Chapter 1
THE MILL
From the old photograph, the mill in the industrial village of Blantyre, on the Clyde, eight miles south-east of Glasgow, looks like a prison. Five storeys of pale blank wall, with square towers, it dominates the village as it dominated the lives of the villagers. Before Shaftesburyâs Factory Act, villagers were working fourteen-hour days and six-day weeks by the age of eight, and could expect that to be the pattern of their whole lives. It took an unusual mind to see this building as the gateway to a world waiting to be explored. But the boy going about his work with Ruddimanâs Rudiments of the Latin Tongue balanced on the spinning jenny, ignoring both the thunderous racket of the machines and the girls throwing bobbins to try to knock his book off, must have seemed something more than the usual. If one characteristic governed David Livingstoneâs life, it was independence, and it did so from the start.
David started work in Blantyre mill at the relatively advanced age of ten. Before then, as well as attending the village school, he had worked occasionally herding cows for a local farmer, and clearly had the same attitude to that job: the farmer later recalled, âI didnaâ think muckle oâ that David Livingston when he worked wiâ me. He was aye lyinâ on his belly readinâ a book.â
In the mill, David was a piecer, which meant his job was to watch for broken threads and tie them. It required constant attention, making it remarkably indulgent if the management regularly allowed him to read at the loom. (He recalled doing so a good deal later in life.) Monteith & Co. were proud of their health and safety record: only two out of 520 workers died in the first four years the mill was open. The mill was hot, crowded and noisy, the air full of cotton dust and the stink of the toilets, which were tubs emptied once a day, but the workforce was largely free from industrial injuries and disorders.
âLiving in one of the âfairy neuks [nooks]â of creation,â says an 1835 national report about the Blantyre villagers, âreligious and moral, well fed and clothed, and not overwrought, they seem peculiarly happy, as they ought to be.â Co-authored by the manager of the mill, the assessment risks a certain degree of overstatement, but life was far better for the Livingstones than it was in most British mill towns. Far from being allowed to study Latin, it was not unusual for young children to be punched, lashed, tied up and flogged, even dropped head-first into water, for getting drowsy in a fourteen-hour night shift. Monteith & Co. were also uncommonly generous in letting the Livingstone family live in company accommodation, despite the fact that Davidâs father Neil did not work for them. They had a one-room apartment in the block called Shuttle Row, which still stands today, outliving the mill itself thanks to its most famous resident. The family of seven, three boys and two girls, slept, cooked and ate all meals in this room, sharing one washroom with the other twenty-three households of Shuttle Row.
The mill also offered a better life than rural Scotland, where the family had come from. Davidâs grandfather, also Neil Livingstone, had left the small rocky island of Ulva off the coast of Mull, where generations had eked out a living as subsistence farmers, to work in the new mill. He and thousands like him, like those in developing countries today moving from villages to sweatshops, chose the gruelling and exploitative life of waged labour over the even more gruelling existence of subsistence farming.
Davidâs father Neil had started out working in the mill, first as a clerk, then apprenticed to the firmâs tailor, David Hunter, a post that came with an education subsidised by the company. Neil married Agnes Hunter, Davidâs daughter, in 1810. The Hunters were from a similar background to the Livingstones, but they were Lowlanders. Keenly evangelical, Neil quit tailoring to become a travelling tea salesman, which allowed him to distribute evangelistic tracts around the region.
David Livingstone had little interest in recording his personal history for posterity, less still his inner life. Much of the information we have about his first twenty-five years is anecdotal and probably influenced by his later career, and it could easily be assembled in a different order with a different interpretation. But he did write very briefly about his childhood impressions of his family, and, whether or not they give us reliable information about the people themselves, they tell us something about how he saw his background. His greatest pride was in the familyâs honesty. He praised his fatherâs âunflinching honestyâ, and said that Grandfather Livingstone knew the lives of his own ancestors going back six generations, could find no hint of deceit among any of them, and urged his children to maintain the standard. There are different kinds of honesty, and the kind that makes people admit their failings, concede when they are in the wrong, and tell a story straight however badly it may suit their ends, was presumably not what Livingstone had in mind, as he had very little of it.
He was also proud of his parentsâ piety, hard work and poverty. Livingstone talked at the height of his career of âmy own order, the honest poorâ, and wrote an epitaph for his mother and father expressing âthe thankfulness to God of their children ⌠for poor and pious parentsâ.
