NATIVE SEEDS. 
287 
although of another portion of the great Moro tribe^ he lived at 
fend with them, and hut a few days previously several of his cattle 
had been stolen. As I have experienced in my former travels 
among the Dor and the Dinka people, it by no means follows that 
people belonging to the same tribe hear always friendly relations 
to each other. 
I give a list of the principal seeds sown by these people, and 
with the native names : 
Ked maize, called 
Millet, 
Seezam, ,, 
Black mint, ,, 
White maize, „ 
"White beans, ,, 
Black „ „ 
Sweet potatoes „ 
Yams, „ 
Grass, „ 
Bamyeh, ., 
BacU. 
Ciiraeja 
Coainjou 
Cacnce 
Boorendi 
War ha 
Balance 
Mvndo 
Goreli 
Yeffo 
B'agolo 
My wife was made quite at home in the village ; and she won 
the hearts of the women by receiving them, and noticing their 
bright little children. 
January l^th . — At seven a.m. made a good start, and rode 
through the prettiest bush we had seen; skirted on our left by 
Saturday's chain of interesting hills, covered as they were with 
luxuriant trees, the naked rock but seldom showing, and even then 
in some places was adorned with tufts of grass. Keached a deep, 
and narrow dried-up water course at eight, where we breakfasted ; 
resuming our march over rocky and undulating ground, with 
whins tone and granite appearing alternately on the surface. 
In little more than half an hour after our last rest we again 
