Kerr (Walter Montagu)

THE FAR INTERIOR.

A Narrative of Travel and Adventure from the Cape of Good Hope across the Zambesi to the Lake Regions of Central Africa.

Published: Sampson, Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington, London, 1886

Edition: First edition

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By Walter Montagu Kerr, C.E., F.R.G.S.  

With numerous illustrations engraved by Mr. J. D. Cooper, and others.  

Two Volumes: I. xvi+316; II. viii + 318 pages, frontispiece portrait of the author in volume I (a laid down photograph), engraved frontispiece in volume II, 30 plates and text illustration, folding map at the end of volume II with the author's route indicated in red, contemporary half calf the straight-grained cloth sides – the leather is lightly rubbed on the spine and along the edges and at the corners, contents bright, a very good copy. 

Mendelssohn (Sydney) South African Bibliography, volume 1, pages 812/3, ‘Mr. Kerr remarks that he did not carry out “an expedition in the accepted meaning of that term,” observing, “My journey was under- taken alone ; I was unaided, and had no companionship of white men, neither had I a corps of regularly enlisted carriers.” He claims that, under these circumstances, the recital of his experiences “should present a very clear reflection of the natural life of some of the races in South- East Equatorial Africa,” as he travelled free from the “natural suspicion or prejudice” which generally prevails among the natives when “regularly organised bodies of men, total strangers to the communities they meet with,” pass through their country. He says, “I lived during a large stretch of my travels as the Kaffirs lived, mingling freely with them, and my opportunities ... for observing closely the modes and conditions of native life were unusually good.” Mr. Kerr was “the first white to traverse the great extent of territory stretching between Cape Colony and the Lake Regions of Central Africa,” and his account of Lobengula, his capital, harem, and the inhabitants of his country is vivid and picturesque, affording a capital description of the state of the country at this period, with interesting notes regarding the few white inhabitants then residing there. In discussing the gold regions between Matabeleland and Tete, the author maintains that he has “been careful to speak of things just as he found them without colour and without gloom,” but he had not discovered anything of so certain a nature that he could “speak with hope and confidence of success in that direction.” The work is an important contribution to the history of exploration in South-East Equatorial Africa, and contains an excellent account of the physical features of these regions, and of their fauna, inhabitants, &c, and the volume contains a portrait of the author, a number of illustrations, and a route map.’  

  • Binding Condition: Very good
  • Overall Condition: Very good
  • Size: 8vo (220 x 145 mm)
  • Sold By: Clarke's Africana & Rare Books
  • Contact Person: Paul Mills
  • Country: South Africa
  • Email: [email protected]
  • Telephone: 021 794 0600
  • Preferred Payment Methods: Visa & Mastercard via PayGate secure links and Bank transfers.
  • Trade Associations: ABA - ILAB, SABDA


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