CHAPTER XXII.
SIR GARNET WOLSELEY—CAPTURE OF CETSHWAYO.
Sir Bartle Frere, whose continued popularity spoke somewhat of colonial approval of the war, had returned to the Cape in June, and his reception at Cape Town “capped the climax of an uninterrupted triumph,” according to _The Natal Mercury_. That he thought himself deserving of the honours due to a conqueror returning home in triumph we may gather from the fact that he sent no instructions to suppress any demonstrations of delight at his return, although at that very time the latest and perhaps the saddest tragedy of all the sad results of his policy had just been enacted, and Natal, as with one voice, was lamenting the Prince Imperial’s death.
“So be it,” says _The Natal Witness_ of June 12th, 1879, commenting upon this text; “Sir Bartle Frere’s reception capped the climax of an uninterrupted triumph. We are quite ready to believe this, and, as we have said, we are glad at last to have so decided an intimation of what Sir Bartle Frere has intended to do. There are triumphs of various kinds. There is the triumph which surrounds the statesman, who, by gentle persuasion, by cautious reforms, by a personal example of uprightness and unselfishness, has reduced threatening elements of danger, and evolved peace and security out of storm and terror. There is the triumph which is his who, impressed with a deep sense of the value of human life, lays his head upon his pillow every night in the happy confidence that never through his means, either directly or indirectly, has a human life been needlessly sacrificed. There is the triumph of the philanthropist, who, feeling deep in his heart the claims of an aboriginal people to the consideration of a civilised power, has, in his dealings with that people, been careful rather to strain doubtful points in their favour, than to take advantage of their presumed simplicity. There is the triumph of the Christian legislator, who regards the authority entrusted to him as entrusted with a solemn injunction to use that authority in the name of his divine Master, for the purpose of spreading and confirming the kingdom of peace and good will. There is the triumph of the diplomatist, who, in respect of his dealings with state questions, can lay his hand upon his heart, and affirm that he never misled his superiors, ... never wrote a line which he did not believe to be true. All these triumphs we doubt not will be yet achieved by Sir Bartle Frere, if only the fatigue caused by his ‘troubles and journeying’ does not suggest an early return to Europe.”
Would Sir Bartle Frere be supported by the Home Government? and would Lord Chelmsford be upheld by his military superiors in England? Such were the questions perpetually asked in the colony, to which there seemed no full and sufficient answer. True, both had received messages of sympathy and confidence; but these were sent palpably on the spur of the moment, and long before all the facts of the case had been brought to light; and, on the other hand, Sir Bartle Frere had received a very severe rebuke in the despatches mentioned in Chapter XII. Still the tide of events was permitted to flow on, and many doubted the reality of the condemnation.
From the time of the disaster at Isandhlwana, prophecies were current that Lord Chelmsford would be recalled, and as misfortune pursued our arms the prophecies were renewed. Many were the conjectures as to who would be sent to replace Lord Chelmsford should he be recalled, and a general idea was prevalent that the sprightly Sir Garnet Wolseley and his “brilliant staff” would once more grace the shores of Natal. The despatch announcing his approach reached the colony in the middle of June, and the telegram to Lord Chelmsford announcing his appointment ran as follows: “Her Majesty’s Government have determined to send out Sir Garnet Wolseley as Administrator in that part of South-Eastern Africa in the neighbourhood of the seat of war, with plenary powers, both civil and military. Sir Bartle Frere, instructed accordingly by Colonial Office. The appointment of a senior officer is not intended as a censure on yourself, but you will, as in ordinary course of service, submit and subordinate your plans to his control. He leaves this country by next mail” (sent _viâ_ St. Vincent, 29th May, 1879).
Sir Garnet Wolseley landed at Durban on the 28th June, and proceeded direct to Pietermaritzburg, where he was the same day sworn in as Governor of Natal. Certainly Sir Garnet did not let the grass grow under his feet. On Sunday, the 29th, he telegraphed to Colonel Walker at Fort Pearson: “Send back Zulu messengers immediately to the king with following message from me: ‘If the king wants peace he must send Umnyamana, Umfanawendhela, and Vumandaba to General Crealock’s column, where I will depute an officer of rank to hear what the king has to say. I alone have power to make peace. All the other Generals are under my orders.’ Explain to the messengers who I am. They are to tell the king, and remind him that I was here as Governor before, and had many communications with him then.”—(P. P. [C. 2454] p. 149).
The message from Cetshwayo was delivered by two Zulu messengers at the Lower Tugela, on June 25th, to Mr. Fynney, Administrator and Border Agent.
“We are sent by the king straight to you. We were ordered not to go to the troop at the Umlatazi, as other messengers (Sintwangu) will go there.... The king asks you to speak to the great white Chief with the Upper Column, and ask to stay the advance of the troops till he (the king) can hear plainly what he has done, what great sin he has committed. If he ever killed a white man or white woman, or ever took cattle from a white man before the war? Did he ever walk over the words spoken at the Umlambongwenya Kraal by Somtseu? (Sir T. Shepstone). The king wished us to say if he is to be destroyed he could die happy if he knew first really what wrong he had done. The king begs you will speak to the great white Chief with the Upper Column to stay a further advance till chosen representatives from both sides can meet and hear really the cause of the war, and what wrong he has done. The king does not ask for favour if it is proved he has been wrong. He wants to hear, and he wishes the troops not to advance till he can hear; for if they do he cannot help fighting, as there will be nothing left but to try and push aside a tree if falling upon him.”
“This is our message from the king to you, and he ordered us to tell you that it is from himself; even the indunas do not know he has sent it” (_ibid._ p. 154).
On the same day (29th) Sir Garnet sent the following order to Captain McLeod: “Make arrangements at once, with Swazis, for massing north of Pongolo River, with view to invading Zululand. Spread abroad news that the invasion will take place immediately, but do not let them cross river without my orders. When they are ready to cross let me know, and I will send you further instructions. Impress urgently upon them that women and children must not be murdered, but promise them all cattle they take. This promise to be made as public as possible. I am now High Commissioner, with full powers to decide all terms of peace. All reports must be sent to me, care of General Clifford, ’Maritzburg” (_ibid._ p. 150).
The object of this message was “to establish a standing menace, and to bring formidable pressure to bear in that quarter upon the Zulus.”
The barbarity of the Swazis in warfare, and the keen delight with which they would have found themselves let loose upon their hereditary enemies the Zulus, whose army was either scattered or destroyed, was a well-known fact, and many wondered that such a course should be proposed.
Captain McLeod, a hardy soldier and brave man, had been for many months in about as unenviable a position as can well be imagined—in an unsettled border district in war time, threatened both by Boers and Zulus. He had been posted at Derby, to guide and control the movements of our ally the Swazi king, who, it was imagined, would be stanch to us or not, according to the fortunes of the Zulu war.
Captain McLeod knew the Swazis well, and how little chance there would be of keeping them under control if once let loose upon the helpless Zulu people; he therefore begged that they might be used only as a last resource.
With the view of still further spreading alarm through the Zulu country, Sir Garnet sent a message to the Amatongas that he might “possibly ascend the Maputa River with a force and use their territory as a base of operations against the Zulus from the north” (_ibid._ p. 149).
On the 30th, after a long conference with General Clifford and Commissary-General Strickland, Sir Garnet Wolseley had an interview with about seventy Natal native chiefs, who had been assembled at his request, and addressed them, through an interpreter, to the effect that the great English Queen had sent him to carry on the war against Cetshwayo, and to thank them for what they had already done. That the chiefs need have no fear but that the Queen would send as many armies as are necessary, if the troops sent were not sufficient. “They may depend upon it, and the past history of our nation is a guarantee thereof, that when we give a promise we will perform it. Our war is not against the Zulu people, but against Ketshwayo, who has broken all his promises. We have no wish to rob the Zulu people of their property or their land; but tell the chiefs this, that I say this war is going to be finished by us, and finished in a satisfactory manner. The Queen is most anxious that the war in Natal should be finished.” Then (as there was a scarcity of grass for draught-oxen) Sir Garnet requested the chiefs to furnish a certain number (2000) of their young men to carry provisions for the troops; the men to carry their arms whilst so employed, and to be paid and fed by him.
Once more, then, we hear the words: “_Our war is not against the Zulu people!_”
These “carriers” were taken from the Tugela Valley, which had lately suffered from the Zulu raid, and where many of the men had belonged to the native levies raised for the defence of the border; they naturally did not appreciate an employment which removed them from the protection of their families, and which was at variance with their customs[175] and prejudices.
There was not much work for these “carriers” after all; they were assembled at the Lower Tugela, and marched up to Fort Chelmsford, each man with a fifty-pound mealie-bag on his head.[176] Their commander, Major Schwabe, left the loads there, and took the men on to Port Durnford, where they were employed as required. Having, after some time, received their pay, the “carriers” quietly walked off to their homes.
The Commander-in-Chief remained but two days in Pietermaritzburg, returning to Durban on the 1st of July. The same evening he embarked on board H.M.S. _Shah_, intending to land at Port Durnford, and thus reach the scene of action. For once in his life Sir Garnet’s good fortune deserted him; the heavy surf on the beach prevented his landing, and the _Shah_ brought him back to Durban. Here he received the news of the battle of Ulundi, telegraphed to him by Mr. Archibald Forbes.
No one quite knew what Lord Chelmsford was about, but everyone understood that he would try and end the war before he was superseded; and the general feeling in the colony was certainly one of hope that “poor Lord Chelmsford” might get a chance, win a battle, and have his bonfire in the enemy’s city of straw. Some few, indeed, argued that as Lord Chelmsford could not possibly, in the time left him, settle the Zulu question by the sword, it might occur to him at last to pay some attention to the hard-pressed Zulu monarch’s repeated messages imploring peace, and propose some conditions possible for Cetshwayo to accept and fulfil. Without further bloodshed an honourable peace might thus have been concluded before Sir Garnet Wolseley could step upon the scene.
We left the 1st Division at the Umlalazi River, close to the landing-place, Port Durnford. There the force remained, General Crealock occupied in receiving the submission of the neighbouring Zulus, who were flocking in from every direction.
But whilst Lord Chelmsford, on his approach to Ulundi, was inquiring, “Where is Crealock?” Crealock was quietly established near the coast, his military activity being displayed in the burning of Empangeni and other kraals north of the Umlatuzi River. As the Zulus all round were coming in, and no “impi” was even heard of, the object of this exhibition of force seems a little doubtful. As was remarked by _The Cape Times_: “Why the British soldier was ordered to destroy the shelter, and, with the shelter, the store of grain food of some thousands of poor women and children whose husbands and fathers were making their submission, we can no more understand than we can comprehend the strategy by which a large British force was held back for months at the edge of the enemy’s country, while commissariat supplies were accumulating sufficient to support a long campaign, the whole work before them being to march a hundred miles, and with one fight close up the war. If they were beaten they could fall back on the base; but with caution and generalship defeat was out of the question.” However, Major-General Crealock must have the credit of quieting the eastern portion of Zululand before the termination of the war. From his despatches of the 5th July we gather that the “district people are all wanting to come in,” that he was “sending back the people to their districts; difficulty of feeding them would be great.” His division paraded under arms to receive the “official submission” of “Mabilwana, Manyingo, and other chiefs,” who, with some 250 men, double that number of women and children, and their cattle, etc., had come in—these people belonging to the coast district, but were not strictly speaking warriors, or necessarily belonging to the Zulu army; nor could their submission be looked upon as any desertion of their king by the fighting-men of the nation. They were told that the General accepted their submission, and should look to them in future to keep peace in that district. If any Zulus were found in arms, their chief or headman would suffer; but, if they behaved themselves well, he would give them back their cattle and his protection. The men then received passes (or tickets) and were permitted to return to their districts.[177]
Sir Garnet Wolseley crossed the Tugela with his staff and escort on July 6th, and proceeded to the head-quarters of the 1st Division, near Port Durnford, which he reached on the 7th. He at once set to work “to reduce the excessive rate of expenditure which has so far been maintained in connection with this war,” and “arranged with the Commodore to embark the Naval Brigade at the earliest opportunity,” and also “dispensed with the services of some of the colonial troops.” Reinforcements of all kinds were stopped, including a fine battalion of Marine Infantry and strong detachment of Marine Artillery, just arrived at the Cape in H.M.S. _Jumna_.
On July 10th, Sir Garnet also put on one side “the plan of a Swazi invasion.” (P. P. [C. 2454] p. 163.) All the chiefs up to St. Lucia Bay tendered their submission, and sent in their arms.
Sir Garnet Wolseley and Lord Chelmsford met at St. Paul’s on the 15th July, the latter arriving with Brigadier-General Wood’s Flying Column. This Sir Garnet inspected on the following day, taking the opportunity of decorating Major Chard, R.E., with the Victoria Cross, awarded him for his gallantry at Rorke’s Drift.
Lord Chelmsford left St. Paul’s on the 17th, on his way home. His “brilliant victory” had turned the tide of popular favour somewhat in his direction, and he found that (as he said) “nothing succeeds like success.”
In Durban he was accorded a reception which must have been highly gratifying to his feelings. One of his last remarks in Natal, in reply to a speech made as he was about to embark, was to the following effect: “I think I may say confidently that we have now seen the beginning of the end of this campaign, and any success which has attended my efforts, I feel, is due to the prayers of the people, and the kindly ordinations of Divine Providence; for I am one of those who believe firmly and implicitly in the efficacy of prayer and in the intervention of Providence.”
In this comfortable frame of mind Lord Chelmsford passes from the scene.
Sir Garnet Wolseley completed the chain of forts across Zululand, commencing with St. Paul’s, an English mission station on the coast road a little north of where it crosses the Umlatusi. Fifteen miles west of this is Kwamagwasa. Twenty miles a little south of west lies Fort Evelyn, on the road from Rorke’s Drift to Ulundi. Fort Marshall about twenty miles west-south-west of Fort Evelyn, Fort Newdigate, twelve miles north-west of Fort Evelyn, and a fort on Itelezi Hill completes the chain to the Blood River. Some of these forts were constructed on the upward march of the 2nd Division and Flying Column, to keep open their communications. In addition to these, Fort Cambridge was built near where the road from Conference Hill crosses the White Umvolosi; and a little later an entrenched post (Fort George) was thrown up near Enhlongana mission station, thus thoroughly, by these detached posts, commanding the country.
Patrols were pushed out in various directions, by one of which the two guns lost at Isandhlwana were found between Ulundi and Maizekanye. They had not been spiked, but the Zulus had screwed rifle-nipples into the vents, and had also apparently tried to load the guns by ramming home shells, but without cartridges.
The Cavalry Brigade was broken up, and a fresh disposition of the troops made. Sir Garnet visited various posts, interviewing the Zulu chiefs who had surrendered themselves. Some of the most important, however, of those who came in, and were supposed to have submitted and deserted their king, had, in point of fact, no such intention, appearing merely to make their often and vainly repeated attempt at procuring “terms” for Cetshwayo and themselves. It had always been prophesied that the Zulu nation would desert their king. Before the war began, some of those who professed to understand the people best, declared that they would be thankful to throw off the yoke of one whom, it was alleged, they regarded with fear and hatred, and would side with the English as soon as the latter crossed their border.
The fallacy of this idea was discovered to our cost.
It was then asserted that the Zulu army had given a temporary strength to the authority of their king, which would last until we had beaten his troops and proved our superiority, and this assertion was used by those who insisted that no peace must be made, however earnestly desired by the Zulus, until we had beaten them and shown them that we were their masters.
After Ulundi, it was argued that the people would be glad to procure peace by giving up their king, whose unconditional submission, or capture, was announced by us to be the only possible conclusion to the war.
The Zulus had ceased to struggle with their powerful conquerors, and it now only remained to find Cetshwayo, who was said to be north of the Black Umvolosi River, with a very small following. A flying column, under Lieut.-Colonel Baker Russell, was sent out from Fort Newdigate early in August, but his patrols were not successful.
