearly always proves fatal, ?, ah:strength of its j1* jr immense,.".nd t-generally carrie" u*"ya iarge piece of f lesh with each orte.
. The hyena seems to be more partial to donkey than anyother animal, and whenever it is hungry, no matter if thereare unfinished co-rpses n the vicinity, it will always
"it".r.. stray donkey if possible. sometimes if there i, only usjls.le.hyena,- he donkey wii l get away, as he runs into athicl< bush, defends himself wii his lreels, and th. ht;";
3fte1 receiving a kicl< or t'o about the head, -"r..r 'on,leaving the donkey with perhaps a bacl bite or two. Ifthere is more than_one hy-ena he donkey stands no chanceand- gets kil led. Horses and mules are
-alsoattacked and
get badly bitten; it is always as well when buying tranrporior riding animals in Abyssinia, to reject any animal thatshows any sign of having been wounded by a hu.n". Thevnever get over their fright of this. animal, and
"r.ahvays
nervous the moment it approaches near the camp, uno
Ghiva, which is here in a f lat open valley, was running asilver thread below us, and the lirnestoneand forest-cov&edsides of the Gheralta mountain lay in front of us, and ourguide pointed some 3ooo feet up at the rock we had topass before we reached the summit.
The river having shelving banks easily overflows andinundates the whole of the lower portion of the valley which,being protected from the winds'from ali siclesexcept thewest, gives it a nearly tropical climate in the centri of atemperate distr ict. This placp is noted for its . ine cotton,and all the lower land above high water level is coveredwith luxuriant gardens, and when we passed through, thebusheswere covered with the various coloured flowers, red,orange,and ail shadesof yellow" Coffee ought to thrive rvell,but I did not see -any. - The country is but very sparselypopulated durinq the rainy season,and the whole way fromLegumti we had not seen half a dozen people, and it wasno weather for travell ing in. At zahie there are a fervhouses, but the majority of the population died from thefamine and cholera,and the whole district by the ruins inolden times must have been even a great deal more thicklypopulated than it was before the epidemic broke out.
we crossed the Ghiva which rvas only about four feet
{9"p,-th9 "felucca" carrying everything acrossperfectly dry.The bed and banks of the Ghiva are thicl<ly covered wi[hfresh water mussels, he first time I have ever seen them insuch-quantities in-Abyssinia; many of them are of fair size,
the shells.bgins frll ly.five.i nches in length. The last night,sstorm had brought the river down a great height, and fcanquite understand what a dangerous stream it must be tocrosswhen it is a raging torrent over a quarter of a mile inbreadth, with its muddy and holding alluvial bottom. Thestorm had evidently been one blessing as it had killedmillions of young locusts,and even the big ones that couldfly had such a washed-outand battered appearance hat theywould never be able to do any more injury to the .ropr, unh
their feeding days were over.About half way 9p the ascent of the Gheralta range I
lrad to _give_i1 and lay down in the hot sun, shaking i' i t t tfever. I could neither walk nor_sit on my mule, luckiry thehermitage of Abaro was quite close and schimper went offto pitch camp there, and in about a couple of hours the coldfit gave way to the hot accesswhen I could throw off all mycovers and manage to walk the mile to the tents.
Abaro is not always inhabited, and the old hermit wasaway' as weil as the monks that generally come to th is p laceto fast and pray. The church is half a iarr. and half s-tone-work, and the roof thatched with rushes. It is situatecl ona gigantic limestone slab, and its surroundings are mostbeautiful as it is built on the side of a narrow girge coveredwith lovely maiden's hair fern, down which a smal-lwaterfallfinds its way from ledge to ledge. The only glimpse ofcountry^ s down the gorge, the mountain fortress prison of
Amba-Salama being in the middle dis tanceand the Sabandasrange in the background, and this only through a vistabetween the large ficus trees that clung to the gorge withtheir enormous long grey roots that looked like hugJsnakesclambering over the rocks. Tradit ion says that the patronsaint of Abyss inia,St Tchlaihaimanout,used o come 6ere topray, and that the hermitage dates from the earl iestChristiantimes. It was a lovely peaceablespot far r emoved tiom anyvil lage.
we had another bad'storm here and nature turned thewaterfall on in full force, and it came thundering down andcould hardly be recognisedas the same small tr i ik le of themorning. I -tooka_large easpoonfulof quinine and managedto get somesleep,whena wind storm cami down the gorge ndoverthrew the tent on account of the poies not being bryonet-socketedat the joint, and rvewere all f loundering aSout-untlerthe canvas n the dark ; it took us a long time Io get the tentu.p and all _the servants got drenched.
-I again got a good
sleep,-and _the
morning-brolcefine and warir wit[ my Fevergone but feeling the effects of the quinine. The asient up
the.goat path lvas most tedious, aird the huge limestonbboulders were so close together that they *ould only aliowof one box being car ' ied-by each mule-on the top of thesaddle,and in some places the animals had to be unloadedand the boxes carried or drawn up the rocl<sby ropes. Iwas too weak to give a hand, and it-took us about foui hoursto get up to the top of the pass; rve then arrived at a moreopen country cut up by deep chasms.
The whole country \^'asof limestone formation and full ofall sorts of fossils and corals,and how this country has beenpushed up t9 its grea-talt i tude is very interesting. we musthave arrived at a height of at least ro,ooo
-feet,as the
mountains round Macalle wel'eof much lower elevation,andthe flora was alsocurious,and the majority of the flowerswithgreenish blooms. A climbing geranium with a horseshoe
markon the lea{, with bright green blooms with a faintcarlet stripe-down
^e.acrr,.]1", "; ;.;t"Jo_.o'"nd
alsoery pretty, arso d crown lily.with p;r'. ;;..n flowers wasurious" Flere he locust, uy dead"tt
orr& the country. hetorm of two daysago havin* k'i.a a; ln millions.-Thisountry s suppos.g.iogive very g9.odspor , t being full ofmail anterop-e,nd the fiudoo ;,rili to"tJ'round, and I sawlenty of their spoor; we cameacross everal airsof horns,he animals having .uiJ.ntry ;i;;;il cattre disease.eopards
"r:, *{- 1="ri9,i ", c.ommon, ld .I saw theirootmarks,and my seivants. aught sight or a coupre haterewatchinga h-erd f oribr.I shourdmuchtike to virirthir_district n fine weather. st offersa sot;1d]d pi;.-s. i".r.."11..o";;;;,a S.hirnpersavsis fatherhia.never'visite? this districtl'andhe beri-evedouropeans ad taken rrir r""te, at which I am not surprised.
