HOTTENTOT CHILDREN ; 
 
 WITH 
 
 A PARTICULAR ACCOUNT 
 OF 
 
 PAUL D IKK OP, 
 
 THE SDN OP A HOTTENTOT CHIEF, WHO DIED 
 IN ENGLAND, SEPT. 14, 1824. 
 
 BY THE REV. JOHN CAMPBELL. 
 
 LONDON: 
 
 Printed for 
 THE RELIGIOUS TRACT SOCIETY 
 And Sold at the Depository, 
 66, Paternoster Row ; 
 
 AND BY J. NISBET, BERN EPS STREET, 
 
HOTTENTOT CHILDREN. 
 
 The following incidents, regarding some Hot- 
 tentot children, are designed both to please 
 and profit young readers. The narration may 
 convince them that there is not naturally 
 such a difference between children in civilized 
 and uncivilized countries as we are apt to 
 suppose. The difference becomes more ap- 
 parent as they advance from childhood to 
 manhood, arising from the difference in out- 
 ward circumstances ; for " of one blood hath 
 God made all nations, for to dwell cn ail the 
 face of the earth, and hath determined the 
 bounds of their habitation." (Acts xviL 26.) 
 The same playfulness,, and the same little 
 pranks, appear much in the same way among 
 children of all climes and colours. The chil- 
 dren of savages in Africa and of civilized 
 persons in Europe, are much upon a par as to 
 their natural dispositions, as to what they love 
 and what they hate ; — all are disposed to 
 walk in crooked paths, which lead to destruc- 
 tion, and have an equal aversion to the paths 
 of righteousness. 
 
6 
 
 When information is given regarding the 
 ruin of mankind by the rebellion of the first 
 man, (the root from whence all nations have 
 sprung,) an(>what God, in the person of his 
 Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, has done for the 
 recovery, the restoration, the redemption, in 
 a word, for the everlasting salvation of men, 
 it is treated much in the same way by the 
 children of the civilized and those of the 
 savage ; — the wondrous and all-important 
 facts slip, with equal ease, out of their minds ; 
 the authority of God is no more influential 
 on the one than on the other ; and the aver- 
 sion increases in both as they advance in life, 
 if not checked by the grace of God, through 
 the powerful application of the precious 
 gospel of Jesus Christ. 
 
 No wonder if savage tribes should become 
 more and more savage, not having ever heard 
 of any thing calculated to check or counter- 
 act the prevailing principle ; having never 
 heard of the will, or of the love, or of the 
 grace of God ; the happiness of heaven, or 
 the misery of hell. 
 
 It may increase the interest of young rea- 
 ders to notice, that the children referred to in 
 this narrative were bom at the opposite part 
 of the world from them ; there being no land, 
 consequently no people living beyond the 
 Hottentots, to the south : and, also, that it is 
 
not yet four hundred years since the existence 
 of their country was unknown to Europeans ; 
 and much less time since any thing certain 
 was known about this people. 
 
 God ; in his providence, has made the Hot- 
 tentots our fellow-subjects : — they now form a 
 part of the British empire. They have been 
 long a most oppressed people, but the present 
 government of our country is beginning to 
 alleviate the bondage under which they have 
 been long and unjustly held. 
 
 Various friends of the missionary cause 
 having expressed regret, after my first visit 
 to Africa, in 1812, that I had not brought 
 home some Hottentot or Bushman youth, 
 to try what effect might be produced by 
 an European education ; on revisiting that 
 country, in 1819, I resolved, if I could meet 
 with a suitable Hottentot boy, whose parents 
 were willing to intrust him to my care, 1 
 would certainly bring him to England, 
 
 There was one missionary station in the 
 colony of the Cape (or Hottentot country) to 
 which I was particularly attached, having 
 seen it in its uncivilized and in its improved 
 state. I was, therefore, anxious to procure 
 one of the children belonging to it. The 
 name of the place was Hooge Kraal, and of 
 its chief Dikkop, (or Thickhead.) It is 
 situated about 250 miles N.E. of the Cape 
 
8 
 
 of Good Hope, on the Indian Ocean. Dikkop 
 visited me, at the head of about sixty of his 
 people, when my wagons were encamped 
 about three miles from his kraal, expressing 
 an earnest desire that a missionary should be 
 sent to them, to teach them the things which 
 were taught white people. 
 
 On visiting his place, I found nothing but 
 poverty and wretchedness. The people lived 
 in miserable huts, without gardens or fields, 
 their bodies covered with filth, and ragged 
 sheepskins. Among them were a number of 
 young people, as ignorant as the wild beasts 
 which roamed in their wildernesses. ^ These, 
 standing in a row, promised if a missionary 
 came, they would attend his instructions from 
 sunrise to sunset. 
 
 Mr. Pacalt, missionary from the London 
 society, soon after commenced his successful 
 labours amongst them. He met the inhabit- 
 ants mornings and evenings to give them 
 religious instruction, and teach them to read. 
 At other times he taught them to build better 
 houses, to enclose ground for gardens, to sur- 
 round their town with a substantial wall, in 
 order to protect their gardens from the ra- 
 vages of cattle, and to erect a building to be 
 used both as a chapel and a school-house. 
 
 Thus improved I found Hooge Kraal on 
 rny second visit, six years after the first, and 
 
9 
 
 had an opportunity of residing three months 
 in it, detained by the Caffre war ; which 
 rendered it extremely hazardous to cross 
 the forests in that direction, which were in- 
 fested by parties of that barbarous people. 
 This afforded an opportunity of observing the 
 dispositions and talents of many of the chil- 
 dren, who were my daily visiters. My little 
 thatched cottage having no window, the door 
 was always open, to admit light, during 
 the day ; they were thereby frequently en- 
 couraged to come in, with solicitations to see 
 some pictures I had brought from England, 
 and drawings I had made of African animals, 
 flowers, trees, &c. 
 
 ^ They seemed highly diverted when they 
 discovered any of the animals or flowers with 
 which they were acquainted ; and I was no 
 less so, when I had said something, in my 
 bad Dutch, which was unintelligible to them, 
 to see them shake their heads, saying, " they 
 did not hear me;" meaning they did not un- 
 derstand me. 
 