On August 14th, a cavalry force under Major Barrow, with Lord Gifford, started from Ulundi to try and find Cetshwayo, who had hitherto eluded all attempts to capture him. Day after day it was reported that the pursuers were close upon the fugitive: they had come to a kraal where he had slept the previous night, they reached another where he had been that very morning, and then they lost “the scent,” and for some time could trace him no farther. They tried in vain to persuade his people to betray him, but this “hated tyrant,” although beaten and powerless, flying through the land now in the possession of his conquerors, had still such a hold over the loyalty and affection of his people, that they were true to him in his adversity, and refused to give him up or to set his enemies on his track.
Severe measures were taken to procure by force the information which could not otherwise be obtained. Orders were given to one party of the pursuers that at each kraal they reached, if the inhabitants refused to speak, so many huts should be burnt, so many principal men and women taken prisoners, and all cattle confiscated. Many kraals were thus treated, and so many prisoners collected in this manner, that the number to be taken at each kraal had to be reduced from eight to four, then to two, and at last to one of each sex; thus proving how steadfast were the people generally in their loyalty to their king. On approaching some of these kraals, the headmen came out and offered the passes or papers promising protection, given them on surrendering their arms; but the unhappy people received another lesson on the text, “When we give a promise we will perform it,” and were told that their papers were worthless now; they must tell where the king was, or suffer like the rest. One of the officers concerned in carrying out these orders, exclaimed at the time with natural indignation: “I don’t care what may be said of the necessity of catching Cetshwayo; necessary or not, we are committing a crime in what we are doing now!”
These measures proving useless, five prisoners were flogged to make them speak—yet they held their peace. An interpreter, who accompanied Major Barrow’s party, writes: “I had been a long time in Zululand. I knew the people and their habits, and although I believed they would be true to their king, I never expected such devotion. Nothing would move them. Neither the loss of their cattle, the fear of death, or the offering of large bribes, would make them false to their king.”
For many days this work of trying to persuade or force the people to betray their king was continued, and, at last a woman was frightened into giving a clue, which resulted in taking prisoners three brothers, at whose kraal the king had slept the night before. “They were questioned,” says the interpreter, “but denied in the most solemn way that they knew anything about the king. We threatened to shoot them, but they said: ‘If you kill us we shall die innocently.’ This was about nine o’clock at night, a beautiful moonlight night, and the picture was rather an effective one. There were all our men sitting round at their fireplaces, our select tribunal facing the three men, who were calm and collected, whilst we, as a sort of inquisition, were trying to force them to divulge their secret. As a last resource we took one man and led him away blindfolded behind a bush, and then a rifle was fired off to make believe that he was shot. We then separated and blindfolded the remaining two, and said to one of them: ‘You saw your brother blindfolded and led away; we have shot him. Now we shall shoot you. You had better tell the truth.’ After a good deal of coaxing (?) one told us where the king had slept the night before, and which was about fifteen miles away, and also where he had seen him that very morning ... it was now eleven o’clock. Lord Gifford gave orders for our party to saddle up, which was smartly done, and we started off with the two brothers as guides. We left the one brother behind so as to keep on the screw, to make the two believe he had been shot. They took us over as ugly a piece of country as ever horse crossed, and at daybreak we surrounded the kraal. But disappointment was again in store for us, for our bird had flown about twelve hours previously.”
The direction he had taken being pointed out, the party followed until they got within four or five miles of a kraal, where the king had halted for the day. Lord Gifford sent off a note addressed to Captain Maurice, saying he was on the track and hoped for speedy capture; and, finding the kraal could not be approached without his being seen, seems to have made up his mind to wait till nightfall. It is perhaps fortunate that this arrangement was not carried out, as, in the darkness and hurry of a night attack, it is possible that we might have had the additional wrong laid upon us of having shot the Zulu king.
Amongst other patrols sent out to look for Cetshwayo was one under Major Marter, King’s Dragoon Guards, consisting of one squadron Dragoons, ten men Mounted Infantry and Lonsdale’s Horse, and one company Natal Native Contingent, their orders being to get on the king’s track and capture him, if possible, and to reconnoitre the Ngome Forest, and report if it could be traversed.
This force started on the 27th August, Major Marter sending two natives on in the direction of the Ngome to impress upon the people that until the king was captured they could not have rest, as troops would be constantly on the move amongst them, and require supplies, etc., and to suggest it would be to their advantage to give him some hint or sign about the king. He had found the natives friendly, but they said frankly that if they knew the king to be close by they would not tell him; he, therefore, remembering the language of symbols was pleasant to the native mind, endeavoured, by indirect means, to obtain the information he sought. Having got over about twenty-four miles of rough country, the little column halted on the summit of the Inenge Mountain, and, starting at daylight next morning, had crossed the Ibuluwane River about ten o’clock, when a Zulu came from the hill in front, sent by a headman to whom the scouts had been, and began to talk on indifferent subjects, not appearing to wish to speak about the king. After some time he casually remarked: “I have heard the wind blow from this side to-day,” pointing to the Ngome Forest, “but you should take that road until you come to Nisaka’s kraal,” showing a track leading upwards and along the side of the range.
About half an hour afterwards a native brought a note addressed to Captain Maurice. As this officer was out in another direction on the same service, Major Marter opened and read it. It was from Lord Gifford, who said he was on the track again and hoped for a speedy capture of the king, but gave no information as to where either the king or Lord Gifford were. Sending the man on in Captain Maurice’s direction, Major Marter proceeded to Nisaka’s kraal, some distance up the mountain. After some talk a suggestion of guides was made to Nisaka, who said they had better go to his brother’s kraal on top of the mountain, and called two men to go as guides. On reaching this kraal the guides made signs for the party to halt where trees hid them from being seen from below, and then took Major Marter on to the edge of the precipice, crawling along on hands and knees; they then stopped, and told him to go to a bush a little farther on and look down. He did so, and saw a kraal in an open space about 2000 feet below, in a basin, three sides of which were precipitous and covered with dense forest. He considered it would be useless to approach the kraal from the open side, as one minute’s warning would enable the king to escape to the nearest point of the forest; and therefore decided to venture down the side of the mountain under cover of the forest, feeling that the importance of the capture would warrant the risk.
Having rejoined his men, Major Marter ordered the natives to take off their uniform, and, with their arms and ammunition only, pass down the precipitous mountain to the lower edge of the forest nearest to the kraal, and remain concealed till the cavalry were seen coming from the forest on the other side; they were then to rush out towards the open side of the kraal and surround it. The cavalry left led horses, pack-animals, and every article which could make a noise or impede their progress, and followed Major Marter, leading their horses down the descent in single file. They left the upper part of the mountain at 1.45 P.M., and, after a scramble over rocks and watercourses, floundering in bogs, and hampered everywhere by trees and gigantic creepers, reached the foot about three o’clock, having lost two horses killed in the descent, and one man having his arm badly hurt. In a little dell they mounted, and at a gallop dashed out—one troop to the right, one to the left, the irregulars straight to the front—over boulders, through high grass and every impediment, up to the kraal; the natives reaching it at the same moment.
Seeing that the men in the kraal were armed with guns as well as assegais, Major Marter desired his interpreter to call out that if any resistance were offered he would shoot down every one and burn the kraal; and then dismounting, with a few of his men, he entered the enclosure, which was strongly stockaded. A chief—Umkosana—met him, and was asked where the king was; after some delay, seeing it was a hopeless case, he pointed out a hut on the farther side of the enclosure. Major Marter called on the king to come out, but he insisted the officer should go in to him. A threat of setting fire to the hut was then made, when the king asked the rank of the officer, and, after some further parley, came out and stood erect and quite the king, looking at Major Marter, saying: “You would not have taken me, but I never thought troops could come down the mountain through the forest.”
Besides the Chief Umkosana, there were with Cetshwayo seven men and a lad, five women and a girl, of his personal attendants.
There were twenty guns in the kraal, four of them rifles that had belonged to the 24th Regiment, much ammunition, some belts of the 24th, and many assegais, one of which—the king’s—was sent by Sir Garnet Wolseley to the Queen.
Taking the most open line of country, the party set out for Ulundi, Major Marter taking personal charge of the king, who was in good health, and showing no signs of over-fatigue.
On the evening of the second day three men and a woman sprang suddenly into the thick bush through which they were passing and tried to escape; but two of the men were shot. They had been repeatedly warned that anyone trying to escape would be shot.
On the morning of the 31st August, Major Marter safely reached the camp at Ulundi with Cetshwayo; who is described by his captor as “a noble specimen of a man, without any bad expression, and the king all over in appearance and manner.”
Sir Garnet Wolseley did not receive the fallen king himself, or accord him any of the signs of respect to which he was entitled, and which at least generosity demanded. That this was deeply felt is apparent from the words of an eye-witness, the interpreter attached to Major Barrow’s force. “Cetywayo,” he says, “who appreciates nicely the courtesies due to rank—as those who knew him tell me—felt this keenly. Sir Garnet Wolseley did not see him at all, and Mr. John Shepstone only had an interview with him to tell him that he would leave under the charge of Major Poole, R.A., for—no one knew where. The instructions to the Major were, on leaving Ulundi, to proceed to Pietermaritzburg _viâ_ Rorke’s Drift, but the camp had not been left many miles behind before a messenger to the Major from the General gave Port Durnford as the port of embarkation.
“Cetshwayo spent less than three hours amidst the ruins of Ulundi, and when he left them he was not aware of his destination. His hope was that he was going to Pietermaritzburg.... This he believed was where he was going until he came to Kwamagwasa, and he said, ‘This is not the way to the Tugela.’ He grew moody after this, and used to moan, ‘It was better to be killed than sent over the sea.’”
The party reached Port Durnford on the 4th September, and was immediately embarked for Cape Town. There the king met with a fitting reception, and was conveyed to the castle, where he remained under strict surveillance in the custody of Colonel Hassard, C.B., R.E., Commandant at Cape Town.
One peculiarity regarding the treatment of Cetshwayo may be illustrated by the following personal anecdote:
A son and daughter of the Bishop of Natal, on their way to England, called at Cape Town on board a steamer at the time of the king’s arrival. They asked permission to see him, feeling that if anything could be a solace to the captive it would be an interview with members of a family which he knew had kindly feelings towards him.[178] This request was refused by Sir Bertie Frere, who regretted that he could not “at present give anyone permission to visit Cetewayo,” and said that “all intercourse with him must be regulated by the orders of the General Commanding H. M. Forces in the Field, to whom all applications to communicate with the prisoner should be referred.” After this communication, it was rather surprising to find that several of the passengers on board the mail-steamer, leaving the Cape the next day, had not only seen the king, but had found no difficulty in so doing.[179]
CONCLUSION.
The fall of Ulundi was looked upon by some as the finishing touch to the Zulu power and the end of the war, while others considered peace ensured only and completely by the capture of the king. Much, however, remained to be done before Natal could be thought of as at peace with her neighbours and herself, and what has been commonly called the “Settlement of Zululand,” was a task which required the gravest consideration and the most careful handling.
Sir Garnet Wolseley’s first act in this direction was to call together as many of the principal Zulu chiefs and officials as could be found, and to address them upon the situation. This meeting took place at Ulundi on the 1st of September, the day after the captive king’s departure for Port Durnford. About 200 Zulus, including two of Cetshwayo’s brothers, and his prime minister Mnyamana, had responded to the summons; and seating themselves in rows four deep, with the principal chiefs in front, a few paces from the flagstaff at Sir G. Wolseley’s tent, waited in perfect silence. When Sir Garnet, with his staff, at last appeared, he addressed the assembled chiefs through Mr. John Shepstone, who accompanied him as interpreter. He informed them that it was six years that very day since Cetshwayo was crowned king of the Zulus, and that he was now carried away never to return. This, he told them, was in consequence of his having broken his coronation promises, and having failed to make and keep such laws amongst his people as the Queen of England could approve, therefore his kingdom was taken from him; and would now be divided amongst a number of chiefs, who would be expected to rule with justice. In future no life was to be taken without trial, and trivial offences were to be punished by fines; no standing army would be allowed, nor the possession of guns and ammunition by any Zulu; nor would any stores be permitted to be landed on the Zulu coast, in case, under the guise of merchandise, arms should be brought into the country. The young men would be allowed to marry when and whom they pleased, provided they had sufficient for the support of a wife, and could obtain the consent of the girl’s parents, and “smelling out” for witchcraft was to be put down. Nevertheless, the Queen had no wish to force our laws and customs upon them. By their own rules of war and conquest, Zululand now belonged to her; but she had already enough land in Africa, and had therefore no intention of depriving the Zulus of theirs. Finally, the missionaries were not to be forced upon them, and the Zulus were even forbidden to encourage their settling amongst them.
To secure the fulfilment of all these commands, Sir G. Wolseley told the chiefs that he intended to leave an English officer as resident, to be the eyes and ears of England, to watch over the people, and to see the laws observed and that the chiefs ruled with justice and equity. With what machinery the officer in question was to perform so wide a task does not appear. Whether his position is to be a real one, requiring several British regiments to support it, or whether it is to be a mere farce, a fine-sounding pretence, remains yet to be proved.
At the conclusion of the General’s discourse he produced a document, the purport of which, he said, he had now told them, and which was to be signed by all the chiefs whom he had chosen as rulers of the land, to each of whom a duplicate copy would be given, while he retained a similar one himself.
The first to sign his name was Mr. John Dunn, whose chieftainship was by far the largest; and after him the Zulu chiefs touched the pen while Mr. Shepstone made their crosses for them, in place of the signature which they could not form.
For once in the history of Natal, all classes, from whatever widely differing motives, were united in condemning the arrangement.
“The so-called settlement of Zululand,” says _The Cape Times_, on September 16th, “is regarded with anything but satisfaction in Natal, if we may accept the press of that colony as representative of public opinion. Sir Garnet Wolseley was probably acting under instructions in making peace on a barbarian basis; such a peace, however, has no guarantee for continuance, but on the contrary an inherent weakness, forbidding any hope of permanence. A savage nation is now divided into a number of savage nations, each leaning to the other with all the force of common blood and common traditions, while to check the impulses of that force there is absolutely nothing beyond the influence of two or three British residents, unsupported by any armed retinue, and clothed with no more than a shadow of authority. And as the embodiment of British civilisation, and as Her Majesty the Queen’s own representative in Zululand, is placed Mr. John Dunn.... But whatever John Dunn’s merits may be, his appointment as Chief Resident in Zululand is a shock to civilisation. His ways are Zulu ways; his associations, Zulu associations; his very habits of thought imbued with the Zulu character. A white man who for twenty years or more has lived the Zulu life, wedded Zulu wives, and chosen their society in preference to that of such women as a white man should love and honour, is not the man to represent the Queen of England in a nation of savages. The settlement of Zululand means simply the appointment of a dozen Cetywayos, with a white man to look after them, who is a Cetywayo in all but colour. And now Sir Garnet Wolseley skips off in his light and airy fashion to the Transvaal, flattering himself that he has made things pleasant in Zululand. It is a miserable delusion....”
The “engagements” into which the Zulu chiefs entered are:
“1. I will observe and respect whatever boundaries shall be assigned to my territory by the British Government through the Resident of the division in which my territory is situated.
“2. I will not permit the existence of the Zulu military system, or the existence of any military system of organisation whatever, in my territory, and I will proclaim and make it a rule that all men shall be allowed to marry when they choose and as they choose, according to the good ancient customs of my people, known and followed in the days preceding the establishment by Chaka of the system known as the military system; and I will allow and encourage all men living within my territory to go and come freely for peaceful purposes, and to work in Natal and the Transvaal and elsewhere for themselves or for hire.
