Author: | Blaikie, Garden | ISBN: | 1230000295472 |
Publisher: | Delmarva Publications, Inc. | Publication: | February 2, 2015 |
Imprint: | Language: | English |
Author: | Blaikie, Garden |
ISBN: | 1230000295472 |
Publisher: | Delmarva Publications, Inc. |
Publication: | February 2, 2015 |
Imprint: | |
Language: | English |
The life of David Livingstone by W. Garden Blaikie is mostly from his unpublished journals and correspondence in the possession of his family and contains over 40 illustrations.
The purpose of this work was to make the world better acquainted with the character of Livingstone. His discoveries and researches have been given to the public in his own books, but his modesty led him to say little in these of himself, and those who knew him best feel that little is known of the strength of his affections, the depth and purity of his devotion, or the intensity of his aspirations as a Christian missionary. The growth of his character and the providential shaping of his career are also matters of remarkable interest, of which not much has yet been made known.
An attempt has been made in this volume, likewise, to present a more complete history of his life than has yet appeared. Many chapters of it are opened up of which the public have hitherto known little or nothing. It has not been deemed necessary to dwell on events recorded in his published Travels, except for the purpose of connecting the narrative and making it complete. Even on these, however, it has been found that not a little new light and color may be thrown from his correspondence with his friends and his unpublished Journals.
Much pains was taken to show the unity and symmetry of his character. As a man, a Christian, a missionary, a philanthropist, and a scientist, Livingstone ranks with the greatest of of men, and shows the minimum of infirmity in connection with the maximum of goodness. Nothing can be more telling than his life as an evidence of the truth and power of Christianity, as a plea for Christian Missions and civilization, or as a demonstration of the true connection between religion and science.
The recovery of an important private journal of Dr. Livingstone, which had been lost at the time when the Missionary Travels was published, has thrown much new light on the part of his life immediately preceding his first great journey.
A Map has been specially prepared, in which the geographical references in the volume are shown, which will enable the reader to follow Livingstone's movements from place to place.
With so much material, it would have been easier to write a life in two volumes than in one; but for obvious reasons it has been deemed desirable to restrict it to the present limits.
W. Garden Blaikie wrote one if not the fullest and most lively account of the personal life and ministry of Dr. Livingstone that has ever been put out. He gives the reader a real feel for the struggles and the joy that Dr. Livingston experienced, as well as a true atmosphere of the ages in which he lived. By the end of the book not only is the reader fully acquainted with Dr. Livingston, but one feels as though you know him.
The life of David Livingstone by W. Garden Blaikie is mostly from his unpublished journals and correspondence in the possession of his family and contains over 40 illustrations.
The purpose of this work was to make the world better acquainted with the character of Livingstone. His discoveries and researches have been given to the public in his own books, but his modesty led him to say little in these of himself, and those who knew him best feel that little is known of the strength of his affections, the depth and purity of his devotion, or the intensity of his aspirations as a Christian missionary. The growth of his character and the providential shaping of his career are also matters of remarkable interest, of which not much has yet been made known.
An attempt has been made in this volume, likewise, to present a more complete history of his life than has yet appeared. Many chapters of it are opened up of which the public have hitherto known little or nothing. It has not been deemed necessary to dwell on events recorded in his published Travels, except for the purpose of connecting the narrative and making it complete. Even on these, however, it has been found that not a little new light and color may be thrown from his correspondence with his friends and his unpublished Journals.
Much pains was taken to show the unity and symmetry of his character. As a man, a Christian, a missionary, a philanthropist, and a scientist, Livingstone ranks with the greatest of of men, and shows the minimum of infirmity in connection with the maximum of goodness. Nothing can be more telling than his life as an evidence of the truth and power of Christianity, as a plea for Christian Missions and civilization, or as a demonstration of the true connection between religion and science.
The recovery of an important private journal of Dr. Livingstone, which had been lost at the time when the Missionary Travels was published, has thrown much new light on the part of his life immediately preceding his first great journey.
A Map has been specially prepared, in which the geographical references in the volume are shown, which will enable the reader to follow Livingstone's movements from place to place.
With so much material, it would have been easier to write a life in two volumes than in one; but for obvious reasons it has been deemed desirable to restrict it to the present limits.
W. Garden Blaikie wrote one if not the fullest and most lively account of the personal life and ministry of Dr. Livingstone that has ever been put out. He gives the reader a real feel for the struggles and the joy that Dr. Livingston experienced, as well as a true atmosphere of the ages in which he lived. By the end of the book not only is the reader fully acquainted with Dr. Livingston, but one feels as though you know him.