Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- CHAPTER I 1829
- CHAPTER II 1830, 1831
- CHAPTER III 1832
- CHAPTER IV 1832, 1833
- CHAPTER V 1834, 1835
- CHAPTER VI 1836, 1837
- CHAPTER VII 1837, 1838
- CHAPTER VIII 1838-1840
- CHAPTER IX 1841-1844
- CHAPTER X 1841-1845
- CHAPTER XI 1845
- CHAPTER XII 1846
- CHAPTER XIII 1846
- CHAPTER XIV 1846
- CHAPTER XV 1846, 1847
- CHAPTER XVI 1847
- CHAPTER XVII 1847
- CHAPTER XVIII 1847
- CHAPTER XIX 1847, 1848
- CHAPTER XX 1848, 1849
- CHAPTER XXI 1850
- CHAPTER XXII 1850
- CHAPTER XXIII 1850
- CHAPTER XXIV 1851
- CHAPTER XXV 1851
- CHAPTER XXVI 1852
- CHAPTER XXVII 1852
- CHAPTER XXVIII 1853, 1854
- CHAPTER XXIX 1855
- CHAPTER XXX 1856
- CHAPTER XXXI 1857
- CHAPTER XXXII 1858
- CHAPTER XXXIII 1858
- APPENDIX
- Plate section
CHAPTER XXIX - 1855
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- CHAPTER I 1829
- CHAPTER II 1830, 1831
- CHAPTER III 1832
- CHAPTER IV 1832, 1833
- CHAPTER V 1834, 1835
- CHAPTER VI 1836, 1837
- CHAPTER VII 1837, 1838
- CHAPTER VIII 1838-1840
- CHAPTER IX 1841-1844
- CHAPTER X 1841-1845
- CHAPTER XI 1845
- CHAPTER XII 1846
- CHAPTER XIII 1846
- CHAPTER XIV 1846
- CHAPTER XV 1846, 1847
- CHAPTER XVI 1847
- CHAPTER XVII 1847
- CHAPTER XVIII 1847
- CHAPTER XIX 1847, 1848
- CHAPTER XX 1848, 1849
- CHAPTER XXI 1850
- CHAPTER XXII 1850
- CHAPTER XXIII 1850
- CHAPTER XXIV 1851
- CHAPTER XXV 1851
- CHAPTER XXVI 1852
- CHAPTER XXVII 1852
- CHAPTER XXVIII 1853, 1854
- CHAPTER XXIX 1855
- CHAPTER XXX 1856
- CHAPTER XXXI 1857
- CHAPTER XXXII 1858
- CHAPTER XXXIII 1858
- APPENDIX
- Plate section
Summary
The affairs of Old Town claim our first attention this year, for they reached a crisis, and ended in its destruction. Mr. and Mrs. Edgerley taught the school there, and kept meetings on the Lord's day in the town, and at other times in their own house, besides visiting several villages of the Qua people—the aborigines of that part of the country. He was also much engaged in printing, and produced some of the best specimens of typography to be seen on the coast, whereby he greatly aided the cultivation of the native tongue by his brethren, and the progress of the schools.
The chief of the town, Willy Tom Robins, was deeply sunk in the gross vices, and imbued with the superstitions of his country; and, in both respects, his people, for whose improvement he had no care, were like himself. At the foot of the hill on which stands the mission-house is the spring-head, whence flows the stream where the mission family, and some of the ships, procured their best water. In the thicket around the spring-head was the sacred place of Anansa, the god of Old Town, and there also the old chief said he kept his shadow, or soul—the word for shadow being the only one in Efik for the invisible, immortal part of man.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Twenty-Nine Years in the West Indies and Central AfricaA Review of Missionary Work and Adventure, 1829–1858, pp. 549 - 575Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1863