Corpus of Modern Scottish Writing (CMSW) - www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/cmsw/ Document : 192 Title: Lion chapter and intro from Livingston's 'Missionary Travels' Author(s): Livingstone, David 1 The Right. Hon. Labouchere Sir In case it should be out of your power to grant me more than a minute or two in the interview to which you kindly invited me when I had the honour to be introduced to you in the House of Commons I now beg leave to lay before you in writing a subject to which I most earnestly beg your attention as it seriously affects the pros-perity of English commerce and the honour of the English name. About half of the Frontier of the Cape Colony is occupied by independent tribes named Guquas & Bechuanas who have not only faithfully observed the treaties made by [the] former Colonial Governments during the last 30 years but have never been even accused of cattle stealing or annoyance to the the English. Many hundreds of these people have become Christians through the teaching of English missionaries and have engaged in commerce so assiduously that about £5000 worth of ivory and 30 000 skins of small animals are annually sent to the Colonial markets Their feelings of con -fidence in the English sense of justice may be judged of by the fact that when the Transvaal Boers attacked the town of Sechele a chief living 10o degrees of latitude from Cape Town and contrary to the express provision in an Article of the treaty which these Boers had entered into with Sir George Cathcart kidnapped about 200 of Sechele's children whom I offered to identify as members of Mrs Livingstones school, this chief travelled one thousand miles in order to beg the English Queen to have the article against slavery enforced 2 and his children restored to the parents. When Sir George Cathcart gave the Rebels Boers their independance he also passed a Powder Ordinance by which ammunition to any amount may be sent into the Trans Vaal Territory while not an ounce is allowed to enter the country of the Griquas & Bechuanas. This I beg you to observe has no reference to the Caffres on our Eastern Frontiers. It refers entirely to the west, And as there is not the smallest doubt that these Trans Vaal Boers continue in the open violation of the treaty to enslave the natives the enforcement of the provisions of the Powder ordinance against those who have always been our Friends amounts to unintentional but direct and to slavery. So long as the Boers retained the name of British subjects the practice of buying & selling native 3 I. Introduction My own inclination would lead me to say as little as possible about myself, but several friends in whose judgement I have confidence have suggested that as the reader likes to know something about the author, a short account of my origin and early life would lend additional interest to this book. Such is my excuse for the following egotism, and if an apology be necessary for giving my genealogy I find it in the fact that it is not very long and contains only one event of which I have reason to be proud. My great grandfather fell at the battle of Culloden fighting for our old line of kings and my grandfather was a small farmer in Ulva, where my father was born. It is one of that cluster of the Hebrides thus described by Walter Scott “And Ulva dark and Colonsay” And all the group of islets gay “That guard famed Staffa round.”* My grandfather who was *Lord of the Isles. Canto IV. 4 intimately acquainted with all the traditionary tales which that great poet has since made use of in the “Tales of a grandfather” and other works, long before their publication, I remember listening to with delight as a boy for his memory was stored with a never ending stock of stories many of which were wonder -fully like those I have since heard while sitting by the African evening fires While my grandmother sung gaelic songs some of which, as she believed, had been composed by captive islanders languishing hopelessly among the Turks My grandfather could give particulars of the lives of our ancestors for six generations of the family before him and the only point of the tradition I feel proud of is this — one of these poor hardy islanders was renowned in the district for great wisdom and prudence and when on his death-bed, it is related that he called all his children around him and said. “Now in my lifetime I have searched most carefully through all the traditions I could find of our family, and I never could discover that there was a thief among our fore fathers 5 since made use of in the “Tales of a grandfather” and other works Long before their publication, I remember listening with delight as a boy to the never ending stock of stories with which his memory was stored —(wonderfully like these tales were to what I have since often heard when sitting by the African evening fires)— ; while my grandmother sung songs in gaelic some of which, she believed, had been composed by languishing captive islanders among the Turks. Hecker history of epidemics of Middle ages if therefore any of you or any of your children should take to dishonest ways it will not be because it runs in our blood, it does not belong to you I leave this word with you. Be honest.” If therefore in the following pages I fall into any errors I hope they will be dealt with as honest mistakes and not as indicating that I have forgotten our ancient motto. This event took place at a time when the Highlanders according to Macaulay were much like the [Cape Keffers] and every one it was said could escape punishment for theft by presenting a share of the plunder to his chieftain. My ancestors were Roman Catholics and long afterwards they were made Protestants by the laird coming round with a man having a yellow staff. The new religion went long afterwards perhaps it does so still by the name of “The religion of the yellow stick.” My grandfather finding his farm in Ulva insufficient to support a numerous family removed to Blantyre works, a large cotton manufactury on the beautiful Clyde above Glasgow and his sons having had the best educators the Hebrides afforded, were gladly received as clerks by the proprietors, Monteith and Co. My grandfather highly esteemed for his unflinching honesty was employed in the conveyance of large sums of money from Glasgow to the works and in old age was according to the custom of company pensioned off so as 7 to spend his declining years in ease and comfort My uncles all entered H. M's service during the last war either as soldiers or sailors but my Father remained at home, and too conscientious ever to become rich as a small tea dealer, by his kindliness of manner and winning ways made the heartstrings of his children twine around him as firmly as if he had possessed every worldly advantage to bestow. During the last twenty years of his life he held the office of deacon of an independant church in Hamilton and deserves my lasting gratitude and homage for presenting me from infancy with a continuously consistent pious example such as that an episode of which is beautifully and truthfully pourtrayed in Burn's “cottar's saturday night”. He died in February last in peaceful hope of that mercy which we all expect through the death of our Lord and