ii i$trlii:*",Ti 'ilyi"'o' ';;;"n"ai;A;;{;;;:;last vai"iv
,*g"";';;Hr'"i.g;rislrkl,o;.f'ru*
delighted to ,.. moie open country before me, and on enter-ng it Macalle-wa., i";'iqlilo_." eight miles ofl, across anpen plateau with mol._jr it tr"gg.i"l-{ ra it*",
"i:.,i,TJ"*'""j,3Ji.ff: ::ffi":tear he vitage of Inder M?riuoiDahan i;;e" nigrrt so-aso get a ions
.restand to clean up beforewe enteredRasangesha's "hief "*".' i
..r, ir.r *"..;a;, to say that rrrived and was_notwell bui wout;-;;ii;.r;
t day,and the:nes,se_ngerame bacr< ate in ttr"
.u.ning *iin a presentofood rrom the Ras and som. of hlr;;rr i"r,i.ur"r brew ofost excelle't tedg,and alr sorts hili; fl-pri.ents.we had a cord"fr^n"rigiri"undno rain,but we had abouthe most noisy'totoi hy.;";;"f evermet,and sometimesheyameso closeasnearly to stampede hl *utlr, and we hadBJ:?'i,,X,Lnt"l*.i:J- ds^"11igh .'"^ina"'.ariamververodo,l,="i#r{jT;"JHxlli:fl.Tfif[ffi*vith trees and hedg; ;ith ti" .und9U1"
",,phorbia; giantycamore rees are arsocommon,- nd ttr"-.drrr" district iseil cultivated.. The *'"i"'"ry rroi;.;;ping place toacalle is one t11s" pl;i";"#"grass meadows, ncl rve saweforesunsetendl&s ;rdr"orir"rnJ';;il;:nd
drovesoforsesand mules..wending'their way frorn the grass rand toamletson the hitrriJ.r.'"rCir"i'age_from he prateauandhe surroundingmountainsat join ;t f;;;; ii lurium Dahan
and forms a stream about a hundred yards broad whichplunges iL 9n-. sheet of water with about a forty feet dropin
a small lake about a third of a mile in cirtumferen...There are two big whirlpools in the lake, one near the falland the other at the side of the exit, which is very narrow.
We started next morning in our best clothes across heplateau for Macalle. The going was very deep and hold-ing, and innumerous water courses had to be crossed, hebottoms of which were composed of water-worn limestonerocks and the
'sidesof black mud which was very slippery,
a1d my mule and I came to grief both going into a-biaikslush hole and dirtying my nice clean clothes.
-
I had to takeoff my lower garments and dry them in the sun, and in thisstate I had to receivean off icer sent out by the Ras to meetme. f don't think it mattered very much as he might havethought it was the usual way of going about in England indirty roads. I sent him back to say I was coming, andwhen dry continued my journey.
.The bog holes -on the plateau were full of the fan-tail
snipe,so common in Egypt, and they got up all around us,and I could have had pretty shooting if I had had any smallshot, but cartridgeswere a great deal too valuable to be usedon such a small bird. Ducks were also numerolls and ofmlny sorts,and so was the ubiquitous Egyptian goose that
s found everywhere n the country where there is an apologyfor a pond ; there were many broods of nearly ful l
-grotvn
goslings which I sent my Somalis after, and after a shortchase they brought back three very fat ones; these aredelicious eating and very tender, and the old birds are thereverse and have to be stewed for hours before they are fit
to eat.Nearing the town I recognised the figure of my friend
the dwarf, Barrambarras Marou, coming along the roacl,fol lowed by severalsmall boys that were evidently annoyinghim as he would occasionally stoop down and pick tip astone to throw at them, and they wouid then run away andkeep just out of reach. When he came up to me he gothold of my foot and kissed it, and said that he wanted aride and wanted to be put up behind Schimper who did not
seem to see it. I suggested re should get on the Ital ianmule between two boxes, and by clambering up a roek bythe side of the road he managed to tal<ea flying leap on tothe baggage and seated himself cross leg between he boxes,which he immediately commenced hammering as if they
saw him more or less all day long and he never missed ameal, and I tr ied to repay the kindness I have invariablyreceived at his hands when in Abyssinia. Before,when h-eused to travel to Egypt, he always made use of my houseatSuai<in and Je_ddali,
-andI perhaps know as rnuth as any
European of this curious old character,and heis a fair rc-presentative of the old-fashioned,educated Abyssinian. I
have always found him truthful and honest,and a iurious mix-tr-rreof semi-modern ideas grafted on to a stock of fifteenthcentury civilisation, and his ideas of the reforms requiredfor his country impossible and impracticable, as the rulerof the north is not strong enoug[ in character to carrythem out.
- Th" Abyssinian will never l<eepquiet under a cafd house,boulevard
.
regime, nor a ruler t6at- gets his ideas from ;puny missionary mode of l i fe; the Abyssinians are huntersand athletes by nature, and believe in the muscular order ofChristianity, and their monks and priests that lead a hardagricultural mode of l i fe are a great deal more in touch withthe peasantry and more listened to than those that lead asedenta_ry ife. Old age, however, they respect as long asyouth has been spent in toil. A man has always rutuaAbyssinia, not a bookworm or clerk, and a man they wil lhave to govern them and he only wii i they l isten to.
_ The first night after my arrival we sat up tiil the srnallhours of the morning, Ledg Mertcha doing
-allthe talking.
I could see,although he was too polit ic tJ tel l me, that hismission to Cairo had been most unsatisfactory,and from thedwarf in the morning I heard that his masier was in a badtemper I court fools have their use, so I told him I was notpleased,which would be certain to go to the place I wantedit
-to. lVIy posit ion I could see was not the pleasantestalth-ough here was no danger; the day that it wis possible
to i l l- treat a European in Abyssinia, thanks to the English,died on the heights of Magdala, and there is, I coniider,absolutely no danger to an Englishman travell ing in thecountry as iong as he behaves himself and steers clear ofpoljtics, local or otherwise; the very worst that can happenis d.etention, unning out of European stores and then havingto live like the natives, no very terrible ordeal as long aione has a good cook, as the country producesgood food inplenty. I retired to bed, anxious to seewhat the interview
with the Ras would bring forth and what the claimant ofthe throne of Abyssinia would have to say for himselfi as I
abilities,nor had his condult niti,?rt, ;;-;h" presenrstateof his countryshown me that he.r1'a9"-hi;;rson
to placeany great confidence n,_ or courd I fincrJui ttr"t tr"- *u,respected. He was neither liked nor dislikei which is nogreat recommendation,nd he certainry "r ntt feared.
afternoons with- hem, and they also brought other of their
friends to see.the-Englishman. I here d; them tea oneday, and Huntley and Palmer's sweet bisc?r i ts ,l t i r Schimper
a.nd a-_pr iest ame,and they al l ran away. ' I ; ; ; ; ; i ; ' b,the old priesr that it wa. trot the correci'thing i;; l ; . ' ,ne.ar he holy well. Some few-days after I catfrht the samepriest and some of his men drinking tedj at th8 . me ph;;and the iaugh was the other way.
