THE REAL START FOR TANGANYIKA IN THE INTERIOR.
[A long march]—[Marsh fever]—[They ascend from Zungomero to a better climate]—[From lovely scenery to fœtid marshes]—[Ants]—[The war-cry of the Wahúmba]—[Evil reports]—[Game]—[Vermin]—[A hard jungle march]—[Description of caravans and difficulties]—[Reptiles]—[Ill and attended by a witch]—[Partial paralysis—Blindness—Elephants]—[The crossing of the great river Malagarázi].
[CHAPTER XIV.]
OUR REWARD—SUCCESS.
[Scenery]—[In an Arab craft to Ujiji]—[More Scenery]—[After twenty-seven days Speke returns]—[A fight]—[Are received with honour]—[A caravan arrives]—[Geographical remarks]—[Troublesome following]—[Forest on fire]—[He sends Speke to find the Nyanza]—[The Chief Suna]—[Richard collects a vocabulary]—[Speke returns and the differences arose]—[Richard soliloquizes on Speke's change of front]—[For geographers]—[The kindness of Musa Mzuri and Snay bin Amir]—[Speke's illness]—[They cross the "Fiery Field"]—[An official wigging]—[Christmas Day, 1858]—[Speke leaves Richard ill, but apparently friendly].
[CHAPTER XV.]
RICHARD AND I MEET AGAIN.
[We try to effect a reconciliation between Speke and Richard]—[My appeal to my mother]—[My letter to my mother—Not a success]—[News of Richard and subsequent return]—[A family council decides the matter]—[Our wedding]—[We are received at home again]—[A delightful London season]—[Fire at Grindlay's]—[Delightful days at country houses]—[Richard goes to West Africa].