Fawn M. Brodie
The Devil Drives
A Life of Sir Richard Burton
"Brilliant. . . . [Brodie's] scholarship is wide and searching, and her
understanding of Burton and his wife both deep and wide. She writes with clarity
and zest. The result is a first class biography of an exceptional man."J.
H. Plumb, New York Times Book Review
Starting in a hollowed log of woodsome thousand miles up a river, with
an infinitesimal prospect of returning! I ask myself "Why?" and the only echo
is "damned fool! . . . the Devil drives!"
So Richard Francis Burton, preparing for an exploration of the lower Congo in
1863, wrote to Monckton Milnes from the African kingdom of Dahomey. His answer,
"the Devil drives," applies not only to his geographical discoveries but also
to the whole of his turbulent life.
Burton was a true man of the Renaissance. He was soldier, explorer, ethnologist,
archaeologist, poet, translator, and one of the two or three great linguists of
his time. He was also an amateur physician, a botanist, a geologist, a swordsman,
and a superb raconteur. He penetrated the sacred Muslim cities of Mecca and Medina
at great risk and explored the forbidden city of Harar in Somaliland. He searched
for the sources of the White Nile and discovered Lake Tanganyika.
Burton's passion was not only for geographical discovery but also for the hidden
in man. His enormous erudition on the sexual customs of the East and Africa,
long confined by the pruderies of his time, finally found expression in the
notes and commentary to his celebrated translation of the unexpurgated Arabian
Nights.
For this major biography of one of the most baffling heroes of any era, Fawn
M. Brodie has drawn on original sources and a newly discovered collection of
letters and papers.
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