
A determined French naturalist sets out for the rugged interior of Mozambique, following the iron rails from the bustling port of Beira to the remote mining town of Massikessé. Accompanied by his wife and a modest convoy of oxen‑drawn carts, he establishes a modest mountain camp that becomes a base for exploring the surrounding forests, swamps, and high‑altitude plateaus. The narrative captures the stark contrast between the oppressive heat, mosquito‑laden marshes, and the surprisingly orderly colonial settlements with their shaded streets, hospital, and sanatorium.
From this foothold, the explorers turn their attention to cataloguing the region’s wildlife and plant life. Their meticulous collections of insects, birds, and the elusive antelope species reveal a landscape both harsh and teeming with hidden beauty. Alongside scientific curiosity, the story conveys the everyday trials of travel—long train rides, precarious mountain paths, and the simple ingenuity required to build a shelter from bamboo and thatch. Listeners are invited to experience a vivid portrait of early‑20th‑century adventure and discovery in an African wilderness that still holds many secrets.
Full title
Op de jacht in Mozambique De Aarde en haar Volken, 1909
Language
nl
Duration
~1 hours (66K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Distributed Proofreaders Team
Release date
2005-06-13
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

A French explorer and hunter, he turned years of travel in Mozambique into a vivid early-20th-century adventure narrative. His writing mixes field observation, colonial-era expedition detail, and the rough immediacy of life on the move.
View all books
by Anonymous

by Stuart Martin

by Henry M. (Henry Morton) Stanley

by Réginald Kann

by Jean Marlys

by Émile Deschamps

by Louis Rousselet

by Clara Engelen