"...no sooner did I see him than I ducked under the rocks, and remembered thankfully that leopards are said to have no power of smell. But I heard his observation on the weather, and the flip-flap of his tail on the ground. Every now and then I cautiously took a look at him with one eye round a rock-edge, and he remained in the same position. My feelings tell me he remained there twelve months*, but my calmer judgment puts the time down at twenty minutes; and at last, on taking another cautious peep, I saw he was gone…. It was an immense pleasure to have seen the great creature like that. He was so evidently enraged and baffled by the uproar and dazzled by the floods of lightning that swept down into the deepest recesses of the forest,"
This was Mary Kingsley's account in meeting a leopard in the forest during a typhoon. Extraordinary!
My adventures with bugs in the garden pales in comparison.
Who knew this prim Victorian lady was, of her own making, destined to be one of the greatest explorer of her time. Looking after her sickly mother and helping her traveling father, Dr. Kinsley, translate scientific texts. She occupied her time reading books in her fathers library, given the choice in reads, it is
no wonder that her interest in far and exotic places grew, as did her dream of travel. In 1892, her time as a nurse and dutiful daughter came to an end with the death of her mother, three months later followed by her father, from rheumatic fever during his travels.
Mary Kinsley did seek the counsel of friends, who advised her against it and experts, requesting that she collect specimens on during travels; dressed in deep mourning silk she forged ahead with her plans.
I admired the fact that she did not allow being lady and traveling alone deter her, despite the male protestations.
Mary Kingsley was not only taught by Africans how to survive the jungles, she
learned customs and the language
during the two years she lived with them.
I did state adventures: stalked by a cannibal, whacks a crocodile snout trying to climb into her canoe, tickles a hippo behind the ear to send it away, the first woman to climb Mount Cameroon, trekked on a broken ankle,
escape a hippo trap. “Save for a good many bruises, here I was with the fullness of my skirt tucked under me, sitting on nine ebony spikes some twelve inches long, in comparative comfort.” (a new found respect for the corset).
Travels to West Africa is a book made of two travels: Travels to West Africa is of her expeditions; West African Studies- Miss Kingsley's travel to finish her father's work on Fetish, African
religious rites, rituals and ceremonies.
There are so many aspects to this book
to go into, but, frankly, I don't want to.
She is a good writer, painstakingly so-I did doze off a few time, my apologies Miss Kingsley. Her humor* and personality in various situations were enjoyable. This book is ideally suited for those with interests in anthropological exploration, biography and travel diaries; perhaps not the novel reader.