Wyndham, Richard (1936) The Gentle Savage: A Sudanese Journey in the Province of Bahr-el-Ghazal, Commonly Called the Bog, Negro Universities Press, p. 224
"But Wyndham should hear the old Zande describing the local fauna [says a Sanderson]. Among other freaks there's the Wanga–a lizard found in the Congo and Nile–that has breasts like a woman. There's another chap which only lives in the river Were [Uere]–a sort of octopus, with an elephant's trunk, that sucks people's blood. And when you cross the river Sue to-morrow you'd better look out for the Ndutu: he has grass and water-weeds growing on his back, and is so large that he can stop the flow of the river."
"And the Ngambue," added Mrs. Frobisher. "They found a Ngambue in the well near your rest-house."
"Ngambue?" I asked.
"A very large poisonous snake with a long beard: its body is covered in flour."
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