Chapter
1 IV | his life among the negro tribes, who were in full revolt.
2 IV | and visited the various tribes residing on its banks, the
3 V | after all, the African tribes should have been civilized,
4 V | information given by the tribes that live along its shores?”~“
5 XI | veneration to the African tribes, and they determined to
6 XI | among those ferocious savage tribes, in regions that had never
7 XII | beasts, but also the robber tribes of the country. They could
8 XIII | beasts and ferocious native tribes!”~“I move that we don’t
9 XIII | basin of Imenge, and the tribes scattered over the adjacent
10 XV | glassware, and trinkets, to the tribes of the great lakes.~So in
11 XVII | could still be seen.~The tribes living near to the equator
12 XVIII | are inhabited by ferocious tribes. Take your sleep, then,
13 XVIII | doura, and sugar-cane. The tribes inhabiting the region seemed
14 XIX | There are those intractable tribes, of whom Petherick, Arnaud,
15 XIX | name of Latif-Effendi. The tribes living near the Nile are
16 XIX | thought so.”~“These scattered tribes come, one and all, under
17 XIX | the reason, sir?”~“These tribes are considered man-eaters.”~“
18 XIX | Brun-Rollet, attributed to other tribes.”~“Dogs’ heads, eh? Quite
19 XIX | is, the ferocity of these tribes, who are really very fond
20 XX | Winged Team.—Two Native Tribes in Battle.—A Massacre.—An
21 XX | than wild beasts or savage tribes.”~“Bah!” said the hunter, “
22 XX | exciting spectacle.~Two hostile tribes were fighting furiously,
23 XXI | my friends. These savage tribes kill their captives in broad
24 XXII | alone among those savage tribes!”~“That cannot be questioned,”
25 XXII | the very centre of those tribes that dwell among the tributary
26 XXII | prisoner to one of the cruelest tribes of the Nyambarra, the object
27 XXII | so frequent between the tribes, instead of retracing his
28 XXVIII| brought back word that many tribes on that continent subsisted
29 XXVIII| forward the assertion that the tribes of Eastern Africa fed upon
30 XXVIII| name of all the neighboring tribes, and, under the same climates,
31 XXXI | important trade between the tribes living along the borders
32 XXXIV | found refuge among the lake tribes, can he not do as the travellers
33 XXXV | vast lake, surrounded by tribes unknown to him, and probably
34 XXXV | Tchad, like many other negro tribes, plunge with impunity into
35 XXXV | country and among these wild tribes. Few travellers who had
36 XXXV | affair among these savage tribes, and carried on with a sort
37 XLIX | generally coveted by all the tribes, since the eleventh century,
38 XL | the midst of the barbarous tribes that infest the coasts of
39 XLI | of these barbarous negro tribes. It was this fatal climate
40 XLI | relations with the surrounding tribes. Under the administration
41 XLI | Mohammed, stirred up all the tribes to war against the infidels—
42 XLIV | midst of most hospitable tribes, whose relations with the
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