Saviour when I was on my way below Zumbo, expecting no greater pleasure in this country than sitting by our cottage fire and telling him my travels. I revere his memory. My earliest recollection of my mother was that so often seen among the Scottish poor 8 of anxious striving to make ends meet, and at the age of ten I was put into the factory as a “piecer” to aid by my earnings to lessen her anxiety. With a part of my first weeks wages I purchased “Ruddiman's rudiments of Latin” and pursued the study of that language for many years afterwards with unabated ardour at an evening school which met between the hours of eight & ten The dictionary part of my labours was followed up till twelve o clock or later, if my mother did not interfere by jumping up and snatching any books out of my hands I had to be back in the factory by six, and continue my work with intervals for breakfast and dinner till eight o clock again. I read in this way many of the classical authors and knew Virgil and Horace better at sixteen than I do now. Our schoolmaster (supported in part by the company) was kind and so moderate in his charges that all who wished for education might have obtained it. Many availed themselves of the privilege and some of my schoolfellows now rank in positions far above what they appeared ever 9 likely to come to in the village school. If such a system were established in England it would prove a never ending blessing to the poor. 6* In reading I devoured everything I could lay my hands on except novels. Scientific works and books of travels were my especial delight though my father believing with many of his time who ought to have known better, that these were inimical 10 to religion, would have preferred to have seen me at the “Cloud of Witnesses or “Boston's fourfold state”. Our difference of opinion reached the point of open rebellion and his last application of the rod on my refusal to peruse “Wilberforce's practical christianity”. This dislike to dry doctrinal reading & to religious reading of every sort continued for years afterwards but having lighted on those admirable works of Dr Thomas Dick — “the philosophy of religion.” and “the philosophy of a future state” I was glad to find my own ideas that religion and science are not hostile but friendly to each other fully proved and enforced. In the glow of love which Christianity inspires I soon resolved to devote my life to the alleviation of human misery. Turning this idea over in my mind I felt that to be a pioneer for Christianity in China would prove of essential benefit to that immense empire I therefore set myself to get a medical education in order to fit myself for that enterprise In botany I had the guidance of a book on the plants of Lanarkshire by “Patrick” 11 in recognizing the plants pointed out in my first medical book that extraordinary old Author on astrological medicine — “Culpeper's Herbal” Limited as my time was I found opportunities to scour the whole countryside “collecting simples”. Deep and and anxious were my studies on the still deeper and more perplexing profundities of astrology and I believe I got as far into that abyss of phantasies as my author said he dared to lead me . It seemed perilous ground to tread farther on for the dark hint seemed to my youthful mind to loom towards “selling soul and body to the devil” as the price of the unfathomable knowledge of the stars. These excursions often in company with brothers, one now in Canada and the other a clergyman in the United States, gratified the intense love of nature I possessed and though we generally returned so unmercifully hungry and fatigued that the embryo parson shed tears; yet we discovered so many to us new and interesting 12 things that he was always as eager to join us next time as he was the last. # On one of these exploring tours we entered a limestone quarry, long before geology was so popular as it is now. It is impossible to describe the delight and wonder with which I began to collect the shells of the Carboniferous limestone which crops out in high Blantyre and Cumbuslang. The quarry men seeing a little boy so engaged looked with that pitying eye which the benevolent assume when viewing the insane. I addressed him with “However did these shells come into these rocks”? “When God made the rocks he made the shells in them” was the damping reply. What a deal of trouble geologists might have saved themselves by adopting the Turco philosophy of this Scotch -man In my reading I could by placing my book on a portion of the Spinning Jenny, catch sentence after sentence as I passed at my work, I thus kept up a pretty constant study undisturbed by the roar of the machinery. To this part of my education I owe 13 10 I owe my present ability of completely abstracting my mind from surrounding noises so as to read and write with perfect comfort amidst the play of children or near the dancing and songs of savages. The toil of cottonspinning to which I was promoted in my 19th year was excessively severe on a slim loose jointed lad, but it was well paid and it enabled me to support myself at the medical and Greek classes as also the Divinity lectures of Dr Wardlaw in Glasgow in winter by working with my hands in Summer. I never received a farthing of aid from anyone and would have accomplished my project of going to China as a medical missionary in the course of time by my own efforts but some friends advised my joining the London Missionary Society on account of its perfectly unsectarian character. It “sends neither Episcopacy nor Presbyterianism nor Independancy, but the gospel of Christ to the heathen” This exactly agreed with my ideas of what a missionary society ought to do. but it was not without a pang I offered myself for I felt as if I should now 14 11 become in a measure dependant on others. And I would not have been much put about though I had been rejected. Looking back now on that life of toil I cannot but feel thankful that it formed such a material part of my early education, and were it possible I should like to begin life over again in the same lowly style and pass through the same hardy training. Our American cousins call the factory life one of white slavery. i.e. when they descend to that poor logic which shrivels before the common sense proverb “Two blacks dont make a white — known in Africa by the phrase “One fault cannot wipe out another”. I passed through every grade of factory labour from the lowest to the highest and the warmest sympathies of my heart being with the English and Scottish poor I would denounce any oppression in them no matter by whom practised. It is therefore with the fullest conviction of truthfulness I declare that anything like slavery does not exist in English cotton factories 15 12 I consider it in the highest degree unfair to speak of those as slaves whose blood boils at the thought of oppression, and who glory in being the sons of the Covenanters and of the men who bled at Bannockburn. Though we are the victims of great social evils arising from overpopulation, those evils are not to be mentioned in the same breath with that slavery which is indissolubly connected with the idea of outlawry & bloodhounds. There is no one here so degraded as not to be able to claim his pay