“3. I will not import or allow to be imported into my territory by any person, upon any pretext or for any object whatever, any arms or ammunition from any part whatsoever, or any goods or merchandise by the sea-coast of Zululand, without the express sanction of the Resident of the division in which my territory is situated; and I will not encourage or promote, or take part in, or countenance in any way whatever, the importation in any other part of Zululand of arms or ammunition from any part whatever, or goods or merchandise by the sea-coast of Zululand, without such sanction, and I will confiscate and hand over to the Natal Government all arms and ammunition, and goods and merchandise, so imported into my territory, and I will punish by fine or by other sufficient punishment any person guilty of or concerned in any such unsanctioned importation, and any person found possessing arms or ammunition, or goods or merchandise, knowingly obtained thereby.
“4. I will not allow the life of any of my people to be taken for any cause, except after sentence passed in a council of the chief men of my territory, and after fair and impartial trial in my presence and after the hearing of witnesses; and I will not tolerate the employment of witch-doctors, or the practice known as smelling-out, or any practices of witchcraft.
“5. The surrender of persons fugitive in my territory from justice, when demanded by the government of any British colony, territory, or province, in the interests of justice, shall be readily and promptly made to such government; and the escape into my territory of persons accused or convicted of offences against British laws shall be prevented by all possible means, and every exertion shall be made to seize and deliver up such persons to British authority.
“6. I will not make war upon any chief or chiefs, or people, without the sanction of the British Government, through the Resident of the division in which my territory is situated.
“7. The succession to the chieftainship of my territory shall be according to the ancient laws and customs of my people, and the nomination of each successor shall be subject to the approval of the British Government.
“8. I will not sell, or in any way alienate, or permit, or countenance any sale or alienation of any part of the land in my territory.
“9. I will permit all people residing in my territory to there remain, upon the condition that they recognise my authority as chief, and any persons not wishing to recognise my authority and desiring to quit my territory I will permit to quit and to pass unmolested elsewhere.
“10. In all cases of dispute in which British subjects are involved I will appeal to and abide by the decision of the British Resident of the division in which my territory is situated. In all cases when accusations of offence or crime committed in my territory are brought against British subjects, or against my people in relation to British subjects, I will hold no trial and pass no sentence except with the approval of such British Resident.
“11. In all matters not included within these terms, conditions, and limitations, and in all cases provided for herein, and in all cases when there may be doubt or uncertainty as to the laws, rules, or stipulations applicable to matters to be dealt with, I will govern, order, or decide in accordance with the ancient laws and usage of my people.”
The following letter, addressed to the Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone, and published in _The Guardian_ of December 10th, 1879, by the Dean of ’Maritzburg, contains such valuable and important matter that we quote it verbatim:
THE DEANERY, ’MARITZBURG, NATAL, _September 27th, 1879_.
SIR,—Though I have not the honour of being known to you, yet, as the affairs of South Africa must necessarily engage the attention of Parliament when it next meets, I venture to hope you will not consider it an intrusion if I lay before you some of the conclusions I have arrived at after thirty years’ residence as a clergyman in Natal. I do so as I know from experience how extremely difficult it is for those who have passed their lives in the midst of a highly organised society, to realise the conditions of a colony, and especially of one which is brought into contact with the undeveloped races of South Africa. The first question that presents itself is, What is the meaning of the apparent antagonism of the native races, at the present time, to the white man? I attribute it immediately to the natives suddenly and unexpectedly finding themselves in the possession of firearms. When the Diamond Fields were first opened out, no restrictions were placed on the gun-trade by the Cape Government, and so soon as this became known the natives flocked there in thousands from all parts of South Africa, hiring themselves out to work, and stipulating to be paid in rifles. Young men everywhere will arm themselves if they can, and especially in a country in which there is abundant room for hunting, and still more so when the young men are savages, and know of no distinction except that which comes from exhibiting prowess in war. I do not myself think they were influenced by any feelings of hatred to the white man, or that there existed any deep-seated conspiracy amongst the chiefs or old men. But the young men suddenly discovered they could obtain firearms, so got them; and having got them, they then desired to use them. Everywhere they were armed, and so everywhere they began to talk of fighting; the leaven had been put in and the whole lump worked. The war which arose is now over, and the Cape Government is engaged in steadily disarming the natives under its rule; its loyal subjects, the Fingoes and the Basutos, as well as the recently conquered tribes. Sir Garnet Wolseley told the Zulus also to bring in their guns; but they have treated his order with contempt, and he has made no attempt to enforce it; the Zulus themselves, I am afraid, will soon adduce this as evidence that they were not beaten. I may say, also, the Natal Governor always placed restrictions on the natives possessing firearms, and, so far as he could, enforced those restrictions on his own natives returning from the Diamond Fields, and they have proved perfectly loyal. Whilst at the time I deprecated the reckless trade allowed by the Cape Government, still it seems to me rather hard, after having allowed the natives to purchase guns, to set to work to disarm them. The wisest course I consider would be to impose a tax on the possession of firearms generally, granting privileges to members of volunteer corps, etc. In that way, without drawing invidious distinctions between white and coloured, our own young men would be exempted from paying by serving as volunteers; and if the tax were a heavy one the natives would be deterred from keeping guns, and, further, the Government would know exactly to what extent they were armed.
To leave, however, the native races in general, and to confine ourselves to the Zulus. They never went to war with us, but we with them; they have always been excellent neighbours; for thirty years they have never been accused of stealing a sheep, or an ox, or a horse from the Natal side. Natal had no quarrel with them nor Cetywayo with us; it has been our misfortune that it has been found convenient to carry on the war from Natal; but Sir H. Bulwer, our Governor, has been true to the colony in insisting that it was no war of ours. If there was any justification of the war, it must be sought in the interests of Transvaal, and then it can only be accepted as a judgment. The Crown had not a shadow of right to annex the Transvaal. True, they were not governing themselves very well in that State; neither, perhaps, is Germany, but we do not annex Germany. We did take over the Transvaal, however, in direct violation of engagements which had been entered into with the Dutch Boers. Shepstone, in his proclamation, was obliged to say that we must read between the lines of that engagement—_i.e._ the promises of the British Government were worth nothing. The simple fact was that the Cape and Transvaal merchants had been overtrading in that republic; it was bankrupt, so many of them were on the brink of insolvency. I cannot say more without mentioning names, but there was no difficulty in seeing what influences were brought to bear on Lord Carnarvon. The Republic was annexed; farms were accepted at a nominal price in payment of debts, and resold again in London, say at sixpence per acre, which amply repaid the merchant, who thus saved himself, whilst the Boers were left without their independence, and poorer than ever. Had we stayed our hand, finding themselves hopelessly bankrupt, in a few months they might probably have sought our assistance, and then we could have annexed them without their having a grievance; as it is they cannot forget it. I am sorry for them, for they are a simple people. Shepstone went up as Governor, and Cetywayo at once asked to have his old disputes with the Boers arranged—in former days both he and his father, whenever they had had any difference with the Transvaal, always sent messengers in to the Natal Government to advise with it—and Shepstone, the Secretary for Natal Affairs, according to his wont, always temporised, admitting in a half-and-half way that they were right, but advising patience. When, however, he found himself at the Transvaal he suddenly sided with the Dutch, and Cetywayo became greatly incensed and declared himself betrayed. I believe he would at once have invaded the Transvaal, but from fear of us in Natal. He hesitated, however, and according to the old maxim, he who hesitates does not fight; but before he had quieted down Sir B. Frere interfered with his _ultimatum_, and Cetywayo stood grandly on the defensive. He is a savage, and his ambition was to be a great savage; I do not mean a cruel one, but a powerful, influential savage. He was ambitious, but disliked progress, and such men must fail; so he has fallen, but with dignity. He has never attacked a neighbour, white or black; he has defended his country bravely, and has been guilty of no excesses. It has been our war, not his. Sir B. Frere says most truly that almost everyone he spoke to encouraged him to go to war; but I am afraid he avoided those who, he was told, were against war—and when will not Englishmen advise war? No argument was used, except the one that Cetywayo might overrun Natal at any moment; but he had never shown a disposition to do so, and we were stronger than men would allow. Men who do not trust in the arm of God do not see the defences which surround them. The Tugela, the river which separates Natal from Zululand, was a great protection, as in summer-time, even if fordable, the Zulus would not cross it, lest it should rise in their rear; and in the winter, our dry season, they cannot keep the field, as their naked bodies are quite unable to bear exposure to the cold nights. Moreover, though our own army will never acknowledge it, Cetywayo’s force did not exceed 30,000 naked savages. Of course we are told they were 60,000 or 80,000 strong; but if you casually inquire of any officer who has been in Zululand whether the kraals were thickly dotted over the country, he will tell you artlessly, “No, quite the contrary.” I have again and again inquired of traders as to the density of the population relative to Natal. I have inquired of those who have lived at Ulundi, and have seen Cetywayo’s regiments mustered, and I am confident that 30,000 is the very outside at which the Zulu force could be put. I may return to this. I mention it now to show why I do not agree with Sir Bartle in his view of our position; and certainly I cannot admit, because a neighbour is powerful, that therefore we are justified in going to war with him.
But, now that we have been at war, on what terms is peace to be arranged? In the Cape Colony the natives—as the Basutos, the Fingoes, and others—live in districts to themselves, not intermingled with the white man. The young men leave their homes, and go into the colony, and work for a time in the towns or on the farms; but their home is in Basutoland, Fingoland, etc. The same holds good in the Transvaal. The natives there are on the border; but Natal is the one exception to this rule; in this colony we live intermingled; and a few years ago we were regarded as living in the crater of a volcano. It was thought that the Natal natives, who outnumber the European settlers eighteenfold, might at any moment overwhelm us, so that Cape politicians and others refused to be connected with this colony. In 1876, however, before the rising of the natives on the frontier, I was bold enough to point out to my fellow-colonists that our supposed weakness was in reality our strength. And so it has proved. During the last two years Natal has been the oasis of South Africa; everywhere else the natives have either been in arms, or shown themselves disaffected, if we except the Fingoes; but the position in which they stand to the Kafir tribes around them compels them to be loyal, so they are scarcely to be taken into account.
Whilst, then, throughout South Africa the natives have been a source of uneasiness, the overwhelming native population of Natal (360,000, against 22,000 whites) has been perfectly true to the Government, and the grounds of their loyalty are now, I think, recognised in Natal. They are these: 1. The natives are not, like Englishmen, self-reliant, but naturally dependent; consequently, they use the machinery of Government much more than we do. An Englishman dislikes appealing to a magistrate, as it implies a want of power to take care of himself or to govern his dependents. Not so the native; he habitually leans upon the magistrate. Thirty years ago in Natal the native leant upon his chief; now he has become familiar with the magistrate, who has become a necessity to him. I argue, therefore, that a people will not plot or even desire to throw off an authority which enters into their daily life. 2. Natives who have resided amongst white men feel the need of their presence. The native races cannot develop themselves—nor, when in some degree developed, can they stand by themselves—as their wills are weak, and intellectually they are lawyers, fond of argument, but without imagination; so they can neither plan nor construct. In their independent state they have no criminal law, no commercial code, no municipal one, no law of tenure of landed property; they possess only a few customs regulating marriage and the division of their cattle amongst the family; but, scattered amongst white men, they are able to expand. The effect is seen in many ways—amongst others, in the increase of their families. 3. They are naturally fond of trading. In many ways they may be compared to the Celtic race, as they cannot rise above the tribal organisation; but, unlike the Celt, they are not intellectual; and, unlike him, their natural bent is towards trading. They are good soldiers, but they prefer trading to everything; consequently, on this account, they are unwilling to separate from the white man. 4. The natives never go to war unless they can first send their cattle to the rear; but this they cannot do when distributed amongst the Europeans, and this operates alone as a great check. During the thirty years I have been in Natal we have only had three chiefs give the slightest trouble, and these three have all been on the borders, and so have been able to send their cattle away. I am convinced, therefore, that, if the Government wishes to maintain peace and to develop the native races, it should intermingle them with the Europeans. The Aborigines Society at home will probably object. It is easy to say the white man seeks only to dispossess the native, but whatever the individual motive, the white man is the benefactor by his presence. He may have hunted down the North American Indian and the Aborigines of Australia, but not so in South Africa. Here not only does the magistrate protect him, but the Kafir is a worker, which the North American Indian and the native of Australia is not. The white man wants the Kafir’s labour, and to secure it has to be just and kind. A farm-servant in England is by no means so independent as a Kafir out here. Mix up the races therefore, and to some extent at least the problem of governing and improving the native race is solved. After the defeat at Isandhlwana, new-comers like the military thought our natives might rise; but their wives, children, waggons, cattle, etc., were in the colony, so they made common cause with us, and showed themselves zealously loyal. I consider it, therefore, to be most foolish to try and keep the races apart; we must intermingle them. It was Alexander’s principle and the Roman rule; the present European families have been founded on this method—so we must go on mingling, not separating.
I send you a copy of Sir Garnet Wolseley’s conditions of peace, as published in _The Natal Witness_. They are universally condemned here. 1. The chiefs are to be under British Residents, and they must be supported by a force. But who is to pay? It is said the Zulus are not to be taxed, as that would amount to annexation; or, rather, it would test Sir Garnet’s arrangements. If he is afraid to tax the Zulus the Residents will be afraid to control them. The test of defeat with Kafirs is the loss of cattle—they do not estimate the loss of life; but we have not taken cattle. Indeed, the balance is on their side: they have carried off more than we have.[180] The test of submission is obedience, and they have with one accord disobeyed the order to give up their guns. The test of the Queen’s authority in South Africa is the payment of taxes. Even Cetywayo offered to pay a hut-tax; and if Sir Garnet does not impose one, all the young men in Zululand, before a year is over, will point to their cattle, their guns, and their immunity from taxes, and boast that they were not beaten. If the Zulus are to be controlled by British Residents they should pay a hut-tax. Our natives pay a hut-tax of 14s. per hut. I have understood that the Cape Government wish it to be uniform throughout South Africa, and to be fixed at £1. We estimate the population at three-and-a-half persons to a hut, and at 14s. it amounts to 4s. per head. Besides that the natives on farms pay rent to the farmer, and the more they adopt our habits the more do they pay through the Customs. The Zulus could readily pay £1 per hut, or, say £36,000 per annum. Cetywayo’s Government was an expensive one. His commissariat alone was a heavy drain upon the resources of the people. Savages, as well as civilised persons, understand that they must support their Government; the Zulus, therefore, would recognise the justice of being taxed; and not to tax them is, I consider, to abandon one of the duties of Government. Moreover, it is said we are to be taxed to pay our quota of the recent expenditure. But our natives will hardly understand first fighting the Zulus, and then having to pay for it. It will seem to them as if they were the offending party, if they, and not the Zulus, are taxed. 2. The conditions discourage trade. It ought to be encouraged to the utmost. Instead of forbidding importation by sea, a Custom-house should be established at the one port or landing-place, 3. The alienation of land is forbidden, in order to keep out the white man; but he should be encouraged to enter, and so long as the land is held in common by the whole tribe there will be no improvement in agriculture. Or, to take the conditions in order—2 is impossible; the young men will be quarrelling with one another at weddings and other gatherings, tribal fights will ensue, and the chiefs must have a force at their command. 3 I have touched upon. 4 is nugatory; if a chief wishes to put to death he can give a man a mock trial and have done with it. 6 overlooks that wars often do not begin with the chiefs; the young men bring them about. 8 I have touched upon. The whole implies the active and constant superintendence of the Resident, and that will be resisted: some kraal or kraals will be disobedient to orders, the chief will be unable or unwilling to enforce obedience, and the Resident must call in other assistance at great expense; and at whose? There is nothing enduring, nothing practical in this settlement, if it deserves to be called such. It is not likely to last, and everyone expects, after a short interval, more bloodshed and more reckless expenditure. The burden cannot be thrown on the Colony, as the Government has not been consulted on the terms of peace. The whole thing is a cruelty to the Zulus, to the colonists, and to the suffering home population, for there will be another £3,000,000 or more to be voted yet; but during the whole time meat was 8d. and bread 4d. per pound. 1s. 6d. per diem was consequently ample allowance for the keep of a soldier; of course I am aware there were numerous other sources of expenditure, but it is extreme folly to send an army out to a distant place, with power to draw upon the Treasury at will; it is too great a trial for human nature. As a blind, all sorts of things are said about the colonists; a great deal or even all may be true, but it does not explain half. That, however, is by the way; but I must mention, before concluding, that one of the newly-appointed chiefs is a white man named John Dunn. He left home when about fifteen or sixteen, and has since lived with the Zulus, taking to himself a number of wives. This appointment is looked upon as an outrage to public morals and as an insult to the colonists. I say nothing about the missionaries, as I do not wish that they should lean upon the civil power; the Church must do her proper work in her proper way. I simply write as an Englishman, to one who largely guides the counsels of the nation, to lift up my voice against what has been done, and is being done, in this part of the empire. Trusting you will excuse my thus trespassing upon your time, believe me to remain yours most respectfully, JAMES GREEN, _Dean of ’Maritzburg_.
