Wanderings in Eastern Africa, 
to the government. He says : I would recommend, 
as far as possible, taking advantage of non-official, 
and especially missionary, enterprise, giving every aid 
and encouragement, in the latter case, to render the 
establishment effective for the industrial training of 
the liberated Africans. 
Alfreds and Charlemagnes are not to be got by 
official indent, but they are sure to appear when men 
trained as members of great civilized communities are 
brought in contact with masses of uncivilized men, 
tractable, teachable, and strong to labour, under any 
other conditions than those of the slave and his 
driver. 
More especially, I believe, the men required will 
be found when they are attracted, not by mere worldly 
motives, by love of gain or adventure, but by the 
religious zeal which civilized the forests of the north, 
and which now supplies more or less of motive to all 
but the outcasts of society in every community of the 
civilized world in which the constructive faculty is 
still active/' 