 I had upon one occasion an opportunity of 
 discovering considerable talents in a Hotten- 
 tot boy, which attached me much to him. 
 Though Hooge Kraal is only four miles from 
 the Indian Ocean, little of it is seen from the 
 settlement, owing to the high land which 
 forms the cliffy teach. I onlv heard of one 
 
10 
 
 place where the sea was at all accessible, for a 
 range of many miles, from the height of the 
 perpendicular cliffs, and the almost impene- 
 trable thicket of shrubs which grew on their 
 summits. This place was a small bay, called 
 Shell Bay, only about a quarter of a mile 
 wide, formed by a rocky cliff; ending in a reef 
 of rock, running into the ocean on each side. 
 In this little bay the ocean retires about 
 100 yards from the shore during part of every 
 month. The people of Pacaltsdorp frequently 
 embrace those opportunities to collect shells 
 on the beach, which they burn, and thus 
 make excellent lime. A party setting out on 
 an expedition of this kind, I took the oppor- 
 tunity of accompanying them, in order to 
 examine this' bay, of the beauty of which I 
 had heard much. All were Hottentots, of 
 whose Dutch I understood little. However, 
 they pointed out to me a woman, who, they 
 said, could speak English, in consequence of 
 her husband having been some time m the 
 Hottentot regiment, the officers of which 
 spoke English. The intelligence pleased me, 
 but on trial I was mortified to find that her 
 whole vocabulary consisted only of three 
 words, which were " yes," " no," and " sir.' 
 I asked her many questions, to all of which, 
 to the surprise of the whole group, she re- 
 turned ready answers, which were either, 
 
11 
 
 Yes, sir ! or No, sir ! By chance the answer 
 was sometimes right, hut more frequently 
 wrong. ^ J 
 
 At length we approached near enough the 
 ocean to hear the roar of its mighty waves 
 dashing against the shore ; but no part of 
 it was visible during the journey, of about 
 live miles, till we had descended by a steep 
 winding path, among trees, almost to the 
 beach, when a romantic miniature bay, all 
 at once, came into view, having a fine look-out 
 to the extended Indian Ocean. Though the 
 day was calm, and delightful sunshine, vet 
 owing to the swell of the sea constantly on 
 those shores, the waves were about four feet 
 in perpendicular height, and fell, with inter- 
 esting grandeur, in succession on the sandy 
 shore. J 
 
 vM he Hottentots divided themselves into 
 little parties, each choosing those parts of the 
 beach which to them appeared most plenti- 
 lully strewed over with shells, which, in 
 storms, had been cast ashore from the bosom 
 of the ocean, many of which had probably 
 been brought by currents and tempests from 
 the Indies, Pacific Ocean, &c. These they 
 collected into heaps, and appeared striving 
 which party would soonest raise their heap 
 to the standard. No situation could be more 
 retired from the rest of the world ; for nothing 
 
12 
 
 more was seen from it than the interesting 
 bay itself, lined with cliffs, almost concealed 
 by the evergreen trees which grew every- 
 where upon them ; and the interminable 
 ocean in front, the snowy spray from whose 
 waves formed a pleasing contrast with the 
 towering green cliffs by which it was nearly 
 
 surrounded. , . . 
 
 The varieties and beauties of this lower 
 world, though inhabited by rebels against its 
 Creator, are many, great, and marvellous ; 
 and most plainly declare his glory, his wis- 
 dom, his power, and his goodness. lne 
 ocean, also, no less than the land, proves 
 the glory of his perfections. In the sea m 
 front of this very bay might have been found 
 an endless variety of animals, from the 
 gigantic whale down to the smallest animal- 
 cule, and all fulfilling some purpose, though 
 utterly unconscious thereof. 
 
 When fatigued by their labours, the Hot- 
 tentots amused themselves by advancing as 
 near as they could to the foaming billows, 
 then taking to their heels, they endeavoured 
 to reach the shore before the billows could 
 overtake them, which afforded them much 
 sport on outrunning them. When tired of 
 their sport, they repaired to a beautiful patch 
 of grass, under the overspreading branches 
 end thick foliage of a charming evergreen 
 
13 
 
 tree, where they kindled a fire, and cooked a 
 portion of the victuals they had brought with 
 them. 
 
 The sun began nearly to reach the end of 
 its course before I discovered it, being so 
 intent upon examining the variety of shells, 
 flowers, trees, rocks, &c. ; but on noticing 
 that the shadows of the evening were every- 
 where visible, I inquired of the Hottentots 
 when they meant to return home : to my sur- 
 prise I learned they were to remain for 
 several days, till they had collected a suffi- 
 cient quantity of shells for the purpose in* 
 tended. Having neither house, hut, nor tent, 
 they meant to sleep in their sheepskins under 
 the bushes. 
 
 When wondering how I should find my 
 way home, a Hottentot boy, about eleven 
 years of age, arrived with two horses, one for 
 me, and the other for himself, and wearing 
 only a small sheepskin over his shoulders. 
 
 On reaching the top of the ascent from the 
 sea, he began to ask me a variety of ques- 
 tions, m so lively and friendly a way, that I 
 became quite pleased with him. He wished 
 to know how I got across the river, on foot, in 
 the morning, which was so deep. Having 
 observed me fatigued by my walk in the 
 morning, he kindly inquired if I was well, 
 end if I could eat. He told me he could 
 
ii 
 
 • read ; bat when I asked if he could write, he 
 most significantly shook his head, and an- 
 swered, No. On coming to a steep descent, 
 he proposed that we should walk the horses ; 
 and when we came to a still steeper part, he 
 advised me to dismount, and offered to lead 
 both horses down, which he did in a clever 
 manner. When I asked him how many days 
 there were in a week, he said, six. When I 
 told him there were seven, he said, Yes, but 
 that includes Zondagh (or Sunday). When 
 I asked him who was the Saviour of the soul ; 
 he said he did not know ; but I j udged from 
 his countenance that he did not understand 
 my Dutch. I felt anxious to bring this boy 
 to England, but. on inquiry, I found he was 
 a half-cast Hottentot, his mother only being a 
 Hottentot. I made him a present of a clasp- 
 knife, as a reward for his trouble, with which 
 he seemed greatly pleased. 
 
 Hearing that a young Hottentot had just 
 been bit by a serpent, I called to see him. 
 Poor boy ! he was greatly alarmed lest he 
 should die ; for death is the king of terrors 
 everywhere, except among those who have 
 obtained mercy from God, through faith in 
 Christ Jesus, to whom they have fled for re- 
 fuge from sin and wrath to come. The 
 wound was on the side of his foot, and he felt 
 the poison paining him to about four inches 
 
15 
 
 above the wound. He said the serpent was a 
 small one ; that he had trod* upon it, and it 
 bit him among the grass. He was surrounded 
 by Hottentot women, who all seemed con- 
 cerned about what might be the issue. A 
 white kidney bean was sticking fast to the 
 wounded part, which they said would stick so 
 long as poison remained in the wound, suck- 
 ing the poison W it. They had also tied a 
 cord very tight round his leg, a little below 
 the knee ; and had his foot standing in warm 
 water, with which a woman kept rubbing his 
 leg downwards. The boy' 3 parents were 
 from home, and these kind attentions were 
 paid to him by the neighbours ; and God 
 crowned their endeavours with his blessing, 
 for the little fellow recovered. 
 
 Sin has poisoned our natures, and brought 
 a train of evils along with it. Our nature 
 received the mortal sting in paradise from 
 him who, in the Bible, is called the old ser- 
 pent and the devil, who to this day exerts all 
 his power to prevent our receiving a cure. 
 Were parents as anxious and industrious in 
 
 # The chief danger from serpents arises from 
 dreading on them while walking among long grass, 
 where they cannot be easily distinguished. In allu- 
 sion to this hinderauce to rapid travelling, Christ 
 assures his apostles they might tread on serpents, and 
 they should not injure them. 
 