and though that is often far too low no Englishman can be guilty of the prime element of slavery viz. the shabbiness of expecting services from an inferior class without pay= -ment. This meaness does not exist on English soil. The perfect freedom of speech we enjoy in Britain and the fact that the man who exposes domestic evils in the most startling terms instead of being in jeopardy for speaking out is lauded on all sides, leads strangers 16 11 to the conclusion that where evils are most exposed they most exist. My humble belief is that in England we have more true liberty with the greatest amount of happiness for the greatest possible number of any country in the world. The poorest among us could stroll at pleasure over the ancient domains of Bothwell and other spots hallowed by the venerable assocations of which even our school books made us well aware and few of us could view such memorials of the past without feeling that these carefully kept monuments were our own- The masses of the working people have read history and are no revolutionary levellers. They rejoice in the memories of “Wallace and Bruce and 'a the lave” who are still much revered as the former champions of our freedom, and while foreigners imagine we want spirit to overturn our capitalists and Aristocracy we are content to respect our laws. Till we can change them and hate those stupid revolutions which might sweep away time honoured institutions dear alike to rich & poor be imposed on such people, if slavery were attempted no human power could restrain their vengeance 17 14 Having finished the medical curriculum and presented a thesis on a subject which required the use of the stethescope for its diagnosis, I unwittingly procured for myself an examination rather more severe and prolonged than usual among examining bodies. The reason was a difference of opinion existed as to whether this instrument could do what I asserted However I was admitted a licentiate of Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons but though qualified for my original plan the opium was then raging and it was deemed inexpedient for me to proceed to China I had previously pursued theological studies both in Glasgow and in England so I went to Africa to spend the following sixteen years of my life as a medical man and missionary The general instructions I received from the Directors of the Missionary Society led me as soon as I reached Kuruman or Lattakoo then then farthest inland station 18 15 from the Cape to turn my attention to the North. Without waiting longer at Kuruman than was necessary to recruit the oxen now pretty well tired by the long journey from Algoa I proceeded in company with another missionary to the Bakuena country and found Sechele with his tribe located at Shokuan. I had a very different object in view than running in three hundred miles and back again as this journey proved to be. Accordingly after again resting three months at Kuruman which is a sort of head station in the country I returned to a spot about 15 miles south of Shokuan called Lepelole (now Litubaruba) and in order to obtain an accurate knowledge of the language, cut myself off from European society for about six months at once and gained by the ordeal an insight into the habits, ways of thinking laws and language of that section of the Bechuanas called Bakuena which have proved of uncalculable advantage in my intercourse with them ever since 19 16 In this second journey to to the place called Lepelole from a cavern of that name, I began preparations for a settlement by making a canal to irrigate gardens from a stream then flowing copiously. When preparations were well advanced we went Northwards to visit the Bakaa and Bamangwato and the Makalaka living between 22° & 23 south lat. The Bakaa mountains had been visited before by a trader who with his people all perished from fever. In going round the Northern part of the Basaltic hills near Letloche I was only ten days distant from the lower part of the Zouga which passed by the same name as Lake Ngami, and I might then (in 1842) have discovered that Lake had discovery alone been my object. Most part of this journey beyond Shokuan was performed on foot in consequence of my waggon oxen having become sick. Hearing my companions discussing my appearance & abilities on the supposition that I did not understand their speech. “He is not strong. He is quite slim” 20 17 and only appears stout because he puts himself into those bags (trousers). He will soon knock up.” My highland blood rose and made me despise the fatigue of keeping them all at the top of their speed for days together and untill I heard them expressing proper opinions of my pedestrian powers Returning to Kuruman in order to bring my luggage to our proposed settlement I was followed by the news that my friendly tribe of Bakuen had been driven from Lepelole by the Barolongs and my prospects blasted. One of those periodical outbreaks of war which seem to have occurred from time immemorial for the sake of cattle had burst forth in the land and so changed the relations of the tribes to each other I was obliged to set out anew to look for a proper locality for a settlement. In going North again a comet blazed on our sight exciting the wonder of every tribe we visited. That of 1816 had been followed by an irruption of the Matibele the most cruel enemies they ever knew and this might portend something as bad, or it might be only the death of some great chief. On the 21 18 subject of comets I then knew as as little than they did themselves but I had more confidence in a kind over ruling Providence which makes such a difference between us and both the ancient and modern heathen. As some of the Bamangwato people had accompanied me to Kuruman I was obliged to restore them and their goods to their chief Sekomi This made a journey to that chief again necessary and I for the first time performed a distance of some hundred miles on ox back Par Returning towards Kuruman I selected the beautiful valley of Mabotsa Lat 25˚ 14' South Long 26˚ 30'(?) to form a missionary station and thither I removed in 1843. Here happened an episode concerning which I have frequently been questioned in England and which but for the importunities of friends I meant to keep in store to tell my children when in my dotage The Bakatla of the village Mabotsa were much troubled by lions which leaped into the cattle pens by night and destroyed their cows. They even attacked the herds in open day. This was so unusual the people believed 22 19 that they were bewitched “given as they said “into the power of lions”. by a neighbouring tribe. They went once to attack the animals but being rather a cowardly people compared to Bechuanas in general on such occasions, they returned without killing any. If one in a troop of lions is killed it is well known the others take the hint and leave that part of the country. So the next time the herds were attacked I went with the people in order to encourage them to rid themselves of the annoyance by destroying one of the number. We found the lions on a small hill of about a quarter of a mile in length and covered with trees A circle of men was formed round it and they gradually closed up, ascending pretty [near] to each other. I being down below on the plain with a native schoolmaster a most excellent man, called Mebalwe, saw one of the lions sitting on a piece of rock within the now closed circle of men. Mebalwe fired at it before I could and the ball struck the rock on which the animal was sitting He bit at the spot struck as a dog does at a stick or stone — ?