Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER III On the Pungwd Sixteen hours in the Shark Hippopotami Crocodiles Intense heat 'Mpanda's Nowhere to sleepLionsOld WilkinsDr. Todd of the MagicienneFeverWork among the natives Camp lifeThe ConsulA plague of ratsArrival of Dr. GlanvilleNews from the BishopDisputes among Mission workers Livingstonian anecdote Sir John Willoughby and monkey-nutsCollapse of transport We must walk one hundred and ninety miles OppositionThe enemy routedThe Portuguese commandanteA Portuguese military hospital Departure of ConsulWilkins in search of bearers His dramatic returnNo moneyLieut. Robertson to the rescue. We were up betimes on the morning of Saturday the 13th of June, and ready and eager to start in the Shark, which steamed up alongside the Tyrian punctually at four o'clock. But a thick fog suddenly enveloped us, sweeping down the Piingw£ with magical swiftness, so that we had to curb our impatience and wait till nearly five. The fog then lifting a little, Captain Ewing decided on venturing up the river, as a longer delay meant losing the tide, and having to spend a night in the Shark. The little launch being the tiniest of steam-launches, in which we three, Captain Ewing, and two sailors, had barely room to sit, the prospect of a night on board was anything but pleasant. We started, puffing gaily away, and soon lost sight of the Tyrian, picking our way carefully amongst islands, which loomed dimly through the fog. After about an hour and a half the fog lightened, and then we discovered that we had somehow drifted round an island, and were rapidly returning to Beira. No sooner had we altered our course, making some advance up the river, than we stuck on one of the shifting sandbanks, which render the navigation of the Pungwe so troublesome...