But at all events we had gained one definite result by all the blood and money spent in the Zulu war. The most important and earnestly insisted on immediate cause of our attack upon Zululand was the invasion of our soil, and the violation of our sanctuary, committed by Mehlokazulu and his brother, sons of Sihayo, when they seized and carried off two women who had taken refuge in Natal. We “requested” the Zulu king to deliver up the young men to us for judgment and for punishment, and he begged us to accept a fine in lieu of the persons of the offenders. We declined this proposal and repeated our request, which suddenly became a “demand” when it appeared in the ultimatum, and as such remained.
It was said at the time that, had the young men been given up even after the troops had crossed the border, hostilities would have been suspended until the rest of the demands could be complied with. But they were not, so we went to war.
And now, at last, the war was over, one of Sihayo’s sons had fallen in battle, and Mehlokazulu, the other, was in our hands. Here was what we had fought for, and obtained! What would be done with him? By the military authorities he could only be treated like any other prisoner of war, and released unharmed amongst the other Zulus. He was therefore handed over to the civil authorities at Pietermaritzburg to be tried by them, although he was denied the same advantages of counsel which are accorded by law to other civil prisoners.
This denial was commented upon unfavourably by those who desired justice to be done, but, apparently, Mehlokazulu required no counsel, for he was not tried. He had committed no offence on British soil punishable in a Zulu subject by British law. His own king could have punished him by our request, but we had deposed and transported that king, and there was no law by which we could have inflicted anything beyond a trifling fine for trespass upon the man whom we had compassed heaven and earth, and shed so much of England’s noblest blood, to seize. The magistrate declined to commit him for trial, and Mehlokazulu was permitted to return to his home. “Doubtless,” remarks _The Natal Colonist_ of October 27th, “the legal adviser of the Crown was concerned in the case, and framed the charge which there was the best chance of being substantiated. And this is the result—‘there was no evidence to maintain the charge.’... It is a miserable conclusion to a most miserable affair.... The charge which, as we have seen, is almost made the chief occasion of the war which has desolated so many homes, and cost millions of money, completely breaks down when brought to the test of legal trial, and the prisoner is, of necessity, set at liberty. We never believed much in the other pretexts for the war put forward by Sir Bartle Frere, but we confess that we always thought the outrage by Sihayo’s sons was one to be visited with condign punishment, whether it was one which would justify war or not; and even though we knew it was only a pretext, seeing that it only took place long after war had been determined on, and preparations for it had been begun to be made.”
“But the ultimatum and its demands are things of the past. Rivers of blood have flowed to enforce these demands, and now they are put on one side as utterly valueless, both by the settlement of Zululand and the release of Sirayo’s son.”[181]
With this humiliating fact we must close our record of the Zulu War. In doing so, we feel that too many of the circumstances which we have thus recorded reflect no credit on the name of England—that name which as English men and women we most desire should be honoured by the world at large; and we realise with pain that, so far as our work may be perused by dwellers upon other shores, so far have we lessened the glory of our motherland in their eyes. But, however much we may regret the necessity, we do not therefore think it a less imperative duty to bring to the light as much as possible whatever wrong and injustice has been committed and concealed by those to whom England has entrusted her power and her fame. That the light of publicity should be thrown upon them is the first step towards their cure, or at least towards the prevention of any further wrong, and it is with the truest loyalty to our Sovereign, and the deepest love and reverence for our country, that we have undertaken the task now completed.
THE END.
CHARLES DICKENS AND EVANS, CRYSTAL PALACE PRESS.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] “Few things struck me more than the evident haste and temporary character of the defensive measures undertaken by the English part of the population”—in the border districts of Natal. (See letter from Sir Bartle Frere to Sir Michael Hicks-Beach, dated March 28th, 1879. P. P. [C. 2318] p. 32.)
[2] Spelt thus to give the nearest proper pronunciation of “Cetywayo.”
[3] Residence of the Bishop of Natal.
[4] These people had refused to leave their homes, or desert their Bishop, as long as he and his family remained at Bishopstowe, although both black and white, for miles around, had sought shelter elsewhere.
[5] A system not unlike the Inquisition in its evil results.
[6] Who, it may be remarked, have always been well treated in Zululand.
[7] Portions of this letter are omitted from the Blue-book. It would be interesting to see the letter as originally received.
[8] One put to death in 1861 was condemned on a charge of high treason.
[9] As he had previously, in the year 1861, visited Zululand for the purpose of fixing the succession upon the house of Cetshwayo.
[10] Since by our desire he refrained from protecting it by force of arms.
[11] He gives as reasons for his objections: first, that such treaties “involve an admission of equality between the contracting parties,” and therefore “encourage presumption” on the part of the inferior, etc.; secondly, that “men who cannot read are apt to forget or distort the words of a treaty.” A third reason, which does not seem to have occurred to Mr. Shepstone, lies in the ease with which a savage may be deceived as to the contents of a written document, which facility we shall soon largely illustrate in the matter of Boer treaties with the natives.
[12] See Lecky’s “Rationalism in Europe”:—7000 at Trèves; 600 by a single Bishop of Bamberg; 800 in _one_ year, in the bishopric of Wurtzburg; 1000 in the province of Como; 400 at _once_, at Toulouse; 500 in three months, at Geneva; 48 at Constance; 80 at the little town of Valary in Saxony; 70 in Sweden; and one _Christian_ judge boasted that he himself had been the means of putting to death, in sixteen years, 800 witches!
In Scotland, two centuries ago, but after many centuries of Christianity and civilisation, John Brown, the Ayrshire carrier, was shot, and, within a fortnight, an aged widow and a young maid were tied to stakes in the Solway and drowned by the rising tide, for the crime of neglecting episcopal worship, and going aside into the moor to spend the Sabbath day in prayer and praise.
[13] P. P. [C. 1401] p. 30.
[14] Natives of Basutoland, resident for many years in Natal.
[15] See Field Force Order, 1873.
[16] In the Zulu language the word _abantwana_ (children) is a general one, including both women and children.
[17] It is only fair to Major Durnford to state that during the whole of these proceedings he was away over the mountains, in vain pursuit of an enemy to be fought.
[18] 1. The following account of the above transaction was given by one of those concerned, in a letter to _The Natal Times_ of that date: “Twenty of us volunteered yesterday to go up and into a cave about eight miles from here. We found only one native, whom we shot, took a lot of goats (eighty-seven), and any amount of assegais and other weapons. We also searched about the country and killed a few niggers, taking fourteen prisoners. One fellow in a cave loaded his rifle with stones, and slightly wounded Wheelwright and Lieutenant Clarke, R.A. We, however, got him out, and Moodie shot him through the brains. Fifteen of ours have just volunteered to go to a cave supposed to contain niggers. We are gradually wiping out the three poor fellows who were shot, and all our men are determined to have some more.”
2. _The Natal Government Gazette_, December 9th, 1873, contains the following enactment: “All officers and other persons who have acted under the authority of Sir Benjamin Chillay Campbell Pine, K.C.M.G., as Lieut.-Governor of the colony of Natal, or as Supreme Chief over the native population, or have acted _bonâ fide_ for the purposes and during the time aforesaid, whether such acts were done in any district, county, or division of the colony in which martial law was proclaimed or not, are hereby indemnified in respect of all acts, matters, and things done, in order to suppress the rebellion and prevent the spread thereof; and such acts so done are hereby made and declared to be lawful, and are confirmed.”
[19] It is hard to understand why these people should yet be detained and their harmless old chief still kept prisoner at Capetown. The common saying that they are all content and the chief better off than he ever was before in his life, is an entirely and cruelly false one. Langalibalele is wearying for his freedom and his own people; the few women with him are tired of their loneliness, and longing to be with their children in Natal. The present writer paid the chief a visit in September of this year (1879), and found him very sad. “I am weary; when will they let me go?” was his continual question.
[20] Not including those individual acts of cruelty which no one could defend, although many speak of them as unavoidable.
[21] The Lieut.-Governor of the colony.
[22] Kafir law, under which Langalibalele was tried, because most of the offences with which he was charged were not recognisable by English law.
[23] Ordinance No. 3, 1849.
[24] The italics are the Author’s own in this and following charge.
[25] The other rebel chiefs of the Cape Colony here alluded to, however, were not “banished,” but merely imprisoned in a portion of their own Supreme Chiefs territory, where, at proper times, they could be visited by members of their families and tribes; moreover, they were duly tried and convicted before the ordinary courts of serious crimes committed by themselves individually, and they had actually resisted by force their Supreme Chief within his territory; whereas Langalibalele had made no resistance—he was a runaway, but no rebel; he had not been tried and condemned for any crime in the Colonial Court, and banishment for life to Robben Island, away from all his people, was a fate worse than death in his and their eyes.
[26] The same Magema, the Bishop’s printer, before mentioned.
[27] Although Mawiza’s lies were plainly exposed, he was never punished, but remains to this day in charge of a large tribe, over which he has been placed by the Government.
[28] On June 24th, 1874, the Bishop presented this “Appeal on behalf of Langalibalele” to His Excellency the Lieut.-Governor of Natal and the executive committee of the Colony. The appeal was made in the first instance to Sir B. C. C. Pine, who altogether refused to listen to it. On this the Bishop forwarded a letter through the Lieut.-Governor to the Earl of Carnarvon, enclosing a copy of his correspondence with Sir B. C. C. Pine, and stating his reasons for acting as he had done in the matter. This letter was dated August 6th, 1874, and on August 16th the Bishop left home _en route_ to England.
[29] He was a bright intelligent lad, keenly anxious for self-improvement, and with a great desire, unusual amongst his kind, to go to England, and see a civilised country.
[30] The Zulus and Zulu-Kafirs bathe their persons frequently, but they have not our ideas of cleanliness in respect to dress and habitations, although they are very particular about their food, utensils, and other matters.
[31] This was done at the expense of Government, which likewise allowed certain supplies of meal, salt, and a little meat to the captives.
[32] The boy was one of those who in the meanwhile had learnt at Bishopstowe to read and write, and who therefore could be of some use to his father as scribe, although his usefulness in that respect is much curtailed by the exceeding caution of the Government, which in its absurd and causeless fear of “treasonable correspondence,” will not allow written words of any description to reach or leave the poor old chief without official inspection. This precaution goes so far that in one instance some mats made by the women for Miss Colenso, and sent from Uitvlugt (the place of Langalibalele’s confinement after he was removed from the island), never reached their destination, owing to the paper attached, signifying for whom they were intended, being removed, as coming under the head of prohibited liberties. Another case is that of a lady who visited the family in September, 1879, and asked them to tell her what trifles they would like her to send them from Cape Town, but found that she had no power to send some babies’ socks which the women had chosen, and a comforter for the old man’s neck, except through an official individual and by formal permission.
[33] A woman, wife of one of the fugitives, being taken prisoner during the expedition, found favour, much against her will, in the eyes of one Adam (a follower of the Secretary for Native Affairs), who asked to be allowed to take her as his wife. Permission was granted, but the woman refused, saying that she had a husband already, to whom she was attached. Her wishes were disregarded, and she was conveyed home by Adam, from whom she shortly escaped. Adam applied to the nearest magistrate for an order to take forcible possession of the fugitive, and the woman was thrown into gaol by the magistrate, until she should consent to be Adam’s wife. The man took her home a second time, and she again escaped from him; in fact her determination was so great that the matter was finally given up altogether. Eventually she rejoined her own husband, who received her and her child with the kindness which her constancy deserved.
[34] Reaching home early in October, 1874.
[35] Acts of “defiance” and “resistance,” too vague for any special instance to be given, probably striking his lordship as being of a slightly imaginary character.
[36] Implying plainly that strict justice would demand it.
[37] Author’s italics.
[38] No notice was ever taken of the recommendation.
[39] It is reported that Sir B. Pine has felt the injustice to himself so keenly that he refuses longer to acknowledge his title of K.C.M.G., and styles himself simply Mr. Pine. There can be little doubt that in point of fact Mr. Shepstone was mainly responsible for all that happened; but “the right man to annex the Transvaal” could not well be spared, and a scapegoat was found for him in Sir Benjamin Pine.
[40] Three at last.
[41] It would be an injustice to an association, called into existence and maintained by a true spirit of Christian charity, to pass over in silence the active, if seemingly ineffectual, efforts of the Aborigines Protection Society to obtain justice for the unfortunate people of the Putini tribe.
[42] The annexation of the Transvaal:—so stated by one of his own staff.
[43] It is neither customary nor convenient to speak publicly of a parent, and I desire to let facts speak for themselves as much as possible. I feel, however, bound to remark that of all the mistakes made by a succession of rulers in Natal, perhaps the most foolish and unnecessary has been that jealousy of episcopal “or unofficial” interference, which has blinded them to the fact that the Bishop has always been ready to give any assistance in his power to the local Government in carrying out all just and expedient measures towards the natives, without claiming any credit or taking any apparently prominent position beyond his own; and, so long as justice is done, would greatly prefer its being done by those in office. He has never interfered, except when his duty as a man, and as the servant of a just and merciful Master, has made it imperatively necessary that he should do so; nor does he covet any political power or influence. To a government which intends to carry out a certain line of policy in defiance of justice and honour, he would ever be an opponent; but one which honestly aims at the truth would assuredly meet with his earnest support.
[44] “The recollection of past events”—that is to say, of the slaughter of many men, women, and children, the destruction of homes, and the sufferings of the living;—this can hardly with reason be said to be _kept alive_ by attempts to ameliorate the condition of those that remained, and to show them some small kindness and pity. How “a good feeling” was to be restored between the victims and their conquerors by other means, Sir Garnet does not suggest.
[45] In common only with the rest of the tribe.
[46] Three women and two children only have been allowed to join him.
[47] Which did not prevent their being of the utmost importance in considering the case of the chief under trial at the time the statements were made.
[48] Sir B. Pine complains in his despatch, December 31st, 1874, of the “intolerable injustice” of charges being made against Mr. J. Shepstone, upon evidence taken by the Bishop _ex parte_, without the _safety of publicity_ and the opportunity of cross-examination. Yet Sir Garnet Wolseley refused to allow publicity or searching cross-examination by experienced advocates.
[49] One of the original four.
[50] Mr. Shepstone says in his second report that a day or two previous to the meeting with Matshana, he had received information to the effect that the chief’s intentions were to put him and his people to death at the expected interview, and all the efforts made by Mr. Shepstone and his witnesses were to prove, first, the murderous intentions of Matshana; and, secondly, that _nevertheless_ Mr. Shepstone had no counter-plans for violence, and did not fire upon the people.
[51] Author’s italics.
[52] Rather by the determination of their rulers to preserve their land from Boer encroachments.