[cf chat]? 23 20 thrown at him. The circle opened and allowed him to escape. The men were afraid perhaps on account of their belief in witchcraft. Reforming the circle we saw other two lions in it but the men allowed them to burst through also. If they had acted according to the custom of the country they would have speared them in their attempt to get out. Seeing it in vain to get them to kill one of the lions we bent our footsteps towards the village and in going round the end of the hill I saw one of the beasts sitting on a piece of rock as before but this time he had a little bush in front. Being about 30 yards off I took a good aim at his body through the bush and fired both barrels into it. The men then called out “he is shot” “he is shot”. Others cried he has been shot by another too let us go to him”. I did not see any one else shoot at him, so I said “stop a little till I load again” and when in the act of ramming down the bullets I heard a shout, starting round I saw the lion just in the act of springing upon me. I was upon a little height 24 21 he caught my shoulder in the act of the spring and we both came down to the plain ground below together. He shook me as a terrier dog does a rat. I turned round to relieve myself of as he had one the weight paw on the back of my head and saw his eyes directed to Mebalwe who was trying to shoot him at a distance of 10 or 15 yards. His gun being a flint one missed fire in both barrels the lion left me and bit his thigh. Another man whose life I had saved before after he had been tossed by a buffalo attempted to spear the lion when he was biting Mebalwe. He left Mebalwe caught this man by the shoulder and then his bullets took effect for he fell down dead The whole was done quickly and must have been his paroxysm of dying rage. In order to take out the charm from him the Bakatla on the following day made a huge bon fire over the carcase which was declared to be that of the largest lion they had ever seen. Besides craunching the bone he left eleven teeth wounds of the upper part of my arm. A wound from 25 22 this animals tooth resembles a gunshot wound. There is a great deal of sloughing and discharge, and pains are felt in the part periodically ever afterwards. Having on a tartan jacket on the occasion I believe that wiped off any virus from the teeth that pierced the flesh for my two companions have both suffered from the peculiar pains while I have escaped with only the inconvenience of a false joint in my limb. The man whose shoulder was wounded actually showed me his wound burst forth afresh on the same month of the following year. This curious point deserves the attention of enquirers. 26 23 The different Bechuana tribes are named after certain animals showing probably that in former times they were addicted to animal worship like the ancient Egyptians - The Bakatla = they of the monkey. Bakuena = they of the alligator. Batla pi = they of the fish. each tribe having a superstitious dread of the animal by which it is called. they also use the word “bina” to dance in reference to the custom so that when you wish to ascertain what they are you say “what do you dance” as if that had been a part of the worship of old. they never eat this animal using the term “ila” hate or dread in reference to killing it and we found traces of many ancient tribes in the country in individual Batau they of the lion - Banoga they of the serpent though no such tribes now exist. the use of the personal pronoun they. Ba. Ma Wa. Va or Ova, Am. Ki &c prevails very extensively in the names of tribes in Africa. I attached myself to the tribe called Bakuena or Bakwains the chief of which called Sechele was then living with his tribe at a place named Chounane I was from the first struck 27 24 by his intelligence and the marked manner in which we both felt drawn to each other rather than to others — and as this remarkable man has not only embraced Christianity but expounds its doctrines to his people let me offer a brief sketch of his career His great grandfather Mochoasele was a great traveller and the first that ever told of the existence of white men. In his father's life time two white travellers whom I suppose to have been Mr Cowan and Dr Donovan passed through the country and passing down the Limpopo were all cut off by fever The Rain makers fearing their waggons might drive away the rain ordered them to be thrown into the river. This is the true account of the end of that expedition. They were not killed by the Bangwaketse as reported for they passed the Bakwains, all well. The Bakuena were then rich in cattle and as one of the many evidences of the dessication of the country streams are pointed out where thousands and thousands of cattle drank in which water never now flows and where a single herd could not find fluid for its support 28 25 II. When Sechele was still a boy his father was murdered by his own people for making free with the wives of his rich underchiefs, the children being spared, their friends invited Sebituane then in those parts to reinstate them in the chieftainship. Sebituane surrounded the town of the Bakuena by night & just as it began to dawn his herald proclaimed in a loud voice that he had come to revenge the death of Mochoasele. this was followed by beating loudly on their shields of sebituane's people all round the town. the panic was tremendous and the rush like that of a theatre on fire while the Makololo used their javelins on the terrified males with a dexterity they alone can employ. Sebituane had given orders to his men to spare the sons of the chief and one of them meeting Sechele put him in ward by giving him such a crack with a club on the head as to render him insensible, the usurper was put to death and Sechele reinstated in his chieftainship felt much attached to Sebituane. The influence here noticed it will yet be seen led me at last into the new well watered country to which this same Sebituane had preceded me by many years. Sechele married the daughters of three of his underchiefs who had on account of their blood relationship 29 26 stood by him in his adversity. this is one of the modes adopted for cementing the allegiance of a tribe. the government is patriarchal, each man being by virtue of paternity chief of his own children. they build their huts around his and the greater the number of children the more his importance increases. Hence children are esteemed one of the greatest blessings and are always treated kindly. Near the centre of each circle of huts there is a spot called a “Kotla” with a fire place in which they work, eat or sit and gossip over the news of the day A poor man attaches himself to the Kotla of a rich one and is considered a child of the latter. An underchief has a number of these circles around his and the collection of kotlas around the great one in the middle of the whole that of the chief constitutes