![]() ![]() Yet continued bleeding leaves him extremely weak, first able to walk for only an hour or two and finally unable to move at all, even when carried. Illustration from the Last Journals (Livingstone 1874,2:opposite 295). He continues to hope for a recovery, believing that his illness may be fever and dosing himself with quinine. In the opening pages he writes that he is “pale bloodless and weak from bleeding profusely ever since the 31st March,” but notes that he still wishes to continue: “Oh how I long to be permitted by the Overpower to finish my work” (Livingstone 1873b:). The Final Manuscripts: Three Bonus Textsįield Diary XVII – just 32 pages long – chronicles the eighteen days leading up to Livingstone’s death.The Final Field Diaries: General Overview.Supplemental Manuscripts with Images & Transcriptions.Edition Manuscripts: A Comparative View.Edition Manuscripts with Images & Transcriptions.Livingstone Online TEI P5 Encoding Guidelines.18th- and 19th-Century European Expeditions.Southern Africans and the Advent of Colonialism.Publishing Livingstone's Missionary Travels.Manuscript Citation and File Naming Practices.Livingstone Spectral Imaging Project: An Integrated Bibliography.Glossary of Key Terms in Livingstone's Manuscripts, 1870-71.The Livingstone Spectral Imaging Project: An Introduction.The Livingstone Online Digital Collection.Livingstone's Manuscripts in South Africa (1843-1872).Livingstone's Final Manuscripts (1865-1873).Livingstone's Missionary Travels Manuscript (1857).LEAP (2013-2017): A Project History, Part II.LEAP (2013-2017): A Project History, Part I.A Brief History of Livingstone Online (2004-2013).Reading Exploration Through the Digital Library.Why Should We Read Livingstone’s Manuscripts?.Livingstone's Manuscripts in the Digital Age.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |