MOFFAT OF ad ar RiCAS Norman J. .M7 D3 BV 3557 Moffat of Africa Davidson, zz A Aes % CMe oy Gage ad a 2, Y. bi Wot H) yi SN He A i, A | Yai Sy ~ CaP Ae is . oe el AN INFURIATED HIPPO A hippo came furiously up the stream, his loud snorts re-echoing from the dark overhanging precipices. (See p. 19). ss ant OFP PRINCES Mv. > MOFFAT OF FRIC un A ZEALOUS MISSIONARY @& A BRAY BY NORMAN 1./DAVIDSON, B.A.(Oxon.) AUTHOR OF “PENNELL OF THE INDIAN FRONTIER,” “ RARBROOKE GRUBB, PATHFINDER,” &¢, &¢. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS NEW YORK GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY 1926 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS = AN INFURIATED Hippo ‘ Morrat’s CouracEous ENDEAVOUR A Niqaut oF LIons Morrat AND KING MoSELEKATSE Frontispiece PAGE 25 31 Moffat of Africa OBERT MOFFAT, the famous missionary and pioneer, R was born at Ormiston, East Lothian, December 21st, 1795, of humble parentage. From there the family removed to Carronshire near Falkirk, where he attended the parish school and picked up such crumbs of knowledge as he could, and afterwards was sent with a brother to a school at Falkirk. From his parents he derived those deep religious impressions which guided his actions all through life. When fourteen years of age he was apprenticed to a gardener at Polmont, a stern but just man, who discouraged laziness and taught his appren- tices their business. When his apprenticeship was finished he obtained a post in the gardens of the Earl of Moray, and afterwards with Mr. Leigh in Cheshire. This was a long journey in those days, which had to be performed by canal, sea, coach, and on foot. He had an affecting parting with his mother, who made him promise to read his Bible every day. While with Mr. Leigh he was one day attracted by a placard announcing a missionary meeting to be held by the London Missionary Society. He read it over and over again, and from that moment new thoughts and desires took root in his heart— he would bea missionary. But reflection made him despondent, for he had no education, and he had no friends in a position to help him, At last he resolved to interview Mr, Roby, the missionary whose name appeared on the placard. With a great effort he summoned up his courage and knocked at the door. Mr. Roby received him very kindly, and listened with attention and sympathy to all Moffat had to say. In conclusion he promised to help him, and to provide him with opportunities for showing if he had the fitness which such a calling demanded. 9 IO Moffat of Africa Through Mr. Roby’s influence he was placed with a nursery gardener named Smith, whose daughter Mary afterwards became Moffat’s wife. Through Mr. Roby, Moffat’s application was placed before the directors of the L.M.S., who at first declined it, but were induced to reconsider their decision, and eventually accepted him as a candidate, and he was appointed to South Africa at the age of twenty-one. When Moffat landed at Cape Town in 1817 it was his inten- tion to proceed at once to Namaqualand, a large tract of country lying between the north-west of Cape Colony and the Atlantic Ocean, but permission to do so was for a long time refused by the Cape authorities owing to the unsettled state of the interior, The objections were withdrawn, however, after many persistent applications, and permission given to start on his journey. At this period the country was terrorised by a native outlaw, Africaner, whose very name was dreaded by the people of the interior. He and his brother Titus had been implicated in the death of a Dutch farmer in whose service they were, and who had treated them with great harshness. He was outlawed, and a price of 1000 dollars was set on his head. He gathered round him a band of followers, and spread — terror through the country. His career was an extraordinary one: he began as a desperate bandit, breathing out fire and slaughter, and ended by being a firm friend of Moffat’s and a devoted follower of Christianity. He had come under the in- fluence of the missionaries before Moffat’s arrival, and, with his two brothers, was baptized, but as Moffat approached the boundaries of the Colony he found that the farmers, who, of course, had not one good word to say of Africaner, were sceptical to the last degree about his conversion, and prophesied an unhappy end to Moffat’s career at his hands. One said that he would set him up as a mark for his boys to shoot at ; another, © that he would strip off his skin and make a drum of it to dance to; while a third predicted that he would make a drinking-cup Moffat of Africa II of his skull. One kind, motherly lady wiped a tear from her eye as she bade him farewell, and said: ‘‘ Had you been an old man it would have been nothing, for you would soon have died, whether or no; but you are young, and going to become a prey to