16 
 
 the use of means for extracting the poison of 
 the old serpent from the souls of then- chil- 
 dren, as these Hottentots were for saving the . 
 life of this boy, with the blessing of God, 
 more would be saved from destruction than 
 
 ™SfC^y visits I had from the 
 voune people, to view the pictures from 
 Europe, there was a little boy about ten years 
 of asre whose mild manners attracted my 
 uotict ' On bringing him to Mr. M— , toa 
 missionary at the station, I found that his 
 rSwas'paul, son of Dikkop, late , chi rfrf 
 the Hottentots of Hooge Kraal, the same 
 who had petitioned me on my ^rvr^to 
 endeavour to obtain a missionary to instruct 
 £ and his people. Mr. M— - spoke » very 
 favourably of the mildness and good beha- 
 viour of the boy. Finding him very willing 
 toZ with me to England for education we 
 S ent for his mother, in order to otamte 
 consent to his going; f^J^^^S 
 hearing my proposal, \ c0 ^\"lTr e t 
 « I cannot part with my child." Various rea- 
 sons were stated to her why she ought to 
 oart with him for a season ; to al which she 
 fave tbe same answer, " I cannot part with 
 m V child.^ On inquiring of her, a few days 
 after, if she had thought upon the proposal I 
 Lad made to her regarding her son Paul going 
 
17 
 
 to England, she made no reply, but fled from 
 the mission-house as if it had been in Hames. 
 We all admired her attachment to her son. 
 So I left Pacaltsdorp without having obtained 
 a young Hottentot. 
 
 On visiting another missionary station in 
 the Hottentot country, I was pleased with the 
 appearance of a young Hottentot belonging 
 to it, and asked him if he would accompany 
 me to England^ the country from whence the 
 missionaries came. He immediately leaned 
 with his back to a wall, put his hands on his 
 face, and after looking at us through his fin- 
 gers for sometime, he said, "No, I cannot 
 go !" We sent to his father, who was herding 
 cattle at a distance, to inquire if he was will- 
 ing his son should go to England for educa- 
 tion. He said he was willing if his wife 
 consented. The mother was then sent for, 
 and asked the same question. She imme- 
 diately looked at her son, who was playing 
 near us. Her eye indicated the affection of 
 her heart to him ; covering her eyes with one 
 hand, while the other arm hung trembling at 
 her side, she stooped forward; and, with a ma- 
 ternal smile on her lips, and plaintive voice, 
 said, " Mynheer, ik kan niet doen het — ik 
 kan niet doen het;*' or, u Sir, I cannot do it 
 — I cannot do it;" which she coaaiirwied to 
 repeat till she gladly left us* 
 
18 
 
 Failing to obtain that boy, another Hot- 
 tentot was sent for, who had also a son at a 
 proper age, who was asked if he was willing 
 to allow his son to go to England for educa- 
 tion. At once he consented, and despatched 
 a messenger to bring the boy from a farmer's 
 about live miles distant. The father could 
 not wait the arrival of his son, being en 
 gaged to drive a wagon to Capetown for some 
 person. We remained till five o'clock in the 
 evening, and there being no appearance of 
 the boy, we put the oxen to our wagons, and 
 were on the eve of departing, when the little 
 fellow arrived. He was immediately asked if 
 he was willing to go to England, the country 
 from whence the missionaries came, to be 
 taught good things. We all felt for the poor 
 boy, as he had not one friend to consult, his 
 mother being dead, and his father gone to 
 the Cape. lie stood motionless for some 
 time, covering his eyes with his left hand, 
 slily peeping at us through his fingers, re- 
 peating, " 1 know not, I know not/' We 
 told him his father was willing he should go ; 
 however, he still said, ct I know not but a 
 person standing near whispered. something to 
 him, on which he cheerfully said, " I will 
 go." On inquiring the cause of so speedy an 
 alteration, I found the person had said, 
 
 Kleinveld (which was his name) if you go 
 
19 
 
 with that gentleman, you will get fine clothes, 
 and tea-water, and plenty of victuals. 5 ' A 
 person then desired him to run and get into 
 the foremost wagon. He took leave of no 
 one, took nothing with him but his little 
 sheepskin cloak, never looked back, but hastily 
 got into the wagon, and immediately fell fast 
 asleep. 
 
 Next day he attached himself to me, and 
 became quite familiar, attending me on my 
 walks while the wagons were halting, carrying 
 the flowers I collected. He began, also, to 
 leave the luggage-wagon, and to moun.t mine, 
 as if in play, and at length ventured inside, 
 and took his seat at my feet, while I was 
 writing, amusing himself with some small 
 land tortoises, making them run about by 
 scratching their shelly backs with his nails. 
 His expectations regarding his condition in 
 England soon began to rise • for on the third 
 day after leaving his home he told a little girl, 
 that on coming to England he should have a 
 horse, and a stable, and he should brush the 
 horse, and ride upon it. He sometimes would 
 Oring me flowers, which he had picked up a> 
 little distances from the wagons, and tell me 
 the Hottentot names for them, in consequence 
 of observing me frequently examining such 
 iiowers with some attention. 
 
 I observed his confidence in me to increase 
 
 c 2 
 
20 
 
 after every meal that he received. During a 
 walk, he showed me the fruit of a flower, 
 part of which, he said, had been eaten by a 
 serpent. For the first time, he sang as he 
 walked. He asked me if he should get an 
 ABC book at the Cape, and if he should 
 get a horse in England, which seemed to be 
 the summit of his ambition. He then asked 
 me some questions about a ship, which he 
 had not yet seen. When he learned that 
 there was plenty of victuals in ships, all his 
 inquiries were satisfied. During the walk he 
 collected a nosegay, which he said he should 
 carry to the Cape. 
 
 11.— On drawing near to Capetown, Klein- 
 veld was surprised to see a ship, full sail, just 
 coming to anchor in Table Bay. He im- 
 mediately inquired if that was the wagon 
 that was to take him over the sea to Eng- 
 land. 
 
 On arriving at Capetown, Kleinveld was 
 very glad to meet with his father. I was 
 pleased to see the anxiety of the father for 
 the welfare of his son. He requested me to 
 write to the missionary at his place as soon as 
 I knew when his son should sail, and after- 
 wards how his son got to England ; and that, 
 besides education, he wished him to be taught 
 a trade ; and with great simplicity asked me 
 io send him once over to Africa during the 
 
21 
 
 period of his education, that he might himself 
 see the progress he made ; having no idea of 
 the great distance, nor the expense, nor the 
 loss of time which it would occasion. 
 
 After remaining some weeks in Capetown, 
 Kleinveld accompanied me on a journey of 
 ten months into the interior of that country. 
 He left Capetown with great spirits, though 
 he had no idea where we were going to ; but 
 having found by experience that sufficient 
 victuals were daily allowed to him, he cared 
 about nothing else. He sometimes assisted 
 in driving the cattle and sheep, and sometimes 
 in watching them while feeding. 
 