[53] SAND RIVER TREATY.—“Evidence was adduced that the Transvaal Boers, who, by the Sand River Convention, and in consideration of the independence which that convention assured to them, had solemnly pledged themselves to this country (England) not to reintroduce slavery into their Republic, had been in the habit of capturing, buying, selling, and holding in forced servitude, African children, called by the cant name of ‘black ivory,’ murdering the fathers, and driving off the mothers; that this slave trade was carried on with the sanction of the subordinate Transvaal authorities, and that the President did actually imprison and threaten to ruin by State prosecution a fellow-countryman who brought it to the notice of the English authority—an authority which, if it had not the power to prevent, had at any rate a treaty right to denounce it. This and more was done, sometimes in a barbarous way, under an assumed divine authority to exterminate those who resisted them. So much was established by Dutch and German evidence. But it was supplemented and carried farther by the evidence of natives as to their own sufferings, and of English officers as to that general notoriety which used to be called _publica fama_.”—_From an article by Lord Blachford in The Nineteenth Century Review, August 1879_, p. 265.
[54] A native chief.
[55] Written in October, 1879.
[56] Lord Blachford says in the article already quoted from: “The citizens of these Republics have gone out from among us into a hostile wilderness, because they could not endure a humanitarianism which not only runs counter to their habits and interest, but blasphemes that combination of gain with godliness which is part of their religion. While that humanitarianism forms a leading principle of our government they will not submit to it. Why should we bribe or force them to do so? It is no doubt right and wise to remain, if possible, on good terms with them. It is wise and generous to save them, if possible, in their day of calamity—as, with our own opposite policy, we have been able to save them—by a wave of the hand—twice from the Basutos, and once from the Zulus. (Once for all rather, through the course of many years, during which we have restrained the Zulus from asserting their own rights to the disputed territory, by promises that we would see justice done.—_Author._) But it is neither wise nor necessary to embroil ourselves in their quarrels until they call for help, until they have had occasion to feel the evil effects of their own methods, and the measure of their weakness, and are ready, not in whispers or innuendos and confidential corners, but outspokenly in public meetings, or through their constituted authorities, to accept with gratitude our intervention on our own terms, until they are, if they ever can be, thus taught by adversity. I do not myself believe that we could enter into any political union with them except at the sacrifice of that character for justice to which, I persist in saying, we owe so much of our power and security in South Africa. Nor so long as we observe the rules of justice to them shall we do any good by disguising our substantial differences, or refraining from indignant remonstrances against proceedings which are not only repugnant to humanity, but violate their engagements with us and endanger our security.”
[57] Colonel Durnford, R.E., who paid a flying visit to Pretoria at the time.
[58] Mr. John Dunn is said to have stated to the Special Correspondent of _The Cape Argus_, and to have since reaffirmed his statement, that Sir T. Shepstone “sent word to Cetshwayo that he was being hemmed in, and the king was to hold himself in readiness to come to his assistance.” This assertion has also been denied by Sir T. Shepstone’s supporters.
[59] P. P. [C. 1776] p. 88.
[60] It may be interesting to compare the above with the wording of Sir T. Shepstone’s “Commission”—P. P. [C. 1776] p. 111.
[61] The chief repeatedly refused to sign any paper presented to him by the Boers, on the grounds that he could not tell what it might contain, beyond the points explained to him, to which he might afterwards be said to have agreed; showing plainly to what the natives were accustomed in their dealings with the Transvaal.
[62] That claimed by the Boers.
[63] P. P. (2079, pp. 51-54).
[64] The conclusion arrived at, after a careful consideration of all producible evidence, by the Rorke’s Drift Commission, in 1878.
[65] A liability transferred to the Zulu king by Sir Bartle Frere in his correspondence with the Bishop of Natal.
[66] That is to say, that they may be bribed by substantial benefits to acquiesce in the loss of their liberties.
[67] Was it by inadvertence that Sir T. Shepstone speaks of “us” and “we,” thus producing a sentence so strangely and unhappily applicable?
[68] Italics not Sir B. Frere’s.
[69] Author’s italics throughout.
[70] Author’s italics.
[71] “_Ama_-Swazi” for the plural correctly, as also “Ama-Zulu.”
[72] Sir Henry Bulwer, speaking of the disputed territory generally, writes as follows: “The Zulu king had always, in deference very much to the wishes and advice of this Government (Natal), forborne from doing anything in respect of the question that might produce a collision, trusting to the good offices of this Government to arrange the difficulty by other means. But no such arrangement had ever been made; and thus the question had drifted on until the formal annexation of the disputed territory by the Government of the Republic last year, and their subsequent attempt to give a practical effect to their proclamation of annexation by levying taxes upon the Zulus residing in the territory, provoked a resistance and a feeling of resentment which threatened to precipitate a general collision at any moment.”—SIR H. BULWER, _June 29th, 1876_ (C. 1961, p. 1).
[73] Umtonga escaped again, and is now living in the Transvaal. His brother was still living in Zululand, as head of Umtonga’s kraal, at the beginning of the war, and no injury appears to have been done to any of the four.
[74] Thereby pointing the truth of his own remark at a previous date—March 30th, 1876 (1748, p. 24): “But messages from the Zulu king are becoming more frequent and urgent, and _the replies he receives seem to him to be both temporising and evasive_.” (Author’s italics).
[75] Immediately after they had signed the instrument of appointment the two Zulu messengers were sent in to the Government by Messrs. Smith and Colenso, and took with them a letter (C. 2000) which mentioned them as its bearers, and announced what they had done.
[76] ’Mfunzi and ’Nkisimane were sent down again to ’Maritzburg by Cetshwayo, at the request of Sir H. Bulwer, and denied the whole transaction, though it was attested by the signatures of the notary and two white witnesses. It was afterwards discovered that they had been frightened into this denial by a Natal Government messenger, who told them that they had made the Governor very angry with them and their king by making this appointment; and John Dunn also, after receiving letters from ’Maritzburg, told them that they had committed a great fault, and that he saw that they would never _all_ come home again.
[77] Messrs. Smith and Colenso’s explanatory letter to Sir M. Hicks-Beach, dated June 9th, 1878, concludes as follows:
“This business, as far as we are concerned, is, therefore, ended. We had hoped to be instrumental in embodying in a contract a proposal which we knew was advantageous to both parties. To do so only required the intervention of European lawyers trusted by Cetewayo. We knew that he trusted us, and would trust no others. The task of acting for the king was, therefore, imposed on us as lawyers and as gentlemen. Of pecuniary reward, or its equivalent, our labours have brought us nothing. We do not require it. Honour we did not desire, nor had a savage prince any means of conferring it. The duty thus undertaken we give up only in despair, and we have nothing to regret.
“Such information, however, as we have gleaned in the course of our agency you are entitled to hear from us, as we are British subjects.
“The Zulus are hostile to the Boers of the Transvaal, and would fight with them but for fear of being involved in a quarrel with the English. But neither Cetewayo himself, who is wise and peaceful, nor the most hot-blooded of his young warriors have any desire to fight with England, _i.e._ Natal.
“If they wished to do so there is nothing to prevent them, and never has been. As they march, they could march from their border to this city or to Durban in a little more than twenty-four hours. Their only fear is, that the English will come with an army ‘to make them pay taxes.’ They say they will rather die than do so. The king says the same. Almost every man has a gun. Guns and ammunition are cheaper at any military kraal in Zululand than at Port Natal. These goods are imported by Tonga men, who come in large gangs from Delagoa Bay, for white merchants. An Enfield rifle may be had for a sheep of a Tonga man; many have breech-loaders. The missionaries, whose principal occupation was trading, deal in ammunition. The missionaries have recently lost most of their converts, who have gone trading on their own account. Without these converts the missionaries cannot do business, and they have left the country, except Bishop Schreuder, who has gone back, that it may not be said that a white man is not safe there. Cetewayo says that he has asked the missionaries to stop. They have certainly not been turned out or threatened. Their going makes the Zulus think that we are about to invade the country.
“Nothing but gross mismanagement will bring about a quarrel between England and the Zulus.”—(P. P. [C. 2144] pp. 215, 216).
[78] This is apparently a figure of speech, since Luneburg, near which the kraal was being built, would seem by the map _not_ to lie “to the rear”—as seen from Zululand—of Utrecht, where Sir T. Shepstone was staying.
[79] Compare the account of the delay on the part of the Boer Government when Mr. Keate proposed to arbitrate. See last chapter, p. 182.
[80] 2144, p. 191.
[81] The Zulus, of course, would not have appreciated the convenience of a table and chairs; they had no “documents” to lay upon the former; and their opinion of the comfort of the latter is best expressed by the well-known Zulu saying that, “_Only Englishmen and chickens sit upon perches._” The mats provided for them were, therefore, a proper equivalent to the tables and seats placed for the other delegates.
[82] Sir Bartle Frere gives a very unfair account of this matter-of-course fact when he transmits to the Secretary of State the above despatch, “informing me of the incomplete result, in consequence of the attitude of Cetshwayo’s representatives at the Commission of Inquiry.”
[83] The king’s kraal at that time.
[84] The homestead specially spoken of in this case does not appear to have been destroyed or injured till March, 1879, in the midst of the war, nor was any human being, white or black, belonging to these farms, killed by this “savage, unbridled, revengeful nation,” before the war began.
[85] Apparently by Sir T. Shepstone’s orders, as the following phrase appears in one of the Boer protests against arbitration, April 25th, 1873: “The majority of the people have, by order of your Excellency, trekked into laager on December 14th last, and after having remained in laager for nearly five months, _we are to go and live on our farms again_.”
[86] The married women work in the mealie-gardens, etc., and the _little_ girls carry the babies; but the marriageable young women seem to have an interval of happy freedom from all labour and care.
[87] This was comprehensible during the attempt, which proved so signal a failure, on the part of Sir T. Shepstone, to impose a _marriage tax_ upon the natives. The tax was so extremely unpopular that it was thought advisable to relinquish it, and to make the desired increase in the revenue of the colony by doubling the hut-tax.
[88] Sir T. Shepstone, when he says (1137, p. 18) “Natal gives up the _cattle_ of Zulu refugees.... The refugees themselves are not given up,” plainly includes women amongst the cattle or “property” of the Zulus.
[89] And later, Nov. 18, 1878 (2222, p. 173), he says: “I do not hold the King responsible for the commission of the act, because there is nothing to show that it had his previous concurrence or even cognizance. But he becomes responsible for the act after its commission, and for such reparation as we may consider is due for it.”
[90] Since rifled by our troops, and the bones of the old king brought over to England.
[91] No “demand” was made until it appeared in Sir B. Frere’s ultimatum.
[92] On perusing the above italicised words, one learns for the first time that the ultimatum, which Sir Bartle Frere sent to the Zulu king a few months later, was actually sent for the express purpose of putting “an end to pacific relations with our neighbours.” This is hardly the light in which the British public has been taught to look upon the matter.
[93] Mr. H. Shepstone (Secretary for Native Affairs in the Transvaal) acknowledges that this fine was paid (2222, p. 99).
[94] Manyonyoba owed allegiance to Cetshwayo (as did Umbilini). He lived north of the Pongolo, in a part of the country over which Sir Bartle Frere and Sir Henry Bulwer altogether deny Cetshwayo’s supremacy, and was claimed as a subject of the Transvaal Government.
[95] Sir H. Bulwer says “they have suspected, quite wrongly, that we had some design against them in making it” (the new road to the drift). It is to be questioned how far their suspicion was a wrongful one, seeing that it was understood from the first that the drift was intended especially for military purposes, and was undoubtedly inspected by Mr. Smith for the same.
[96] Quotations from Mr. Deighton’s report to Mr. Wheelwright.
[97] Words applied to him by Mr. Brownlee, late Secretary for Native Affairs of the Cape Government.
[98] Author’s italics.
[99] On one of these visits a missionary is reported to have said to the king coarsely in Zulu, “You are a liar!” (unamanga!) upon which Cetshwayo turned his back to him, and spoke with him no more.
[100] Or rather he was angry with them for the rudeness which they committed in going _without taking leave_. He said they had never received anything but kindness from him, and might as well have paid him the compliment of a farewell salutation.
[101] Author’s italics.
[102] “Our Correspondent” of _The Daily News_ speaks, in to-day’s issue (November 17th, 1879), of the “tranquillising fear” of Cetshwayo having been removed from “our own native population.”
[103] A mere assertion, often made, but never supported by the slightest proof.
[104] And so the Rev. Mr. Glockner, speaking of the late war, says that they (the missionaries) had often warned the native chiefs of what would befall them, if they refused to become Christians.—_Vide The Scotsman, February 5th, 1880._
[105] Story of Maqamsela, from _The Natal Colonist_ of May 4th, 1877: “Another case referred to in our previous article was that of a man named Maqamsela, particulars of which, derived from eye-witnesses, we have received from different sources. On Friday, March 9th, he attended morning service at Etshowe mission station as usual, went home to his kraal, and at noon started to go over to the kraal of Minyegana, but was seized on the road and killed because he was a Christian!
“For many years he had wished to become a Christian, and this at his own desire was reported to Gaozi, his immediate chief, who _scolded him, saying, ‘it would occasion him_ (Gaozi) _trouble_.’ The earnest and repeated solicitation of Maqamsela was that the missionary (Mr. Oftebro) would take him to the king to obtain his permission to profess Christianity. Last winter the missionary consented to mention it to the king; but, _failing to see Gaozi first, deemed it imprudent to do so at that time_. Maqamsela was greatly grieved at this, saying, ‘I am not afraid of death; it will be well if I am killed for being a Christian.’ When an opportunity occurred of speaking to Gaozi about Maqamsela’s wish to be baptized, _he would give no direct answer, but complained of his bad conduct_. Maqamsela, however, persisted in his entreaties that his case should be reported to the king. ‘If they kill me because I believe, they may do so; the Lord will receive me. Has not Christ died for me? Why should I fear?’ A favourable opportunity of naming the matter to the king presented itself some time after. Cetshwayo appeared very friendly, and proposed that the Christians should pay a tax, but said that their service should be building houses for him when called; otherwise they might remain in peace. Maqamsela was then mentioned as being desirous to become a Christian. He was an old man, who could not leave his kraal, and could not come up to serve. He had therefore been eaten up, and had not now a single head of cattle. On his name being mentioned, the king replied that _he would say nothing, Gaozi, Minyegana, and Xubane not being there_. Maqamsela was glad when he heard what had been done, and said, ‘If they kill me now, it is all right.’
“A week later his time came. An induna, named Jubane, sent for him, and on his return from Jubane’s, an impi came to him, saying they had orders to kill him. He asked for what reason, and being told it was because he was a Christian and for nothing else, he said again, ‘Well, I rejoice to die for the word of the Lord.’ He begged leave to kneel down and pray, which he was allowed to do. After praying, he said, ‘Kill me now.’ They had never seen any man act in this manner before, when about to be killed, and seemed afraid to touch him. After a long pause, however, a young lad took a gun and shot him, and they all ran away.”
[106] This indiscriminate killing is disproved and denied by Cetshwayo himself and his principal chiefs (_vide_ “A Visit to King Ketshwayo,” “Macmillan’s Magazine,” March, 1878).
[107] Author’s italics throughout.
[108] Two Zulu prisoners, captured while on a peaceful errand, just before the commencement of hostilities, and who were permitted to reside at Bishopstowe when released from gaol, until they could safely return home, were questioned concerning these regulations, and said that they applied only to those who voluntarily joined the regiments, concerning which there was no compulsion at all, beyond the moral effect produced by the fact that it was looked upon, by the young people themselves, as rather a poor thing to do to decline joining. Once joined, however, they were obliged to obey orders unhesitatingly. These young men said that in the coast, and outlying districts, there were large numbers of people who had retained their liberty and married as they pleased, but that strict loyalty was the _fashion_ nearer the _court_. It was in these very coast districts that the Zulus surrendered during the late war, the _loyal_ inhabitants proving their loyalty to _the bitter end_.
[109] “We are equal,” said the interpreter; but the expression used is more correctly translated as above.
