The Discovery of The Source of the Nile by John Hanning Speke  






 -  About eight yards broad, it was sunk down a
considerable depth below the surface of the land, like a huge - Page 339
The Discovery of The Source of the Nile by John Hanning Speke - Page 339 of 767 - First - Home

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About Eight Yards Broad, It Was Sunk Down A Considerable Depth Below The Surface Of The Land, Like A Huge Canal, And Is So Deep, It Could Not Be Poled By The Canoemen; While It Runs At A Velocity Of From Three To Four Knots An Hour.

I say I viewed it with pride, because I had formed my judgment of its being fed from high-

Seated springs in the Mountains of the Moon solely on scientific geographical reasonings; and, from the bulk of the stream, I also believed those mountains must obtain an altitude of 8000 feet[FN#16] or more, just as we find they do in Ruanda. I thought then to myself, as I did at Rumanika's, when I first viewed the Mfumbiro cones, and gathered all my distant geographical information there, that these highly saturated Mountains of the Moon give birth to the Congo as well as to the Nile, and also to the Shire branch of the Zambeze.

I came, at the same time, to the conclusion that all our previous information concerning the hydrography of these regions, as well as the Mountains of the Moon, originated with the ancient Hindus, who told it to the priests of the Nile; and that all those busy Egyptian geographers, who disseminated their knowledge with a view to be famous for their long-sightedness, in solving the deep-seated mystery with enshrouded the source of their holy river, were so many hypothetical humbugs. Reasoning thus, the Hindu traders alone, in those days, I believed, had a firm basis to stand upon, from their intercourse with the Abyssinians - through whom they must have heard of the country of Amara, which they applied to the N'yanza - and with the Wanyamuezi or men of the Moon, from whom they heard of the Tanganyika and Karague mountains.

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