The Albert N'Yanza, Great Basin of the Nile by Sir Samuel White Baker
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page 4 of 545 (00%)
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Philanthropist,--what shall I promise to induce him to accompany me? I
will exhibit a picture of savage man precisely as he is; as I saw him; and as I judged him, free from prejudice: painting also, in true colours, a picture of the abomination that has been the curse of the African race, the SLAVE TRADE; trusting that not only the philanthropist, but every civilized being, will join in the endeavour to erase that stain from disfigured human nature, and thus open the path now closed to civilization and missionary enterprise. To the Missionary,--that noble, self-exiled labourer toiling too often in a barren field,--I must add the word of caution, "Wait"! There can be no hope of success until the slave trade shall have ceased to exist. The journey is long, the countries savage; there are no ancient histories to charm the present with memories of the past; all is wild and brutal, hard and unfeeling, devoid of that holy instinct instilled by nature into the heart of man--the belief in a Supreme Being. In that remote wilderness in Central Equatorial Africa are the Sources of the Nile. CONTENTS. INTRODUCTION CHAPTER I. THE EXPEDITION. |
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