[110] The natives of Natal, “peaceful subjects of Her Majesty,” were living in perfect security on one side of the border, and the Zulus on the other, the two populations intermarrying and mingling in the most friendly manner, without the smallest apprehension of injury to life or property, when Sir B. Frere landed at Durban.
[111] Compare with 9 and 10 the distinct instructions on this point given by Lord Carnarvon during the previous year (1961, p. 60): “I request, therefore, that you will cause the missionaries to understand distinctly that Her Majesty’s Government cannot undertake to compel the king to permit the maintenance of the mission stations in Zululand.” Yet here the clause is made one of the conditions of an ultimatum, the alternative of which is war.
[112] Sir T. Shepstone’s incontrovertible, overwhelming, and clear evidence, sifted and proved worthless by the Commissioners.
[113] Sir Bartle Frere declares (Correspondence, p. 57) that Cetshwayo “could have known nothing of the memorandum,” although (_ibid._ p. 6) he himself asserts that “it was intended to explain for Cetshwayo’s benefit what was the nature of the cession to him,” and it was plainly very generally known, and therefore naturally by the king.
[114] Correspondence, p. 3.
[115] Ibid. p. 6.
[116] Compare with Sir Bartle Frere’s suggestion to Sir Henry Bulwer that the latter should persuade the Zulu king that the _Active_ and her fellows were mostly merchant vessels, but that the English war-vessels would be sufficient to _protect his coast_!
[117] Our own troops’ experience showed that this was no idle excuse.
[118] One of Colonel Durnford’s officers writes, January 26th, “that he (the Colonel) had worked so hard at equipping this Native Contingent, against much opposition, and took special pride in his mounted men, three hundred men, that he called ‘The Natal Native Horse.’”
[119] These words deserve special remark.
[120] After-events proved the fallacy of these “reports.” Even when the Zulus could have swept Natal with fatal effect, they refrained.
[121] Lord Chelmsford, January 16th, 1879. (P. P. [C. 2252] p. 63.)
[122] Captain N. Newman.
[123] Some Zulus (a chief named Gandama, and others) came into the camp on the 21st, saw the General, and were allowed to depart.—(P. P. [C. 2454] p. 182).
[124] P. P. (C. 2260) p. 81.
[125] Major Clery.
[126] “There were no high words,” Lieutenant Cochrane says, of any kind between the colonels, as some would lead the public to suppose. The above remarks are taken from Lieutenant Cochrane’s account of what passed; and he says: “I think no one lives who was present during the conversation but myself; so that anything said contradictory to my statement is _invented_.”
[127] Captain Essex, 75th Regiment.
[128] Lieutenant Raw, Natal Native Horse.
[129] Lieutenant Cochrane, 32nd Regiment.
[130] Mr. Brickhill.
[131] Having disengaged his men, Captain G. Shepstone said: “I must go and see where my Chief is,” and rode in again. His devotion cost him his life.
[132] Captain Gardner.
[133] Captain Essex.
[134] Lieutenant Curling, R.A.
[135] Captain Essex.
[136] Lieutenant Cochrane.
[137] Mr. Brickhill.
[138] Lieutenant Curling.
[139] Three mounted Zulu scouts were seen on the hills on the right from the rear guard, by an officer, who pointed them out to one of the staff.
[140] Some remarks made by Lieutenant Milne, R.N. (aide-de-camp), are worthy of notice: “_January 21st._—We then rode up to the high land to the left of our camp, the ascent very steep, but possible for horses. On reaching the summit of the highest hill, I counted fourteen Zulu horsemen watching us at the distance of about four miles; they ultimately disappeared over a slight rise. Two vedettes were stationed at the spot from where I saw these horsemen; they said they had seen these men several times during the day, and had reported the fact.... We then returned to camp, the General having determined to send out a patrol in this direction the next day.”—(P. P. [C. 2454] p. 183).
_January 22nd._—Lieutenant Milne was sent to the top of a hill to see what was doing in camp, and says: “On reaching the summit I could see the camp; all the cattle had been driven in close around the tents. I could see nothing of the enemy on the left” (_ibid._ p. 184).
“We are not quite certain about the time. But it is just possible that what I took to be the cattle having been driven into camp may possibly have been the Zulu ‘impi’” (_ibid._ p. 187).
[141] One message only is mentioned by the General or his military secretary as having been received from the camp. But an officer (of rank) _who had seen them_, says that five or six messages were received from the camp during the day by the General or his staff; and he says distinctly that the messages were in the possession of Lieut.-Colonel Crealock.
[142] About this hour the tents in camp suddenly disappeared.
[143] No spare ammunition was taken by the force with the General.
[144] The reserve ammunition is said to have been packed in waggons, which were then filled up with stores.
[145] The _first_ official mention of this appears in a Blue-book of August, 1879, where Lieutenant Milne, R.N. (aide-de-camp), says: “In the meantime, news came that Colonel Harness had heard the firing, and was proceeding with his guns and companies of infantry escorting them to camp. Orders were immediately sent to him to return and rejoin Colonel Glyn.”—(P. P. [C. 2454] p. 184).
[146] By the General’s directions this statement was to be “of the facts which came under his cognizance on the day in question.”—(P. P. [C. 2260] p. 80).
[147] “The panic and confusion were fearful,” says one of themselves.
[148] The number of prisoners thus killed is said to have been about twenty.
[149] Yet Sir B. Frere, on the 30th June, writes: “The position of Wood’s and Pearson’s columns effectually checked the execution of an attempt at invasion.” These two columns, being some ninety miles apart and secure in their own positions _only_, would have been of little avail _had_ the Zulu king desired to make “an attempt at invasion.” It needed no better strategists than Cetshwayo and his chiefs to have masked each of the posts at Kambula and Etshowe with some 5000 men, and then “the Zulus might march at will through the country.”
[150] Some officers who were with the advance column, and who afterwards visited Isandhlwana, say that they appear to have “tried to get the waggons together to form a laager,” but there was not time.
[151] With respect to this, Lord Chelmsford lays down a principle (relative to the border raids, but even more strongly applicable here) that if a force remains “on the passive defensive, without endeavouring by means of scouting in small bodies or by raiding in large ones, to discover what the enemy is doing in its immediate front, it deserves to be surprised and overpowered.”—(P. P. [C. 2318] p. 80).
[152] It is stated that on the previous evening there was no intention on the part of the Zulus to attack the camp upon the 22nd, which was not thought by them a propitious day, being that of the new moon. It is also said that the Zulu army came with pacific intentions, in order to give up Sihayo’s sons, and the cattle for the fine. In all probability they _left the king_ with such orders—that is to say, to make terms if possible, but to fight if forced to it, and if the English intentions were plainly hostile. This hostility was thoroughly proved before the morning of the 22nd, when the departure of Lord Chelmsford’s force from the camp must have been a strong temptation to the Zulus to attack the latter.
Warning of the Zulu army moving against Nos. 1 and 3 Columns was received on the border, and communicated to Mr. Fannin, Border Agent, on January 20th. The warning stated that the whole Zulu army, over 35,000 strong (except about 4000 who remained with the king), was marched in two columns, the strongest against Colonel Glyn’s column, the other against Colonel Pearson; this was to take up its position on the 20th or 21st January at the royal kraal near Inyezane, and the first to approach Rorke’s Drift. The writer complains of the little and inadequate use made of the information, which might have been communicated from Fort Pearson to Rorke’s Drift in time to have averted the fearful disaster of the 22nd January.—(P. P. [C. 2308] pp. 69, 70).
[153] P. P. (C. 2318) p. 12.
[154] Had Lord Chelmsford been acquainted with this peculiarity of the Zulus, he might not have thought it necessary to hurry away from Isandhlwana on the 23rd. There was no fear of the same force attacking again for some days to come.
[155] P. P. (C. 2318) pp. 11-17.
[156] Who, it is said, insisted upon the animals being fine and in good condition, returning some which were sent in below the required mark.
[157] Captain Clarke’s report (C. 2144), p. 37.
[158] Sir T. Shepstone to Sir H. Bulwer, April 16th, 1878 (C. 2144).
[159] Upon the Zulu border.
[160] C. 2367, p. 90.
[161] Sondolosi, deceased brother of Seketwayo.
[162] Trooper Grandier’s story of ill-treatment has since been contradicted by this Dutchman.
[163] C. 2374, p. 109.
[164] Nevertheless, during the end of March and beginning of April communications took place between the Lieut.-Governor and the General commanding, on this subject (C. 2318, p. 45); therefore _both_ the military and civil authorities _were_ aware of it.
[165] John Dunn is understood to have come back from his interview with the last peace messengers, and to have reported that the message was _bonâ fide_, and that Cetshwayo “means to have peace if possible.”
[166] This company of Native Pioneers (one of those organised by Colonel Durnford, R.E., before the war) was raised from the _employés_ of the Colonial Engineer Department, and commanded by Captain Beddoes of the same department; this officer being highly commended by his chief. The company worked under the supervision of Lieutenant Main, R.E., and rendered excellent service. Colonel Pearson remarked: “The men worked cheerfully. They had eyes like hawks, and they did their scouting to perfection.”
[167] One of the hardest workers in this department was Commissary J. W. Elmes, who distinguished himself by his untiring zeal and energy.
[168] P. P. (C. 2260) p. 104.
[169] P. P. (C. 2374) p. 115.
[170] Mr. Mansel, the officer commanding this troop of Natal Mounted Police, says: “When we went out the morning before the fight we left thirty-one men behind, men whose horses had sore backs, etc. These men were in charge of only a corporal. Seven men escaped, and we buried all of the twenty-four that were killed. Twenty were killed just around Colonel Durnford. Three about two hundred yards away, and one at the Fugitives’ Drift.”
[171] Properly Uzulu—the Zulu nation.
[172] The above is corroborated on all main points by Mehlokazulu, son of Sihayo, who states that he was sent with three other indunas (mounted), on the morning of the 22nd, to see what the English were doing. On reporting to Tshingwayo, he said, “All right, we will see what they are going to do.” “Presently,” says Mehlokazulu, “I heard Tshingwayo give orders for the Tulwana and Ngyaza regiments to assemble. When they had done so, he gave orders for the others to assemble and advance in the direction of the English camp. We were fired on first by the mounted men, who checked our advance for some little time.” He says the soldiers were at first “in loose order,” but afterwards he saw them “massing together,” when “they fired at a fearful rate.” When the Zulus broke the infantry and closed in, they “came on to a mixed party of mounted men and infantry men,” about one hundred, who “made a desperate resistance, some firing with pistols and others using swords, and I repeatedly heard the word ‘Fire!’ given by someone. But we proved too many for them, and killed them all where they stood. When all was over I had a look at these men, and saw a dead officer, with his arm in a sling and a big moustache (Colonel Durnford, R.E.), surrounded by dead carbineers, soldiers, and other men whom I did not know.”—_Vide R. E. Journal, Feb. 1880._
[173] Written for him by a Dutch trader, residing with him.
[174] This information he obtained through his messengers ’Mfunzi and ’Nkisimane, who were in Pietermaritzburg in June. The message (sent by Mr. Colenso) being, that the young officer killed at the Styotyozi river was a Prince; that his sword would be desired by his family, and that if Cetshwayo wanted to make peace he had better return it. The result was that, as soon as the king received the message, he sent the sword on to Lord Chelmsford.
[175] Amongst the wild natives of South Africa it is thought that the carrying of burdens is not a manly task. In a family of travelling Zulus the women and lads perform the duties of carriers, while the man of the party marches ahead, unencumbered except by his weapons, ready if necessary to defend his flock against the attack of man or beast. An officer, travelling in the eastern province some years ago, met and questioned a party proceeding in this fashion. “Why,” he asked the leader of the little band, “do you allow these women and girls to carry heavy loads, while you, a strong able-bodied man, have nothing but your assegais and knob-kerries in your hand?” Such questions are not seldom resented when they touch on native customs, and are asked in an overbearing manner. This officer was uniformly kind and courteous to the natives, and the man smilingly replied, “It is our custom, and the women prefer it;” referring his questioner to the women themselves for their opinion. The chief of these latter thereupon replied, with much grace and dignity: “Does the white chief think we would let _our man_ do woman’s work? It is our work to carry, and we should not like to see him do it.”
[176] The appearance of the native carrier on the march was very ludicrous. Picture a stalwart Kafir carrying his sleeping mats, provisions, cooking-pot, drinking-gourd, shield, bundle of assegais and knob-kerries, and perched on top of all, on his head, a fifty-pound mealie-bag; the result was likened to a Christmas-tree.
[177] A splendid elephant’s tusk (the Zulu emblem of international good-will and sincerity) had been sent by Cetshwayo, with one of his messages, to General Crealock; this Sir Garnet Wolseley sent home to the Queen, who thus has received a valuable present from her dusky antagonist.
[178] Mr. Colenso was acquainted with him, having, as already related, paid him a visit in 1877.
[179] At the same time many residents in Cape Town obtained, from mere motives of curiosity, that interview which, to those who had desired it for humanity’s sake, had been refused, while all who know his language, or are likely to sympathise, are rigidly excluded. Orders were given afterwards that the name of the Bishop of Natal should not be mentioned to Cetshwayo, “because it excited the prisoner.”
[180] We think this statement is hardly correct.
[181] _The Daily News_, 30th October, 1879.
* * * * * * * * * *
_February 16, 1880._
BOOKS
PUBLISHED BY
CHAPMAN & HALL LIMITED,
193, PICCADILLY.
(A Selection from their general Catalogue.)
THE LETTERS OF CHARLES DICKENS. (_NOW FOR THE FIRST TIME PUBLISHED._) Edited by his SISTER-IN-LAW and ELDEST DAUGHTER. 2 vols. demy 8vo, 30_s._ Second Edition.
_BEESLY (EDWARD SPENCER)—Professor of History in University College, London_—
CATILINE, CLODIUS, AND TIBERIUS. Large crown 8vo, 6_s._
_BLAKE (MRS.)_
THE REALITIES OF FREEMASONRY. Author of “Twelve Months in Southern Europe.” Demy 8vo, 9_s._
“A singularly interesting and entertaining volume, clearly, concisely, and systematically arranged in a series of chapters, each of which contributes, in its proper place and order, to the elucidation of the common purpose of them all, that is, the _rationale_ of Freemasonry as it exists and is practised in the present day. Mrs. Blake is never desultory or discursive; possessing her subject thoroughly, and writing with all the calmness of dispassionate investigation.”—_Daily News._
_BOYLE (F.)—Author of “Camp Notes.”_
CHRONICLES OF NO MAN’S LAND. Large crown 8vo, 10_s._ 6_d._
“It would be difficult to single one essay out above another in Mr. Boyle’s series of remarkably equal sketches.”—_Standard._
_BRADLEY (THOMAS)—of the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich_—
ELEMENTS OF GEOMETRICAL DRAWING. In Two Parts, with Sixty Plates. Oblong folio, half-bound, each Part, 16_s._
_BUCKLAND (FRANK)_—
LOG-BOOK OF A FISHERMAN AND ZOOLOGIST. Second Edition. With numerous Illustrations. Large crown 8vo 12_s._
“We welcome once more the freshest and most genial of the many writers who aim at popularising among us habits of observation, and the intelligent lover of natural history.”—_Graphic._
_BURCHETT (R.)_—
DEFINITIONS OF GEOMETRY. New Edition. 24mo, cloth, 5_d._
LINEAR PERSPECTIVE, for the Use of Schools of Art. Twenty-first Thousand. With Illustrations. Post 8vo, cloth, 7_s._
PRACTICAL GEOMETRY: The Course of Construction of Plane Geometrical Figures. With 137 Diagrams. Eighteenth Edition. Post 8vo, cloth, 5_s._
_BURNAND (F. C.), B.A., Trin. Coll. Camb._
THE “A. D. C.”; being Personal Reminiscences of the University Amateur Dramatic Club, Cambridge. Demy 8vo, 12_s._ Second Edition.
