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THE NINETEENTH CENTURY

AND AFTER

Founded by Sir James Knowles, and now edited by George A. B. Dewar, The Nineteenth Century and After has, from its earliest issues, been universally regarded as the leading review of the world.

The scope of its contents is world-wide. The leading statesmen of England and Europe frequently contribute to its pages, and its long history is illuminated with many articles of universal fame. It is impossible to keep in touch with the great movements of the day, to acquire familiarity with the trend of the best thought of the time, to keep abreast of current affairs of real moment without constant reference to its brilliant pages.

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It was one of those glorious balmy moonlight nights that almost wholly compensate for the heat and burden of the day in Equatorial West Africa. Dinner was just finished, and we had strolled outside into the fragrant semi-tropical gardens of the Residency. Everything was calm and peaceful, save for the intermittent cry of some solitary night-bird and the restless murmur of the Niger a mile or so below us. Now and again, as we sauntered along the gravelled paths, we caught glimpses of the riverirregular brilliant patches of silver, framed by dark gaps here and there in the thick cluster of orange-trees that surrounded the garden.

The last faint notes of the "Lights Out" were floating across the peaceful cantonment from the distant constabulary barracks as we were joined by our host, and we adjourned to

VOL. CCXIX.-NO. MCCCXXVI.

the long Madeira chairs ranged upon the high picturesque terrace outside the Residency. It was delightfully cool, I remember, with just a faint breeze undulating the two coloured Chinese lanterns suspended from the guy-ropes of the tall flagstaff above us.

Three of us-officers passing through Lokoja had dined that evening as guests of the Resident. There was a senior political from one of the downriver provinces, on his way to England; there was a Government engineer, planning a bridge, I think, across troublesome local tributary of the Niger. The latter impressed himself upon my memory by reason of a row of noteworthy miniature decorations that he was wearing on the lapel of his white messjacket; and I afterwards learned that he had won them in the early 'nineties as a

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