The Darkest Continent (April 1991 | Volume: 42, Issue: 2)

The Darkest Continent

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Authors: Geoffrey C. Ward

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April 1991 | Volume 42, Issue 2

In the spring of 1891, nearly twenty years after Henry Morton Stanley introduced himself to Dr. David Livingstone on the shore of Lake Tanganyika, Oxford University awarded the grizzled, stumpy explorer an honorary degree. As he made his way forward to receive it, an undergraduate shouted out, “Dr. Stanley, I presume.”

The subsequent laughter greatly embarrassed Stanley. His sense of humor was meager at best, and about himself, nonexistent; but there may have been more to his discomfiture than that, for no one, least of all Stanley himself, seems ever to have been entirely sure just who he really was. His achievements as an explorer of what he was the first to call the Dark Continent should have been enough to satisfy anyone’s ambition: in four expeditions between 1871 and 1889—and in the face of illness, intermittent warfare, the deaths of his companions, and a hundred other obstacles—he explored Lake Tanganyika, circumnavigated Lake Victoria, paved the way for a British protectorate at Buganda, identified the Ruwenzori range as the legendary Mountains of the Moon, traced the twisting course of the Congo, established outposts, built roads, and—when Britain proved insufficiently enthusiastic about colonizing the lands watered by the great river—helped establish the Congo Free State under Leopold II of Belgium.

Yet, as John Bierman’s recent biography Dark Safari: The Life Behind the Legend of Henry Morton Stanley (Knopf, $24.95) ably demonstrates, none of his accomplishments were ever great enough to overcome his own self-loathing, soften his distrust of others, or slake his thirst for the warm approval that had been conspicuously denied him as a boy. The authentic adventures that crowded his life are all vividly chronicled here, but it is his other life, the one he fabricated for himself to conceal the drab, dispiriting truth about his origins, that held my attention.

 

Stanley’s illegitimacy seems to have been the central fact of his existence. At his birth at Denbigh, Wales, in 1841, the pastor of his parish church recorded him as “John Rowlands, Bastard.” His father may have been the town drunk, whose name the boy would jettison as soon as he could, or a local landowner who had paid the drunk to admit paternity, or yet another, still more transient lover—Stanley was never sure—but his slatternly mother never showed the slightest interest in him. Her early rejection, he remembered, was “so chilling that the valves of my heart closed, as with a snap.”

They would rarely open.

He was farmed out, first to indifferent relatives, next to utter strangers, and then was locked away inside an authentically Dickensian workhouse.

Abandoned children often reinvent their childhoods, idealizing absent parents or fantasizing for themselves wholly new ones. But few have ever done so for so long or with such dogged consistency as did the man who named himself Henry M. Stanley. When fame first came to him, he stubbornly insisted he had been born in America; later, as an old man,