Le Saboteur
Active member
Yes, that Livingstone.
Originally penned in 1871, Dr. Livingstone had run out of paper while holed up in a Congolese village along the Lualaba River except for a copy of what is now known as The London Evening Standard. Out of it, he managed to get two 32-page journals by writing across the pages and perpendicular to the text.
After some 140-years of collecting dust at David Livingstone Center in Blantyre, Scotland, the text had become completely illegible. Working closely with the text scientists and scholars
Harry Fountain said:used light-emitting diodes and a high-resolution digital camera — with about five times the pixel capacity of a typical point-and-shoot — to take multiple images of each page under light of a range of wavelengths, from ultraviolet through the visible spectrum to infrared. The huge image files — more than a trillion bytes of data in all — were processed and analyzed by computer.
Read up on the restoration at The New York Times.
The National Library of Scotland also has an in depth article on the restoration that you can read up on here.
David Livingstone said:‘50 yards off two guns were fired and a general flight took place – shot after shot followed on the terrified fugitives – great numbers died – It is awful – terrible, a dreadful world this,’ writes Livingstone in despair as he witnesses the massacre. ‘As I write, shot after shot falls on the fugitives on the other side [of the river] who are wailing loudly over those they know are already slain – Oh let thy kingdom come.’
The above quote is from the principle entry, an account of the massacre of some 400 slaves by Arab slave traders. Livingstone retold this incident to H. M. Stanley, but left it out of the Last Journals of David Livingstone published in 1874 a year after Livingstone's death.
Thanks to funding from the US National Endowment for the Humanities and the British Academy, the full and unexpurgated text is being made available to read by the David Livingstone Spectral Imaging Project, The University of California, Los Angeles, & Livingstone Online!
From the introduction to Multispectral Critical Edition said:In 1871, David Livingstone spent five months stranded in a small village in the Congo called Nyangwe. He had run out of writing paper and had nearly run out of ink, so he improvised the materials for his diary by writing over an old copy of The Standard newspaper with ink made from the seeds of a local berry. On 15 July 1871, while still in Nyangwe, Livingstone witnessed a massacre of the local African population by Arab slave traders from Zanzibar. Some 400 or 500 Africans, the majority of them women, died in a single day – a scale of murder and death unprecedented in Livingstone’s experience.
To delve right into the diary head this way. Otherwise, check out the site's home page to check out the spectral imaging archive and the other writings on offer. Another journal is supposed to be forthcoming for those who're interested.
Do follow the Livingstone Online link if you're interested in reading Dr. Livingstone's medical writings.