2O4 JOURNEY WITHOUT MAPS was all the prudery and pornography one needed. These visitors from Africa, I felt, were not only innocent beside our own masters, they were innocent among the blacks they taught. There they stood, in their ruined health and their worn simplicity, beg- ging for our shillings for a new altar cloth, a silver cruet stand; I couldn't believe they had done much harm among the alligator societies, the human leopards, nor corrupted very effectively those men whose secret ritual it is to sacrifice a child once a year to the great python. In Liberia I discovered another kind of missionary, I do not imagine Dr. Harley, the Methodist medical missionary, is unique in Africa: a man with a body and nerves worn threadbare by ten years* unselfish work, cutting away the pus from the huge swollen genitals, injecting for yaws, anointing for craw-craw, injecting two hundred natives a week for venereal disease. He had made his home in this corner of Liberia with his wife and two children, curious little elderly yellow-faced boys; he had lost one child, who was buried at the mission.* All the way along the Liberian border I had heard of him; he was the man in Liberia who knew most about the bush societies; the little time that the long hopeless fight against disease allowed him was de- voted to these investigations. But he did not care to talk about them before his servants for fear of poison, We had been lent a house a hundred yards from the mission, a luxurious litde house it seemed to us by this time, for it was built of wood with a tin roof, * Dr. Harley lias now completed more than 20 years at Ganta