TRAVEL.
Nothing favors breadth more than travel and contact with those of differing modes of life and variant belief. The tolerance and sympathy that are folding in the world in these modern days owe much to the vast increase of travel that has resulted from growth of commerce, the development of wealth, and the cheapness and rapidity of steam transportation. Even a wider view of the world comes to us through the literature of travel than we could ever gain by personal experience, however much of wealth and time we had at our disposal; and though the vividness is less in each particular picture of the written page than if we saw the full original reality that is painted for us, yet this is more than compensated by the breadth and insight and perception of the meaning of the scenes portrayed, which we can take at once from the writer, to whom perhaps the gaining of what he gives so easily has been a very costly, tedious process, and would be so to us if we had to rely on personal observation. Voyages and travels therefore are of much importance in our studies, and delightful reading too. Stanley's opinions have been much relied on in selecting the following books:—
[274] Voyages. (Eng., 18th cent.)
[275] Cosmos; Travels. (Ger., 1762-1832.)
[276] Naturalist on the Beagle. (Eng., 19th cent.)
[277] Travels. (Venice, 14th cent.)
[278] Arctic Explorations. (U. S., 19th cent.)
[279] South Africa. (Eng., 19th cent.)
[280] Through the Dark Continent; In Darkest Africa. (U. S., 19th cent.)
[281] Travels in Africa. (France, 19th cent.)
[282] On Egypt. (Germany, 19th cent.)
[283] Abyssinia. (Eng., 19th cent.)
[284] India.
[285] Niger.
[286] South America.
[287] Upper Niger.
[288] Persia.
[289] Central Africa.
[290] West Coast of Africa.
[291] Travelled for thirty years, then wrote the marvels he had seen and heard; and his book became very popular in the 14th and 15th centuries. (Eng., 14th cent.)
[292] The Nile.