CHAPTER I
THE JOURNEY UP B J T E E KA LAHA R I D E SE R T ' ROUTE
shonaland I am loti
to introduce remarks ii
narrative form relating
how we got to them anc
how we got away. Still
however, the incidents
of our journeyings to
and fro offer certain
features which may be
interesting from an anthropological
point of
m r . t h b o d o r e b e n t view. The study of
the natives and their
customs occupied our leisure moments when not
igging at Zimbabwe or travelling too fast, and a
ecord of what we saw amongst them, comes legiti-
ately, I f t g | within the scope of our expedition.
panes°i f e V t T V ' naTrative pages I feel it hardly necessary toof saPpo°rlot e™ise theSsoe
hSS ■ ” % by the colossal