“An eminently readable and pleasant book.”—_Examiner._
“A singularly amusing and interesting book.”—_Saturday Review._
_CAMPION (J. S.) late Major, Staff, 1st Br. C.N.G., U.S.A._—
ON THE FRONTIER. Reminiscences of Wild Sport, Personal Adventures, and Strange Scenes. With Illustrations. Demy 8vo, 16_s._ Second Edition.
“Every chapter is a finished picture.... The book will not only delight the sportsman, but will prove irresistibly attractive to all who like good stories thoroughly well told. To those in search of fresh information about the aborigines or animals or physical geography of Western America, Major Campion’s work will yield many new facts. We hope to meet him again.”—_Times._
ON FOOT IN SPAIN. With Illustrations. Demy 8vo, 16_s._ Second Edition.
“No one will look for word-painting, elaborate description, or profound observation in a book of this kind; and, moreover, the author seems to have a positive dread of what he calls ‘Coming Barlow over the reader’—referring, we presume, to the terrible mentor of Sandford and Merton. But in an unpretending way it gives a much more graphic picture of the scenery, people, and ways of North Spain than many a more ambitious work. Few readers, we imagine, will lay it down without feeling they have a clearer idea of the country, and without feeling also a kind of liking for the author.”—_Pall Mall Gazette._
_CARLYLE (DR.)_—
DANTE’S DIVINE COMEDY.—Literal Prose Translation of THE INFERNO, with text and Notes. Second Edition. Post 8vo, 14_s._
CARLYLE BIRTHDAY BOOK. Prepared by permission of Mr. Thomas Carlyle. Small crown 8vo, 3_s._
“An elegant little volume of the usual kind, with all its quotations selected from Mr. Carlyle’s writings. Apart from its primary use, this is really a book worth having, as it forms a very good anthology of his wise and witty sayings.”—_Whitehall Review._
_CLINTON (R. H.)_—
A COMPENDIUM OF ENGLISH HISTORY, from the Earliest Times to A.D. 1872. With Copious Quotations on the Leading Events and the Constitutional History, together with Appendices. Post 8vo, 7_s._ 6_d._
“This is an invaluable book. In 280 pages it gives the whole course of the history from the earliest ages, judiciously interspersed with quotations from the best historians down to our own time....”—_Examiner._
_CRAIK (GEORGE LILLIE)_—
ENGLISH OF SHAKESPEARE. Illustrated in a Philological Commentary on his Julius Cæsar. Fifth Edition. Post 8vo, cloth, 5_s._
OUTLINES OF THE HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE. Ninth Edition. Post 8vo, cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._
_DAVIDSON (ELLIS A.)_—
PRETTY ARTS FOR THE EMPLOYMENT OF LEISURE HOURS. A Book for Ladies. With Illustrations. Demy 8vo, 6_s._
THE AMATEUR HOUSE CARPENTER: a Guide in Building, Making, and Repairing. With numerous Illustrations, drawn on Wood by the Author. Royal 8vo, 10_s._ 6_d._
_DAVISON (THE MISSES)_—
TRIQUETI MARBLES IN THE ALBERT MEMORIAL CHAPEL, WINDSOR. A Series of Photographs. Dedicated by express permission to Her Majesty the Queen. The Work consists of 117 Photographs, with descriptive Letterpress, mounted on 49 sheets of cardboard, half-imperial. Price £10 10_s._
_DE POMAR (THE DUKE)_—
FASHION AND PASSION; or, Life in Mayfair. New Edition. Crown 8vo, 6_s._
_DIXON (W. HEPWORTH)_—
BRITISH CYPRUS. Demy 8vo, with Frontispiece, 15_s._
“‘British Cyprus’ is in essential points an able and piquant work, and full of fresh and valuable information.”—_Graphic._
THE HOLY LAND. Fourth Edition. With 2 Steel and 12 Wood Engravings, Post 8vo, 10_s._ 6_d._
_DRAYSON (LIEUT.-COL. A. W.)_—
PRACTICAL MILITARY SURVEYING AND SKETCHING. Fifth Edition. Post 8vo, cloth, 4_s._ 6_d._
_DYCE (WILLIAM), R.A._—
DRAWING-BOOK OF THE GOVERNMENT SCHOOL OF DESIGN; OR, ELEMENTARY OUTLINES OF ORNAMENT. Fifty selected Plates. Folio, sewed, 5_s._; mounted, 18_s._
Text to ditto. Sewed, 6_d._
_ESCOTT (T. H. S.)_—
PILLARS OF THE EMPIRE: Short Biographical Sketches. Demy 8vo, 10_s._ 6_d._
“The editor of the present volume deserves praise for the skill displayed both in arranging the gallery and in painting some of the more striking portraits which adorn it. From first to last these sketches are full of fresh and lively interest; and it would be no easy matter to select any one chapter which at all falls short of the high standard reached by the volume as a whole. The story of the lives and achievements of the distinguished men whose career is here so brightly and freshly recorded presents many varied contributions to the history of the Empire, which appear as different illustrations of Imperial service and aspects of the Imperial idea.... With bright touches, happy illustrations, and pithy epigrams the whole book abounds, and is readable from first to last.”—_Standard._
_EWALD (ALEX. CHARLES), F.S.A._—
REPRESENTATIVE STATESMEN: Political Studies. Two Vols. Large crown 8vo, 24_s._
“Contains much interesting matter well put together.... Mr. Ewald has a happy knack of seizing the most salient points of the story which he has to tell.”—_John Bull._
_FANE (VIOLET)_—
DENZIL PLACE: a Story in Verse. Crown 8vo, cloth, 8_s._
QUEEN OF THE FAIRIES (A Village Story) and other Poems. By the Author of “Denzil Place.” Crown 8vo, 6_s._
ANTHONY BABINGTON: a Drama. By the Author of “Denzil Place,” “The Queen of the Fairies,” &c. Crown 8vo, 6_s._
_FEARNLEY (W.), late Principal of the Edinburgh Veterinary College; Author of “Lectures on the Examination of Horses as to Soundness”_—
LESSONS IN HORSE JUDGING, AND THE SUMMERING OF HUNTERS. With Illustrations. Crown 8vo, 4_s._
“An excellent description (with diagrams) of the points of a horse one by one, followed by an equally excellent appendix on the ‘Summering of Hunters.’”—_Graphic._
_FITZ-PATRICK (W. J.)_—
LIFE OF CHARLES LEVER. 2 vols. Demy 8vo, 30_s._
“Mr. Fitzpatrick’s book is one of the most interesting of the season; and we are glad that the task of writing about a writer of whom all will be anxious to know all that can be known, should have fallen into such conscientious and pains-taking hands.”—_John Bull._
_FLEMING (GEORGE), F.R.C.S._—
ANIMAL PLAGUES: THEIR HISTORY, NATURE, AND PREVENTION. 8vo, cloth, 15_s._
HORSES AND HORSE-SHOEING: their Origin, History, Uses, and Abuses. 210 Engravings. 8vo, cloth, £1 1_s._
PRACTICAL HORSE-SHOEING: With 37 Illustrations. Second Edition, enlarged. 8vo, sewed, 2_s._
RABIES AND HYDROPHOBIA: THEIR HISTORY, NATURE, CAUSES, SYMPTOMS, AND PREVENTION. With 8 Illustrations. 8vo, cloth, 15_s._
“Such a work as that now before us has long been a desideratum. There have been useful treatises, more or less elaborated, upon dog-madness, but there has not hitherto been any one which could pretend to such a degree of completeness as the subject deserved. It is not too much to say that Mr. Fleming has brought to its consideration a remarkable amount of varied research and of practical knowledge and judgment, and it must be acknowledged that he has fulfilled the task he had assigned to himself in the most ample and satisfactory manner.”—_Athenæum._
A MANUAL OF VETERINARY SANITARY SCIENCE AND POLICE. With 33 Illustrations. 2 vols. Demy 8vo, 36_s._
“His book is quite an encyclopædia of veterinary science, and cannot fail to be of great value to all who have animals about them. Mr. Fleming has resorted to the best authorities both in this country and on the Continent, and has been able to add to what he has obtained from them the results of a wide and varied practical experience. His works on ‘Animal Plagues,’ and ‘Rabies and Hydrophobia,’ have already secured his reputation as a writer on veterinary science, and a material addition will be made to it by the present extremely valuable and fairly exhaustive treatise.”—_Pall Mall Gazette._
_FORSTER (JOHN)_—
THE LIFE OF CHARLES DICKENS. With Portraits and other Illustrations. 15th Thousand. 3 vols. 8vo, cloth, £2 2_s._
“Mr. Forster’s life of Dickens will always be eagerly read as long as Dickens himself is eagerly read; and that will be as long as Englishmen retain their delight in English literature.”—_Spectator._
THE LIFE OF CHARLES DICKENS. Uniform with the Illustrated Edition of Dickens’s Works. 2 vols. Demy 8vo, £1 8_s._
THE LIFE OF CHARLES DICKENS. Uniform with the Library Edition. Post 8vo, 10_s._ 6_d._
THE LIFE OF CHARLES DICKENS. Uniform with the “C. D.” Edition of his Works. With Numerous Illustrations. 2 vols. 7_s._
THE LIFE OF CHARLES DICKENS. Uniform with the Household Edition. With Illustrations by F. BARNARD. Crown 4to, cloth, 4_s._ 6_d._; paper, 3_s._ 6_d._
WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR: a Biography, 1775-1864. With Portraits and Vignettes. A New and Revised Edition, in 1 vol. Demy 8vo, 12_s._
_FRANCATELLI (C. E.)_—
ROYAL CONFECTIONER: English and Foreign. A Practical Treatise. With Coloured Illustrations. 3rd Edition. Post 8vo, cloth, 7_s._ 6_d._
“Under the above abbreviated designation we are announcing a work, the mere title-page of which is a catalogue of culinary mysteries, and the programme of an exhibition of subtle and ambrosial art. ‘The Royal English and Foreign Confectioner,’ as this title-page avers, is a practical treatise on the art of confectionery in all its branches, comprising ornamental confectionery artistically developed; different methods of preserving fruit, fruit pulps, and juices in bottles, the preparation of jams and jellies, fruit and other syrups, summer beverages, and a great variety of national drinks; with directions for making dessert cakes, plain and fancy bread, candies, bonbons, comfits, spirituous essences, and cordials; also, the art of ice-making, and the arrangement and general economy of fashionable desserts. By Charles Elmé Francatelli, pupil to the celebrated Carême, and late maître d’hotel to Her Majesty the Queen, author of ‘The Modern Cook,’ ‘The Cook’s Guide,’ and ‘Cookery for the Working Classes.’ With numerous illustrations in chromo-lithography. We shall not affect to pass judgment on the vast variety of recipes which carry out the abundant promise of Francatelli’s title-page. It is enough to absolve us from such endless labour to mention that the contents of the chapters occupy 15 pages, and that the index in which the references are printed very closely, comprises upwards of 20 pages, and includes all imaginable products of the confectionery art.... WE SALUTE FRANCATELLI RESPECTFULLY IN DISMISSING HIS BOOK; ONLY ADDING THAT HIS RECIPE FOR BEIGNETS OF PINK-APPLES, ON PAGE 252, IS WORTH ALL THE MONEY WHICH THE PURCHASER WILL PAY FOR THIS VERY OPPORTUNE VOLUME.”—_Times._
_HANCOCK (E. CAMPBELL)_—
THE AMATEUR POTTERY AND GLASS PAINTER. With Directions for Gilding, Chasing, Burnishing, Bronzing, and Ground Laying. Illustrated. Including Fac-similes from the Sketch-Book of N. H. J. WESTLAKE, F.S.A. With an Appendix. Demy 8vo, 5_s._
“A most useful handbook to the now fashionable art of painting on china and glass, containing minute instructions which only have to be thoroughly mastered to render the student capable of turning out reasonably artistic work. The illustrations will also be found very useful by the beginner, as they show the sort of designs best adapted for the purpose in hand. For the general reader, who does not aspire to become a crockery painter, some interesting chapters on pottery and porcelain are provided, in which they will find descriptions of many of the chief manufactories, with particulars of the special productions that have rendered them famous. Any person bitten with the china mania cannot fail to be pleased with the information given in this part of the book.”—_Globe._
_HALL (SIDNEY)_—
A TRAVELLING ATLAS OF THE ENGLISH COUNTIES. Fifty Maps, Coloured. New Edition, including the Railways, corrected up to the present date. Demy 8vo, in roan tuck, 10_s._ 6_d._
_HILL (MISS G.)_—
THE PLEASURES AND PROFITS OF OUR LITTLE POULTRY FARM. Small crown 8vo, 3_s._
_HITCHMAN (FRANCIS)_—
THE PUBLIC LIFE OF THE EARL OF BEACONSFIELD. 2 vols. Demy 8vo, 32_s._
_HOLBEIN_—
TWELVE HEADS AFTER HOLBEIN. Selected from Drawings in Her Majesty’s Collection at Windsor. Reproduced in Autotype, in portfolio. 36_s._
_HOVELACQUE (ABEL)_—
THE SCIENCE OF LANGUAGE: LINGUISTICS, PHILOLOGY, AND ETYMOLOGY. With Maps. Large crown 8vo, cloth, 5_s._ Being the first volume of “The Library of Contemporary Science.”
“This is a translation of the first work of a new French series of Popular Scientific Works. The high character of the series, and also its bias, may be inferred from the names of some of its writers, _e.g._ P. Broca, Ch. Martins, C. Vogt, &c. The English publishers announce that the present volume will be followed immediately by others on Anthropology and Biology. If they are like their precursor, they will be clear and well written, somewhat polemical, and nobly contemptuous of opponents.... The translator has done his work throughout with care and success.”—_Athenæum._
_JARRY (GENERAL)_—
NAPIER (MAJ.-GEN. W. C. E.)—OUTPOST DUTY. Translated, with TREATISES ON MILITARY RECONNAISSANCE AND ON ROAD-MAKING. Third Edition. Crown 8vo, 5_s._
_KEMPIS (THOMAS À)_—
ON THE IMITATION OF CHRIST. Four Books, Beautifully Illustrated Edition. Demy 8vo, 16_s._
“It is illustrated with great ability—even the head and tail pieces are themselves complete pictures, suggestive, quaint, beautiful. The paper is of the best, and the printing very careful. On the whole, for a gift or for presentation, we hardly know where else to look for a book to match it. Clearly neither care nor expense has been spared in producing this tasteful but sumptuous volume.”—_Nonconformist._
_KLACZKO (M. JULIAN)_—
TWO CHANCELLORS: PRINCE GORTCHAKOF and PRINCE BISMARCK. Translated by Mrs. Tait. New and cheaper edition, 6_s._
“This is a most interesting and valuable book.... The object is to trace out the working and the results of a ten years’ partnership between the two famous Chancellors of Russia and Germany, Prince Gortchakoff and Prince Bismarck and these are delineated with considerable artistic power, and in a manner which betokens considerable political insight, and an intimate acquaintance with the diplomatic world.”—_Blackwood’s Magazine._
_LEFÈVRE (ANDRÉ)_—
PHILOSOPHY, Historical and Critical. Translated, with an introduction, by A. W. KEANE, B.A. Large crown 8vo, 7_s._ 6_d._
_LETOURNEAU (DR. CHARLES)_—
BIOLOGY. Translated by William MacCall. With Illustrations. Large crown 8vo, 6_s._
_LUCAS (CAPTAIN)_—
THE ZULUS AND THE BRITISH FRONTIER. Demy 8vo, 16_s._
“Even if South Africa did not so much engage public attention at this moment, Mr. Lucas’s book would be well worth reading. It is not a catchpenny publication, but a well written and well arranged study of our relations with the Zulus. Mr. Lucas expresses himself in a vigorous and manly style, without waste of words; and, though he makes use occasionally of the figure of irony, he never declaims, and never tries to be humorous out of place. He himself has had some military experience near the scene of the present disturbances, and he writes with a military clearness and directness which command attention.”—_Saturday Review._
CAMP LIFE AND SPORT IN SOUTH AFRICA. With Episodes in Kaffir Warfare. With Illustrations. Demy 8vo, 12_s._
“Mr. Lucas has admirably executed the task which he set himself to perform, and that was to touch upon some of the salient points of life and character in South Africa, at the same time weaving into them some of the everyday incidents of garrison life whilst serving with his old regiment, the Cape Mounted Rifles. The book is full of interest from the first page to the last, containing as it does descriptions of the chief places in South Africa, its various inhabitants, the peculiarities of Kaffir warfare, and the sport to be met with.”—_Naval and Military Gazette._
_LYTTON (ROBERT, LORD)_—
POETICAL WORKS—COLLECTED EDITION. Complete in 5 vols.
