An expatriate memoir recounts more than a decade of work and travel in Central Africa, documenting voyages by steamship, life at remote trading posts, hunting excursions, and upriver journeys between colonial settlements. The author combines practical accounts of station administration, trade in rubber and other goods, and the hazards of fever and other illnesses with vivid travel scenes and personal reflection. Encounters with regional leaders and everyday interactions with local communities are described alongside impressions of indigenous beliefs and folktales. The book mixes chronological travel narrative with thematic chapters on economy, health, and cultural observation.