When David was thirteen, evening classes in Latin were started by the local teacher, the inauspiciously named Mr McSkimming, subsidised by Monteith & Co. So David worked at the mill from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m., he says, had lessons from 8 p.m. till 10 p.m., and then in his own time studied until midnight â âif my mother did not interfere by jumping up and snatching the books out of my handsâ. Gradually all the other boys dropped out of the Latin class, and McSkimming was reluctant to spend his time on a single pupil who had no likely use for the language, so he stopped the lessons and David continued to teach himself. He read science and travel books as well as Virgil and Horace, everything he could lay his hands on except novels, of which evangelicals such as his parents generally disapproved, and theology, which David found boring. Other boys at the mill, he recalled in later life, often told him they thought he should go easy on the books, to which he replied, âYou think! I can think and act for myself; I donât need anybody to think for me.â
It comes as something of a relief to hear of David behaving more like a normal boy. He poached salmon with his elder brother John and younger brother Charles, and it was said that they once smuggled one home in Charlesâs trousers, Charles receiving sympathy from the villagers for his swollen leg. The three boys took long walks through the surrounding countryside, though for David at least this was, more than anything, another opportunity for learning, as he collected plants and shells to identify and classify. Charles often came back crying from hunger and tiredness, we are told, but always insisted on joining the next expedition. Biographers have been puzzled as to how David, working a fourteen-hour day in the mill, then studying till midnight, every day except the Sabbath, found time for anything else at all, let alone long walks. One answer is that what David in later life called fourteen hoursâ work, his father, much nearer the time, called twelve hours. Another is that, either way, his story is extraordinary enough if that self-imposed timetable was one he frequently kept to, without assuming that he followed it perpetually or without exception.
Davidâs independence was nowhere more evident than in his spiritual life. At the age of twelve, he had a spiritual crisis, being struck with a sense of how seriously God takes sin, and how appallingly wicked he was in Godâs sight. The only escape he could see from this predicament was for the Holy Spirit to put him right, and all he could do was wait for that to happen. He waited and waited in terrible anxiety, often in tears, but never talked to anyone about it. The anxiety subsided, but he spent all his teenage years in âa perpetual uneasiness, a soreness of heart ⌠which no amusement or pursuit could assuageâ. Similarly, when Neil decided to leave the parish church and take the family to Hamilton Congregational Church, David alone refused to come. Even when he did leave the âAuld Kirkâ, it was not to follow his family, but to join the Relief Church because of its excellent library.
David also rebelled against his father in his reading. Neil was one of those Christians who feared that science was incompatible with religion, especially because of what geologists were discovering about the age of the earth. Neil tried to dissuade David from reading science, or in fact anything other than religious books, and David refused to obey. He did not deny that science and religion were in conflict, but he could not give up his science and so held the two in uncomfortable tension. He refused Neilâs instruction to read William Wilberforceâs celebrated introduction to evangelical faith, Practical Christianity, and was caned for it.
Eventually, however, Davidâs independent path brought him back round to the fold. In the library of the Relief Church, he came at the age of eighteen across a couple of books by Thomas Dick, a defrocked clergyman, theologian and astronomer. Dick argued that not only was studying Godâs creation scientifically compatible with believing in God, but science was a branch of theology and a form of worship, which made scientists better able to appreciate and understand the ways of God. David was reassured that science and faith did not have to be enemies, and also found the answer to his lonely anxiety about sinfulness. Dickâs thoughts on what science reveals about the afterlife made the prospects of heaven and hell more intensely real for David, but at the same time he grasped for the first time the evangelical idea that all a Christian can or need do is to accept Christâs death as a sacrifice for his or her own sin. â[I] cast myself on the mercy of God through Christ,â said Livingstone. âA peace and joy entered my heart, to which till then I had been an entire stranger.â Elsewhere he likened the change to being cured of colour blindness â what he had learned was not just a revelation in itself but changed the way he saw everything.
David finally joined the rest of his family at Hamilton Congregational Church and applied for membership. It took five months of weeknight classes in Hamilton before the elders agreed he was doctrinally sound enough for the church. The irony is that though he was too independent to follow his family there until then, he found Congregationalism the perfect fit for his personality because of the complete independence of every congregation.
Chapter 2
MISSION
Evangelical conversion was not about the fate of his soul for David Livingstone, but about the purpose of his life. As he put it, âIn the glow of love which Christianity inspires, I soon resolved to devote my life to the alleviation of human misery.â
The way he wanted to do that, from the start, was overseas mission. This was an endeavour in its early days for the British churches, but it had become a vigorous movement, and both Neil and David, like many Christians, avidly read of the evangelistsâ exploits. The new wave of mission was led by William Carey, the Northamptonshire shoemaker who took his family to British India in 1793, supported by his Baptist Missionary Society, and opposed by the East India Company. Carey and the Anglican chaplain Henry Martyn translated the Bible into numerous languages and founded a university in Serampore, as well as preaching.
Careyâs expedition was the trigger for an extraordinary explosion of foreign mission, and most of the British missionary organizations that reached across the Victorian empire began in the same decade: Careyâs Baptist Missionary Society, the interdenominational London Missionary Society (LMS), the Anglican evangelical Church Missionary Society, and on a smaller scale, the Edinburgh Missionary Society and the Glasgow Society for Foreign Missions were all founded between 1792 and 1799.
The LMS had had great success in the south Pacific after sending seventeen agents to Tahiti in 1796. It achieved the remarkable feat of getting a missionary into China, which was strictly closed to the West: Robert Morrison was employed in Canton as a translator for the East India Company from 1809, translated the Bible, and converted eleven people. Non-conformist missionaries in general got good responses preaching to slaves in the British Caribbean, despite violent opposition from their owners. The CMS found it harder to recruit missionaries, and concentrated on sending German Lutherans to former slaves in British Sierra Leone. The Lutherans turned their townships into Christian communities, and founded a thriving college, but suffered a very high death rate from tropical disease. Various unsuccessful expeditions went to Siberia, Ceylon and Egypt.
