Contents. DR LIVINGSTONE'S LABOURS, EXPLORATIONS, AND DISCOVERIES DR LIVINGSTONE'S LABOURS, EXPLORATIONS, AND DISCOVERIES DR LIVINGSTONE'S LABOURS, EXPLORATIONS, AND DISCOVERIES CONSIDERED AS TO THEIR EXTENT AND RESULTS IN THEIR The Bechuana family of Tribes The Bakalahari AFRICAN DISEASES AND MEDICAL PRACTICE NATIVE LOVE OF COMMERCE THE SICHUANA LANGUAGE Its Construction Its Importance THE AFRICAN RACES NOT INFERIOR TO OTHERS DR LIVINGSTONE'S LABOURS, EXPLORATIONS, AND DISCOVERIES MISSIONARY RETROSPECT WITH REGARD TO SOUTH AFRICA THE QUALIFICATIONS AND ATTAINMENTS NECESSARY FOR THE SUCCESSFUL MISSIONARY IN SOUTH AFRICA DR LIVINGSTONE'S LETTER WITH RESPECT TO MISSIONARIES The Natural Qualifications of the Christian Missionary. The Moral and Spiritual Qualifications needed by the Chris- The Attainments best suited for the Christian Missionary MISSIONARY PROSPECTS IN SOUTH AFRICA THE MISSION FIELD IN SOUTH AFRICA SECTION VI. EXTRACTS FROM DR LIVINGSTONE'S LETTERS. PAGE 269 270 ibid. Miss Burdett Coutts "" 17 addressed jointly by Drs Livingstone and Kirk to Sir James Clark .? The Master of Trinity College, Cambridge PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. AT T the recommendation of some kind friends I have, with great satisfaction, undertaken to meet a public want by preparing a Second Edition of this book, knowing that the former volume has not only been useful and appreciated as such, but that it has undeniably done much towards the establishment of the great University Mission to Central Africa, now being advocated before the country at large. Many expressions to be found in the introduction to the first Edition were intended to be and are, as it were, prophetic. Witness the following passage written two years ago; 'In this place of learning he (Dr Livingstone) has left a track behind him; and has sown seed which will, in the end, produce good fruits in Africa. He came here with the avowed purpose of striving to awaken a deeper interest in Christian Missions to the heathen; and spoke with the authority of the greatest of modern travellers, among the men and in the place where a Missionary spirit ought pre-eminently to prevail1.' Dr Livingstone's visit to Cambridge, together with the impression produced among us thereby, as well as by his lectures, have been herein stereotyped so as not 1 Introduction to the First Edition. |