that monster.” We shall see how untrue these gloomy predictions were. The account, too, which the missionary received from a traveller of the region he was about to pass through, was not encouraging: ‘‘ You will find,” he was told, “‘ plenty of sand and stones, a thinly scattered population always suffering from want of water, plains and hills roasted like a burnt loaf, under the scorching rays of a cloudless sun.” The ignorant traveller is wont to scoff at the awkward, clumsy-looking wagon, but experience soon teaches him how well suited it is for the heavy work it has to perform. The slow and measured paces of the oxen, and their intractable nature, try one’s patience; but if slow, they are powerful and well adapted for their strenuous work. Drivers had to be engaged, horses and spare oxen to be bought, as well as sheep to provide them with mutton. On account of the extreme heat travelling had to be done by night, and it required no little perseverance as well as courage, when sometimes a hyena would approach with his unearthly howl and set the poor timid sheep scampering in all directions; and the missionary dreading the loss of his mutton, in his haste gets his legs torn by one bush and his face scratched by another, now tumbles prostrate over an ant-hill, and then headlong into the large hole of a wild boar. He frequently arrives at the halting-place long after the wagons, when the keen eye of the native wagon-driver surveys the cattle and announces to the breathless and thirsty missionary that he has lost some of his charge. He sits down by the fire, examines his wounds, and heavy sleep ends his day’s labours. A search next morning reveals only a few bones. The hyena has had the rest. On one occasion the flock was reduced to one, which became so tame that it was with the greatest reluctance they were obliged to sacrifice its life to their needs. Scarcity of water 12 Moffat of Africa was the chief trouble with which they had to contend, the oxen at times being so exhausted that they could not move the wagon one inch. Recourse would be had to digging, and after excavating an immense hole they would be rewarded with a scanty supply of liquid resembling the bilge-water of a ship, but which was drunk with great satisfaction. One evening most of the oxen stampeded off to their last halting-place, and for three days they were left stranded on the blistering plain with hardly any food until messengers could bring oxen and supplies from Pella, the nearest mission station. After staying at Pella for some days Moffat resumed his journey, his destination being Africaner’s kraal. Having to cross a river the wagon and its contents were swum over piece- meal, on a fragile raft of dry willow logs, about six feet long, and from four to six inches thick; fastened together with the inner bark of the mimosa, which stud the banks of the river, at this place five hundred yards wide, rocky, and with a rapid current. The rafts were carried down a great distance by the stream, taken to pieces every time of crossing, each man swimming back with alog. When it came to Moffat’s turn to cross, the prospect did not seem to him very enticing, so he stripped and plunged into the water, leaving his clothes to be ferried over. His men were horrified when they saw him in the middle of the rapid current, and some of them sprang in to save him, but, being an expert swimmer he easily kept ahead of them and reached the other bank safely. An affecting scene then took place, for he was met by the people from Warm Bath, a mission station not far distant, who pleaded that he would come to them. Moffat protested that he must first fulfil his promise to visit Africaner. The women, however, were insistent, and vowed that they would lay their bodies on the ground in front of his wagon, to be crushed if he advanced. At last a party of Africaner’s people, with three of his brothers was seen approaching in the distance. This ended a painful conflict ; for, awed by their presence, the people withdrew with many tears. Moffat of Africa 13 Christian Africaner gave Moffat a cordial reception, and at once ordered a hut to be erected for him. But though the reception was friendly there appeared to be an undercurrent of animosity running beneath the surface which Moffat could not fathom, and which caused him great distress. A Mr. Ebner had been in charge of the mission before Moffat arrived, and it was evident that this feeling was directed against him, and when Titus, the chief’s brother, who was a bitter enemy of mission- aries, came to the station it was still more pronounced, for he would stand before Ebner’s house and pour the most violent abuse upon his head, ordering him to leave the village, and threatening him with violence. The chief refused to take any part in the matter, but promised to restrain Titus from personal