the town. the circle of huts immediately around the Kotla of the chief is composed of the huts of his wives and those of his blood relations. He attaches the underchiefs to himself and government by marrying as Sechele did their daughters or inducing his brothers to do so. They are fond of the relationships to great families 30 27 If you meet a party of strangers and the headman's relationship to some uncle of a certain chief is not at once proclaimed by his attendants you may hear him whispering “tell him who I am”. this usually involves a counting on the fingers of a part of his genealogical tree ending by the important fact that the head of the party is half cousin to some well known ruler Sechele was thus firmly seated in his chieftainship when I made his acquaintance. On the first occasion in which I ever attempted to hold a public religious service he remarked that it was their custom when any new subject was brought before them to put questions on it. And he begged me to allow him to do the same in this case. On expressing my entire willingness to answer him, He enquired if my forefathers knew of a future judgement. I replied in the affirmative and began to describe the scene of the “great white throne and him who shall sit on it from whose face the heaven and earth shall flee away.” &c. He said “You startle me. these words make all my bones to shake I have no more strength in me.” but my forefathers were living at the same time yours were and how is it they did not send word about these terrible things sooner? they all passed 31 28 away into darkness without knowing whither they were going.” I got out of the difficulty by explaining the geographical barriers in the North and the gradual spread of knowledge from the South to which we first had access by means of ships, and expressed my belief that as Christ had said it so the whole world would yet be enlightened. Pointing to the great Kalahari desert he said, you never can cross that country to the tribes beyond, it is utterly impossible even for us black men except in certain seasons when more than the usual supply of rain falls and an extraordinary growth of water melons follows. Even we who know the country would certainly perish without them. Re-asserting my belief in the words of Christ we parted and it will be seen farther on that Sechele himself assisted in crossing that Desert which had proved an insurmountable barrier to so many adventurers As soon as he had an opportunity of learning he set himself to read with such close application was that from being comparatively thin the effect of having been fond of the chase he became quite corpulent. Mr Oswel gave him his first lesson at figures and he acquired the alphabet on the first day of my residence at Chonuane He was by no means an ordinary specimen of the people 32 29 for I never went into the town but was pressed to hear him read some chapters of the bible and Isaiah was a great favourite and he used the same phrase nearly as our Professor of Greek at Glasgow Sir D.K. Sandford used respecting the apostle Paul when reading his speeches in the Acts.” “He was a fine” fellow that Paul” “He was a fine man that Isaiah he knew how to speak” he invariably made an offer of something to eat on every occasion of visiting him. Seeing me anxious that his people should believe the words of Christ he said once “Do you imagine these people will ever believe by merely talking to them. I can do nothing but by thrashing them and if you like I shall call my head men and with our “litupa” (whips of Rhinoceros hide) we shall soon make them all believe together.” The idea of using entreaty to subjects whose opinion on no other subject he would ask and persuasion to become Christian which they ought if he ordered them only to be too happy to embrace were especially surprising. During the space of two and a half years he continued to profess to his people [the] full conviction of the truth of Christianity — and in all discussions on the subject he took that side acting at the same time in an upright manner in all his relations. He felt the difficulties of his situation long before I did and often said, “O I wish you had come to this country before I became 33 30 in the meshes of our customs” In fact he could not get rid of his superfluous wives without appearing to be ungrateful to their parents who had done so much for him in his adversity. In the hoping that others would be induced to join him in his attachment to Christianity he asked me to begin family worship with him in his house. I did so and by & by was surprised to hear him conduct the prayer in his own simple and beautiful style for he was quite a master of his own vernacular We were suffering from the effects of a drought which will be described and none except his family whom he ordered to attend came near his meeting. “In former times” said he “when a chief was fond of hunting, all his people got dogs and became fond of hunting too. If fond of dancing or music all showed a liking to these amusements too. If he loved beer they all rejoiced in strong drink. But in this case it is different. I love the word of God and not one of my bretheren will join me” 34 31 One reason why we had no volunteer hypocrites was the hunger from drought which was associated in their minds with the presence of Christian instruction and I believe hypocrisy is not prone to taking the line which seems to ensure empty stomachs He continued to make a consistent profession for about three years and percieving at last some of the difficulties of his case as also feeling compassion for the poor women who were by far the best of our scholars, I had no desire that he should be in any hurry to make a full profession by baptism. His principal wife too, was about the most unlikely subject in the tribe ever to become anything else than an out & out greasy disciple of the old school. She has become greatly altered, I hear, for the better since but again and again have I seen Sechele send her out of church to put her gown on and away she went with her lips shot out the very picture of unutterable disgust at his new fangled notions 35 32 When he at last applied for baptism, I simply asked him how he having the bible in his hand and able to read it, thought he ought to act. He went home gave each of his superfluous wives new clothing and all his own goods which they had been accustomed to keep in their huts for him, and sent them to their parents with an intimation that he had no fault to find with them, but that in parting with them he wished to follow the will of God. On the day in which he and his children were baptized great numbers came to see the ceremony Some thought from a stupid calumny circulated by enemies to Christianity in the South that they would be made to drink an infusion of “dead's men's brains” and were astonished to find it water only. Seeing several of the old men actually in tears during the service I asked them afterwards the cause of their weeping — they were crying “to see”, as the Scotch remark over a case of suicide, their father so far left to himself” They seemed to think I had thrown the glamour over him and he had become mine 38 36 Here commenced an opposition of which we knew nothing previously; for