Geographical

RIVER OF THE GODS

- By Candice Millard DAVID EIMER

Genius, Courage, and Betrayal in the Search for the Source of the Nile

Candice Millard has made a name for herself as the author of fast-paced, accessible and wellresear­ched histories that focus on headline-grabbing subjects, such as Winston Churchill’s adventures in the Boer War. In River of the Gods, she turns her attention to the mid-19th century quest to find the source of the White Nile, considered by both Millard and the then relatively new Royal Geographic­al Society to be the holy grail of exploratio­n.

This isn’t uncharted territory. The rivalry between Richard Burton and John Hanning Speke – the two men who led the RGS’s 1857 East Africa Expedition – is well documented. Burton was a bohemian polymath, while the vainglorio­us Speke was almost a caricature of a hearty colonial explorer. The men distrusted each other even before the expedition departed Zanzibar. Their subsequent feud over who discovered the source of the White Nile was exacerbate­d by the RGS leadership, which had a habit of playing rival explorers off against each other, and of not providing sufficient funds for the expedition­s it backed.

Millard, a former National Geographic journalist, writes well about the landscapes through which the squabbling, fever-stricken pair struggled. She notes, too, that Arab traders were criss-crossing East Africa decades before Burton and Speke and, most interestin­gly, focuses also on the servants and slaves who accompanie­d them. In particular, Millard highlights Sidi Mubarak Bombay, a Yao African who was enslaved as a child and spent 20 years in India before being freed and returning to Africa.

Bombay would later be a guide and interprete­r for Henry Morton Stanley on his expedition to find David

Livingston­e and confirm the source of the White Nile. His role as a majordomo to some of the most storied Victorian explorers isn’t unknown – he features, for example, in Mountains of the Moon, the 1990 movie about Burton and Speke. Millard’s admirable aim, however, is to tell something of Bombay’s story, while also revealing just how dependant European explorers in Africa were on locals to achieve their goals and even simply to stay alive, and what little recognitio­n those men received at the time. A redressing of that glaring discrepanc­y is long overdue.

 ?? WIKIMEDIA COMMONS ?? John Hanning Speke
WIKIMEDIA COMMONS John Hanning Speke
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