 When halting at Stellenbosh, a town about 
 twenty-six miles from Capetown, a poor Mo- 
 sambique slave complained to me of Klein- 
 veld, that he had destroyed some unripe 
 melons. " Had they been ripe, and he had 
 eat them/ ' said he, "I should have thought 
 nothing of it, but when they could be of no 
 use, it was wicked to destroy them : — but 
 Hottentots are not good, they are not indus- 
 trious. The Mosambique man do what 
 master bid him ; but Hottentot sleep, and not 
 work ' ' 
 
 Kleinveld kept his eyes fixed on the ground 
 during this speech by the poor black man, 
 which was delivered with great fluency and 
 earnestness. He was reprimanded for his 
 
22 
 
 conduct, and desired never to be guilty of the 
 iike again. 
 
 About a hundred miles higher up the coun- 
 try, when travelling along the Hex river, a 
 Bootshuana man who accompanied us, and 
 who took his turn in driving the loose cattle, 
 brought Kleinveld before me in the evening, 
 and sharply reproved him, in broken Dutch, 
 for having left him to drive the oxen alone, 
 and ran forward to the wagon to sleep; 
 adding, " You Hottentot, when you come 
 among the wild Bushmen, they will not treat 
 you so tenderly as these good people do, they 
 will lash you, and make you work." In his 
 defence Kleinveld said, « I am master's boy, 
 not your boy." On which I told him, that 
 those who will not work, the word ot God 
 said, they should not eat ; which made him 
 look very downcast ; however, m a tew 
 minutes, he fell fast asleep under a bush near 
 tliG fire 
 
 I found next morning that we were halting 
 at a very tempting situation for boys, tor at 
 the side of bur wagons was a very extensive 
 orchard, uninclosed, covered with trees, laden 
 with chestnuts, walnuts, figs, peaches, apricots, 
 nectarines, mulberries, oranges, lemons, ap- 
 ples, pears, &c. most of which were perfectly 
 npe, and delightful to look upon. It was not 
 long before this scene attracted the particular 
 
!3 
 
 attention of my Kleinveld and another Klein- 
 veld, older and taller than him, who was one 
 of our ox-wagon leaders, and who was gene- 
 rally distinguished by the name of Black or 
 Great, Kleinveld. These two boys darted 
 into the orchard, and were not content with 
 pulling fruits which were within their reach 
 from the ground, and for pulling which they 
 would not have been found fault with by the 
 Proprietor if they had asked permission; 
 but my Kleinveld mounted a large pear tree 
 each branch of which was loaded with pears' 
 while the other boy remained under to receive 
 the fruit he might throw down from the tree 
 While thus employed, the branch on which 
 he stood gave way, and both came to the 
 ground. The proprietor complained, and 
 both the boys were punished. 
 
 Kleinveld generally attended our morning 
 and evening worship in the tent, and some- 
 times seemed to listen with attention to the 
 scriptures read and the address given, but 
 seemed much disinclined to acquire the know- 
 ledge of the alphabet. 
 
 One morning about this time, I tried to 
 teach our Bootshuana to name the letters in 
 a very short word of six letters. After going 
 over these few letters ten or twelve times, he 
 was as unable to name one of them as when 
 we began. From the manner in which he 
 
24 
 
 laughed while thus employed, it evidently 
 appeared to him a ridiculous amusement, as 
 he had not the least conception of the impor- 
 tance of being able to read, and for want of 
 his language I could not explain it to him. 
 
 Feb. 3.— An ox, by mistake or carelessness, 
 being left behind at the former halting place, 
 two of the ox-leaders were sent back in search 
 of it, which put us to great inconvenience, 
 because at every quick descent, or rough part 
 of the road, a leader for the oxen that are 
 dragging the wagon is absolutely necessary, 
 as the oxen are in such cases inclined sud- 
 denly to turn out of the road, and to drag the 
 wagon into dangerous places. Little Klein- 
 veld gave some assistance on this emergency, 
 but when the road became rather smoother, 
 he had watched an opportunity of getting 
 away, unnoticed by the wagon-driver, and 
 concealed himself among the boxes in my 
 wagon, where he was afterwards discovered 
 fast asleep. 
 
 On the tlth, observing the footsteps of 
 lions in various parts near our halting place in 
 the e vening, Klein veld was very active in as- 
 sisting to collect wood for making fires to 
 frighten them away during the night ; but as 
 Hottentots are unable to keep awake in order 
 to feed the fires, they only protect during the 
 early part of the night. Indeed, they sleep 
 
25 
 
 so soundly, that one would suppose thai 
 though all the lions in Africa were roaring at 
 their ears, it would hardly awake them. In 
 hot weather, I have little doubt, that Klein- 
 veld could have slept three-and-twenty hours 
 out of the four-and-twenty. 
 
 As we expected to reach the village of 
 Beaufort the next day, I desired Kleinveld to 
 make himself as clean as he could. The dirt 
 was so ingrained in his jacket by frequent 
 sleeping on the ground, that his brushing 
 made little alteration in its appearance, nor 
 did he seem to care whether it did or not. 
 
 After crossing the wild Bushman and 
 Griqua countries, we came to the city of Lat- 
 takoo, in the Matchappee country, which we 
 left April 11, 1820, to explore three countries 
 beyond it, namely, the Tammaha, Mashow, 
 and Marootzee countries. When all was pre- 
 pared for departure, I was amused by seeing 
 Kleinveld fearlessly standing in the front of 
 the luggage- wagon, shaking hands with all 
 the children, and bidding them farewell. 
 
 In the Griqua country, when returning to 
 the colony of Good Hope, observing Klein- 
 veld travelling without any clothing, I inquired 
 what had become of his trowsers. With a 
 downcast countenance, he said he had forgot- 
 ten them at Griqua Town. He had previously 
 lost his cap in one country his sheepskin 
 
26 
 
 cloak in the Bushman country, and the dogs 
 in the Mashow country had eaten his shoes 
 while lie slept, so that he had nothing more 
 to leave behind him anywhere, having now 
 ost his last piece of dress; nor could any ar- 
 ticle be procured for him till we should reach 
 the first town within the colony of the Cape 
 of Good Hope, which was then distant about 
 a month's journey. After having related his 
 misfortunes, he walked off perfectly satisfied 
 and cheerful, whistling as he went. In the 
 evenings, having no cloak to sleep in, he used 
 to creep into the tent-sack, and be fast asleep 
 in five minutes. Many Hottentots cannot be 
 at the trouble to think, or reflect, which is a 
 great hinderance to their improvement and 
 comfort. 
 
