He is considered as great a man as the Sultan of Fezzan. Dome dates are in great plenty: the common ones are scarce, and never arrive at any degree of perfection. The soil of the country is earth, not sand, and is quite covered with grass. There are large trees, chiefly the Talhh. Corn and vegetables are in plenty, and animal food is very cheap. The people are rigid Moslems. Kashna is 20 days from Noofy. I here give an account of the road, as we received it from a friend of Homeman’s, who is well acquainted with Soudan. I Kashna to Yandekka. Yandekka to Doogroomakee. Doogroomakee to Zurmee, a very large town. Zurmee to Faoushee, or Zanfara. F aoushee to Doofa Mafora. West. <! Doofa Mafora to Thalata noma. Thalata noma to Bacoora. Bacoora to Gandee. Gandee to Burnee dengada. Burnee dengada to Sakkatoo, a large Fellata town. ¿Sakkatoo to Mifleradaati; from whence several small towns are passed until Noofy, which is a country on the borders of the Nil. Its chief town is Bakkanee; and it was there that Homeman died, in the house of a man called Ali el Felatni. Our informant gave the following account of his having accompanied Homeman from Morzouk to that place. They first became acquainted in Fezzan, from whence they went together with a large Kaffle to Bornou, when they separated. After Homeman had resided three or four months there, they again met in a KaiH6 going to Kashna, and associated much together. The people became greatly attached to Horneman, on account of his amiable deportment and skill in medicine; and he was generally considered as a Maraboot. After a short time they proceeded with another party of merchants to Noofy, living together in the house o f a man named Ali, of the tribe Fellata. I t was Horneman’s custom while on his journeys after quitting Fezzan, to note down the bearings of every tree, mountain, or village, he saw; by which means he might be more easily enabled to know his road again without a guide. His intention was to go on through Dagomba to Ashantee, which is forty days’ journey to the southward. When our merchant left Noofy, he was in good health and spirits, and had not experienced any difficulties; but this man, on arriving in Kashna, heard that Horneman had died of dysentery, a few days after their separation. The clearest account I have yet heard of the rivers which flow near Kashna is from a person named Mustapha, a son of the old Mamluke who, with his two other sons, was strangled by Mukni. This man fled, and spent some years in Soudan. H e has himself passed three rivers, all running from east to west, as he thinks; but will not be positive. One alone is very considerable; fish, alligators, and hippopotami, being found in it. It is very deep, and is passed in boats, and by rafts. He mentions the rivers in the following order: Kashna to the river Ringhem is seven days east. This river is the smallest; it is deep, but narrow; water quite fresh. A town, called Sankara, is distant one day east. From Kashna to the river Doodroo is six days* nearly south. On this river are canoes, which are hollowed out of a single tree: they have sharp bottoms, not rounded. They are numerous, and serve equally well for fishing, and for ferry-boats from shore to shore. From Kashna to Kattagum (which again appears east-north- east on the road to Bornou) south-east is ten days. This river is
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