assault. This quarrel culminated in Ebner refusing to take any further part in the mission work, and handing over the entire charge to Moffat, who was thus left quite alone amongst a people suspicious in the extreme: in a barren and miscrable country, and with a small salary not exceeding £25 a year. He had no grain, and consequently no bread, and no prospect of getting any owing to the want of water to cultivate the ground ; and destitute of the means of sending to the Colony. But there was one bright beam which cheered Moffat’s heart, and that was, the increasing interest taken by the chief in the study of the Scriptures. Titus too, who was a grief to his brother, and a terror to most of the inhabitants on the station, and a fearful example of ungodly living, had become greatly subdued in spirit. The state of the people and the impossibility of the spot on which they lived becoming a permanent missionary station raised the question as to the advisability of searching out a locality more suitable. It was accordingly resolved to make a journey to the north, and examine the country on the borders of Damaraland where it was reported fountains of water abounded ; but Moffat had only one wagon, and that was a cripple. There were neither smiths nor carpentcrs on the I4 Moffat of Africa station, and Moffat had no experience of such work, but with the determination which is so characteristic of these brave pioneers of Christianity when driven back on their own resources he made a forge, complete with bellows, and rough but effective tools, and succeeded in putting fresh tyres on the wheels and mending the locks of several guns, to the great admiration of the onlookers, but somewhat to tlie embarrass- ment of the worker. When all was ready a body of thirty men prepared to set forth. Moffat objected to so formidable a body- guard, but Jacobus, Africaner’s brother, told him that they were concerned for his safety, and that he would run less risk of being molested, and Moffat confesses that he was right. The country over which they passed was barren in the extreme, but game abounded; water, however, was very scarce. Ina vale they found some honey in a fissure in the rock and enjoyed it ; but after a time all who had eaten of it experi- enced an intolerable burning sensation in the throat which water failed to alleviate. A native who had approached the camp informed them that the honey of that vale was dan- gerous to eat, as it was gathered from the flowers of poisonous bushes. , After reaching some of the branches of the Fish River the party was brought to a stand. The wild Namaquas were suspicious of the object of their visit. They knew of the fame of Africaner, and had been informed of his object, as well as that of the missionary, but they had in earlier times received such impressions of “‘ hat-wearers’”’ that they were resolved on a determined opposition or flight, Africaner proposed to return rather than run the risk of shedding blood, and in this he was — confirmed by the arrival of a relative from the north who gave a very poor account of the country. During their return homeward they were often exposed to danger from lions, and some of their number had hair-breadth escapes. One night they were quietly camped near a pool and had just closed their evening worship, when a terrific roar was Moffat of Africa 5 heard. The terrificd oxen rushed through the camp and over the fires, scattering hats and hymn-books, Bibles and guns in the wildest confusion, and leaving the party prostrate in the dust and sand. Providentially no serious injury was sustained ; the oxen were pursued, brought back, and secured to the wagon through the promptness of Africaner, who seized a firebrand and bade his people follow him into the darkness. It was the custom of the people in these parts to abandon their parents when too old or infirm to provide for themselves, leaving with them a small quantity of food and water. Being disappointed in the object of their journey they endeavoured to reach home by a shorter route: but this nearly ended in disaster, for they found themselves in a plain of deep sand, and were on the point of abandoning their wagon. They had no water, and though they found some water-melons they were as bitter as gall. After searching in all directions they discovered a river, and rushed pell-mell down its banks. So frantic with thirst were the poor oxen that it was only with great difficulty they were restrained from plunging into the water and dragging the wagon after them. They, however, reached home without further mishap. Itinerating or missionary visits to the surrounding villages now followed. A short description of Moffat’s manner of living may perhaps be here given. As before noticed, he had neither bread nor vegetables. Mr. Bartlett, of Pella, once sent him a bag containing a few pounds