XV111 
INTRODUCTION. 
by an Arab, whom I have told that, on delivering them safe, you will give 
him thirty dollars. I remain, &c. 
(Signed) “ Richard Lander, 
“ Servant to the late Captain Clapperton. 
“ Mr. Consul-General Warrington.” 
With regard to the Journal of Clapperton, it may be necessary to observe, 
that it is written throughout in the most loose and careless manner ; all 
orthography and grammar equally disregarded, and many of the proper names 
quite impossible to be made out ; full of tautology, so as to have the same 
thing repeated over and over again daily, and even on the same day. Much, 
therefore, has been left out, in sending it to the press, but nothing whatever 
is omitted, that could be considered of the least importance ; and the only 
change that has been made is that of breaking it into chapters, which is always 
a relief to the reader. Clapperton was evidently a man of no education ; he 
nowhere disturbs the progress of the day’s narrative by any reflections of his 
own, but contents himself with noticing objects as they appear before him, 
and conversations just as they were held; setting down both in his Journal 
without order, or any kind of arrangement. This may, perhaps, in one respect 
be considered as an advantage. The reader sees the naked facts as they 
occurred, and is left free to draw his own inference from them. There is no 
theory, no speculation, scarcely an opinion advanced throughout the whole of his 
Journal. He has not contributed much to general science, but, by his frequent 
observations for the latitude and longitude of places, he has made a most valuable 
addition to the geography of Northern Africa ; and it may now be said of him, 
what will most probably never be said of any other person, that he has traversed 
the whole of that country, from the Mediterranean to the Bight of Benin. 
The map that accompanies the Journal was constructed entirely from the 
latitudes and longitudes in a table annexed to that document. That portion 
of it which shows the route pursued by Richard Lander on his return, till 
stopped by the Fellatas at Dunrora, and from thence back again to Zegzeg, 
was laid off from the bearings and distances marked down by this intelligent 
young man ; and no better proof is wanting of its general accuracy than 
that of his return route closing in with the fixed point Zaria, or Zegzeg, 
within ten miles. 