In the large.round Abyssi.iian church at the upper end.of lh:
grove Ras Areya Selassie, (ing j fr r..5Gn, ,Iburied ; such a peacefui, quiet .poi,
*h.-r. rr ry ferv peoolecome to. The number of differbnt-sorts of bea.ri i f f Ll iJ;1 9 gorg-.ousbutterflies that could be seenhere would havedelighted the
,heartof a'y naturalist, anJ in.y , ;;J-l;
knorv it was a haven of resl where they were n.u., disturbed,and were consequentryvery tame. Th.r were arso manvrock and tree squirrels thal used to play
b;;trr r i 'Jr
the church, and cliyp up_and down itt. 'piti rs, and I wasnever tired of watching their gambols. The ficus trees *i;htheir r ipe fruit were viJited bf hundreds of th. t ig. ;;;;
,a1d. ello.w pigeons, that get io fat and are urch gJod't bl;birds,and in the eveningJonstant flocks of other *n a pig. n,were constarftly passing over our garden on their ;;r-i;roost in the grove.
Nearly every house at Macaile has a large garden rvithan.irr igatio-n channel to it, and there
r,.i r i - n *ho
look out after the water chan'eis and k .p them i; ;p;i;;and also turn on the rvater to the gardens when trr.y .ffirJwateri 'g; t le smarl chan'els arJblo-cked by sodi of i l ; iar-rd.hey _9'1y require t-alcingout to let the
'waterinto the
garden. Here the-small boys are just as
-mischi uou,
-1,
th.ey are in any other countiy, and. th.y have great games
with the watermen, breaki'g down the water ch annerr' .oso give them extra worl<,a.d I saw several of therrr; gh;
after a long chase and smacked ; one- ought refuge i; il ;-caTp-, nd_on it
Soming.tomy ears what ?he young rascal
hadtone, r gaveli in up to receivehis weil-der iu d B. ti s.The whole of the walls round the
n.lo.ur s
are built
o.f rough stones ; they are all of very old limestone forma_tion' A whole m.orning coulf be'spent iooking
lth
curious shells, corals and fossilized und., , u tir. ir *ni.nthey are composed. This country at some remote periodmust have had either the sea over ii or hav b..n purri J upfrom it ; i f the fo'ner the rower country ancl the uil y, *u&
at Raio after General Baratieri ran away; he had a soearwound in his a_nkle, nd a bulret in rris ri";l;;;d.;"r;iliremained, and the rvoundwould not h.ai.
- i i*",
in a horriblestate rvhen I first saw him, but after a week,s crressing t;;;better, but would nevef gefwell unti l t t . uutt.t was removed ;f he had been a nativi I wourd have taken it out, but I donot l i ke do ing my unsk i l redbut . t . i ' r ; ; k 'on a nurop. *The marr's name was Benedetto gistuinil-" p.ur"nt, and hecame from near pisa_,and I promisecr if i ever went there I
would call and see him. H'e was always talking an"i, i ' rr i .mother, and he was quite childish i; t l ;-p_r"ttt";"d a.i isi l iat the chance,of seeing_rris ome agai.n,-T g",r. him a[ ?heclothes I could spa'e arid sent him ou his way rejoicing,witha present of some rira notes and some Abv.'rin#; i"*?ri"r i,including a silver gilt cross or his ;; ihJ;; l . ino- he seemeddevoted"
I might have made a smail fortune out of.paper money,as the natives offered sometimes a hundrecl lrra note for adollar, but
I do not believe that money got in this way doesone any good, and all the p1p9, ,non.l i l got, I ;"".rt"
th;poor prisoners,returning toErithrea, who riere very preasedto receive t ' I managed
9 buy severarmedarsand ,,crossesfor valour," besides otf,er l i t t ie
'things,aiia-,.nt them acrossthe borders to my friend Mulazzani
"whoreturned them lvhenpossible, o the families of the officers that had r.., t i l i l i ,
yho ,f lr:utlyappreciated the litt le kinclness.
--I
";-;;U;ay that the French ir the soutrr behaved airg-.u."i,1tty,buying Italian officers,hats
and uniforms ;"J .l*i;il;;;;servarts in them, and I saw one servant beronginf ;;-;Frenchman rvho also sporte4 Itarian ;;"[ that he hadpurchased. This *","^'eediess
and gratuitous insurt to abrave nation, and pained me greatly J l-;;; ld d" ;; g;;d,1,n.dg"lI-lowe-red Europeanr ii th"" Jy* ;iihe natives, butthis the French do not'mind, and the'famiriaiity of so're ofthem with the natives is n'othing 1.;; ; ir-;; indecent anddeplorable.
The next morning I went to say good-byeto Ras Arouia,who was just startin[; he immediat"ely ol6 me that he wasthe only one that wished me to be ailJw"J1o-g..t nry thingsfrom Adowa before
.being.s_ent outi l ; ; ; h"e'rropea hat Iwould vis i t h im.again,_w[ i . t t r promised to do i f I had theopportunity.. I l i t t te. thought, when h. g..pped *y rr"na-
"iart ing, that it was the lasi t ime I shoufd i. ' . t i- , and thatthe hero of so many battle-fierds would ro." rri. rife over a
and repair their houseswhiclr were partially destroyedbyeingunroofed, nd t'" ruooJ;1i;; ;ii l;";outhern ioldieison their homeward ournev. w.-*'"a?"rr
night,shaltingplaceat the choum's" iuag-en ilr. pur;.r,"rAdi_I(i_Kolfd-the last hour'smarch in itr" dark
";;;l;.igation channers'into which we_-bru'dered-andg"; ;h;-,,irrry wet throusdand muddv' we werearsoeaten.upby mbsquitos,he fir-stime I havl felt them ,.r/l"a i" a6vrJi"i"l
The viliages rveresurrouncr"a--ii''i'*r-tigrrt ditch andareeba,lwaysa sign that the gguntry s not assecure s tight be,and_we.?. k";i outside.the iilage or some ittreime while the tenantswere removing rre 6orn busheswithvhich the entrance vas.g'arded. fi";l;;"'iraa not arrived,'or had the choum, vrro -ad een "ri..ii"g at Macaile, ndhen thev did, thev were l[;iGh;ru?;:ili.. rt seemshathe farmersn'this'.;;;;;;.. not unlike their brethre' inomeparts of England, irat in forme; ii-l, made marketday an excusero{h.1vin;; ,,Jrigr,
;i; ;;;;.,, rt was ten'clockbefore go ttr" t?ni pitcied i" trr"-court-yard,andoon after a bad thunderstormburst orr.i ,rr,which rasteclor severalhour-s,with.""iy
tr"uyy rains. very littie sleepnd all the servants itting:q_"tla-rhiu.ring-uncrer he flapif the tent; Schimperoid H"ds;"Aii"i,rr?a. ,rr" tent rviihe' as the former rradbeenwash-e_d";i;-
Fi;iou, the crroumand trresoldiers rrarreuirig lr.night b";ti;;d supplies. Inhe early *or1lq, at sunfse, trr.-r"hJ.-rl*Jr" randscapewasnveloped n miit, and -o.t of the -".inl"i;;'lrJ""rnliwhite cloudson their-stop.r r cappedwith them. Alr hands9:llq
t'i'gs,,_111,
h"i,qp"i cov^er f the tent, whictr rvasntrrely vet through and-too
rreavy " polr.l '.pr.oa out to-9r
Th.eweigtrt r the teni increasest least 30 per cent.vhen entirelv wet, and it cannot be fordeJ-properiy,andakesmore h",, a mule to"J.one of the pre_asuresf iraveiling n Abyssinia s that itr"11ldaviight r.vorr<; ur urtiuinffi; l"*;dl, wasbecauseof the detention n', the oad,and. 'ot makin an earrystart.
