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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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i MR . ¦'¦¦ tii / . ¦ -u § fc ' s * . ¦ ' : ? I H : MlPOins ; ¦•*¦ i--. ; •; ¦ REGfcOT . ' " Jffl ^ iAIT ¦ . ¦• \ ¦ EJffiJ & ' " - R . & iFIORS -it ; 11 1 ¦ - ¦ . . ^¦ ^ - > - .. ^ ^ ' ¦ ' ^ - " > - i -- ¦ > ¦ ' -j —^ ;! ; ¦* - r ¦ " " i 3 MIW ANt CHIAPiR ^ mm v Oro'wn 8 vo . cloth ., ^ With . numerous IlluBtratioiis and a large coloured Houte * ' " Ms ^ p of the Masai Oouniacy , Price 7 s « 6 cl , THWD 6 I MASAI LAND : -4 Journey of Exploration among the Snowclad Voleanic Mountains and Strange Tribes of Eastern Equatorial Africa . Being the Narrative of the Royal Geographical Society ' s Expedition to Mount Kenia and Lake Victoria Nyanza , 1883 , 1884 . By JOSEJPE : THOMSON , F . R . GkS ., Gold Medallist of the Royal Geographical Society ; Hon . Memb . Scottish and Italian Geographical Societies ; [ Leader of the Expedition ; Author of ' To the Central African Lakes and Back / . ; \ ¦ ' . * . OPINIONS OP THE-PRESS . J 'It would indeed be difficult to find another man who could hare gone through . what Mr . Thonfson has done , and have come out of it alive and with stainless , hands . The present volume is marked by all the , be 3 t qualities of its predecessors . Certainly , so far as novelty is concerned , we have had nothing from Africa to compare with the present volume since the publication . of Mr . Stanley ' s " Through -the Dark Continent . " Mr . Thomson has been able to open up and shed broad daylight on a region previously absolutely unknown ! B £ r . Th 6 ms 3 n * s hunting exploits , which he tells so well , are sure in themselves to attract readers to his book as well as mighty hunters to Masai Land Altogether he has done a solid piece of work of unusual scientific value / - —Times . ' With the narrative of Mr . Thomson ' s journey , few books of travel will bear comparison . That it is interestiftg find hig find hly them entertaining in the pages goes without of " Through saying . Ma Those ^ ai L « who nd desire in abundance amusement . There , or storied is sufficient of peril . of the and latter hairbreadth to satisfy escapes the m will ost ardent thirst for the sensational ........ There is a great deal in his book , however , besides the ordinary incidents of African travel ; and though much of the Information he has collect el may not be available for any immediate practical purpose , much of it is of solid worth . '—Scottish Review , i i * Mr . Joseph Thomson ' s " Through 'Masai Land " deserves all the praise that has been given to it , and that is much " A flue record of pluck , endurance , ingenuity and observation . ' —Tee Wojeild . * Mr . Thomson , if one of the youngest , mu $ b rank among the moat enterprising of African travellers , for though still under thirty , he has made three expeditions to " the Dark Continent . " The gr . eat merit of Mr . Thomson as an author is , that for the first time he has made us acquainted with the Masai , an African nation with whose characteristics we were hitherto so little familiar that their very name does not occur in thd most comprehensive treatises on ethnography . ' —Standard . * r : « Mr . Thomson ' s " Through Masai Land" is one of the best books of travels we have road for many a day . *—Con- ? TEMPORARY BeVIBW . ' It is quite impossible within our space to do justice to Mr . Thomson ' s " Through Masai Land . " Mr . Thomson is a young explorer , of wonderful pluck , tact , and resource . His volume is equally delightfnl to the geographer , the sportsman , and the general reader . '—Pall . Mall Gazette . i i * If , however , yon are in the mood to enjoy a book like Mr . James ' s—a modest record of a brilliant achievementorder by all means Mr . Thomson ' s " Throug-u Masai Land . " Besides its special attraction for geographers , geologists , ethnologists , anthropologists , and all tha other ' ologists , the book Is of absorbing interest as a mere narrative of sport and adventure ; of stirring incidents , hairbreadth escapes ; of endurance , pluck , and presence of mind . You will find of particular Interest the account of the Masai themselves—which reads like a leaf out of a history of Sparta—and the description of the vast and mysterious caves of Mount Elgon , of which no one knows , or can know now , the origin , purpose , date or conptruction . *—Truth . London : -SAMPSO ^ LOW , MAieSl ^ ON , SEABLB & RIVlJSTGTOl ^ Crown Buildings , i } 88 Fleet Street , E . G . > - *¦ * ' <¦ ¦ - ¦ ¦¦ ' ¦ ¦¦ **
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Citation
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Publishers’ Circular (1880-1890), April 15, 1887, page 409, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/pc/issues/tec_15041887/page/31/
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