
South India By Palanquin
A Missionary on Holiday in 1842
J. H. Gray(Author)
Stephen Terry(Editor)
Matador (Publisher)
Published on 28. August 2023
Book
Hardback
208 pages
978-1-80514-039-9 (ISBN)
Description
J.H. Gray, a young and idealistic Anglican missionary, has been running a Theological College in Madras for five years. In September 1842 he sets off on a three-month trip round south India by palanquin with a team of bearers.
They travel often by night to avoid the heat, stopping to rest at Travellers' Bungalows; among the hazards are scorpions, swollen rivers and tiger-infested jungle. His anti-clockwise route takes him via the temple-city of Conjeveram to Bangalore, then south to Mysore and the great fortress of Seringapatam. He suffers from fever and his bearers go on strike, but his spirits soar at the hill-station of Ooty. Further south in Malabar and Travancore he travels on the backwaters and visits fellow-missionaries working to reform the ancient Syrian Church.
His journal, written up each day, records his impressions of the people, landscape, flora and fauna, and his reflections on missionary work. He reveals himself as a man of strong moral purpose, honest, self-critical and humorous, but with many of the prejudices of his age.
Discovered by chance 180 years later, the journal has now been transcribed and annotated by his great-great-grandson and illustrated with contemporary prints and watercolours.
They travel often by night to avoid the heat, stopping to rest at Travellers' Bungalows; among the hazards are scorpions, swollen rivers and tiger-infested jungle. His anti-clockwise route takes him via the temple-city of Conjeveram to Bangalore, then south to Mysore and the great fortress of Seringapatam. He suffers from fever and his bearers go on strike, but his spirits soar at the hill-station of Ooty. Further south in Malabar and Travancore he travels on the backwaters and visits fellow-missionaries working to reform the ancient Syrian Church.
His journal, written up each day, records his impressions of the people, landscape, flora and fauna, and his reflections on missionary work. He reveals himself as a man of strong moral purpose, honest, self-critical and humorous, but with many of the prejudices of his age.
Discovered by chance 180 years later, the journal has now been transcribed and annotated by his great-great-grandson and illustrated with contemporary prints and watercolours.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Market Harborough
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Troubador Publishing
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-80514-039-9 (9781805140399)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Stephen Terry, great-great-grandson of J.H. Gray, is a classicist and retired schoolteacher who now lives on the edge of Dartmoor where he devotes his time to gardening, acting and printmaking. He has travelled extensively in Europe and made two trips to India.