all the friends of these castaway wives became our enemies. The attendance on school & church diminished to very few besides the chief's and own family. They treated us still with respectful kindness, but to Sechele himself said things (which he often remarked) had they ventured in former times to enuntiate, would have cost them their lives. It was trying to see our labours so little appreciated at last; but we had sown the good seed and have no doubt but it will yet spring forth though we may not live to see it. [Maka] the name of the people Chp. 37 34 Leaving this sketch of the chief we now proceed to give an equally rapid sketch of our dealing with this people of the Bakuena or Bakwains A small piece of land sufficient for a garden was purchased when we first went to live with them though that was scarcely necessary in a country where the idea of buying land was quite new. It was expected that a request for a suitable spot would have been made and occupation follow as in the case of any other member of the tribe. But on explaining that we wished to avoid any cause of dispute when land had become more valuable or when a foolish chief began to reign and we had erected buildings of value he might wish to claim the whole. About £5 of goods were given and the stipulation made that a similar garden should be given to any other missionary at any other place to which the tribe might remove the particulars of the sale sounded as strangely in the ears of the tribe as did a certain Roman Emperor's tax in the ears of his son and the coin in either case emitted no bad efluvium 38 35 III. In our relations with this people we were simply strangers exercising no authority or controul whatever. Our influence depended entirely on persuasion, and having taught them by kind conversation as well as by public instruction I expected them to do what their own sense of right and wrong dictated. We never wished them to do right merely because it would be pleasing to us nor thought ourselves to blame when they did wrong. although we were quite aware of the absurd idea to that effect we saw that our teaching did good to the general mind of the people I am certain of five cases in which by good influence on public opinion war was prevented, and where in individual cases we failed they were no worse than they were before we came., In general they are slow like our African people hereafter to be described in coming to a decision on religious matters, but in matters affecting their worldly affairs they were keenly alive to their own interests — they might be called stupid in matters which have not come under the sphere of their observation 39 36 but in all matters which have they shew more intelligence than is to be met with in our own peasantry. They are remarkably accurate in their knowledge of cattle, sheep and goats, knowing exactly the kind of pasturage suited to each, and they select with great judgement the kinds of soil best suited to different kinds of grain They are adepts in knowledge of the habits of wild animals The place where we first settled with the Bakuena is called Chonuane, and it happened to be visited during the first year of our residence there by one of those periodical droughts which occur in even the most favoured districts of Africa 40 37 . Now the belief in rain making is one of the most deeply rooted articles of faith in this country. The chief Sechele being himself a noted rain doctor believed in it implicitly, and he has often assured me that he found it more difficult to give up his faith in that than in anything else required by Christianity. I pointed out the only feasible way of watering the gardens to be to select some good never failing river, make a canal and irrigate their lands. this suggestion was immediately adopted and soon the whole tribe was on the move to Kolobeng about 40 miles distant. the experiment succeeded admirably during the first year. the Bakwains made the canal and dam in exchange for my labour in assisting to build a square house for their chief. they also built their own school under my superintendance. Our own house at Kolobeng was the third which I had reared with my own hands . A native smith taught me to weld and having improved by scraps of information in that line and in capentering and gardening and as my wife could make candles soap and clothes we ?iron 41 38 came nearly up to what may be considered the essential part of a Central African missionary's accomplishments viz. the husband to be a Jack of all trades without and the wife a maid of all work within. But in our second year no rain again. In the third the same extraordinary drought followed. Indeed not ten inches of water fell during these two years and the Kolobeng ran dry, so many fish being killed the hyaenas of the whole country collected to the feast and were unable to finish the putrid masses. A large old alligator which had never been known by any depredations was among the victims. the fourth year was equally unpropitious. Too little rain to bring the grain to maturity, Nothing could be more tantalizing, We dug down in the bed of the river deeper and deeper as the water receded, striving to get a little to keep the fruit trees alive for better times, but in vain. Needles lying out of doors for months did not rust, and a mixture of sulphuric acid and water used in a galvanic battery parted with all its water to the air instead of imbibing more 42 39 as it would have done in England. the leaves of indigenous trees were all drooping, soft, & shrivelled though not dead. And those of the Mimosae were closed at midday as they are when going to sleep. In the midst of this dreary drought it was wonderful to see these tiny creatures the ants running about with their accustomed vivacity. I put the bulb of a thermometer 3 inches under the soil and found the mercury to stand at 132˚—134˚ and if certain kinds of beetles were placed on the surface they ran about a few seconds & expired, but this broiling heat only augmented the activity of the long legged black ant. they never tire. Their organs of motion seem endowed with the the same power as is ascribed by Physiologists to the muscles of the human heart by which that part of the frame never becomes fatigued and which may be imparted to all our bodily organs in that higher state to which we fondly hope to rise. Where do they get their moisture.? Our house was built on a hard ferruginous conglomerate in order to be out of the way of the white ant but they came in in spite of the precaution and not only were they in this sultry weather 43 40 able individually to moisten soil to the consistency of plaster for the the formation of galleries towards any vegetable matter they might wish to devour, but when their inner chambers were laid open these were also surprising -ly humid. Yet there was no dew and the house being placed on a rock they could have no subterranean passage to the bed of the river almost 300 yards below the hill.