 A singular escape of a Bushman child from 
 being devoured by a lion, was reported to 
 have happened about this time. The child 
 was only four years of age, and was sleeping 
 beside its parents, in a half open hut. About 
 midnight the child awoke, and sat by a dull 
 fire. The father happening to awake about 
 the same time, looked at his child, and while 
 he looked, a lion came to the opposite side of 
 the fire. The child not knowing what the 
 lion was, was not afraid, but spoke to him, 
 and sportingly threw live cinders at him ; on 
 which the lion snarled, and approached nearer, 
 
27 
 
 when the child seized a burning stick, and 
 playfully thrust it into his mouth, which made 
 him scamper off as fast as he could run. The 
 father witnessed all this, but was afraid to 
 interfere, lest he himself, as well as his child, 
 should have been torn to pieces by the fero- 
 cious animal; but his child's feat attached 
 him to it more strongly than ever. 
 
 Kleinveld soon afterwards had a very nar- 
 now escape from death. The oxen of the 
 luggage- wagon took fright, and ran off 1 most 
 furiously, perhaps from hearing the roar of a 
 lion. The thundering noise made by the 
 wagon thus furiously dragged over stones, 
 alarmed the oxen of two other wagons. A 
 numerous drove of oxen, belonging to some 
 Coranna chiefs who travelled along with us, 
 happened to be about half a mile a-head of 
 us ; the frightened oxen ran against them, 
 and were stopped : but for this impediment, 
 the whole three wagons might have been 
 dashed to pieces. Poor Kleinveld happened 
 to be fast asleep in one of those wagons, and 
 was tumbled out, most happily not from the 
 front, but from the hinder part of the wagon, 
 or he might have been crushed to death by 
 the wheels going over him, instead of which 
 he suffered no material injury. 
 
 On reaching Graaf Reinet, the highest up- 
 town in the colony, Kleinveld was almost in 
 
28 
 
 an extasy of joy, because every street was 
 lined with a row of lemon-trees on each side, 
 loaded with ripe fruit 5 and multitudes of 
 orange-trees appearing in the same beautiful 
 state, in the gardens behind and between the 
 houses. Indeed, it was the glory of the season 
 for those kinds of fruit, and nothing terres- 
 trial could appear more enchanting to the 
 human eye, especially during the vivid sun- 
 shine. It was not the beauty, however, that 
 afforded to Kleinveld. the most pleasure, it 
 was the eating of them. 
 
 Oct. 19th. — As usual, Kleinveld and Mu- 
 lialy, the native of Lattakoo, drove the cattle 
 and sheep the whole day, generally a mile or 
 two ahead of the wagons. At sunset we 
 came up with Kleinveld halting with a sheep, 
 that either could not or would not proceed 
 further. Kleinveld thought it was in conse- 
 quence of a stroke received from Mulialy, 
 who had gone forward with the other sheep 
 and oxen to the Blood River. The next day 
 Kleinveld assisted in driving the cattle twenty 
 miles. Being behind the wagons, out of 
 sight, when we halted in the evening at Hal- 
 beck fountain, in the Karroo, expressing 
 my fears to a Hottentot, that Kleinveld would 
 not be able, from fatigue, to join us, he 
 smiled, saying, Kleinveld shall come up ; 
 and jso he did, with Mulialy, in a few minutes 
 
29 
 
 after^ without the smallest complaint of fa- 
 tigue, hut was highly gratified with the supper 
 I gave him. In England we speak of a hill 
 standing or lying in such a place, but the 
 Hottentots, at supper, were talking of a hill 
 sitting in such a place. Let the young readers 
 decide whether standing, lying, or sitting be 
 most applicable to the position of a hill. 
 
 Kleinveld was diverted by our meeting 
 some Hottentot females with their faces 
 painted as black with soot as sweep boys in 
 England. They did not do this as ornamental, 
 but to preserve their faces from the effects of 
 the sun : but the sight was novel, as all faces 
 we had seen far in the interior were painted 
 with red. 
 
 Some weeks after arriving at Capetown, a 
 letter came from a missionary, stating that 
 Kleinveld' s father considered himself dying 
 of a consumption, and was very anxious that 
 I should send back his boy to him, which 1 
 did without delay. The boy seemed to con- 
 sider it a matter of indifference whether he 
 went to England with me, or home to his 
 father. This easiness or indifference of tem- 
 per is shown in most young Hottentots I have 
 seen. 
 
 About the time that Kleinveld was taken 
 from me a wagon arrived t'rmn Bethelsderp 
 
30 
 
 which had halted on the way at Pacaltsdorp 
 (formerly Hooge Kraal.) The mother of 
 Paul Dikkop, the little boy whom I had first 
 wished to take to England, told the mis- 
 sionary she had repented her refusal of 
 my proposal to take her boy to England, 
 and begged him to take Paul with him to 
 Capetown, and offer him to me for that pur- 
 pose. Thus the very boy whom I had been 
 first anxious to obtain was sent to me. 
 
 On the 15th of February, 1821, the ship 
 Castle Forbes, from India, which had touched 
 for a few days at Capetown, to put ashore 
 some passengers, and to take in a supply of 
 fresh provisions, was appointed to sail to 
 England, and 1 had taken my passage in her. 
 In the morning I found Paul, the Hottentot, 
 through the kind attention of Mrs. Philip, in 
 complete readiness to depart. I could not 
 out wonder at his apathy, for he appeared to 
 leave his country with as much unconcern as 
 if he had been" to return in half an hour. 
 While in the boat, he scarcely ever looked 
 back to the land he was leaving, but was 
 wholly intent upon the vessel to which we 
 
 were sailing. 
 
 When the bustle and confusion connected 
 with setting sail from a port had subsided, 
 Paul became an object of considerable interest 
 
31 
 
 to all on board, only because he was a Hot- 
 tentot, and he was particularly so to all the 
 seamen. 
 
 He was delighted with the food which he 
 had daily allotted to him ; it was so superior, 
 both in quality and quantity, to what he had 
 been accustomed to at home from his infancy. 
 From this circumstance, and the kind atten- 
 tion paid to him on board, especially by the 
 sailors, he felt perfectly at home, and was 
 always in good spirits. On the third day, he 
 was attacked by sea-sickness, when all his fine 
 spirits forsook him ; he lost all inclination for 
 playing about the deck, and was only desi- 
 rous to lounge or lie in corners, or among 
 coils of ropes ; but w r hat seemed most to sur- 
 prise him was his inability to eat good vic- 
 tuals, owing, perhaps, to his never having 
 before experienced the least failure of appetite, 
 
 When the sailors were trying to make him 
 eat something savoury, he only put it to his 
 mouth, but could not swallow it. I asked 
 him if he knew why he could not eat such 
 nice food. He said he did not know. One 
 asked him if it was anything sticking in his 
 throat, that prevented the food going down. 
 He seriously told him he did not know, but 
 intimated, by the expression of his counte- 
 nance, that he w r as as much astonished at the 
 circumstance as they seemed to be. Tbo 
 
sickness passing away, Paul resumed his 
 spirits and playfulness. 
 
