the natives of
Madagascar. Being Mahometans, they have mosques and schools, in which we
were pleased to see girls as well as boys taught to read the Koran. The
teacher said he was paid by the job, and received ten dollars for
teaching each child to read. The clever ones learn in six months; but
the dull ones take a couple of years. We next went over to Johanna for
our friends; and, after a sojourn of a few days at the beautiful Comoro
Islands, we sailed for the Kongone mouth of the Zambesi with Bishop
Mackenzie and his party. We reached the coast in seven days, and passed
up the Zambesi to the Shire.
The "Pioneer," constructed under the skilful supervision of Admiral Sir
Baldwin Walker and the late Admiral Washington, warm-hearted and highly
esteemed friends of the Expedition, was a very superior vessel, and well
suited for our work in every respect, except in her draught of water.
Five feet were found to be too much for the navigation of the upper part
of the Shire. Designed to draw three feet only, the weight necessary to
impart extra strength, and fit her for the ocean, brought her down two
feet more, and caused us a great deal of hard and vexatious work, in
laying out anchors, and toiling at the capstan to get her off sandbanks.
We should not have minded this much, but for the heavy loss of time which
might have been more profitably, and infinitely more pleasantly, spent in
intercourse with the people, exploring new regions, and otherwise
carrying out the objects of the Expedition. Once we were a fortnight on
a bank of soft yielding sand, having only two or three inches less water
than the ship drew; this delay was occasioned by the anchors coming home,
and the current swinging the ship broadside on the bank, which,
immediately on our touching, always formed behind us. We did not like to
leave the ship short of Chibisa's, lest the crew should suffer from the
malaria of the lowland around; and it would have been difficult to have
got the Mission goods carried up. We were daily visited by crowds of
natives, who brought us abundance of provisions far beyond our ability to
consume. In hauling the "Pioneer" over the shallow places, the Bishop,
with Horace Waller and Mr. Scudamore, were ever ready and anxious to lend
a hand, and worked as hard as any on board. Had our fine little ship
drawn but three feet, she could have run up and down the river at any
time of the year with the greatest ease, but as it was, ha
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