r know many trave'ers .'"[o ,ilt i;;i;;";;T making nightnarches; the consequences, t6.ii ofinio,r"'or."countrv isearly worthless,
"n-dI very *u.rr.'Jouil, ;i th; h;:i ,;
::l11;t":1? :1"by.hem,.iu",urin
-81'auy, i,"i- r,"|
since r have traveiled in Abyssinia I have observedevery point that is to be ,..n, udd t coula--filr; ;/;;;about anywhere i' trre rorth witirour r[."- iJlf
I told them that the next timg they fo.y.gr.tshourd ight too,and that they must now be friends. Tfit tn.,, kissecleachother like two naughty rtirJ."nl"outa'^if ir,"t'h"ue had a[sht over a toy, a"nd'wepton each other,sshourdersikeFrenchm"n,and then tur'ned o their *ort
"naI had nomore botherwith them for daysafter. frr" rigrz", s"i ti;.worst of the encounterbut was stilr g"*., and as he rvasin betterconditionand had not suffe..a'iro- the famine ikethe other who-had not long recovered. Hardrt h;J ill;combat been finishedwhe'" another commencedbetween
some of my escortand the viilagers, h" ioim.r I r* gi;;to see got drive'out of some iour". Ly-it . womenwhot"^"tg.onl/ armed witrr bLrrningsticks *r,1.r. they *"i."otfraid of using, ancl
th."y -ui." qr":, p"rJ"riu; *""p";;;when the men-were drive' out of the'enclosure,he thornPl:ri.r
closing he entrancewas astened ;Jthe inhabitantstett r' peace. I rventand congratulatedhe fernales n theirbraveryand wehu91 lofg chal together; after they t;i ;;;;
suclraseggs,milk, pumpkins,green_peas,tc.The escort had anbther'?ow it a hamret about onehundred and fifty ygjd.: ofl but with the -"r, tni, time, andit rvasas much is- I-Iailouand the choum co.,ld do to keeporder and preve't broodshed; ifles were
-tuJ.J-b;;;;ilside,a'd swordsdrawn,
"nd3.hi-p.i *""t"i to interfere
but I read him a lectureaboui i;;;pr..g'n.ur.ir, ';,rl ';.;;ii;our escort o themselves,
_as f we joi'"ed in, r,ve hould onriget into trouble,".ng..as
ong as we were fil";;ly;"'"riirrivillagers t ivasnot likel
y thZt they *outa
-ao
u, any harm,as long as we behavedourserves,and did 'ot want thingsby force.
.,.My e5p-erienceas always been that it is a very rarething to find tn1 alfssinian
'peasantry-hard to get on with,they are not thievesbr brigan^ds,nd if treated properrywilrdo the stranger no_harm] and it i.
"f".f tn"t uir r.ir#ntravellers hat have had disturbances
"na
-b.Lill_treatednthe country,have had no oneto blame but themr"l";;;-'bt
tr;'ring o do things whichrheywourdnot crare ttempt to doin any other country. These rows have generaily iur."n
pllg. by entering"thehouses, ulling th" ;J"-e' about,andtaking things by force,or offer'ing irfui, p"y*.nt for thinsssupplied; or as..thecase n quJ.t ion,Uy'i 'r""" i i l rg'; i l" ;rascaily escort lil<.eours, nnd' backing.'th;; ,p
-intheiiexactions n the villagers. It may be a'".iy ni.. custom o
of civilisation, and Abyssinia wourd be one of the brightestewels of the E'grish'.ro*n. I believe aiso that Englanclis the onlv natioithat wilr ever do this country justice, andbe able tt make ur. or- ihe undoubted native talent thatexists; which onlv wants r.rdi";iJ;;# example shownlike our cleve_r ndia' ci"il seivice odcials would give, tomake it one of the happiest countries hai the sun srrineson.Socota is a fi.ne arge tow' t' ith gt;at possibirities or thefuture; it is built on ?trr"l hiirs ; i. : i";-;,-; i ' u prateau,sur-rounded
b.y-Tgutrtains opening rrigiriry"to*ord.
the highmountain (which I here find is"callEd lft ' ; ; ;u";;# *hi: i ;has been such a co'spicrous rund-uir. i ;".;" southern rand_scape since reaving Macalre. Mt pr";;;; Hailou wouldnot te l l me i ts name en route,"nd' I
d id not rery on whatthe second in command tord me, as our frienclshipwas notof long e'ough duratio' to ,"urrunt confidence in him ; rre'aving been Ted gy me on- severar o..". ionr, and promiseda bacl<sheeshat the end .r tr..""/"g"
ils entirery takenup his abode:igl lr r.", -y tent, ini ,,hen it is set sleepsunder the flap with-my servints. He has uir."oy promisedHadgi-Ali thit after so.oin he wilr telr us everything, but ifhe is too attentive befor", h" may be se't back from thereto Macalle, and he warrts io go to Arrese Abata as some oneowes him money, a'd there i, ,lso;;;"n;*l"dy there thatl i l<eshim very much.