 Paul had never been possessor of a shirt 
 till the day we left the Cape of Good Hope. 
 At the proper time I desired him to put on a 
 clean one ; but leaving the foul one on the 
 floor of my cabin, a wave soon after rushed 
 through the small window, which drenched 
 with water various articles, among the rest 
 the Hottentot's shirt. On desiring him to 
 take it on deck to dry, misunderstanding me, 
 and supposing that a shirt was of no more 
 use when dirty, he pressed it into the form 
 of a ball, and threw it into the sea. The 
 sailors observing what he had done, made 
 sport of it ; calling him a gentleman Hotten- 
 tot, who would not wear a shirt twice. How- 
 ever, when the matter was explained to him, 
 he never repeated the action, which had been 
 done from ignorance. 
 
 A lady from Bombay kindly furnishing 
 soap which could be used with sea water, 
 Paul and another boy, of his own age, (an 
 English boy, who also was under my care • ) 
 had a regular weekly wash of their own arti- 
 cles during the remainder of the voyage ; 
 but, from being utterly insensible to danger, 
 they generally washed on the forecastle, 
 where there was no railing to prevent falling 
 into the sea, and within half a yard of the 
 
33 
 
 edge, even in boisterous weather, notwith- 
 standing the remonstrances and warnings 
 of the captain and myself ; which thoughtless 
 obstinacy brought punishment upon them 
 more than once, before they would desist. 
 
 Though no land had been seen, except the 
 small island of St. Helena at which we 
 touched, for almost a quarter of a year, to our 
 astonishment, the Hottentot never once ex- 
 pressed the least surprise that we were so 
 long coming to the land to which I had pro- 
 mised to take him. Indeed, he seemed so 
 contented with his situation, that he probably 
 would not have complained even if we hud 
 sailed round the world. 
 
 I left the ship in a pilot -boat, about 
 eighteen hours before we came in sight of 
 England, in order to reach London in time 
 for the annual meeting of the Missionary 
 Society. In the hurry to get ready to go 
 into the boat, I entirely forgot the little 
 Hottentot, but he had been watching the 
 whole affair, and when I was ready to leave 
 the ship, I found he had hastily dressed him- 
 self, and packed up a small parcel, which he 
 carried under his arm, and was ready to step 
 into the boat with me. When I told him 
 that he was to remain in the ship till it should 
 bring him to the place where I lived, and 
 where I should meet him, he seemed full of 
 
 D 
 
34 
 
 terror, and screamed loudly. I had explained 
 the matter to the English boy, who was 
 under my care ; I therefore desired him to 
 look at James, and he would see he was not 
 weeping. He immediately went up to J ames, 
 and narrowly inspected both his eyes. On 
 finding that there was not a single tear in 
 either of them, he was satisfied, became 
 silent, and returned to our cabin with his 
 parcel. 
 
 It was almost a fortnight after my arrival 
 in London before I had notice that the ship 
 was expected to get up the Thames to Black- 
 wall. I went to the ship, and when Paul 
 saw me come on board for him he was 
 greatly delighted; for the scene on board was 
 become very dull, in consequence of all the 
 passengers, with their servants, and about a 
 doze** of children from India, having left the 
 ship. He was soon dressed, and his box 
 packed and standing ready to descend to the 
 boat wlJch I had brought with me to take 
 him to Blackwall. 
 
 The change was so great, from three 
 jnonths' confinement on board a ship, to tra- 
 verse the streets of such a city as London, in 
 the evening, illuminated with gas, and all 
 kinds of vehicles moving along, with crowds 
 of passengers, that he seemed quite bewil- 
 dered,, noticing hardly anything particularly, 
 
35 
 
 but gazing strangely around him, as if at 
 once he had fallen into a new world. 
 
 James, his chief companion on board the 
 ship, though an English boy, spoke the Dutch 
 language very well. This being the only 
 language Paul understood, his company was 
 rather an obstruction to his acquiring the 
 English. However, notwithstanding this, 
 though he did not know a single word of 
 English when he came on board, before he 
 saw land he could speak it tolerably well, 
 chiefly by means of frequently playing with 
 the children from India. This fact shows 
 that even Hottentots are far from being des- 
 titute of talents. The first English words 
 which he was heard to speak were, " Dinner 
 is ready," which he one day, when near the 
 Equator, called to the cabin passengers, after 
 hearing the dinner-bell ring, which he did in 
 imitation of the steward. 
 
 Many surrounding friends came to see him 
 soon after his arrival, who generally expressed 
 surprise at the manner in which the black 
 wool grew on his head, the singularity of 
 his features, &c. but he never appeared to 
 take the least notice of their surprise, nor did 
 he seem either elated or depressed by their 
 commendations of him as a fine boy a good 
 boy, a clever boy, &c. which were too fre- 
 quently spoken in his hearing. 
 
 i) 2 
 
36 
 
 When we got a little settled, he was de- 
 sired to repeat, after another, parts of scrip- 
 ture, psalms, hymns, &c. in order to fix them 
 in his memory. He did not relish this kind of 
 exercise, for he said it made him so tired. 
 The natural mind of man is carnal ; it under- 
 standeth not, nor does it know the value of 
 the things revealed by the Spirit of God. 
 
 There were no persons Paul was so delighted 
 to see as the poor chimney-sweepers, whom 
 he called " kimney mans," evidently owing to 
 their being black. He could not comprehend 
 how there was a constant succession of young 
 chimney-sweeps ; for he one day said, " When 
 all the little kimney mans are great kimney 
 mans, what will you do then 
 
 On being told, one day, that his place in 
 Africa was nearly under his feet, he said, 
 " Den if we was to knock very hard, coidd 
 we not make de peoples hear at my place ?" 
 
 When the history of Ananias and Sap- 
 phira was related to him, of their being struck 
 dead by the power of God for telling a lie, he 
 inquired, " If dat womans not live before all 
 de watei's come upon de world ?" Being 
 asked, why he thought so, " Because," said 
 he, " she was so very wicked, and de waters 
 did come to kill de wicked peoples evi- 
 dently referring to the destruction of the 
 world by water in the days of Noah, 
 
37 
 
 Being desired to repeat a verse of a hymn 
 which begins with, " My Bible says that 
 Jesus died ;" instead of immediately repeat- 
 ing it, he said, " You know me has not got a 
 Bible ;" meaning, one that he could call his 
 own. 
 
 He told us, that he could not understand 
 how 4 picture of a person in the room seemed 
 to look always to him, whatever part of Ihe 
 room he went to. Standing up, and moving 
 in the room, he said, " Look, you, now, how 
 it turns its eyes. Is it alive ?" 
 
 We found that he had no idea that it was 
 with his ears that he heard. When told to 
 put his fingers in his ears, to try whether he 
 could then hear ; on finding that he could 
 not then hear, he immediately shut his mouth 
 and held his nose, on purpose to discover 
 whether that would not produce the same 
 effect. 
 
