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Ean your in the love of the Triune God, and of His truth Hichard Cope Morgan,

1898.

FOUR CONTINENTS

BEING

AN ACCOUNT OF THE TRAVELS

OF

RICHARD COPE MORGAN

BY

MRS. R. C. MORGAN

MORGAN & SCOTT LTD.

OFFICE OF "The Christian"

12, PATERNOSTER BUILDINGS

[blocks in formation]

G

463

.M85

1911

WORKS BY RICHARD COPE MORGAN

(Founder of The Christian)

"OD'S SELF-EMPTIED SERVANT: Also a Key to the Philippian Epistle. Second Edition, Revised and ExWith Notes from Ancient and Modern Expositors.

tended. Cloth, Is.

THE OUTPOURED SPIRIT AND PENTECOST.

A Scriptural and Expository Elucidation of the Work of the Holy Spirit. Cloth, 1s.

THE

HE CROSS IN THE OLD TESTAMENT.
Papers on a Great Subject. Cloth, Is.

Brief

AT JESUS FEET. Papers on Christian Doctrine, Life,

and Work. Cloth, Is.

RICHARD WEAVER: The Converted Collier.

Portraits. Cloth, Is. 25th thousand.

With

BY MRS. R. C. MORGAN

~LIMPSES OF FOUR CONTINENTS. Being an Account of the Travels of Richard Cope Morgan. With Four Photogravures and Sixteen Half-Tone Illustrations. Cloth, Gilt Top. 2s. 6d. net.

C. MORGAN: His Life and Times. "A Veteran in

R. Revival." By his son, George E. Morgan, M.A.,

Author of "Old World Stories: Retold for To-Day"; "While we're Young: Talks with Young People"; 'Dreams and Realities," etc. With Introduction by the Right Hon. Lord Kinnaird. With Four Photogravures and Eight Half-Tone Illustrations. Cloth, 2s. 6d.

MORGAN AND SCOTT LTD.

12, PATERNOSter BuildingS, LONDON, E.C.

PREFACE

D

URING the last few years of my husband's life, friends often suggested that some account of his travels should be made; but as of making many books there is no end,' neither Mr. Morgan nor myself thought our experiences of sufficient value to be put into bookform.

After my husband's translation the same suggestions were repeatedly made to me. While his Biography was under preparation, the need of such a book became more and more apparent; for it was found impossible to devote to his travels more than one chapter of the Biography, and this could not possibly give an adequate idea of this interesting part of his life. As his constant companion during the last eleven years, I was entrusted with the sacred task.

The narrative of journeyings like ours, undertaken with the same special object and covering in comparatively little time a good deal of ground, would appear monotonous if strictly confined to the chief traveller's doings, which were in all countries the

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