About an'hour after our arrivar the waag choum Gangulreturned; he had bggtr away superintenlir i some harvestoperations. we courcrsee him cbming-with-his large escortand numbers of foilowers a rong way off,and I went forwardto meet
i-; he got off his -i l l . J"a .t i , . i .omeome to historv' a'd sa'e rne the crroiceof a hour. l; ; ; ;",
-or carnpingin the larfe encrosure o*" way outside where he kept hisstud animals' I chose the latter, as the town houses arealrvays noisy,lug lug, ,;J fl"", in abunclun.., and in the
:frc.ountry it.is free from trrem. Th"
";iosurewe were
flt":",to. camp in was of oval form
";;;;;;t eig't acrestn extent; in the centre were two
very ;;J stables and aig rou'd housewith sevloirlorr.r ones for the head officiala'd his grooms.- It was surro.rnded by a trr i *urr and poresabout ten feet hjSh, ta..a tog=ther with grass rope, and as:.1r"^t:
was on'.S1ne guarded ?ntrance to it, we could havewhat rve greatiy rvaniep, privacy for o;;.il.; and securitytor our animals , rvhich iould graze in the enclosure al lnight' They had arready Jon" fairly hard work since
330 MODER\T ABYSSII{IA'Ihe nexthw;d:e;lHt'J?i:* l,Lli.1?'?|;:,""1i lf ::H:nd seehim ancrhave u..ur.r"rt *?h iri-,"rrris we of courserad to do, and so I p;
"*;; G ;#des and proceecled
l;i::.:"::rhe d.iiiaing, which r, --o..upi", cover anveryreanil: "Ht,,tJ,""xo:*.j:;ThSxJ#rder shorvn fin irl
"n1i".1herestabtishnlentthat r havesyet seen n
Abyssinia,a'cr " g;;;;;;.., to trre untidyav Ras Mange*u t ..pr iil rr"ir.;;il ';h"lr surroundi'gs.he pri'cipariuirdinf l ;", oftrrree s;t*;rrigt.,, f squa-rehape,onger.trranr l. fr*a. rr *"r; ; ; i ; aDorrr 50yearsgo' and r"tg:.T1{-designeJ.uv,o-J Ii."rt,o had servecrnder he portugre9.,
or"*iro rr"a tiou"iili-i' othercountries.t wase't-ireTy evoid oi u..hit..tur"i b."uti.r, the warseing perfectlypi+i", ;;;"the
rvin.ro*, oii"ttice work rikehat i' Mahoniedan;;;";;i", o,iJ'.r"."..i '
with commonhutters. tn:,::t *T.O;1,'*l* "^.fign,"pr"recting arapet.t the samerirr as this hou.".rvas.uirt ,ao;ornrngo it a
"gfrlargeordinaryauy..iii i"n roundhouse ait' rather 'oocr.wood-worr<;th,eshape
"t,ti3t,n,i;ffiT:r::*oorsbeins ir.".thor.;;;; 'in the superior rouses f Adowa'at'ave ilready-u.." J"rlrit..a. Tir. uprights to the roofhat formeda ciicr., h;Jil;; .ro..d^in"un5^$"repartly usecls stablesa'd par'tlyor .1or.'ou*rr
-Th; waag-choumanguiciid ot usetiris
"r "oy4;;-irr":;iio. -uny otherf the leading nen n auy*r"i",
but 'o'r; ;r; wait ing-roomJ,:::;.::"0''
remai'ed until ;i';v";;;: i'",t'",..a into hisThe othet y? big.houses ere of the sameconstructions the latter, b't th-eir nt..io.. were differentryarranged;ne \\.rasmptv rvith the exception;i ; ';; or"o or nativeedstead,
"nd'*a.,. .J * 'ulurrice a'd meEting oom,andhe otherhad t*o portio;; ;.l*.en the out* *"ll and innerircleof uprigh.r:
from the latest kind of breechloader to the old fl int lock;one of which I am nearly certain was of ancient Portuguesemanufacture, and had been converted from the old matchlock by having a hammer and str i l<er added by some nativearmourer. Had it not been for the modern fire-arms on thewalls, one might have fancied oneself back at a middle-ageepoch,and in the presenceof people that lived at that date.
Waag Choum Gangul was most polite, and said thatseveral of his people who had been servants to his father,had seen me at Adowa, rvhen they were there with l(ing
Johannesin t884. Breakfast was served, and we all sat
otr cushions round a small low table, l ike those used by theTurks and Arabs, and the food was also served a greatdeal more after their fashion than Abyssirlian. Thanl<goodnesswe had no raw meat ; the disheswere well cool<edand clean, consisted of stews ar"rdbroils, and the tedj lvasexcellent, clear and nearly sparl<ling. Coffeewas served insmall cups, the same as in Egypt, and small glassesof nativespirit rvhich was very old and srveetand more l i l<e a l iqueur.I was told it had been made many years ago, rvhen the
Choum's father was a young man, and the bott le from urhichit was tal<en was one of a bye-gone age. After the mealwas over I was invited to smoke, and at first reftrsed,but asthe Choum's cousin lighted a cigarette I dicl the same.
We sat talking for over two hours, the party assembledconsisted of the Choum, his brother, a cousin,a priest thathad been to Jerusalem,and talkecl Arabic very lvell; anotherrelation who acted as the Choum's secretary,u'ho had alsobeen across the border; were perhaps as enlightened and
intell igent a lot as could be found anywhere in Abyssinia,and comparedmost favourably with Ras Mangeshaand his set.Our conversationwas mostly about the different campaign.scommencing with that against the Egyptians ; the fight atMetemneh against the Dervishes, and the late Ital iancampaign. The Choum's troops had been with Menelel<'s,and made the attack on the Ital ian left wing under GeneralAlbertone, and tirey sufferedvery consiclerablyboth in l<i l ledand wounded. The Choum told me that in his archives n
the church he could trace his family's descent for overthree hundred )/ears,and that the square three-storied ousein which he lived, was built about two hundred and- iftyyears ago by ar-l ancestor,and if I l i l<ed at any time to gothrough the archives I might; unfortuqately I had not thetime, as the next day I had to leave on my journey south,
healed the quicker._I was greatly amused at the boy, his
rnule started along the road and he went hopping afier it ;caught it
.yp ltrd got into the saddle teap-rrog' fashionover the tail, a feat which a great many people with- two legscould not do.
It was warm a'd fine last night, and the last three dayshave not been a bit warmer than ordinary summer weatherin England, and I have not worn my helmet for a week. our
road was due south for about four miles, when it divided intotwo, one branch going south-east o Dildi, and the other south-r,vest o_Beghemeder. we took the south-west road, so as to
\eep clear of the trituari Avete,s people,which we followedfor about four miles and then tuined into a path that leddue south, our Rirr1a1e1 uide knowing the road thoroughly;h9r-e_w9got into thick bush with many big' fig trees ana oiheriwhich I did not know the name of, and no signsof cultivationor houses. I rvas told that in the rainy season plenty of
large game come up from the Tacazze,but return as soon asthe heavy rains are over.
..9"entering h. bush we heard shouting and people
caliing to each other from the tops of the hi[s, which *'.r.supposed_ o be Avete's men. Hailou was in great formmal<ing he caravan keep together and throwing out flankingscouts,and an advanceguard which I insisted on going with-,telling him that no one u'ould hurt me, that it wls hE theywere after. we met no one unti i we came to the banks of
one of the many tributaries of the upper Tserrare. Thisbelt of bush is about six miles across,and widens the furtherit gets west. I am also told that it stretches down to theTacazze, and that the dividing ridge between the twodrainages is also covered with forest. At the first openground rve met about a hundred of Ras wolie's soldiers *itttmany transport mules on their way to Axum and Adowa tobring away the wounded that had been left behind, and alsothe arms that the Ras had left behind in store at Adowa, hehaving received
a large share of the spoils of war and had nomeans at the time of taking it back with him. I remainedat the banks of one of the streams for some time, talking toa party ^of priests who were on their way to Jerusarem, ndthey informed us that the Dildi road was not safe,as ih.r.was another rebel that had closed the Dildi-Aschangi roadsand he mustered over three hundred rifles, so thev" had tomake a detour and come round this wav.