 For a considerable time after being in 
 England, he had formed no correct idea how 
 people obtained money. We discovered this 
 by his having asked a person for money, who 
 told him he had not got any to give him. 
 " O," said he, "why don't you go to de 
 money-man in London, where Mr. Campbell 
 gets de money." On being asked who that 
 person was who had money to give away so 
 freely ? ' 6 It is the man that makes the 
 
38 
 
 money : he will give you plenty. Dere is a 
 gentleman in de Cape [of Good Hope] dat 
 gives every peoples money. " 
 
 Conversing with him on the fall of Adam, 
 he asked, " If Adam had not eaten dat fruit, 
 who would have eaten it ? If de woman had 
 not eaten de fruit, would de snake have bitten 
 her?" 
 
 He had no idea of difference of rank 
 amongst men, for he would speak as respect- 
 fully to a drayman driving his cart, as to the 
 gentleman sitting in his carriage. However, 
 he diil not wish to be a servant, but said he 
 would be a gentleman, and his reason evi- 
 dently was, because he expected, in that case, 
 an exemption from labour, forgetting that he 
 had found u head-work" to be very hard, 
 
 Hottentots in general have naturally, per- 
 haps, as little emulation as any nation under 
 the sun, yet Paul certainly had some. Re- 
 turning from school one day in the October 
 after his arrival, having been raised to the 
 third class, he seemed delighted at his ad- 
 vancement. " O !" said he, his eyes spark- 
 ling with joy; " I am so glad I have got into 
 the fird class." 
 
 The ancient Hottentots certainly had very 
 filthy habits, though perhaps, not more filthy 
 than many of the inhabitants in some of our 
 uarrow lanes in London. The change to the 
 
39 
 
 better, in most of the modern race of Hotten- 
 tots, is very considerable. As for Paul, he 
 was remarkably particular as to cleanliness in 
 his food. Had he observed any one use a 
 spoon or a mug, it must have been washed 
 before he would use it. The servant once 
 gave a beggar some beer in a mug lie had 
 been accustomed to drink out of. Imme- 
 diately after the beggar was gone, Paul said, 
 " Now, Jam, that is- my jug, but I shall not 
 drink out of it any more !" which was carry- 
 ing his cleanliness to an extreme. 
 
 A young friend of mine, (Miss Mary 
 Meade,) only five years of age, arrived from 
 India, and remained two or three months in 
 the house with him. Though in general she 
 treated him kindly, she would sometimes 
 speak contemptuously to him, calling him a 
 dirty black boy. Nevertheless, he continued 
 to be very fond of her, and was truly sorry 
 when she left the house to go to her grand- 
 mother in Scotland. His affection for her 
 continued long after she had left us, which he 
 showed even a year after, by expending two 
 shillings of his own money in purchasing a 
 little present to be sent to her. 
 
 During the first summer and autumn he 
 was in England, he eagerly longed for the 
 winter, that he might see people walking 
 upon water, which the boys at school assured 
 
40 
 
 him he should then see ; but from the mild- 
 ness of the winter there was no ice, which 
 greatly disappointed him, and perhaps led 
 him to doubt the truth of the report. 
 
 He was always pleased to hear read or related 
 to him any of the historical parts of scripture, 
 especially the miracles of Jesus Christ, and 
 the account given of his last sufferings and 
 death, for the redemption of a lost world. 
 He would sit with stillness, and evident in- 
 terest, as long as we chose to continue narra- 
 ting, with the living voice, those wonderful 
 facts ; and when done, would frequently ask 
 simple questions regarding what he had been 
 hearing, which we viewed as an evidence that 
 he felt interested in them. 
 
 It was a long time before he could remem- 
 ber any thing of the sermons he had heard. 
 He began by remembering single words, such 
 as God, Cnrist, J esus, &c. ; after which he 
 woidd recollect part of a verse that had been 
 quoted by the minister, but seldom a senti- 
 ment or remark. However, when he was able 
 to repeat any thing he had heard, he seemed 
 highly gratified. No doubt, ,his imperfect 
 Knowledge of the English language rendered 
 it more difficult for him to understand a re- 
 gular discourse, being most conversant with 
 boyish conversational language. When he 
 recollected nothing he was sometimes asked 
 
41 
 
 if he had ears to hear ; on which he would 
 put up his hands to feel if he had ears, and, 
 finding he had ears like other people, with a 
 very pleasant smile he would confess he had 
 ears, hut could give no reason why he could 
 not remember sermons, and yet was able to 
 relate any droll story told him by his com- 
 panions ; not being aware of the depravity of 
 the heart, which naturally relishes trifles far 
 more than the all-important truths of the 
 living God. 
 
 Soon after his arrival in England he was 
 put to the Kingsland day-school, which is 
 taught according to the Lancasterian method. 
 The progress he made during the first year 
 of his attendance is stated in a letter from 
 his master, an extract of which is subjoined. 
 
 H I am happy to bear testimony to the 
 good behaviour of Paid, and I think I may 
 to his general improvement, as his exertions 
 and acquirements, during the short time he 
 has been with us, have been quite equal to 
 any European youth in the school. He 
 manifests great ambition ; in feet, it requires 
 some management to keep his emulation 
 within due bounds. He has generally been 
 the first boy through all the classes he has 
 passed. I think his improvement will bear a 
 comparison with any of the boys from Mada- 
 gascar who are now at the Borough school. 
 
42 
 
 • Some of them excel him in writing, but he * 
 reads as well as most of them. He has 
 passed through our first five classes in eleven 
 months ; which we reckon very fair improve- 
 ment : few boys would be able to do more in 
 that period. It must be taken into considera- 
 tion, that he was entirely unacquainted with 
 the language, and it is rather wonderful to 
 observe the correct ideas he forms concerning 
 the meaning of words. 
 
 " I think about the 5th of last November, 
 I was hearing him his lesson, when he had to 
 spell the word ?nake. I asked him the mean- 
 ing of it, or whether he ever made any thing, 
 lie said, ' Yes, charcoal.' ' Charcoal ?' — 6 Yes.' 
 4 How did you make charcoal ?' — ' I put a piece 
 of stick into fire, and burnt it, and then 
 scraped it with a knife.' — 6 And for what pur- 
 pose ?' — ( I put it into a piece of paper to make 
 squibs.' It seems that he and a school-fellow 
 had amused themselves previous to the 5th 
 of November in this manufacture." 
 
 After leaving Kingsland school he was 
 boarded at the Borough-road school, along 
 with the Madagascar youths, who were sent 
 over from that island for their education. Tti 
 show his talent for letter-writing during his 
 residence at that seminary, I shall insert a 
 letter which he wrote to me when I was tra- 
 velling in Ireland. 
 
43 
 
 "Sir, 'M^ iti*f£ Mviii 
 
 " Miss Bower hath fetched me from the 
 Borough-road school to your house, and I was 
 very glad ; and I hope you are very well, and 
 Mary, I should like to see her. I hope she 
 can read well. 
 
 " I have saw in the newspaper that the Por- 
 tuguese hath beaten the French ; though tha 
 Portuguese are a little city they have beaten 
 them. We have one French man and one 
 Portuguese man in our school. I did ride 
 here in the coach, because it rained. 
 
