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was exhausted, I endeavoured to purchase a fresh supply; but was informed that corn was become very scarce all over the country ; and though I offered fifty Kowries for a small quantity, no person would sell me any. As I was about to depart, however, one of the villagers (who probably mistook me for some Moorish shereef) brought me some as a present; only desiring me in return, to bestow my blessing upon him ; which I did in plain English, and he received it with a thousand acknowledgments. Of this present I made my dinner ; and it was the third successive day that I had subsisted entirely upon raw corn. In the evening I arrived at a small village called Song, the surly inhabitants of which would not receive me, nor so much as permit me to enter the g a te ; but as lions were very numerous in this neighbourhood, and I had frequently, in the course of the day, observed the impression of their feet on the road, I resolved to stay in the vicinity of the village. Having collected some grass for my horse, I accordingly lay down under a tree by the gate. About ten o'clock I heard the hollow roar of a lion at no great distance, and attempted to open the gate ; but the people from within told me, that no person must attempt to enter the gate without the Dooty’s permission. I begged them to inform the Dooty that a lion was approaching the village, and I hoped he would allow me to come within the gate. I waited for an answer to this message with great anxiety ; for the lion kept prouling round the village, and once advanced so very near me, that I heard him rustling among the grass, and climbed the tree for safety. About midnight the Dooty with some of his people, opened the gate, and desired me to come in. They were convinced, they said, that I was not a Moor ; for no Moor ever waited any time at the gate of a village, without cursing the inhabitants. Aug. 16th. About ten o'clock I passed a considerable town, with a mosque, called Jabbee. Here the country begins to rise into hills, and I could see the summits of high mountains to the westward. I had very disagreeable travelling all this day, on account of the swampiness of the roads ; for the river was now risen to such a height, as to overflow great part of the flat land on both sides ; and from the muddiness of the water, it was difficult to discern its depth. In crossing one of these swamps, a little to the westward of a town called Gangu, my horse being up to the belly in water, slipt suddenly into a deep pit, and was almost drowned before he could disengage his feet from the stiff clay at the bottom. Indeed, both the horse and his rider were so completely covered with mud, that in passing the village of Callimana, the people compared us to two dirty elephants. About noon I stopped at a small village near Yamina, where I purchased some corn, and dried my papers and clothes. The town of Yamina, at a distance, has a very fine appearance. It covers nearly the same extent of ground as Sansan- ding ; but having been plundered by Daisy, King of Kaarta, about four years ago, it has not yet resumed its former, prosperity ; nearly one half of the town being nothing but a heap of ruins : however, it is still a considerable place, and is so much frequented by the Moors, that I did not think it safe to lodge


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