of salt, but, on examining it, it was hard to tell whether there was more sand or salt, and having become accustomed to do without it, he hung it upon a nail, where it remained untouched. His food was milk and meat, living for weeks together on one, and then for a while on the other, and again on both together. All was well so long as he had either ; but sometimes they both failed, and there were no shops in the country where they could be purchased ; and had there been any they must have been bought on credit, for money he had none. 16 Moffat of Africa Meals consisted frequently of a draught of milk in the morn- ing, another at noon, and a third at night, either sweet, sour, or curdled ; He had frequently pretty long fasts, and had recourse to the “‘ fasting girdle,’ as it is called ; on more than one occa- sion, after the morning service, he shouldered his gun, and went to the plain or the mountain browin search of something to eat, and, when unsuccessful, returned, laid down his gun, and addressed his congregation. He never liked begging, and was frequently hard put to; but many a time has an unknown friend placed in his hut a portion of food, on which he looked with feelings better conceived than described. He never forgot the kindness of Titus Africaner, who, when he visited the station, would ask what he could do for him, and, on receiving a few shots, would go to the field, and almost always bring home something, for he was an extraordinary marksman. The contents of his wardrobe bore the same impress of poverty. The supply of clothes which he had received in London were, as is too often the case, made after the dandy fashion, and being still a growing youth, they soon went to pieces. There were no laundry-maids there, nor anything like ironing or mangling. The old woman who washed his linen, sometimes with soap, but oftener without, was wont to make one shirt into a bag, and stuff the others into it; and he just took. them out as they were, and more than once has he turned one © to feel the comfort of a clean shirt. His mother, to keep him out of mischief in the long winter evenings, had taught him to sew and knit; and when he would tell her he intended being a man, she would reply, “‘ Lad, ye dinna ken whar your lot will be cast.’? She was right, for he often had occasion to use the needle since. Once she showed him how a shirt might be smoothed, by folding it properly, and hammering it with a piece of wood. Resolving one day to have a nice shirt for the Sabbath, he folded up one, and having prepared a suitable block, laid it on, not a smooth hearth-stone, but fine granite, and hammered away in good carnest, when Africaner coming by said, ‘‘ What — Moffat of Africa 17 are you doing?” ‘*‘ Smoothing my shirt,” he replied. ‘‘ That is one way,” said he. So it was, for on holding it up to view, it was riddled with holes ; some as large as the point of his finger. When he left the country he had not half a dozen shirts with two sleeves apiece. Africaner was most anxious to leave Namaqualand, and a location having been offered to him in Griqualand he begged Moffat to go and survey it. Moffat at first refused as the mission seemed to be of a political nature. However, at the earnest request of Africaner he consented. Although their course lay along the banks of the Orange River, Moffat’s party suffered torture from thirst and hunger, for all the villages lay on the other side of the river. The river at this point presented the appearance of a plain, miles in breadth, entirely covered with mimosa trees among which the many branches of the river ran, and then tumbled over the precipices, raising clouds of mist. One night they were overtaken by darkness, a cold wind was blowing and they were afraid to light a fire because of the Bush- men, so Moffat adopted an expedient of others in similar circumstances, and scooping a large hole in the sand lay down in it and covered himself with the sand which had been exca- vated, and passed a comfortable night, in spite of the roaring of lions. On one occasion Moffat had a narrow escape from death, for coming to a pool he stooped down and took a hearty draught and immediately felt an unusual taste in his mouth, and looking attentively at the water it dawned on him that the pool had been poisoned for game. At that moment a Bushman came running up with a terrified look on his face, and seizing Moffat by the arm tried to drag him from the pool. But when Moffat intimated that he had already drunk of the water the man’s distress was great. He ran off to his village followed by Moffat, the natives, with sympathy expressed on their faces, looking on him already as dead. The sensation was one of extreme fulness of the arteries, with rapid beating of the pulses, and giddiness. B 18 Moffat of Africa However, the unpleasant effects passed entirely away