Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa

audiobook

Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa

by David Livingstone

EN·~29 hours

Chapters

Description

A Scottish physician turned missionary steps onto the southern tip of Africa with a purpose that goes beyond preaching. He seeks to ease both the spiritual and material hardships of the people he meets, while carefully noting the geography, wildlife, and the flow of trade that sustains remote communities. His early months in the Cape reveal a landscape of endless savannahs, bustling markets, and the lingering shadow of the slave trade, all observed with a blend of scientific curiosity and heartfelt concern.

Livingstone’s narrative shines through his vivid, often humorous descriptions of daily life among the diverse peoples he encounters. From the rhythmic pulse of a Makololo dance to the harsh realities of malaria‑ridden camps, his prose captures the beauty and the brutality of frontier existence. He records conversations, customs, and the challenges of navigating uncharted rivers, offering listeners a richly textured portrait of a continent on the cusp of change.

The work reads as a seamless mix of travel diary, natural history, and personal reflection. Listeners will travel alongside a man who balances rigorous observation with genuine empathy, gaining a rare glimpse into mid‑nineteenth‑century Africa through the eyes of one of its most determined explorers.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~29 hours (1716K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Alan. R. Light and David Widger

Release date

2006-02-11

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

David Livingstone

David Livingstone

1813–1873

A factory worker’s son from Scotland who became one of the 19th century’s most famous explorers, he journeyed deep into central and southern Africa as a missionary, doctor, and writer. His books brought distant landscapes and peoples vividly to Victorian readers while also helping stir outrage over the East African slave trade.

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