* Rain however would not fall. the Bakwains believed that I had bound Sechele with some magic spell, and I received deputations in the evenings of the old counsellors entreating me to allow him to make only a few showers “the corn will die if you refuse, and we shall become scattered.” “Only let him this once and we shall come to the school and sing & pray as long as you please” It was in vain to protest that I wished Sechele to act first according to his own ideas of what was right as he found the law laid down in the Bible. And it was distressing to appear hard hearted to them. the clouds *When we come to Angola I shall describe an insect there which distills several pints of water every night 44 41 often collected beautifully over us, and Rolling thunder seemed to portend refreshing showers, but next morning the sun would rise in a cloudless sky. Indeed these were more frequent by far than days of sunshine in London. Dele JM It is irksome to sit and wait so helplessly as is implied in the idea of God giving the rain from Heaven. It is more comfortable to help themselves and they can do so by such a variety of . preparations Charcoal made of burned bats inspissated urine of the mountain coney Hyrax Capensis (which by the way is used by old Dutch ladies in the form of pills as a good antispasmodic under the name of “Klipsweit”= stone sweat) The internal parts of different animals as Jackalls livers, Lion's and baboons hearts and hairy calculi from the bowels of old cows serpents skins & vertebrae. And 42 45 every kind of tuber, bulb, root, and plant to be found in the country. Disbelieving their efficacy in charming the clouds to pour out their refreshing treasures and knowing that civility is useful every where you kindly state you think they are mistaken, as to their power, the rain doctor selects a bulb, pounds it and administers a cold infusion to a sheep which in five minutes afterwards expires in convulsions. Part of the same bulb is converted into smoke which ascends to the sky, rain follows in a day or two. The case is clear. Were we as much harassed by droughts, the logic would be irresistible in England in 1857. Have we ought else in support of the powers of the homeopathic globule? A powerful medicine capable of appreciable effects is manipulated into a decimal fraction & post quad the cure follows. The inference is irresistible 46 43 As the Bakwains believed that there must be some connection between the presence of “Gods word” in their town and these successive and distressing droughts, they looked with no good will at the church-bell. but still they invariably treated us with kindness and respect. I am not aware of ever having had an enemy in the tribe. the only cause of dislike was expressed by a very influential and sensible man the uncle of Sechele. “We like you as well as if you had been born among us, you are the only white man we can become familiar with” (tloaela) but we wish you to give up that everlasting preaching and praying We cannot become accustomed to that at all” “You see we never get rain while those tribes who never pray as we do get abundan" This was a fact, and we often saw it raining on the hills 10 miles off while it would not look at us “even with one eye.” If the Prince of the power of the Air had no hand in schorching us up I fear I often felt uncharitably towards his majesty. As for the Rain makers they carried the sympathies of the 47 44 people along with them and not without reason. With the following arguments they were all acquainted. and in order to understand their force we must place ourselves in their position & believe as they and [homoæpathes] do that all medicines act by a mysterious charm. the term for cure may be trans lated “Charm” Alaha. Medical Doctor Hail friend! How very many medicines you have about you this morning. Why you have every medicine in the country about you [this] Rain Doctor. Very true my friend and I ought for the whole country needs the rain which I am making M.D. So you really believe that you can command the clouds I think that can be done by God alone R.D. We both believe the very same thing. It is God that makes the rain but I pray to him by means of these medicines and of course the rain is mine. It was I who made it for the Bakwains for many years when they were at Shokuane, Through my wisdom their women became fat and shining Ask them they will tell you the same as I do. M.D. But we are distinctly told in the parting words of our saviour that we can pray to God acceptably in his name alone and not by means of medicines. R.D. Truly, but God told us differently. He made black 7 48 45 men first, and did not love us as he did the white men. He made you beautiful. and gave you clothing and guns and horses and gunpowder and waggons and many other things about which we know nothing But toward us he had no heart He gave us nothing except the assegai and cattle, and rainmaking and did not give us hearts like yours We never love each other Other tribes put medicines about our country to prevent the rain so that we may be dispersed by hunger and augment their power. We must dissolve their charms by our medicines God has given us one little thing which you know nothing of. He has given us the knowledge of certain medicines by which we can make rain We do not despise those things which you possess though we are ignorant of them. We dont understand your book yet we dont despise it. You ought not to despise our little knowledge though you are ignorant of it. M.D. I dont despise what I am ignorant of I only think you are mistaken in saying you have medicines which can influence the rain at all. R.D. Thats just the way people speak when they talk on a subjec of which they have no knowledge When we first opened our eyes we found our forefathers — 49 46 making rain, and we follow in their footsteps. You who send to Kuruman for corn and irrigate your garden may do without rain, we cannot manage in that way. If we had no rain the cattle would have no pasture. the cows give no milk. Our children become lean and die. Our wives run away to other tribes who do make rain, and have corn, and the whole tribe become dispersed and lost. Our fire would go out. M.D. I quite agree with you as to the value of the rain, but you cant charm the clouds by medicines. You wait till you see the clouds come then use your medicines and take the credit which belongs to God only. R.D. I use my medicines and you employ yours. We are both doctors, and doctors are not decievers. You give a patient medicine. Sometimes God is pleased to heal him by means of your medicine sometimes not — he dies. When he is cured you take the credit of what God does. I do the same. Sometimes God grants us rain sometimes not. In each case we take the credit of the cure. 50 47 When a patient dies you dont give up trust in your medicine neither do I when the rain fails, If you wish me to leave off my medicines Why continue yours? M.D. I wish you would try and God would give us rain without your medicines. R.D. Mahalama-kapa,a,a. Well I always thought white men were wise till this morning. Who ever thought of making trial of starvation Is death pleasant then? M.D. Could you make rain on one spot and not on another R.D. I wouldnt think of trying I like to see the whole country green and all the people glad, the women clapping their hands and giving me their ornaments for thankfulness — and lullilooing for joy M.D. I think you decieve both them and your-self. R.D. Well there is a pair of us.