I saw here the first gipsy encampme't in Abyssinia,
3 5 6 MODERN ABYSSII{IAbloom. orchids of many sorts new to me, staghorn fernsgrasping the trunks of the trees and the wild asparaguswith its feathery fronds, on the banks on each sicre of Theroad, ferns of all sorts, maiden.hair_and Lygodiums beingvery common with clumps of Abuti lons and white Daturaiwith their trumpet shaped flowers. Other common road-side plants, such as the Kalancoie with its various coloured
flowers, s 9h as pink, yeilow, orange, scarlet, purple, andstriped yellow and scarlet,and purple and white abouncledand the ditches were full of the cyperus palm-shapedplant.
Aloes, cactusand euphorbiae of all sorts on the tides ofthe hil ls, with an undergrowth of the wild fennel so commonin Tigrd, and _that looks s,o pretty with its graceful foi iagecovered with dewdrops in the early morning, and everywherethe wild rose, essamine and, different sorts of convolvulus.I was delighted with everything, and I do not think in such
a short distance, ever came acrossbefore such a varied andrvonderful collection_ f plants that l(ew could not equal inthe gayest seasonof the year, and Ceylon at its best couldnot rival.
The canyon then opened out into a rvide valley, and thescenerybefore me quite beggared description. Seven water-fal ls were to be seen rom one point of the road, coming downin cascadesand mighty falls from the surrounding highlands,and the valley lay stretched out in front a green gem sur-rounded by u sett ing of grey weather-worll granite.
On aneminence in the centre of the Sanca valley was the churchof GeshobarAbo, with its market-green below. A networkof irr igation channelscame from every waterfall the momentthey got into iower ground, and dozens of groups of honses,with their sheltering trees and hedges,studded the sides ofthe hil ls and the slightly higher parts of the valley. I neverenjoyed seeing a view more and I do not believe that thisworld can produce a more lovely and prosperousspot, naturehaving blessed his place with her choicestgifts.
We went about a mile further on than the marl<et-placeand camped just outside a smal l hamlet , on one oi thegreenest of lawns, surrounded by irr igation channels aboutsix feet broad by about three feet deep, bank full of themost lovely clear water. I had been gradualiy taking offmy clothes, ancl on coming down from the highlands-haddiscarded my ulster overcoat, hen my thick tweed shooting-jacket, and arrived in camp in my shirt sleeves. My Somaiiservantswere delighted with the change,as the last few days
- It has, howevcr, peculiar customs that wourd certainrv bea drawback for Europeans, and before tfr. _lf.;;;i ;;thought to have arrivecl atman's .riit" trrey harr" to kill afeilorv creature ;, before they have don;-;;h'.y cannot have
their hair plaited or welr ^iy orn^me'ts on their head of anvsort, neither can t .r have any intercourr. ; i ih';;;Jot,enter into the married state. Ii is rath.,
". lr"*back to thepeace of the country, as whe'.a young ma' wish.; i; ;"rryhe..must bring. a. trophy to his i;;;s ;;;;, to show hisgallantry. Tii is is not dim.uit in the ri-;; i war, but whenthere are no disturbances in th. cou"l.y] ,^ia, have to beplanned into the lower Danakil .o},"-t-r1i;rth
the object ofk i l l ing men a'd, loot ing cat t re, and seier" l young warr iorsrvill set out together, an[ if successfri;lii ?iu.n witrr whatthey require
""nd.miny h;;*d cattle ;n; .h;"p and goats,
and then festivit iesani ma.riages tuk" fia.; ;ra trr., i ir"s.Jare the scenesof great rejoicing.
, , {ai l ing' these-raids
th.y #itt ort.n plan the most coldblooded murders, the yorng woman wii l arrange with theobject of her choice to itart iom" day anJ g=i ,-,.", to somevil iage a litt le
ivay flom the distr i. t , 'unJ tn?-yorng man wil lhide in the bushei while the your-rgwoman wil l start horriblecries of distress, o try and ariure some man to aid her. Theyoung syrer rlav succeed,and some youth may thint. ii isone of the women from his vil lage thai is in trouble, and willrush out to see rvhat is trre mitter, and rvil l get speared nthe back for his t rouble; the pair of
"rurJ.r . isrv i l r hen return
with their trophy and s'etup'rrousek..pin;log"th.r.One nevei sees in yejju men going about singly on theroads rona ou,r_1e1
:y:i
fr:m h&rJi-.tii.tl"+.;.;.;;;;ii;go _either,in pair? or_ n compa'y with severat others, andalways well armed. Life is ruf.
-.r,oughn"or home,
";Jr;is generaily the christians that falr vic?im, ln tn.i.
"G,"p;o rescue he weal<ersex. yeiiy maidens are pretty, gracefulgir ls, but I do not think t *oitta ;;-; ' th.ir""ia no matterhorv iong thev,cr ied ; ryy. Somi l i . . *untr , being str ictI\{ohamedun, u'na "ying' ini ir"pr"yers the orthodox numberof t imes each day,
-wei.horrif i .d at thl
- io*n.r,
of theirco-religio.ists, and the whole time *. *.r" ln this prorrin."
they always remained crose to camp, and our christianescort also l<ept ogether.The rulei of Yejju, Ras Woly is doing everything hecan.to put down this horr ib le custo. ,
"nEi t i , , ro* 'noi
near ly so prevale ' t as i t used to be'b.C. n" took ih;
quainted with Europeans or European manufactures; they
live in good stone houses well-thatched, and being a fair l lrwarm cor-rntry hey are better venti lated ; in habits theyare clean, and do a good deal of washing and bathing,and I found my servants romping in the water rvith 1lot of gir ls on severaloccasions.
Ras Woly told me Yejju was entirely self-supporting,and required nothing from any other country but f irearmsand cartr idges. That they grew iheir own cotton, dyed it,and manufactured t; they tanned the hides and si<ins hat
they required; they smelted cheir own iron for rnakingspears, swords, knives, and agricultural instruments; theyrnade their own pottery, and that they had every grain andoil seed that was requiled, and they had never suffered fromstarvation, and they grew more food than they knew whatto do with, and raised more cattle than required for localconsumption, n fact it is without exception h. most fert i leand h"ppy country in Abyssinia, and one of the mosthealthy, and any sort of cl imate can be got within a short
distance.In the market places camels are seen that come up from
tire low country and from the Ital ian port of Assab, andas it is an impossibil i ty ever to make a commercial railwaynorth or south tirroughor-rt byssinia, owing to the engineeringdiff icult ies, Yejju and Central Abyssinia may some day beservedby u light l ine of railway from the sea coast at Assab ;the line run along one of the roads by which the camelsnow find their way to these marl<ets.
