Front matter

Editor's Preface

Oval studio portrait of Dr. Obadiah Johnson, the book's editor, in a suit and tie.
Dr. O. Johnson — the author's brother and editor of the work. Frontispiece of the 1921 edition.

¶1 A SINGULAR. misfortune, which happily is not of everyday occurrence, befel the original manuscripts of this history, in consequence of which the author never lived to see in print his more than 20 years of labour.

¶2 The manuscripts were forwarded to a well-known English publisher through one of the great Missionary Societies in 1899 and —mirabile dictu—nothing more was heard of them !

¶3 The editor who was all along in collaboration with the author had occasion to visit England in 1g00, and called on the publisher, but could get nothing more from him than that the manuscripts had been misplaced, that they could not be found, and that he was prepared to pay for them ! This seemed to the editor and all his friends who heard of it so strange that one could not help thinking that there was more in it than appeared on the surface, especially because of other circumstances connected with the so-called loss of the manuscripts. However, we let the subject rest there. The author himself died in the following year (1901), and it has now fallen to the lot of the editor to rewrite the whole history. anew, from the copious notes and rough copies left behind by the author.

¶4 But for many years after his death, partly from discouragements by the events, and partly from being appalled by the magnitude of the task, the editor shrank from the undertaking, but circumstances now and again cropped up showing the need of the work, and the necessity for undertaking it ; besides the almost criminal disgrace of allowing the outcome of his brother’s many years of labour to be altogether lost. No one, who has never made the attempt, can have the faintest idea of the great difficulties that attend the efforts to elicit facts and accuracy of statements from an illiterate people: they are bewildering with repetitions, prolix in matters irrelevant, while facts germane to the subject in hand are more often than not passed over: they have to be drawn out by degrees patiently, and the chaff has to be constantly sifted from the wheat. In no sphere of labour is patience and perseverance more required than in this. It shows strongly the magnitude of the labours of the original author, labours undertaken along with the unremitting performance of his substantive duties.

¶5 When all this had to be done with the daily exactions of a busy profession, and other demands on his time, friends will judge the editor leniently for having taken such a long time to repair the loss sustained many years ago. Some chapters had to be rewritten,

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