alter a few days, leaving no trace behind. After several days they reached the Quis or Kwees River, suffering from the pangs of hunger. This they tried to alleviate by drinking as much water as they possibly could. In this neighbourhood Moffat and a companion while riding in front quite lost touch with the main body. Moffat fired his gun but the only answer was a terrific roar from a lion close at hand which continued to follow them far into the night, when they - and their horses were so exhausted that they were compelled to halt. They allowed their horses to go free and lit a fire. Fortunately the lion did not attack them. After spending a very uncomfortable night they arose, and the companion went off in search of the horses while Moffat tried to find water. As he was walking along he happened to cough, and immediately he was surrounded by close on a hundred baboons, who grunted, grinned, and sprang from rock to rock, threatening an instant attack. Moffat parried them with his gun; he was afraid to shoot for that would have invited an immediate attack. At length he reached the plain where the baboons appeared to hold a noisy council. The animals did not follow him further, but, Moffat kept his gun pointed at two of the largest and most aggressive. The companion soon appeared with the horses, and they resumed their painful journey. So parched were their mouths that speech was gone and everything was expressed by signs. At length they came to a small pool, filthy in the extreme, but what a boon to them in their distress. They staggered to the house of a friend, speechless, haggard, ex- hausted, and unrecognisable. Moffat reached Griqua Town and after drawing up his report respecting the object of his visit, prepared to return to Namaqua- land. During the afternoon of the day on which they started they were overtaken by a terrific thunderstorm, the rain coming down in torrents. Having reached the place where they intended to halt they scraped together a few twigs and after Moffat of Africa 19 getting them alight with much difficulty went off in search of more fuel. They collected all they could find and retraced their steps in the direction of the camp, but the fire had disappeared and they had no landmark. After a long search in the midst of another violent storm they found the camp, the fire out, and the guardian asleep under a small bush. They had before them the prospect of a miserable night, but contrary to expectation, in spite of the chilly wind and pelting rain, they all fell asleep. Moffat rose next morning stiff, cold, and dizzy, his hair clotted with mud, but after a refreshing bathe in a pool of rain-water, and when he had wrung out his clothes, he prepared to enjoy a breakfast of biscuits provided by friends at Griqua Town, But more disappointment was in store, for the bag which contained the biscuits held also some tobacco, and the rain had trans- formed the two into one disgusting mass which even their famished condition could not tolerate, and so a good draught of water had to supply their wants. ‘The night before reaching home they had a narrow escape from a hippo. It was necessary to cross a river, the only fordable part of which was by means of two low islands covered with reeds and jungle. These were a great distance from each other, and it was now nearly dark. They had reached the first when a hippo came furiously up the stream, his loud snorts re-echoing from the dark overhanging precipices. Younker Africaner, a brother of the chief, shouted to Moffat to escape, and, springing from his horse, which appeared petrified with terror, he seized a large stone and hurled it at the huge creature, for the guns were out of order. The enraged animal then made for the next ford through which Moffat was forcing his horse, up to the saddle in a rapid torrent. A moment’s delay on his part would have been fatal. The other men remained until the infuriated animal had again got into the rear when they also escaped to the second island, where expecting another encounter, all made the best of their way to the mainland, effectually drenched with perspiration and water. As a rule hippos are 20 Moffat of Africa timid, but if wounded or constantly hunted they become savage and very dangerous. | Moffat gave the details of his journey and the result of his investigations to Africaner, who expressed his entire satisfaction, but it was resolved that the question of the removal should for the time being remain undetermined. Moffat at this time was contemplating a visit to the Cape and proposed to Africaner that he should accompany him. But Africaner reminded him that he was an outlaw with a price upon his head. Moffat, however, reassured him, and it was finally decided that he should go, the perilous part of the scheme being to get Africaner safely through the territories of the