That there is a future for Yejju there can be no doubt, asthe coffee and the sugar cane are now found, and the countryseems adnrirably adapted to the cult ivation of tea, and everyknown cereal exists. The red pepper is the great featureof the country and very large quantit ies of it are grown, notonly for local consumption but for export to the other partsof Abyssinia, a certain amount of rock salt in bars also comesup from the low country, but not nearly so much as toMacalle, this town doing the largest trade of all in thiscommoditv.
After ieaving olrr camp near Geshobar Abo church ourmarch was down the valley for about three hours, and wethen crossed a spur that runs at right angles to the roadwhich divides the upper Yejju valley from the next which iscalled the Ata valley. Waldea the chief town of Yejju isabout three miles off the road to the east, rvhich we did not
what_ said, I had to tell no more untruths, so perhaps hesaved me a lot more black marks on the debit iia. ii-, -yledger above.
Th yhad seen the Italian prisoners on their way to the
south, and as a rule the Ital ian is not a big man, bdt I told
them that -they were much finer men than tle F'rench,whichas a rrrle tltSy are, and I led them to believe that the Englishwere the biggest and strongest men that existed, ancl
that
I was only a baby compared to most of my ferlow country-men.
The weather at M-er_ta,hich is situated on higher groundthan the majority of the Yejju province was bEautif ir l , thetemperature never being too great, whereas n the sub-tropicalva l ley, t was occasionally very hot in the middle of the clay.we had several showers
and a thunderstorm cluring our stav.which freshened up thp vegetation and helped to bring ouithe. lowering plant:
9f mlny descriptiont, and the beanl peaand l inseed crops ladened the air with their perfume.
'ft
hite flowers of the beans,pil\ and purple of^the peas (theyhave v.ery ew white peas n Abyssinia), the tight nlue or thelinseed, he yellow of-the noug, and the bright icarlet patchesof
.thered pepper-pods drylng in the fieldq gave a charming
colour to the landsc-apewhich was also set 6ff by the wate?in the river and different irrigation channels
that
every-where crossed and recrossed he country.
.Elep[ants -from the low country sometimes visit yejju,and the Ras showed me a pair of very fine tuskr rto- on.that he had kil led,within a few miles of waldea about twomonths before;
.he.wasa very good sportsman and very fond
of shooting and had several very good E,nglish guns,nd u r,n this country the people prefei guns oT Loidon' make to
any others, and nearly all the men look betweenthe barrelsto seewhether the rvord London is marked on them. I be-l ieve it is the only English word they know.
_ we. got away fror Merta on Sunday the z5th october.r struck .1mp at daylight intending- to make a-n early startas I felt better with no tr:ace of fever, but so deai fromquinine that- I could not hear the tickin g of my rvatch whenp.laced at -either ear. The Ras rode past on hi. way tochurch and asked me to send my luggafe on, ancl schi-p .and I to breakfast rvith him on his return from praying. Hegaye-us a firs-trate breakfast and asked me if i want?cl any
quinine to talcervith me, and before leaving gave rne nearlvhalf an ounce out of his stock, he had .rr -ry English sort Jf
soup' snipe and new potatoes, and sterved mutton rvithyoung-beans orming the menu; we ended up wi th hot puncrrrnade_fromgood native spir it sent us by Scirimper's eiative,with hone-y nstead of_sugar and fresh
-l imes,mbst warming
as the night rvasbitterly coldBoru Meida marl<et is held every Saturday, and it is a
very large one and there are several resident Moslem andChristian merchants rvho buy up the small parcels of coffeeand beeswax brought in by the peasairts from the sur-rounding country, and the ostrich feathers ancl eggs, andsomet imesa l i t t le ivory brought f rom the Danal<i l ountry;t l-res_eatter products are exchanged for grain, and cottoncloths manufactured in this toivn and
-thesurrounding
vil lages from cotton grown in Yejju.The roacl from Boru Meida to Velan, our nert camping
gronnd, is slightly west of south for the f irst part, ancl tti touth, south-rvest ; t r l lns througl i a s, rccesr ibnof val leys
separatedllo* gryh other by nearly' bare grass ancl barley
covered hi l ls , rv i th only smal l c lumps of- t rees
round thlvi i lages the bottoms of all the vallel,s are marsh and rvatermeadon' ,cror i 'dedrvi th ducks of manl ' l< inds,geese,sr i ipe,and other n'ater- lovingbirds, and the cor-rntr ) 'o ismal l gameis a real sportsman'sparadise.
DLrr ing the ear l l ' par t ot ' the dal- , rve mct hrrnclreds fpeople n' i th large quant i t ies of l ive stocl< bouncl to BoruMeida market , and a servant of Oueen Tai tou's u, i th manymules laden with presents from- her for her niece Mis
Mangesh.a,he rains having prevented the wedcling presentsfrom being sent before. \\re also met a chou m
^of the
country between Entiscio and Adon'a, rvho has the old cityof Yeha in his distr ict . This man had been dismissed rom
lrfsposit ion by Ras 1\,Iangesha,rrd had appealed to l( ing
N{enelek,who had re-installedhim. I had- met him beforEand he was a great fr iend of Schimper's,ancl from him rvegot the n_ewshat Ras Aloula, Ras l\4angesha,Ras Wol;,,r - t - td- the-waag choum had to send a fo ice to punish the
Azebus for their crueity to the l( ing's troops.There can be no doubt that they are-far from pleasantpeople, and not only do they kil l Abyssinians urit rvhitepeople; they murdered trvo of Ras Woly,s Ital ian prisonersand castrated a third, u'ho nor,vhas to work for them at allsorts of hard jobs ; horvever, should not mind visit ing theircountry-in spite of everyone else having failed. I have metsome of them good-looking fellows buta bit rvi ld, and I was
we reached he downs and the hjsrt road again. The canyondrains into the grand valley of the wancheet. Yerbelo isanother very ferti le place, and the whole ground seems o betaken up with barley cult ivation, the red, yellow and blackvarieties ali being represented,and growing eight i ines ofgrain,on each ear. A good deal had alreadl' [een harvested,and the black sheepwere feeding on the stubbles.
We had come down rather in al t i tude since eaving Adis
Amba, and-our next day's journey was again slightly risingover undulating down land to Woro Eilu town. Thiacountry carries a very' large population, and hunclreclsofharnlets are passed en roade. I halted for a time on the riseup tc _Woro Eilu, and counted the hamlets in sight, andthrough my binoculars made out seventy-eight
-distinct
groups, a-ll contai-ning over ten houses,and some as many astwo hundred. The average might be about sixty, and givingonly four inhabitants to each house would account for about
rZ,ooo people. The country is composedof deep,black soil.very fert i le and highly cult ivated, and what is not under theplough is all good grass and, with many ponds and marshes,which contain water the whole year round.