—(meaning both are rogues exit M.D. mentally writing Cont. Med.) the above is only a specimen of their way of reasoning in which when the language is well understood they are percieved to be remarkably acute. these argument are generally known and I never succeeded in convincing 51 48 a single individual of their fallacy though I tried them in every way I could think of. Their faith in medicines as charms is unbounded. the general effect of argument is to produce the impression that you do not feel anxious for rain at all and it is very undesirable to allow the idea to spread that you do not feel a generous interest in their welfare. An angry opponent of rainmaking in a tribe would be like a Greek merchant in England during the Russian war. the ?The Conduct of the people during this long continued drought was remarkably good. the women parted with most of their ornaments to purchase corn from more fortunate tribes. the children scoured the country in search of the numerous bulbs and roots which can sustain life, and the men engaged in hunting. Very large numbers of the large game. buffaloes, zebras giraffes, tsessebes, kamas, gnus pallas, Rhinoceroses &c. congregated at some fountains near Kolobeng and the trap called hopo were constructed in the lands adjacent for their destruction the Hopo consists of two hedges in the form of the letter V. very 52 49 high and thick near the angle at the bottom and at the extremity of that same angle a pit is formed six or eight feet deep and about ten in breadth & length Trees are laid accross the edge over which the animals are expected to leap and attempt to escape so as to form an over lapping ledge which they cannot possibly climb. As the hedges are frequently a mile long and about as much apart at their extremities tribe making a circle extending three or four miles round the country ajacent to the opening and gradually closing up are almost sure to enclose a large body of game. Driving it up with shouts to the narrow part of the hopo. men secreted there through throw their javelins into the affrighted herds and on they rush into the pit till that is full of a living mass. Some escape by rushing over the others as a Smithfield market dog does over the sheep backs It is a frightful scene the men wild with excitement spear the lovely animals with mad delight Others borne down by the weight of their dead & dying companions every now and then make the whole mass heave in their smothering 53 50 agonies. No one but a born butcher could look on that scene without feeling sick at heart. The Bakuena often killed between sixty and seventy head of large game at the different Hopos in a single week and as every one both rich and poor partook of the prey, the meat counteracted the bad effects of an exclusively vegetable diet. When the poor who had no salt were forced to live exclusively on roots they were often troubled with indigestion. Such cases we had frequent opportunities of seeing at other times for the district being destitute of salt the rich alone could afford to buy it. The native doctors aware of the cause of the malady usually prescribed some of ingredient with their medicines. The doctors themselves had none so the poor resorted to us for aid, We took the hint and henceforth cured the disease by giving a tea spoonfulful of salt minus the other remedies. Either milk or meat had the same effect though not so rapidly as the salt. Long afterwards when I was myself deprived of salt for four months at two distinct periods I felt no desire for that condiment, but I was 54 51 plagued by very great longing for these articles of food This continued as long as I was confined to an exclusively vegetable diet. And when I procured a meal of flesh though boiled in perfectly fresh rain water it tasted as pleasantly saltish as if slightly impregnated with the condiment Both milk and meat removed (Turnover) ? IV 55 entirely the excessive longing and dreaming about roasted ribs of fat oxen and bowls of cool thick milk gurgling forth from the big bellied calabashes And I could understand the thankfulness of poor Bakwain women (in the interesting condition) to Mrs L. for a little milk or meat. Had there been no other adverse influences at work the general uncertainty though not absolute want of food, and the necessity for frequent absence, for the purpose of either hunting or collecting roots and fruits, proved a serious barrier to progress in knowledge, our own education was carried on at the comfortable breakfast and dinner tables and by the cozy fire, as well as in the church and school. Few English would be [decorous] at church on over empty stomachs no more than they are on overfull ones Ragged schools would have been failures had the teachers not wisely provided food for the body as well as food for the mind. And not only must we shew a friendly interest in bodily comforts as a christian duty, but we can no more hope for healthy feelings among the poor either at home or abroad without feeding them into them than we can hope to see an ordinary working bee feed into a queen mother by the ordinary food of the hive 56 63 Sending the gospel to the heathen must if this view be correct, include much more than the usual picture of a missionary implies; viz. a man going about with a bible under his arm. The promotion of commerce ought to be specially attended to as this more speedily than aught else demolishes feeling of isolation which heathenism engenders, and makes the the tribes feel themselves mutually dependant on and mutually beneficial to each other. Those laws which still prevent free commercial intercourse among the civilized, seem to be nothing else but the remains of our own heathenism. My experience makes me intensely desirous to promote the preparation of the new materials of European manufactures in Africa for by that means we shall not only put a stop to the slave trade but introduce the negro family into the body corporate of nations no one member of which can suffer without the others suffering with it. Success in this in both Eastern and Western Africa would lead in the course of time to a much larger diffusion of the blessings civilization [¿] [If to work] 57 64 than efforts more purely spiritual and educational. these however it would be extremely desirable to carry on at the same time The English character should never be exhibited except in connection with Christianity. Another adverse influence with which the mission had to contend was the vicinity of the Boers of the Cashan mountains otherwise named “Magaliesberg.” These are not to be confounded with the Cape Colonists who sometimes pass by the name. The word simply means “farmers” and is not synonymous with our word Boor. Indeed to them generally the term is inappropriate for they are a sober, , industrious and most hospitable body of peasantry. Those who however have fled from English law on various pretexts, and have been joined by English deserters and every other variety of bad character in their distant localities are un-fortunately of a very different stamp The great objection many of them had and still have to English law is that it makes no distinction between black & white. they felt aggrieved by their supposed losses in the emancipation of their Hottentot slaves, and