Travels in West Africa
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Title: Travels in West Africa
Author: Mary H. Kingsley
Release Date: June, 2004 [EBook #5891] [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on September 17, 2002]
Edition: 10
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, TRAVELS IN WEST AFRICA ***
This eBook was prepared by Les Bowler, St. Ives, Dorset.
Travels in West Africa (Congo Francais, Corisco and Cameroons) by Mary H. Kingsley.
To my brother, C. G. Kingsley this book is dedicated.
CONTENTS
PREFACE. PREFACE TO THE ABRIDGED EDITION OF TRAVELS IN WEST AFRICA. INTRODUCTION.
CHAPTER I.
LIVERPOOL TO SIERRA LEONE AND THE GOLD COAST.
CHAPTER II.
FERNANDO PO AND THE BUBIS.
CHAPTER III.
VOYAGE DOWN COAST.
CHAPTER IV.
THE OGOWE.
CHAPTER V.
THE RAPIDS OF THE OGOWE.
CHAPTER VI.
LEMBARENE.
CHAPTER VII.
ON THE WAY FROM KANGWE TO LAKE NCOVI.
CHAPTER VIII.
FROM NCOVI TO ESOON.
CHAPTER IX.
FROM ESOON TO AGONJO.
CHAPTER X.
BUSH TRADE AND FAN CUSTOMS.
CHAPTER XI.
DOWN THE REMBWE.
CHAPTER XII.
FETISH.
CHAPTER XIII.
FETISH--(Continued).
CHAPTER XIV.
FETISH--(Continued).
CHAPTER XV.
FETISH--(Continued).
CHAPTER XVI.
FETISH--(Concluded).
CHAPTER XVII.
ASCENT OF THE GREAT PEAK OF CAMEROONS.
CHAPTER XVIII.
THE GREAT PEAK OF CAMEROONS--(Continued).
CHAPTER XIX.
THE GREAT PEAK OF CAMEROONS--(Continued).
CHAPTER XX.
THE GREAT PEAK OF CAMEROONS--(Concluded).
CHAPTER XXI.
TRADE AND LABOUR IN WEST AFRICA.
CHAPTER XXII.
DISEASE IN WEST AFRICA. APPENDIX. THE INVENTION OF THE CLOTH LOOM.
PREFACE
TO THE READER.--What this book wants is not a simple Preface but an apology, and a very brilliant and convincing one at that. Recognising this fully, and feeling quite incompetent to write such a masterpiece, I have asked several literary friends to write one for me, but they have kindly but firmly declined, stating that it is impossible satisfactorily to apologise for my liberties with Lindley Murray and the Queen's English. I am therefore left to make a feeble apology for this book myself, and all I can personally say is that it would have been much worse than it is had it not been for Dr. Henry Guillemard, who has not edited it, or of course the whole affair would have been better, but who has most kindly gone through the proof sheets, lassoing prepositions which were straying outside their sentence stockade, taking my eye off the water cask and fixing it on the scenery where I meant it to be, saying firmly in pencil on margins "No you don't," when I was committing some more than usually heinous literary crime, and so on. In cases where his activities in these things may seem to the reader to have been wanting, I beg to state that they really were not. It is I who have declined to ascend to a higher level of lucidity and correctness of diction than I am fitted for. I cannot forbear from mentioning my gratitude to Mr. George Macmillan for his patience and kindness with me,--a mere jungle of information on West Africa. Whether you my reader will share my gratitude is, I fear, doubtful, for if it had not been for him I should never have attempted to write a book at all, and in order to excuse his having induced me to try I beg to state that I have written only on things that I know from personal experience and very careful observation. I have never accepted an explanation of a native custom from one person alone, nor have I set down things as being prevalent customs from having seen a single instance. I have endeavoured to give you an honest account of the general state and manner of life in Lower Guinea and some description of the various types of country there. In reading this section you must make allowances for my love of this sort of country, with its great forests and rivers and its animistic-minded inhabitants, and for my ability to be more comfortable there than in England. Your superior culture-instincts may militate against your enjoying West Africa, but if you go there you will find things as I have said.
January, 1897.
PREFACE TO THE ABRIDGED EDITION OF TRAVELS IN WEST AFRICA.
When on my return to England from my second sojourn in West Africa, I discovered,
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