The approach to the town is very curious, and is over Agra-s-s
-covered ridge about three quarters of a mile long, witha slight slope to east and west, unti l two enormous canyonswith inaccessible idesare reached, he one to the east diainsto the Wancheet, and that on the west to the Blue Nile.
The ridge is perhaps two thirds of a mile across, and isdefended by ^ high wooden palisade,with a ditch in frontand a stone rampart behind, and the f lanks of the work arealso strongly defended, and have been scarped, so it isimpossib_leb get round them. There are nothing but easilydefended sheep paths for many miles to the east and wes[,and this is the only practicable mil i tary road on the easternside of Abyssinia from north to south, unless a detourthrough the Danakil country is made. It is therefore thekey of this part of the country, and to
Shoain
the south.The fort if ications are useless against modern arti l lery, butnearly impregnable against savages,and the approacli overthe ridge is as bare as a billiard table.
There is one strongly fort if ied gate that opens into acustom house,and dues are levied here on all things goingnorth and south at the rate of ten per cent., and great pilesof bars of salt are stacked here,belonging to the Governmentwait ing for distr ibution. The custorns officials here are
after havingti l led-his-adv_ersaryn fair f ight; his men luckilygam-egp and caught the Sl-roan, ho was well beaten and putin chains. The choum informed me that the better clasJ ofpeople in the country had entirely abandoned this custom,and it is now only practised by the lowest and most degraded
of the people who are generally cowards and follow theflghting, and then boast of the number of the people theyhave kil led.
I managed to have a talk to several of the Italianprisoners and to two officers,Lieutenants Scala and Gambi,but as \4/ewere watched very closely,and it was only gratify-ing an idle curiosity,and I might have got them into trouble,I thought they might l ike more to write letters to theirfr iends, so I told them I would send my Abyssinian servant
with paper and pencils, and if they sent me their letters Iwould see hat they were handed over to the Italian agent,who took the post from Adese-Ababa to the coast. I foundthey were hard up, no money and their food rations werepoor, and I do not think there was one of thern that did notenvy the lot of the men with Dedjatch Imma. I gave theofficers everything I could spare in the rvay of cash, and sentthem sheep, chickens, honey and other l i t t le things that Icould perhaps ll afford to part with including handkerchiefs.I pit ied them, and I only hope it is never the lot
of English-men to be prisonersof war in Abyssinia. These people-rverenot badly treated, but being in rags and dependent bn foodfrom natives must be a sad experience. I managed to get alarge bundle of letters from them without its being kntwn,a-nd am happy to say I afterwards heard that they reachedtheir destination in -safety, o I was instrumental in gett ingthe first news of their being alive and in safpty to theirfamil ies.
I here lost the mule that Ras Woly so kindly sent me asa present from the sickness. I was out of my tent at twelveo clock at night to see the animals were all r ight, as thehyenas were making such a noise so close,and as the groundwas so damp I was afraid of the tethering pegs drawing andthe animals stampeding I it was all r ight then and feeding,and both it and my old riding animal greeted me with tlieusual whinny, their mode of asking for bread or sugar-orsome dainty that I used always to give them; at half pastfour it was dead and stiff, and the heads and necks of the
three other animals that were t ied to the same picketing peg,covered with froth and mucus from its mouth and nostrils.
I(rtpspnructx (Orestragzts allator). This pretty little animal is foundthroughout the r,vhole f Abvssiniaancl r .otll-oo among the clifrsand rocks near the largest towns. Its flesh s delicious,p1rt
"p.itt"
best of all the:Tlll anteropes it is perfectryhardy ;A ;h#rd-A;
:I_t_i"England if turned out. It is founcrupon ttr6 trign".i;l;;
trons, and in waag and Lasta lt was common at an"elevation
ofover lo,ooo feet.
srot.ynoy .(P,aphicerol.cmn e1/ris).This_ s the only representativeof
the sternboks n Abyssinia, ommon in the Harir piovince and inGallaland.
Durxnn (cephotophusAltyssiniats), is common throughout the wholeot .Abyssrnia,mo.reespecial ly n the north ; in the south, besidesc.A., a larger duiker is-found-whichseems o me to be exhctlv thesame as cephalophus Grimmi of Ny-assaland. This latter is'verycommon round the town of Harar, and comesat night time to witnina fewhundred yards of the walls'of the town to ieecl on the khatplantations. The flesh of the duiker is much liked by
-the
Abyssinians.
OnInr (O-urebior Oribialbyssinirus\. This is also very common in allthe thick scrubnear the villages,'and s founclboth in the north and
sonth. Does a-good deal of-damage o the young crops and also
i?tl" yo.ng khat trees. There -a"re hree ipeciEs O.A., Ori; i ;
Hastata he same as is found in Nyassaland, nd a much smallerone than o.A. which is found both in the north and south. o.H.is a southernanimal, and not found anywhere n the north.
Drr-Drr< (Madogn saltiana).- The smallest of the Abyssinian ante-lopes,ve.Iygg-r-nmonn the lorv countriesand foot hills.' Goocleatingand easilykilled with small shot. very.difficult to keep in .^pti"iiiowing-to ts timidity. on the south and east borrler h" MuhoquiGuentheri
takes the prace greatly of M.s. and b..;;;- ih;cornmoneraninal, but both are met with together. Tlre dil<-ctikgenerally un in pairs, and the natives say th"ey nate for life.
Isnx. This animal is only found in the north, and is the same as theSoudanand Sinai speiies.
Bumar,o. Reported to be extinct on account of the r-inderpest,heywere generallymet with in the north-westof Abyssinra.
ErnpuaN'r (Loy1{2yztg fricnna). Still found but in alwaysdiminishingnumbers. walkeit and the northern Danakil .orniry h.i"g. ;hEplaceswler-e t is most numerous in the north, r{affa in the .?"th:west, and, during the rains it is sometimes airly plentiful
or-, hueastern slopes of the mountains from Aschengi ' to the Hawashvalley,and in the Arussi Galla country to the soith-east. It soine-times crosses uring the rains from thl eastern to the western siclesof .Abyssiniaalong the banks of the Mareb river ; from easternYejju_along the
"Taca,?evalley and along the Blue Nile valley.
The Harar. province yields a -re1,'nnuall , and it is reported isIatrty plentltlll rn the unexploredDanakil country.
HtppoporAMUS (l{ilpo 6nntus amy'ltibhrs). still numerous in all therivers such as the Mareb, Tacizze and parts of the Blue Nile, andin Lake Tsana,but extinct in all the smaller lakes and rivers tnatrun to the east.