
audiobook
A Reverend’s log from 1886 offers a vivid, on‑the‑ground view of life on three remote islands in the New Hebrides. The diary opens with the anxious launch from a bustling pier, the farewells of friends and children, and the first taste of a fierce southerly gale. Already the tone is both practical and personal, noting the steam winch that has replaced old‑fashioned anchoring and the uneasy anticipation of a “very dirty, rough night” ahead.
The entries transport listeners to Araga, Maewo and Opa—rugged, mountainous lands where villages cling to inland valleys and schools dot the terrain. The missionaries describe a patchwork of languages, customs and scattered settlements, each presenting its own hurdles for teaching, worship and daily survival. Despite the hardships, the tone remains hopeful, portraying the islanders as “not so far gone in vileness as to be incapable of improvement.”
Through candid observations, weather sketches and quiet moments of prayer, the journal paints a portrait of a frontier mission struggling against nature, distance and cultural differences, while forging connections that would shape the region’s future.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (317K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from scans of public domain works at The National Library of Australia.)
Release date
2018-10-09
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

A novelist with a small but intriguing body of work, known for The Vagabond's Legacy and an active Amazon author page. Publicly available information about this author is limited, which only adds a little mystery.
View all booksKnown for a practical guide to hand engraving on precious metals, this writer is associated with classic craft instruction rather than a widely documented public literary profile. The surviving book listings suggest a specialist author whose work has remained of interest to metalworkers and decorative arts readers.
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by John Gibson Paton