384 



INDEX 



Hay, ii. 238 



Heat, such never felt before, i. 279 ; 



scorching, ii. 97, 98 ; intense, 244 

 Heaths, i. 186 

 — tree, i. 188, 189 ; ii. 58 

 Hedging-bills, i. 33 

 Herbs, ii. 181 

 Herpns, ii. 110 

 Himidi bin Ali, ii. 39 

 Himo river, i. 169 

 .Hinterland, i. (note) 59 

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



110, 112, 118, 184, 306 

 Holland and Holland, English firm, i. 



36 



Honey, i. 98, 140, 153, 168, 169, ii. 302 ; 



anointed with, i. 143 

 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 Arusha-wa-ju, 165 ; on 

 return jom'ney, 166; to Miriali, 177- 

 179 ; to Useri chief, 218 ; in Masaiiand, 

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

 land, 301, 303, 309, 316, 319, 321 ; to 

 Likibes, 397; to the Wandorobbo, 399; 

 to Masai, 408; to Wakwafi at Nyemps, 



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

 to Wakamba, 307 



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 Eandile, 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. 

 31 



Hunting, arduous nature of, ii. 43, 45 

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

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

 stakes and interlaced branches, plas- 

 tered over, 259 ; Wakikuyu bee-hive 

 shaped, thatched, 318 ; Wandorobbo, 

 like Masai, neatly finished, 413 ; 

 Elmolo in Alia, hay-rick shape, ii. 

 132 ; Eeshiat, round, covered with 

 hides or grass mats, 164 ; Suk, of 

 brushwood and plaited osiers, 271 ; at 

 Ngaboto, of dhtn-ra stalks, 363 

 Eydnora africana {likke),i. 123, 124 



i Hyenas, i. 90, 199, 269, 370 



— spotted, i. 261 



— colonies of, ii. 35 

 Hyjihcena thebaica, i. 219, 242 



— fibre of, for stringing beads, i. 219 



Ibises, ii. 110 



Ice on Kilimanjaro, i. 191, 193 ; on 

 Kenia, 375, 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 vahied by Eeshiats, ii. 167, 168 ; 

 iron ornaments of Turkana, 231 ; 

 beads in Eeshiat and Ukambani, 139, 

 310 



— magnetic, ii, 223, 228 

 Irrigation, ii. 5 



Islands in Lake Eudolf, 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, 312 



Ivory, from Masaiiand, 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 

 Eandile 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 

 i Jagga beads, i. 168, 213 

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

 Jala crater-lake, i. 209, 210 

 Jasper, red and yellow, 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 

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



