Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE TO THE READER
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY
- CHAPTER II SIERRA LEONE AND ITS SURROUNDINGS
- CHAPTER III AFRICAN CHARACTERISTICS
- CHAPTER IV FISHING IN WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER V FETISH
- CHAPTER VI SCHOOLS OF FETISH
- CHAPTER VII FETISH AND WITCHCRAFT
- CHAPTER VIII AFRICAN MEDICINE
- CHAPTER IX THE WITCH DOCTOR
- CHAPTER X EARLY TRADE IN WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER XI FRENCH DISCOVERY OF WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER XII COMMERCE IN WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER XIII THE CROWN COLONY SYSTEM
- CHAPTER XIV THE CROWN COLONY SYSTEM IN WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER XV MORE OF THE CROWN COLONY SYSTEM
- CHAPTER XVI THE CLASH OF CULTURES
- CHAPTER XVII AN ALTERNATIVE PLAN
- CHAPTER XVIII AFRICAN PROPERTY
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
- Plate section
CHAPTER II - SIERRA LEONE AND ITS SURROUNDINGS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE TO THE READER
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY
- CHAPTER II SIERRA LEONE AND ITS SURROUNDINGS
- CHAPTER III AFRICAN CHARACTERISTICS
- CHAPTER IV FISHING IN WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER V FETISH
- CHAPTER VI SCHOOLS OF FETISH
- CHAPTER VII FETISH AND WITCHCRAFT
- CHAPTER VIII AFRICAN MEDICINE
- CHAPTER IX THE WITCH DOCTOR
- CHAPTER X EARLY TRADE IN WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER XI FRENCH DISCOVERY OF WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER XII COMMERCE IN WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER XIII THE CROWN COLONY SYSTEM
- CHAPTER XIV THE CROWN COLONY SYSTEM IN WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER XV MORE OF THE CROWN COLONY SYSTEM
- CHAPTER XVI THE CLASH OF CULTURES
- CHAPTER XVII AN ALTERNATIVE PLAN
- CHAPTER XVIII AFRICAN PROPERTY
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
Concerning the perils that beset the navigator in the Baixos of St. Ann, with some description of the country between the Sierra Leone and Cape Palmas and the reasons wherefrom it came to be called the Pepper, Grain, or Meleguetta Coast.
It was late evening-time when the —— reached that part of the South Atlantic Ocean where previous experience and dead reckoning led our captain to believe that Sierra Leone existed. The weather was too thick to see ten yards from the ship, so he, remembering certain captains who, under similar circumstances, failing to pick up the light on Cape Sierra Leone, had picked up the Carpenter Rock with their keels instead, let go his anchor, and kept us rolling about outside until the morning came. Slipperty slop, crash! slipperty slop, crash! went all loose gear on board all the night long; and those of the passengers who went in for that sort of thing were ill from the change of motion. The mist, our world, went gently into grey, and then black, growing into a dense darkness filled with palpable, woolly, wet air, thicker far than it had been before. This, my instructors informed me, was caused by the admixture of the “solid malaria coming off the land.”
However, morning came at last, and even I was on deck as it dawned, and was rewarded for my unwonted activity by a vision of beautiful, definite earth-form dramatically unveiled. No longer was the —— our only material world.
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- West African Studies , pp. 35 - 61Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1899