4G2 



INDEX. 



Steinhaeuser, Dr., i. 25. 



Storm in Uzaramo, i. 69. Those of the 

 rainy monsoon in Unyamwezi, ii. 9. On 

 the Tanganyika Lake, description of a, 

 122. 



Succession and inheritance, in Unyamwezi, 

 ii. 23. 



Sugar-cane, wild, or Gugu-mbua, i. 71. 

 In Ujiji, ii. 58. Chewed, 288. 



Sugar made of granulated honey, i. 397. 



Suiya, antelope, i. 269. 



Sulphur in Karagwah, ii. 185. 



Sultans, burial-places of, in Unyamwezi, ii. 

 26. Power of the Sultan in this country, 

 31 And in East Africa generally, ii. 362. 



Sun, his splendour at the equator, i. 162. 

 Ring-cloud tempering the rays of the, in 

 Unyamwezi, ii. 11, 12. 



Suna, Sultan of Uganda, ii. 188. The Arabs' 

 description of him, 189. His hundred 

 sons, 192. His chief officers, and mode 

 of government, 192. Account of a visit 

 to him, 193. 



Sunset-hour on the Indian Ocean, i. 1. In 

 the Land of the Moon, 387. In Unyam- 

 wezi, ii. 7. In Ujiji, 89. In East Africa 

 generally, 289. 



Sunrise on the Tanganyika Lake, ii. 156. 



Superstilions of the Wamrima, i. 38. Of 

 the Wagogoni, inland, 88. Of the Wa- 

 zaramo, 112, 114, 115, 



Supplies, shortness of, ii. 130. Arrival of 

 some, but inadequate for the purpose, 1 30. 



Surgery in East Africa, ii. 322. 



Suwarora, Sultan, his exorbitant black-mail, 

 ii. 176. 



Swallows in Unyamwezi, ii. 17. 



Swords in East Africa, ii. 308. 



Syeomore tree of East Africa, the Mkuvu, 

 its magnificence, i. 195. Its two varie- 

 ties, 195, 196. Its magnificence in Usa- 

 gara, 229. 



Tailoring in Africa, ii. 201. 



Tamarind trees of the Usagara Mountains, 

 i. 165, 229. Modes of preparing the 

 fruit, 165. At Mfuto, 389. 



Tanganyika Lake, first view of the, descri- 

 bed, ii. 42, 43. A boat engaged on the, 

 45. Seen from Ujiji, 47. Hippopotami 

 and crocodiles in, 60. People of the 

 shores of, 62, et seq. Fishing in, 66. Va- 

 rieties of fish in, 67. Failure of Captain 

 Speke's expedition for exploring the 

 northern shores of, 90. Preparations for 

 another cruise, 93. Description of the 

 boats of the lake, 94. Navigation of the, 

 94. Voyage up the, 99. Eastern shores 

 of the, described, 100. Fishing villages, 

 1 00. Remarks on boating and voyaging 



on the lake, 101. Account of the islard 

 of Ubwari, 108. Visit to the island, 113. 

 Further progress stopped, 117, 119. 

 Storm on the lake, 122. History of the 

 Jake, ii. 134 et seq. Meaning of the name, 

 137. Extent and general direction of, 

 137. Altitude of, 139. Sweetness of 

 its water, 139. Its colour, 140. Its 

 depth, 140. Its affluents, 140. Its 

 coasts, 141. No effluents, 141. Its tem- 

 perature, 142. Its ebb and flow, 143. 

 Physical and ethnological features of its 

 periplus, 144. Sunrise scenery on the 

 lake, 156. 



Targes of the East Africans described, ii. 307. 

 Tattoo, not general amongst the Wazaramo, 



i. 108. Nor amongst the Wak'hutu, 

 120. Practised by the Wadoe, 124. Of 

 the Wanyamwezi, ii. 21. Amongst the 

 Wajiji, 63. Of the Warundi, 145. 



Teeth, chipped to points by the Wasagara 



tribe, i. 235. 

 Tembe, the houses beyond Marenga Mk'- 



hali so called, i. 207. Description of the 



Tembe of East Africa, 366. 

 Tembo, or palm-toddy, a favourite inebrient 



in Ujiji, ii. 70. 

 Tenga, in Karagwah, ii. 177. 

 Tent-making in Africa, ii. 201. 

 Termites of East Africa, i. 201, 202. In 



the houses of Ujiji, ii. 61. 

 Tetemeka, or earthquakes in Unyamwezi, 



ii. 13. 



Thermometers in Africa, i. 169. 



Thiri, or Ut'hiri, district of, ii. 215. 



Thirst, impatience and selfishness of, of the 

 Baloch guard, i. 205. African impa- 

 tience of, 359 ; ii. 334. 



Thorns, nuisance of, on the road to Ugogo, 

 i. 246. 



Thunder and lightning in Unyamwezi, ii. 9. 

 In the Malagarazi valley, 50, In Ka- 

 ragwah, 180. 



Timber of East Africa, ii. 415. 



Time, difficulty of keeping, by chrono- 

 meters in East African travel, i. 189, 

 1 90. Second-hand watches to be pre- 

 ferred, 190. 



Tirikeza, or afternoon march of a caravan, 



i. 203, 221. Incidents of one, 204, 205. 

 Tobacco, trade of, in East Africa, ii. 418. 

 Tobacco, use of, in East Africa, i. 36. 



Smoked by women in Unyamwezi, 388. 

 Chewed by Unyamwezi, ii. 28. Tobacco 

 of Uganda, 196. Tobacco trade of East 

 Africa, ii, 418. 

 Tobacco-pipes of Eastern Africa, i. 388 ; 



ii. 315. 



Toddy obtained from the palmyra of 

 Msene only, i. 398. Extracted from 



