'june 17th 1805:
finding that Hinton was worse, and Sparks delirious, left them to the care of the Dooty of the village; having given him amber and beads sufficient to purchase victuals for them if they lived , and to bury them if they died.'
The West African rainy season is quite a frightening and overwhelming phenomenon.
Violent storms are often preceded by dramatic and beautiful skies, the portents of huge dust storms bringing Sahara sand in big whipped -up clouds causing near invisibility which is sometimes, but not always, followed by violent torrents of hard rain, beating down in horizontal attacks on the fragile mud buildings.
In the aftermath of the storms there is a calm and a momentary freshness in the air before the merciless sun has once more heated the atmosphere causing an unhealthy and unpleasant humidity.
Then at night, all the toads of West Africa celebrate in a deafening chorus. And all the mosquitoes are hatched and start their deadly business (although Djenné Djenno is so far mosquiteo free, being apart from the city- the mosquitoes have not yet discovered us!)
Neither Mungo Park, nor his French successor in these parts, the amazing René Caillé, the first explorer to reach Djenné, understood the connection between the mosquitoes and the 'fever' which consumed their companions as well as themselves during the rainy season. When Mungo Park fell ill with the 'fever', he believed that he had 'imprudently exposed himself to the night dew', and that this was the reason for his illness.
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