How I Found Livingstone Travels, Adventures And Discoveries In Central Africa Including Four Months Residence With Dr. Livingstone By Sir Henry M. Stanley
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His Dress, When First I Saw Him, Exhibited Traces Of
Patching And Repairing, But Was Scrupulously Clean.
I was led to believe that Livingstone possessed a splenetic,
misanthropic temper; some have said that he is garrulous,
That
he is demented; that he has utterly changed from the David
Livingstone whom people knew as the reverend missionary ; that
he takes no notes or observations but such as those which no other
person could read but himself; and it was reported, before I
proceeded to Central Africa, that he was married to an African
princess.
I respectfully beg to differ with all and each of the above
statements. I grant he is not an angel, but he approaches to that
being as near as the nature of a living man will allow. I never
saw any spleen or misanthropy in him - as for being garrulous, Dr.
Livingstone is quite the reverse: he is reserved, if anything;
and to the man who says Dr. Livingstone is changed, all I can say
is, that he never could have known him, for it is notorious that
the Doctor has a fund of quiet humour, which he exhibits at all
times whenever he is among friends. I must also beg leave to
correct the gentleman who informed me that Livingstone takes
no notes or observations. The huge Letts's Diary which I
carried home to his daughter is full of notes, and there are
no less than a score of sheets within it filled with observations
which he took during the last trip he made to Manyuema alone;
and in the middle of the book there is sheet after sheet,
column after column, carefully written, of figures alone.
A large letter which I received from him has been sent to
Sir Thomas MacLear, and this contains nothing but observations.
During the four months I was with him, I noticed him every evening
making most careful notes; and a large tin box that he has with
him contains numbers of field note-books, the contents of which I
dare say will see the light some time. His maps also evince great
care and industry. As to the report of his African marriage, it is
unnecessary to say more than that it is untrue, and it is utterly
beneath a gentleman to hint at such a thing in connection with the
name of David Livingstone.
There is a good-natured abandon about Livingstone which was not
lost on me. Whenever he began to laugh, there was a contagion
about it, that compelled me to imitate him. It was such a laugh
as Herr Teufelsdrockh's - a laugh of the whole man from head to heel.
If he told a story, he related it in such a way as to convince one
of its truthfulness; his face was so lit up by the sly fun it
contained, that I was sure the story was worth relating, and
worth listening to.
The wan features which had shocked me at first meeting, the heavy
step which told of age and hard travel, the grey beard and bowed
shoulders, belied the man. Underneath that well-worn exterior
lay an endless fund of high spirits and inexhaustible humour;
that rugged frame of his enclosed a young and most exuberant soul.
Every day I heard innumerable jokes and pleasant anecdotes;
interesting hunting stories, in which his friends Oswell, Webb,
Vardon, and Gorden Cumming were almost always the chief actors.
I was not sure, at first, but this joviality, humour, and
abundant animal spirits were the result of a joyous hysteria;
but as I found they continued while I was with him, I am obliged
to think them natural.
Another thing which specially attracted my attention was his
wonderfully retentive memory. If we remember the many years he
has spent in Africa, deprived of books, we may well think it an
uncommon memory that can recite whole poems from Byron, Burns,
Tennyson, Longfellow, Whittier, and Lowell. The reason of this
may be found, perhaps, in the fact, that he has lived all his
life almost, we may say, within himself. Zimmerman, a great
student of human nature, says on this subject "The unencumbered
mind recalls all that it has read, all that pleased the eye,
and delighted the ear; and reflecting on every idea which
either observation, or experience, or discourse has produced,
gains new information by every reflection. The intellect
contemplates all the former scenes of life; views by
anticipation those that are yet to come; and blends all ideas
of past and future in the actual enjoyment of the present
moment." He has lived in a world which revolved inwardly,
out of which he seldom awoke except to attend to the immediate
practical necessities of himself and people; then relapsed again
into the same happy inner world, which he must have peopled with
his own friends, relations, acquaintances, familiar readings,
ideas, and associations; so that wherever he might be, or by
whatsoever he was surrounded, his own world always possessed
more attractions to his cultured mind than were yielded by
external circumstances.
The study of Dr. Livingstone would not be complete if we did not
take the religious side of his character into consideration. His
religion is not of the theoretical kind, but it is a constant,
earnest, sincere practice. It is neither demonstrative nor loud,
but manifests itself in a quiet, practical way, and is always at
work. It is not aggressive, which sometimes is troublesome, if
not impertinent. In him, religion exhibits its loveliest features;
it governs his conduct not only towards his servants, but towards
the natives, the bigoted Mohammedans, and all who come in contact
with him. Without it, Livingstone, with his ardent temperament,
his enthusiasm, his high spirit and courage, must have become
uncompanionable, and a hard master. Religion has tamed him, and
made him a Christian gentleman: the crude and wilful have been
refined and subdued; religion has made him the most companionable
of men and indulgent of masters - a man whose society is pleasurable.
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