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DR. LIVINGSTON'S SAFETY.

(From the Cape Mail, Dec. 20.)

Mr Young and his volunteer comtanion, Mr Faulkener, have accomplished

the task entrusted to them by Sir Roderick Murchison, the Geographical Society, and the British Goverement, with admirable success. In July last they arrived here by the mail steamer Celt. Within a week they proceeded to the cast coast in H.M.S. Petrel ; they were landed at one of the mouths of tho Zambezi about the beginning of August; and yesterday again they loft in the Celt for England— their mission satisfactorily accomplished, and the safety of Dr Livingstone clearly established. Mr Young, the leader of the expedition, has kindly shown us the chart of his travels, and indicated exactly what it was ho did, and what conclusions he established. This we shall now briefly recapitulate. In August he and his party were landed at the Zambesi, an understanding being come to that they would be back there again on or about the Ist of December, by which time a Queen's ship would be in readiness to convey them to the Cap«. They ascended a iicw outlet of the Zambesi for some distance, and thence crossed by a canal to the Luabo, by which they got into the main channel of the river, and first to Shupango, where they engaged an additional native crew, and thence past the confluence of the Shiro to Senna; there they discovered a new river, by which with greater facility they crossed into tho Shire at a point considerably higher up. From there they proceeded in their steel boat upwards to the Murchison Cataracts, where their craft, according to previous arrangement, had to to ts>ken to pieces and carried across the country, a distance of 90 miles, to the Upper Shire, opposite to Pamofunda, by which, leaving Lako Shinva on the right, they sailed right on to Lake Nyassa. There they embarked a fresh crow and proceeded northwards, calling at intervals along the coast until, in the latitude of 13deg 25min, on the east side of the lake, they found the spot where Dr. Livingstone had in vain attempted to cross this inland sea. From point to point they traced tho various localities described by the Johanna men, and ascertain ed beyond a doubt that these fellows had from fear deserted their leader,

and concocted by ingenious fiction the tale of his alleged assassination. From the accounts given by the natives, confirmed by the exhibition of various articles given by tho doctor in barter, Mr Young was abundantly satisfied that ths distinguished explorer, failing to cross the lake for inland sea) travelled southward, made the detour of its southern extremity, and thence had proceeded along its west side, and thence northwestward in the direction of Lake Tanganyika, as he had originally intended. The object of the expedition was thus accomplished. It was established beyond doubt that Dr Livingntone was not murdered when and where the Johanna men described. His course was traced for many months, and some hundred mibs beyond the spot nnd time so indicated. Ho was proved to have gone in precisely the direction which he had originally intended

and announced ; and under those circumstances it would have been mere folly for Mr Young to have prosocuted his inquiries or search any further. His work was done, and he returned forthwith ; and the highest compliment that can be paid to him is to say that he was back again at the Zambezi mouth precisely at the time appointed, where the Itacoon was in readiness to receive him and his companions. He and his associate, and all his impedimenta, arrived at the Cape just in the nick of time to catch the very same mail steamer bound for England which brought them out only five months ago. Aa to Dr Livingstone himself, we have no doubt that he is pursuing his exploring course north- j ward with the same success which dis-1 tiuguished his marvellous journey across , thoxontinent a fewyears ago. Theintelh"ence which has reached us from Zanzibar via Bombay, is quite confirmatory of this. His object was to explore the lofty highlands, on the western shores of Lake Tanganyika, the eastern coast of which had already been visited by Speke, when in company with Burton. Thence he would explore its northern routines, and ascertain whether there may not be an outlet from it there, as Speke and Grant had discovered was the case with Victoria Nyanza. And still further it was the object of his high ambition to i explore the region thence to the two Nyanzas—Victoria and Albert--and thus determine and solve for ever the still mysterious problem of the reatsouroea Qt the Nile,

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT18680324.2.20

Bibliographic details

Otago Daily Times, Issue 1944, 24 March 1868, Page 5

Word Count
780

DR. LIVINGSTON'S SAFETY. Otago Daily Times, Issue 1944, 24 March 1868, Page 5

DR. LIVINGSTON'S SAFETY. Otago Daily Times, Issue 1944, 24 March 1868, Page 5