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Seven years in South Africa, volume 1 (of 2) cover

Seven years in South Africa, volume 1 (of 2)

Chapter 2: PREFACE.
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About This Book

The author recounts three extended journeys across southern Africa during a seven-year period, combining travel narrative, natural history, and ethnographic observation. He describes routes between coastal ports, diamond-mining settlements, and inland rivers and highlands, noting landscapes, geology, and wildlife, and recording hunting expeditions and encounters with local communities. Chapters detail camp life, practical difficulties of travel, markets and camps, hunting scenes, and structural and social customs of multiple indigenous groups. The account intersperses scientific curiosity about flora and fauna with vivid scene-setting, practical notes for travellers, and numerous illustrations and maps to support the observations.

PREFACE.

From the days of my boyhood I had been stirred with the desire to devote myself in some way to the exploration of Africa, and whenever I came across the narratives of travellers who had contributed anything towards the opening up of the dark continent, I only read them to find that they gave a more definite shape to my longings.

It was in 1872 that an opportunity was afforded me of gratifying my wish, and I then decided that South Africa should be the field of my researches. For seven years I applied myself to my undertaking with all the energy, and with the best resources that, as a solitary individual, I could command, and was enabled to make the three journeys which are described in the following pages.

On my third return to the Diamond-fields I was urged by my South African friends immediately to publish an account of my travels; my time, however, was so engrossed by my medical practice that I had no leisure for the purpose, and contented myself with merely sending a few fragmentary articles to some of the South African newspapers.

But on arriving in London I was again so repeatedly solicited to make public what I had seen, that, on reaching home, I determined to issue these volumes containing an account of the leading incidents in my travelling experiences. To enter into the details of all the scientific observations that I made would occupy me for at least three years, and would interfere altogether with my scheme for returning to Africa as soon as possible, so that I have been satisfied to leave these results of my labours to be worked out by the co-operation of the men of science to whom they may be of interest.

I cherish the hope that these volumes may tend to increase the public interest which is now so powerfully drawn to South Africa, and I trust that the time is not far distant when I may submit to the public some further researches relating to “the continent of the future.”

EMIL HOLUB.