farmers to the Cape. Though a chief there was no necd to lay aside any- thing like royalty with a view to travel in disguise. Of the two substantial shirts Moffat had left, one he gave to Africaner; he had a pair of leather trousers, a duffel jacket, much the worse for wear, and an old hat neither white nor black, and Moffat’s own garb was scarcely more refined. As a further precaution it was agreed that for once Moffat should be the chief and that Africaner should be in the character of a servant. The picture may appear to be ludicrous, but the subject was a grave one. On the journey it amused Africaner and his Namaqua followers to hear the opinions of the Dutch farmers on that ferocious and inhuman monster Africaner, and one farmer with whom Moffat was very intimate for a long time refused to believe that he was addressing anything but the missionary’s ghost, so convinced was he that he had perished at the hands of the monster of iniquity ; but when Africaner was introduced to him, can it be wondered that words entirely failed him. Similar scepticism was at first expressed by the Governor of the Colony, Lord Charles Somerset, who afterwards, received the chief with great kindness, and seemed impressed with the result of missionary enterprise, and as a proof of his good feeling, presented Africaner with an excellent wagon. Moffat had a twofold object in visiting the Cape: first, to Moffat of Africa 21 introduce Africaner, which we have seen he successfully did ; second, to secure supplies for the Namaqua station. This, how- . ever, was not to be carried out as he had hoped, for a Depu- tation from the Missionary Society then visiting the Cape wished to appoint him to the Bechuana Mission. To this Moffat reluctantly agreed, for he had become greatly at- tached to his Namaqua flock. Another important event took place while Moffat was at the Cape, for he there married Miss Smith to whom he had been engaged for some consider- able time, The whole party then set out on their return journey, Africaner accompanying Moffat as far as Daniel’s Kuil, where they met Berends Berend, the Griqua chief. The two chiefs had met in many a deadly contest, but now they were united by the common bond of Christianity, and their former hostility dissolved. This was to be Moffat’s final parting with Africaner, for the chief passed away within two years of this memorable meeting. Griqua Town had formerly been under the chieftainship of Adam Kok, but he had abandoned the town, and the acknow- ledged chief was Berends Berend, He, however, seldom visited the place, devoting all his interests to Daniel’s Kuil, distant about fifty miles, and refusing to appoint a representative. The place was, therefore, disorganised, and like a ship without a rudder, Finally, Andries Waterboer was unanimously elected to the position of chief, to the satisfaction of the missionaries ; he was a man without name or riches, and had been educated on the station. His management of affairs was at first con- sidered severe, and this led to the formation of two parties— those who were in favour of law and order, the other consisting of turbulent and unruly spirits who could not brook discipline or restraint. To this party all the desperadoes of the com- munity joined themselves, and carried devastation, blood, and rapine among all the Bechuana tribes within their reach. They even made two attacks on Griqua Town, though happily 22 Moffat of Africa attended with little loss of life on either side, but causing much alarm in the mission families. : Moffat found the work amongst the Bechuanas, upon which he entered in 1821, to be even a severer trial of patience than that in which he had been hitherto engaged. The people were absolutely devoid of religious ideas, and had not even risen to. the level of idolatry. They were also extremely mischievous. The Moffats were often left without any water for their vege- tables, as the women would cut the watercourse which they had made from the Kuruman River, leaving them on a thirsty plain . without a drop of water, and with the thermometer at 120°, The savage temper of the Bechuanas was a severe trial to the missionaries. On one occasion, Mrs. Moffat, with a babe in her | arms, humbly begged a woman to be kind enough to move out of a temporary kitchen, that she might shut it as usual before going to church. The woman seized a piece of wood to hurl at Mrs. Moffat’s head, who was obliged to make her escape, leaving her in undisputed possession of the kitchen, and free to appropri- ate its contents to her own use. Thefts of their property were of daily occurrence, from cattle and sheep, to tools and utensils. Sometimes on returning from preaching the missionary would find a stone left in the pot instead of the meat on which he had hoped to dine. | Occasionally the natives hinted that the missionaries