LIFE OF DR LIVINGSTONE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
Summary
DAVID LIVINGSTONE is a Scotchman, and one whom his nation may well delight to honour. He is one of God's true nobility, as is shewn by high resolve, energetic and successful action, Christian character, and unselfish aim.
The Scottish nation stands out boldly in the history of great achievement; especially in Travel. Here is a golden chain of names eminent in exploration: Mungo Park, Bruce, Buchanan, Moffat, Livingstone. The last the greatest of all. It appears from his own statement, that his great grandfather fought at Culloden, and that his grandfather was a small farmer at Ulva, one of the cluster of the Hebrides. Like Sir Walter Scott, Burns, and others, his mind, in childhood and youth, was much influenced by the Gaelic and Scottish legends of years bye-gone. His grandfather could recount the lives of his forefathers for six generations, who it appears were remarkable for uprightness of character.
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- Dr Livingstone's Cambridge LecturesTogether with a Prefatory Letter by the Rev. Professor Sedgwick, pp. xxiii - xlPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1858