356 NEW ROUTE EYEBEECHT UNHORSED. 



different dialects of the countries bordering upon the settle- 

 ments about the Mozambique Channel. Personally, I could 

 make myself understood in more than one European lan- 

 guage ; and this Babel-like confusion was completed by Tim- 

 bo's 2)citois. 



The preceding year, when our steps were pointed in the 

 same direction as at present, we traveled on the summit of 

 the low range of hills which take their rise near to Twass, 

 extending eastward. We were then on saddle-oxen ; but, 

 from what we saw of the country, we deemed it nearly im- 

 practicable for wagons. I therefore determined to strike 

 through the woods at the base of the hills in question, or 

 along the valley intervening between them and another 

 mountain range running in the same direction. The soil 

 proved exceedingly soft and yielding, and the bushes harass- 

 ing ; yet this new route was preferable to the other. 



We saw a good deal of game, chiefly of the larger kinds ; 

 but the animals were wary, and I shot badly. My horse 

 was so unsteady as to be of little or no use. His speed was 

 great ; he was a match for the swiftest antelope ; but when 

 I fired from his back, he was very apt to start on one side. 

 If his rider, at such times, was not on his guard, the chances 

 were in favor of his being dismounted. One day Eyebrecht 

 begged eagerly to be allowed to try his hand on the giraffes, 

 which abounded in this locality. His request was granted, 

 and I lent him my -horse, though we well knew what would 

 be the result. After nearly a whole day's absence, he re- 

 turned, when the men hailed him with shouts of laughter, as 

 his appearance too plainly indicated his misfortunes. But, 

 notwithstanding his flushed face and torn and soiled dress, 

 he stoutly denied having been thrown. It so happened, how- 

 ever, that the very next day we passed a spot where he had 

 been chasing a herd of giraffes, and where we could distinct- 

 ly see the marks of how the scared horse had been dragging 

 Eyebrecht along the ground for a considerable distance. 



