THE HOME FROM HOME 45 Bolahun; it would be as well to stay there a few days and try to get carriers to go through with me to Monrovia. He examined the route suggested by the Secretary of the Interior; that had got to be avoided as far as possible; though I should have to follow it to Zigita. On the blank spaces of the English map, Mr. D. made his pencilled suggestions; he couldn't be really sure to a matter of ten miles where to put the places he mentioned; the English map confused him with its inaccuracies. At last he gave it up altogether, and I simply wrote the names down in my notebook, spelling them as best I might: Mosambolahun, Gondolahun, Jenne, Lombola, Gbey- anlahun, Goryendi, Bellivela, Banya. But it is un- necessary to give them all here, for as it turned out I did not follow this route at all, didn't even aim at Monrovia, which had been my object when I sailed. Circumstances in a country where the only way to travel is to know the next town or village ahead and repeat it as you go, like the Syrian woman in Little Arthur's History who said "Gilbert, London" across England, were to alter my plans again and again until my small book was filled with lists of probably mis- spelt names in smudged pencil of places I never suc- ceeded in finding. Examining it now I discover this cryptic entry: "Steamer calling C. Palmas and Since. Keep S. dark. Get off at S. Take the beach to Setta Kru, Nana Kru. At N.K., Dr. V., Am. missionary. To Wesserpor or Dio. Tell people to take me to Nimley. On to New Sasstown and C.P." This is the record of another plan which came to nothing through lack of money and exhaustion. I had brought with me from England a letter of intro-