 " The two Madagascar boys are gone to 
 Manchester to learn Latin and Greek. I was 
 very sorrow when they went away. 
 
 " I go to Mr. Hill's chapel in the morning, 
 and St. George's church in the afternoon. I 
 hope that when you come home that you will 
 fetch me here again, for Joseph and Samuel 
 are very glad to see me. The thieves have 
 been stealing the apples in the garden. 
 " I remain, sir, 
 
 66 Yours, respectfully, 
 
 " Paul Dikkop. 
 
 " Shacktewell, Aug. % 1823." 
 
 From his arrival in England to the month 
 of April, 1824, Paul enjoyed excellent health, 
 and all fears about his standing the climate 
 were gone. In that month, however, he 
 
44 
 
 . began to complain of a pain in his side ; but it 
 was not until the beginning of the J Line fol- 
 lowing that we began to entertain any serious 
 apprehensions concerning him. At that time 
 lie was brought home to us, by the son of the 
 late Dr. Vanderkemp, from the school where 
 he had been boarded upwards of a year. He 
 was very poorly indeed, but we hoped the 
 change of air, and constant attention to all 
 his wants, might be blessed of God to the 
 restoration of his health ; but instead of this, 
 we were sorry to observe the disease in- 
 creasing, and his strength gradually declining. 
 
 From the nature of his disorder, he con- 
 stantly felt such languor and depression on 
 his spirits, it seemed troublesome to him to 
 speak. His patience, however, surprised us 
 all. Not a complaint or murmur came from 
 his lips during the whole of his three months' 
 illness under our roof, unless the following 
 might be considered a murmur, which he 
 expressed one morning. When asked, How 
 he had been during the night ? poor little 
 fellow ! he said, " He had had great pain 
 during the night, and had prayed to Jesus to 
 take it away, but he had not done it." 
 
 During the greater part of his illness he 
 said little to us, except in answer to questions 
 put to him. A few of these are selected as 
 samples of the whole. 
 
45 
 
 Early in the morning of the last Sabbath 
 of July, I asked him if he was afraid to die. 
 With great calmness he answered, No. Did 
 he think he should go to Jesus ?— Yes. But 
 he could not give a good reason why he 
 thought so ; and asked for some toast and 
 water, for (he said) he was very thirsty. On 
 handing it to him, he seemed much struck on 
 being reminded of the rich man's request in 
 hell, only for a single drop of water to cool 
 his tormented tongue, yet none durst give it 
 him, because he was doomed to endure the 
 unmingled wrath of God for ever for his sins. 
 
 At another time, when he said he had not 
 slept much, it was asked him, "If, in sleepless 
 nights, he ever thought of his being a sinner 
 against God ?]'— " Yes." " And of Jesus 
 being the Saviour of sinners that come to 
 him ?»_« Yes." " Do you know that Jesus 
 is always near to you, Paul ?" — " Yes." " Do 
 you pray to him ?" — " Yes." 
 
 On another morning he was asked, " Have 
 you thought on Jesus during the night, 
 Paul ?»_"Yesv" "Do you love him ?»— 
 4i Yes." "Why do you love him ?"— "Be- 
 cause he saves us." 
 
 On being asked by a friend, " For whom 
 Jesus Christ was crucified ?" — " For sinners." 
 " What effect should this have on our minds, 
 Paul ?"— "To love him." " What punishment 
 
46 
 
 ' does sin deserve ?"— " Hell." " What is the 
 reason that all sinners are not saved?" — 
 " Because they do not believe." " What do 
 they not believe ?" — "They do not believe in 
 Jesus." 
 
 At another time : " Do you still think about 
 Jesus, Paul ?"— " Yes." " What do you 
 think of him ?"— " He will save me." " What 
 makes you think he will save you?" — "Be- 
 cause he says so." "What becomes of the 
 soul after death ?" — " It goes to heaven or 
 hell." 
 
 Having an engagement in Cornwall, on 
 behalf of the Missionary Society, for two or 
 three weeks, which could not be altered, I 
 was, at the latter end of August, obliged, 
 with great reluctance, to leave my little Hot- 
 tentot, who had cheerfully trusted himself 
 with me to the distance of nine or ten thou- 
 sand miles from his home ; nay, more, would 
 have gone round the world with me, if I had 
 only asked him, without entertaining a single 
 doubt as to the propriety of it. Often have I 
 desired to be able to give up myself as simply, 
 completely, and confidently to the support 
 and guidance of God, as that boy gave him- 
 self up to me. 
 
 However, I left him among kind friends, 
 my neighbours, Mr. Joseph Reyner and Mr. 
 Robert Steven, who kindly undertook lo visit 
 
47 
 
 . him as often as they could. The former Cull- 
 versed and prayed with him the very night 
 I) ef ore he died, and the latter did the same in 
 the morning. Also, three young ladies and 
 the servant were indefatigable in their atten- 
 tions to the wants of his body and soul, by 
 night and day. 
 
 As Paul experienced a little revival before 
 my departure, I fondly cherished the hope 
 that i was not taking a final leave of him, 
 but should see him again ; nor did he seem 
 to have the least suspicion, when I shook his 
 hand for the last time, that we should not 
 meet again till the coming of the Son of man 
 to judge the world in righteousness. 
 
 For a few days after I left him he was 
 thought to be getting better, being improved 
 in spirits, and able to take more nourish- 
 ment ; but he again relapsed to great weak- 
 ness, again had restless nights, and, from the 
 painful state of his throat, found much diffi- 
 culty in speaking. The first letter I received 
 in Cornwall was written on the morning of 
 the day he died, which stated that his mind 
 seemed to be in perfect peace trusting in 
 Christ. 
 
 A day or two before he died, ne was asked, 
 i Whether he would rather live or die. Paul 
 answered, that he would rather die. 
 
 Next day I received a letter from the late 
 
/ 4 8 m '% 
 
 Mr Robert Steven, intimating the death of my 
 little boy. i He made the following remark at 
 the close of his friendly letter : — " Though 
 Paul said but little, I think there is ground 
 for hope that he has made a happy exchange. 
 May his death be the means of awakening 
 his companions and acquaintance, of his own 
 age, toaserious concern about their salvation.'* 
 One trait in his character I must not forget 
 to notice, That I never knew him once to 
 
 TELL AN UNTRUTH. 
 
 Thus all my prospects regarding Paul's 
 future Lisefulness among his Hottentot coun- 
 trymen in SoLith Africa were blasted ; but I 
 bowed to the divine will, believing that the 
 Judge of all the earth can do nothing but 
 what is right, and that not one link in the 
 chain of his wondrous plan of mercy to men 
 is lost by the death of Paul Dikkop. 
 
 He died on Tuesday, the 14th of Septem- 
 ber, 1824, at twenty minutes past nine o'clock 
 in the evening, aged about thirteen vears. 
 
 TKE END.