M 



INDEX 



Hay, ii. 288 



Heat, such never felt before, i. 279 ; 



scorchbig, ii. 97, 98 ; intense, 244 

 Heaths, i. 186 

 — tree, i. 188, 189 ; ii. 58 

 Hedging-bills, i. 38 

 Herbs, ii. 181 

 Herons, ii. 110 

 Himidi bin Ali, ii. 89 

 Himo river, i. 169 

 Hinterland, i. (note) 59 

 Hippopotami, i. 28, 62, 175, 412 ; ii. 9, 64, 



110, 112, 118, 184, 806 

 Holland and Holland, English firm, i. 



86 

 Honey, i. 98, 140, 158, 168, 169, ii. 802 ; 



anointed with, i. 148 

 Hongo (tribute, presents), to Sembodja, 

 i. 72 ; at Taveta, 102, 103 ; to Miriali 

 at Marangu, 116; to Masai, 132; to 

 the Wameru, 141, 142, 148; to the 

 Wakwafi of Aruslia-wa-jn, 165 ; on 

 return journey, 166; to Miriali, 177- 

 179; to Useri chief, 218 ; in Masailand, 

 222, 227, 265, 268, 289 ; in Kikuyu- 

 land, 801, 308, 309, 316, 319, 321 ;' to 

 Likibes, 897 ; to the Wandorobbo, 399 ; 

 to Masai, 408 ; to Wakwafi at Nyemps, 

 ii. 5 ; to the Oromaj of Reshiat, 172 ; 

 to Wakamba, 807 

 Hornbills, i. 161, 265 

 Horns, of buffaloes, ii. 22 ; of rhinoceroses 



and hippopotami, 310 



Horses, in Samburuland, ii. 76 ; on Mount 



Marsabit, and amongst the Borana 



and the Randile, 185 



Hot springs, valley of, ii. 8, 15, 16, 17, 285 



Human habitations, traces of oldest, ii. 



296 

 Humming-bird, i. 375 

 Humps of oxen, ii. 24 

 Huna river, i. 112, 118 

 Hunter, Major, i. 11, 96 

 Hunters, remarkable tribe of, i. 260 ; ii. 



81 

 Hunting, arduous nature of, ii. 48, 45 

 Huts, at Taveta, of tree-trunks and palm- 

 leaf ribs, i. 96 ; Masai, 247 ; of pliable 

 stakes and interlaced branches, plas- 

 tered over, 259 ; Wakikuyu bee-hive 

 shaped, thatched, 818; Wandorobbo, 

 like Masai, neatly finished, 418 ; 

 Elmolo in Alia, hay-rick shape, ii. 

 182 ; Reshiat, round, covered with 

 hides or grass mats, 164 ; Suk, of 

 brushwood and plaited osiers, 271 ; at 

 Ngaboto, of dhurra stalks, 868 

 Mydnora afrlcana {liJike),i. 123, 124 



Hyenas, i. 90, 199, 269, 370 

 -— spotted, i. 261 



— colonies of, ii. 35 

 Hijph(Bna thebaica, i. 219, 242 



— fibre of, for stringing beads, i. 219 



Ibises, ii. 110 



Ice on Kilimanjaro, i. 191, 193 ; on 

 Kenia, 875, 376 



Idris, Qualla, see Qualla 



Insects, see Ants, Bees, Beetles, Butter- 

 flies, Fleas, Flies, Grasshoppers, Mos- 

 quitoes, Phasmodia, Sandhoppers, 

 Spiders 



Instruments, scientific, i. 36 ; injured by, 

 sand, ii. 56 



Irises, i, 187, 189 



Iron chains worn by Wataveta, i. 101 ; 

 made at Maranga, 179 ; iron wire 

 and chains, by Masai, 77, 84, 251 ; 

 little valued by Eeshiats, ii. 167, 168 ; 

 iron ornaments of Turkana, 231 ; 

 beads in Reshiat and Ukambani, 189, 

 310 



— magnetic, ii, 223, 228 

 Irrigation, ii. 5 



Islands in Lake Rudolf, ii. 95, 101, 109, 

 111, 112, 125, 132 



— in Lake Stefanie, ii. 189 

 Issa ben Madi, i. 7, 10, 12, 37 



Iveti, district of, or Machako, ii. 307, 

 308, 812 



Ivory, from Masailand, i. 23, 261 ; pur- 

 chase of, a secondary aim, 198 ; search 

 for in unknown districts, 394, 398 ; 

 division of by caravans, 399, 426 ; 

 Mrima cannot resist the sight of, ii. 

 30 ; supplied by Wandorobbo, i. 261, 

 ii. 30 ; kinds of, 138 ; bought by the 

 Randile and the Marie, 185, 187 ; our 

 ever-increasing store, 186 ; bought on 

 the Trrawell, 257, 259 ; quantities of, 

 267, 272 ; Wakamba demanded ivory 

 for hongo, 307 ; value of, 310. See 

 Trading and Tusks. 



Jackson, Mr. F. J., ii. 305 



Jackson, Mr. W., ii. 265 



Jagga beads, i. 168, 213 



Jagga States, i. 173, 198, 211, 213, 217 



Jala crater-lake, i. 209, 210 



Jasper, red and vellow, i. 277 



Jipe, Lake, i. 89^, 90, 116, 174; ii. 317 



Johnston, Mr. H. H., i. 183, 188, 397 



Jomari, i. 35 ; ii. 16, 17 



Joost, Mr. W., i. 49, 59, 60 