had left their own country on account of some crime. Besides their natural stupidity, the superstitious reverence paid by the natives to supposed ‘‘ rain-makers ”’ formed a great obstacle to missionary labours. No device was too grotesque or absurd for the natives to carry out at the command of the “‘ rain-maker ” in order, as they hoped, to obtain rain, On one occasion he told them to catch a baboon and bring it without a single hair missing, on another to kill a lion and bring its heart. Neither of these methods had any result; and the rain-maker then declared that Moffat and his brother missionary Hamilton frightened away the clouds by looking at them. Moffat of Africa 23 Eventually Moffat had to intercede for the life of the rain-maker whom the disappointed natives were preparing to kill. He succeeded in getting him off safely, but they then directed their anger against himself, saying that the missionarics’ residence among them was the cause of the long-continued drought, and that they must leave the country. One day a chief, brandishing his spear, came to Moffat’s door with a threatening message to this effect. Moffat came out and con- fronted him, while his wife looked on from the doorway with her infant in her arms. To his threats the missionary replied, ** If you are resolved to rid yourselves of us you must resort to stronger measures. You may shed blood or burn us out. Then shall they who sent us know, and God, who sees and hears us shall know that we have been persecuted indeed.” At these words the chief looked at his companions, remarking with a significant shake of the head, ‘‘ These men must have ten lives when they are so fearless of death ; there must be something in immortality.” The threatening group then broke up, and the missionaries were left for the time in peace. At last the day came when the Bechuanas were to learn the value of Moffat. For some time past rumours had reached Kuruman that a savage tribe named the Mantatees were about to attack the Bechuanas. Moffat had been preparing for a visit to a distant chief, Makaba, head of the Bauangketsi, in order to open up friendly relations with him. Notwithstanding the dis- suasions of the Bechuana chief, Mothibi, who refused to lend him any men for the journey, he persisted in carrying out his plan. After some days’ journey he came in sight of the Mantatees, who were preparing for the attack on the Bechuanas. Moffat hurried back to Latta Koo, the Bechuana headquarters, and advised Mothibi to send for help to Griqua Town. He followed the missionary’s advice, and, after eleven days’ waiting, about one hundred armed horsemen came. Moffat and the Griquas proceeded to reconnoitre, and soon came in sight of the enemy. They were also seen by the latter, 24. Moffat of Africa and a few warriors hurled their spears at them, which, however, fell short. Moffat then went forward unarmed, with one of the Griquas, to parley with them. They had approached within a hundred yards of the enemy, and were just about to dismount, when the savages uttered a hideous yell, and several hundred men rushed forward flinging their weapons with such velocity that Moffat and his companion had scarcely time to turn their terrified steeds and gallop away. Seeing no possible means of bringing them to a parley, they retired to a height at a short distance but within view of the enemy. At sunset Moffat rode back to confer with the Griqua chiefs, and to devise some way of bringing the enemy to terms, and avoiding, if possible, the dreadful consequences of a battle. Next morning they were all in motion before daybreak, and the hundred horsemen rode up to the invaders hoping to intimidate them by their imposing appearance, and bring them toaparley. But when they had approached within one hundred and fifty yards the Mantatees set up their terrible howl and flung their spears and javelins, whereupon the Griquas fired and shot several of their warriors. It was confidently expected that the Mantatees, never having seen fire-arms, would be daunted by this, but it only seemed to inflame their rage. Those who > had flung their spears snatched weapons from the hands of their dying companions, and sallied forth in such numbers that the Griquas were compelled to retreat. At length, finding their ammunition failing, they charged the enemy, who gave way in their turn. During the battle the Bechuanas came up and began to plunder and despatch the wounded men, and to butcher the women and children with their spears and war-axes. Seeing this Moffat galloped in among them, and by entreaties and remonstrances turned many of the Bechuanas from their murderous purpose. At last, after many hours’ fighting, the Mantatees were finally repulsed, and the threatened attack on Kuruman was averted. ATI NA \\ WW) {yy % ee — Se i ee iar ea ees = SSS ee . = SRS SSIS 4 i \ Wy i