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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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.
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