ТОП просматриваемых книг сайта:
A Journal of a Tour in the Congo Free State. Marcus Roberts Phipps Dorman
Читать онлайн.Название A Journal of a Tour in the Congo Free State
Год выпуска 0
isbn 4057664615145
Автор произведения Marcus Roberts Phipps Dorman
Жанр Книги о Путешествиях
Издательство Bookwire
Marcus Roberts Phipps Dorman
A Journal of a Tour in the Congo Free State
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4057664615145
Table of Contents
The Ubangi River.—Irebu to Banzyville.
The Upper Ubangi.—Banzyville to Yakoma.
Across Uele.—Djabir to Ibembo.
ILLUSTRATIONS
MAP--ITINERARY OF MARCUS R.P. DORMAN IN THE CONGO FREE STATE
THE CATARACTS RAILWAY NEAR MATADI.
THE RAILWAY STATION AT MATADI.
STEAMERS AND DOCKS AT LEOPOLDVILLE.
THE AMERICAN MISSION HOUSE AT LEOPOLDVILLE.
NATIVES OF THE UPPER CONGO.
BOTANICAL GARDENS AT EALA.
NATIVE CHIEFS AT COQUILHATVILLE.
THE FARM AT EALA.
THE UBANGI RIVER..
YOUNG COFFEE TREES AT COQUILHATVILLE.
SANGO NATIVES OF THE UBANGI.
THE UPPER UBANGI.
YOUNG SANGO GIRLS AT BANZYVILLE.
THE STATE POST AT DJABIR.
THE RIVER NEAR BANZYVILLE.
THE SULTAN OF DJABIR.
WARRIORS AT DJABIR.
THE ITIMBIRI RIVER.
BASOKO FROM THE RIVER.
LOADING A BARGE.
GENERAL VIEW OF BASOKO.
THE FORCE PUBLIQUE AT STANLEYVILLE.
PREFACE.
This journal is practically my Diary reproduced with the minimum of editing in order that the impressions gained on the spot should be described without modification. It was never intended for publication, and was written only as an aid to memory. Consequently it is little more than a collection of rough notes.
Having left England with a prejudice against the Government of the Congo Free State and returned with a very strong feeling in its favour, I feel however that it is my duty to publish an account of what I did see for the benefit of those whose opinions are not already formed beyond recall.
As in all controversies where feelings subordinate reason and people judge more by their emotions than by evidence, many are too quick to-day to attribute interested motives to those whose opinions are not similar to their own. Since a great number of people in the Congo and at home are curious to know whether I was sent out by the Congo Government, the British Government or the Times, I will state here once for all that I went to the Congo entirely to please myself and with the hope of shooting big game. In order indeed to satisfy curiosity, I will go further and state that not only was I not paid for telling the truth, but that the trip cost me a great deal of money.
It