The most significant for our story was the LMS work in South Africa, which the British had taken from the Dutch (twice) in the French Revolutionary War. Three LMS men arrived there in 1799, including the 51-year-old Dutch doctor Johannes van der Kemp. He defended the Xhosa and Khoikhoi from the Dutch colonists, whom he further annoyed by marrying a former slave. His political stance was maintained by John Philip, who came in 1820, and whose success in promoting black rights with the British governor helped to inspire the Dutch Great Trek out of British territory. The third influential missionary in South Africa was Robert Moffat, who with his wife founded the town of Kuruman beyond the colonial border and translated Christian scriptures into Tswana.
The emergence of the British missionary movement in the 1790s, transforming the work of a few individuals into a national endeavour, is so sudden as to demand explanation. One reason is the progress of the evangelical movement. Carey went to India in the year that John Wesley died, in whose lifetime evangelicalism had moved from the terrifyingly radical fringe into national life so successfully that believers now had the resources, influence and self-confidence to start worrying about the souls of heathens overseas as well as those in Britain.
At the same time, this was a significant period in the self-confidence of the British people. The navy gave Britain an unrivalled global reach commercially and militarily. Though losing America had been traumatic, the growth of British India was already making up for it, with the help of the Caribbean plantations. While the new penal colony of Botany Bay was not commercially or strategically important, it was a bold demonstration of the ease and confidence with which the British made themselves at home on the opposite side of the world. And once they were sending their soldiers, traders, farmers and convicts all over the earth, it was, for those who took their faith seriously, about time they sent their gospel too.
Livingstone had no thoughts of going abroad himself as yet, but resolved âthat he would give to the cause of missions all that he might earn beyond what was required for his subsistence.â He was helped in this plan when, at eighteen, he was promoted at the mill from piecer to spinner, working the spinning jenny. It was tough work, especially for a âslim, loose-jointed ladâ, but it allowed him to save money for further study as well as for giving.
Three years later, in 1834, Neil brought home from church a new book which seized Davidâs imagination. Journal of Three Voyages Along the Coast of China was by Karl GĂźtzlaff, a Prussian missionary to the Chinese, described by a modern scholar, Arthur Waley, as âa cross between parson and pirateâ. Unable to settle in China itself, GĂźtzlaff had preached to Chinese expatriates in the Riau Archipelago and Bangkok, before sailing the Chinese coast with opium smugglers. (Not surprisingly, despite its repeated denunciations of Chinese opium addicts, the Journal did not mention this travel arrangement.) Wherever he went, GĂźtzlaff distributed Christian literature and medicines. The book was introduced with a rousing essay by William Ellis, an LMS missionary to Polynesia. Altogether, the volume presented China as a vast country of enormous potential, but tyrannical and barbaric, debilitated by superstition, idolatry, poverty and drugs, and where, despite official obstruction, the people eagerly seized Christian writings in their own language, especially when accompanied by medical aid. âA mighty deliverance yet awaits these victims of delusion,â declared Ellis, while GĂźtzlaff argued: âThere is something irresistible in that holy ardour which counts all things nothing for Christ ⌠I am convinced that individual Christians, thoroughly penetrated with such sentiments, could accomplish more for the benefit of China, than the greatest statesmen.â
Reading this, Livingstone heard the call of the Lord. He would not merely support the cause from his little income, he would train in medicine and then go to China as a missionary doctor. He would not join any of the missionary societies, he decided, but would follow his own path, completing his education and medical training before he consulted anyone.
When David first told Neil he planned to go to medical school, they once again found themselves in vehement opposition, Neil apparently feeling that it smacked of worldly ambition. Only later did David explain that it would be for the purposes of evangelism, and then Neil heartily supported his son. The lack of communication here is startling, but again this introduces one of the recurrent themes of Livingstoneâs life.
Davidâs sights were set on Andersonâs University in Glasgow, but with college fees of ÂŁ12 a year he had to work for another two years to save sufficient funds to start, and then he had to work throughout the six-month vacation. He enrolled at Andersonâs in October 1836, he and his father walking the eight miles together through snow. They had a list of recommended lodgings, but they were all too expensive. They eventually found a cheap place in Rottenrow, but David had to move when he found that the landlady stole his tea and sugar.
As well as the requisite anatomy, surgery, physiology, pharmacology and chemistry, David took extra classes in maths, Greek and theology. He impressed his teachers and in several cases made lifelong friends of them. James Young, the lab technician for the Professor of Chemistry, called Livingstone âthe best man I ever knewâ, and Livingstone returned the compliment by naming a river in Africa after him. Under Youngâs supervision, Livingstone and a fellow pupil, Lyon Playfair, made a new galvanic battery, which the college put on display. Both Playfair and Young went on to lucrative careers in chemistry, the former gaining a seat in the House of Lords and the latter becoming a millionaire through paraffin. Such were the possible futures that beckoned a young man of such application as David Livingstone. More modestly, his landlord, Mr Dove, offered him a teaching post worth ÂŁ150 ...