About This Book
The author recounts missionary travel across East African rail and waterways, describing landscapes from coastal towns through lakes, rivers, swamps, and snow-capped mountains, and scenes of caravan and camp life. She sketches village and royal customs, festivals, language, child and women's life, and encounters with several indigenous groups including forest-dwelling pygmy communities and their neighbors. Interwoven are accounts of daily mission work: schools, medical dispensaries, baptisms, and household routines, together with practical challenges of transport and climate. The narrative balances vivid topographical and ethnographic observation with reflections on religious instruction, cultural change, and the personal adaptations required for long-term field service.