FABLES IN SONG. 2 vols. Fcap. 8vo, 12_s._ LUCILE. Fcap. 8vo, 6_s._ THE WANDERER. Fcap. 8vo, 6_s._ POEMS, HISTORICAL AND CHARACTERISTIC. Fcap. 6_s._
_MAXSE (FITZH.)_—
PRINCE BISMARCK’S LETTERS. Translated from the German. Second Edition. Small crown 8vo, cloth, 6_s._
_MAZADE (CHARLES DE)_—
THE LIFE OF COUNT CAVOUR. Translated from the French. Demy 8vo, 16_s._
“The arrangement of incidents, the juxtaposition of historical contrasts, and the entire elaboration of M. de Mazade’s material, are very artistic and very effective.... There is also much in M. de Mazade’s work, which, by-the-bye, is well translated, that may gratify English pride as well as instruct English politicians.”—_World._
_McCOAN (J. CARLILE)_—
OUR NEW PROTECTORATE. TURKEY IN ASIA: ITS GEOGRAPHY, RACES, RESOURCES, AND GOVERNMENT. With a Map, showing the Existing and Projected Public Works. 2 vols. large crown 8vo, 24_s._
“If a good book was to be made about Asiatic Turkey, it is difficult to see how it could have been made with greater success than has attended the efforts of Mr. McCoan. He has told us all that we could wish to know; he has put his information into a compact and readable shape; and he has supplied just as much detail as gives body to his work without overloading it. He has, too, a personal knowledge of many parts of the vast district he describes; and has been for years familiar with the Turks, their ways and work.”—_Saturday Review._
_MOLESWORTH (W. NASSAU)_—
HISTORY OF ENGLAND FROM THE YEAR 1830 TO THE RESIGNATION OF THE GLADSTONE MINISTRY.
A Cheap Edition, carefully revised, and carried up to March, 1874. 3 vols. crown 8vo, 18_s._
A School Edition. Post 8vo, 7_s._ 6_d._
“It is a great misfortune that the history of our country that is nearest our own times young men are least acquainted with. It is not written in histories that were read at school, and they are not old enough, as I am old enough, to remember almost every political fact since the great Reform Bill of 1832. I wish young men would read some history of this period. A neighbour and a friend of mine, a most intelligent and accomplished clergyman—Mr. Molesworth—has published a work, being a political history of England from the year 1830—that is, from the first Reform Bill—until within the last two or three years; a book honestly written, in which facts are plainly—and I believe truly—stated, and a work which would give great information to all the young men of the country, if they could be prevailed upon to read it.”—_From the Right Hon. John Bright’s Speech at Birmingham._
_MORLEY (HENRY)_—
ENGLISH WRITERS. Vol. I. Part I. THE CELTS AND ANGLO-SAXONS. With an Introductory Sketch of the Four Periods of English Literature. Part II. FROM THE CONQUEST TO CHAUCER. (Making 2 vols.) 8vo, cloth, £1 2_s._
⁂ Each Part is indexed separately. The Two Parts complete the account of English Literature during the Period of the Formation of the Language, or of THE WRITERS BEFORE CHAUCER.
“Mr. Morley’s volume, looks, at first sight, a formidable addition to the existing mass of English writings after Chaucer; but it is well worth reading. It comprises the foundation and ground story, so to speak, of a work upon the whole sequence of English literature. If carried out with the same spirit and on the same scale as the volume already published, the complete work will undoubtedly form a valuable contribution towards the story of the growth of the literary mind of England, told as a national biography of continuous interest.”—_Saturday Review._
Vol. II. Part I. FROM CHAUCER TO DUNBAR. 8vo, cloth, 12_s._
TABLES OF ENGLISH LITERATURE. Containing 20 Charts. Second Edition, with Index. Royal 4to, cloth, 12_s._
In Three Parts. Parts I. and II., containing Three Charts, each 1_s._ 6_d._
Part III., containing 14 Charts, 7_s._ Part III., also kept in Sections, 1, 2, and 1_s._ 6_d._ each; 3 and 4 together, 3_s._ ⁂ The Charts sold separately.
_MORLEY (JOHN)_—
DIDEROT AND THE ENCYCLOPÆDISTS. 2 vols. demy 8vo, 26_s._
“We have here the story of a life, full in itself of human interest, vividly and dramatically told; we have also glimpses of the lives of others whose interest is scarcely inferior; have a perfect treasure-house of social and political knowledge, literary and artistic criticism; and we have another of those singularly valuable contributions to the history of the ‘modern spirit,’ which Mr. Morley is perhaps better qualified than any living English writer to furnish, and which are achieving for him a reputation that is more than English in its comprehensiveness.”—_World._
CRITICAL MISCELLANIES. Second Series. France in the Eighteenth Century—Robespierre—Turgot—Death of Mr. Mill—Mr. Mill on Religion—On Popular Culture—Macaulay. Demy 8vo, cloth, 14_s._
VOLTAIRE. Large crown 8vo, 6_s._
“It is impossible to read his volume without being struck by its independence of thought, its sincerity and candour of expression, as well as by its ability and literary power. We have freely expressed our dissent from the views which it presents of the value and wholesomeness of the Voltairean philosophy, if that name can fairly be applied to anything so essentially unphilosophical; but at the same time it is well that such views should be fairly argued out, and that, whatever inconvenience it may occasion to people who, having once made up their minds on a subject, dislike to have them disturbed, accepted conclusions should be occasionally tested over again. Mr. Morley has given us a valuable and highly suggestive study of the great man of a very critical age.”—_Saturday Review._
ROUSSEAU. Large crown 8vo, 9_s._
CRITICAL MISCELLANIES. First Series. Large crown 8vo, 6_s._
CRITICAL MISCELLANIES. Second Series. [_In the Press._
“The papers one and all will bear reading not once but twice—papers full of suggestive thought on subjects of undying interest.”—_Graphic._
DIDEROT AND THE ENCYCLOPÆDISTS. Large crown 8vo, 12_s._
ON COMPROMISE. New Edition. Crown 8vo, 3_s._ 6_d._
STRUGGLE FOR NATIONAL EDUCATION. Third Edition. 8vo, cloth, 3_s._
_MORRIS (M. O’CONNOR)_—
HIBERNIA VENATICA. With Portraits of the Marchioness of Waterford, the Marchioness of Ormonde, Lady Randolph Churchill, Hon. Mrs. Malone, Miss Persse (of Moyode Castle), Mrs. Stewart Duckett, and Miss Myra Watson. Large crown 8vo, 18_s._
TRIVIATA; or, Cross Road Chronicles of Passages in Irish Hunting History during the season of 1875-76. With illustrations. Large crown 8vo, 16_s._
“The highest compliment paid to the merits of ‘Triviator’s’ volume will be found to proceed from outsiders beyond the circle of ‘hunting men,’ who have found interest and amusement in its pages. The illustrations do not pretend to high line in art, but are not lacking in humour and fidelity, and altogether we can without scruple commend a perusal of ‘Triviata’ to all lovers of hunting, on whose shelves it should find a place among the standard works of that enthusiastic body.”—_Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News._
_MURPHY (J. M.)_—
RAMBLES IN NORTH-WEST AMERICA. With Frontispiece and Map. 16_s._
“Mr. Murphy has not only written a very readable volume, but must have employed infinite pains in collecting his materials.”—_Saturday Review._
_OLIVER (PROFESSOR), F.R.S., &c._—
ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE PRINCIPAL NATURAL ORDERS OF THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM, PREPARED FOR THE SCIENCE AND ART DEPARTMENT, SOUTH KENSINGTON. Oblong 8vo, with 109 Plates. Price, plain, 16_s._; coloured, £1 6_s._
_PIERCE (GILBERT A.)_—
THE DICKENS DICTIONARY: a Key to the Characters and Principal Incidents in the Tales of Charles Dickens. With additions by WILLIAM A. WHEELER. Large crown 8vo, 10_s._ 6_d._
“The description of the external and internal peculiarities of the characters is, as far as possible, given in Dickens’s own words, a sign of laudable discretion on the editor’s part. The volume forms a useful, we may say necessary, supplement to the library edition of Dickens’s works.”—_Mayfair._
_POLLOK (LIEUT.-COLONEL)_—
SPORT IN BRITISH BURMAH, ASSAM, AND THE CASSYAH AND JYNTIAH HILLS. With Notes of Sport in the Hilly Districts of the Northern Division, Madras Presidency. 2 vols. Demy 8vo, with Illustrations and 2 Maps. 24_s._
“Colonel Pollok’s ‘Sport in British Burmah’ must be ranked among the best books of its class.”—_Graphic._
_POYNTER (E. J.), R.A._—
TEN LECTURES ON ART. Second Edition. Large crown 8vo, 9_s._
“This is a fine book, probably one of the books on art for a good many years, full of clearly and deftly wrought-out explanations upon subjects of much intricacy.... The remaining contents of this remarkable book we must not even indicate. Its chief lessons will, perhaps, centre upon the skilful teaching of thoroughness, nobility, and patience that appears in almost every page, and upon the remarkable illustrations and exposure of false taste in decorative art.”—_Spectator._
_PRINSEP (VAL), A.R.A._—
IMPERIAL INDIA. Containing numerous Illustrations and Maps made during a Tour to the Courts of the Principal Rajahs and Princes of India. Second Edition. Demy, 8vo, 21_s._
“It is to be hoped that the author of this work may be as successful in his delineation of the Great Durbar on canvas as he has been in the wood pictures we have noticed. His book is one of the most readable that has lately appeared on the subject of India, full of interest and of touches of humour which make it a pleasant companion from the first chapter to the last.... It may be added that the illustrations are superlatively good.”—_Athenæum._
_REDGRAVE (SAMUEL)_—
A DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE OF THE HISTORICAL COLLECTION OF WATER-COLOUR PAINTINGS IN THE SOUTH KENSINGTON MUSEUM. With an Introductory Notice by SAMUEL REDGRAVE. With numerous Chromo-lithographs and other Illustrations. Published for the Science and Art Department of the Committee of Council on Education. Royal 8vo, £1 1_s._
“A book which is a real contribution to British art.”—_Graphic._
_ROBSON (REV. J. H., M.A., LL.M.)—late Foundation Scholar of Downing College, Cambridge_—
AN ELEMENTARY TREATISE ON ALGEBRA. Post 8vo. 6_s._
_ROLAND (ARTHUR)_—
FARMING FOR PLEASURE AND PROFIT.
VOL. I.—DAIRY FARMING, MANAGEMENT OF COWS, &c. Edited by WILLIAM ABLETT. Large crown 8vo, 6_s._
“We cannot follow our author in detail, but we may confidently recommend his book, not only to the attention of amateurs, but also to that of experts, who will find a good many hints of advantage to them.”—_Gardeners’ Chronicle._
“The book contains much information that will be useful to people who may wish to keep their own cows and utilize their produce, but are at present ignorant as to the best methods of going to work.”—_Queen._
VOL. II.—POULTRY-KEEPING. Edited by WILLIAM ABLETT. Large crown 8vo, 5_s._
“Mr. Roland’s book gives much useful and instructive information on the keeping and management of fowls; but we particularly recommend his directions for the construction of a proper fowl-house, which, though of the utmost importance and absolutely necessary to success, is, as often as not, hopelessly neglected.”—_Graphic._
VOL. III.—TREE-PLANTING, for Ornamentation or Profit, suitable to every Soil and Situation. Edited by WILLIAM ABLETT. Large crown 8vo, 5_s._
“The book comprises much useful and practical information as to the nature, uses, and growth of various kinds of trees; it possesses the additional merit of being very readable, and interesting to all admirers of sylvan beauty.”—_Queen._
VOL. IV.—STOCK-KEEPING AND CATTLE-REARING. [_In the Press._
VOL. V.—DRAINAGE OF LAND, MANURES, &c. [_In the Press._
VOL. VI.—ROOT-GROWING, HOPS, &c. [_In the Press._
_SCOTT-STEVENSON (MRS.)_—
OUR HOME IN CYPRUS. With a Map and Illustrations. Demy 8vo, 14_s._ Second Edition.
“Mrs. Scott-Stevenson tells her story with delightful _naïveté_ and womanly simplicity; she gives us many amusing pictures of life in Cyprus, and her sketches of her interesting female friends at Kyrenia are particularly graphic. Her book is altogether really attractive reading, gives one a fair idea of several aspects of the island, and would prove useful to any one contemplating a stay, especially for the sake of health. It is accompanied by an excellent new map, containing many important corrections on existing maps and a number of attractive illustrations.”—_Times._
_STORY (W. W.)_—
ROBA DI ROMA. Seventh Edition, with Additions and Portrait. Post 8vo, cloth, 10_s._ 6_d._
THE PROPORTIONS OF THE HUMAN FRAME, ACCORDING TO A NEW CANON. With Plates. Royal 8vo, cloth, 10_s._
CASTLE ST. ANGELO. Uniform with “Roba di Roma.” With Illustrations. Large crown 8vo, 10_s._ 6_d._
_STREETER (E. W.)_—
GOLD; OR, LEGAL REGULATIONS FOR THIS METAL IN DIFFERENT COUNTRIES OF THE WORLD. Crown 8vo cloth, 3_s._ 6_d._
_TANNER (PROFESSOR HENRY), F.C.S._—
JACK’S EDUCATION; OR, HOW HE LEARNT FARMING. Large crown 8vo, 4_s._
“Few people now fail to appreciate the value of popular lectures on science and education, and the result of studies in agricultural science is put into a taking narrative form by Professor H. Tanner in ‘Jack’s Education,’ wherein he traces the spread of agricultural knowledge in a certain district from a stray remark dropped by a student at some provincial lectures. Even the most unenlightened in farming matters could not fail to understand and be interested in Professor Tanner’s volume.”
_TOPINARD (DR. PAUL)_—
ANTHROPOLOGY. With a Preface by Professor PAUL BROCA, Secretary of the Société d’Anthropologie, and Translated by ROBERT J. H. BARTLETT, M.D. With numerous Illustrations. Large crown 8vo, 7_s._ 6_d._
_TREVELYAN (L. R.)_—
A YEAR IN PESHAWUR AND A LADY’S RIDE INTO THE KHYBER PASS. Crown 8vo, 9_s._
“Mrs. Trevelyan has made the best of her opportunities for observing what was worth noting while she was stationed at Peshawur. The incidents of frontier life are well described, as also are all the doings that go to make up life at that important station, the whole being told in a pleasantly written story.”—_Naval and Military Gazette._
_TROLLOPE (ANTHONY)_—
THE CHRONICLES OF BARSETSHIRE. A Uniform Edition, consisting of 8 vols., large crown 8vo, 6_s._ each, handsomely printed, each vol. containing Frontispiece.
THE WARDEN. BARCHESTER TOWERS. DR. THORNE. FRAMLEY PARSONAGE. THE SMALL HOUSE AT ALLINGTON. 2 vols. LAST CHRONICLE OF BARSET. 2 vols.
AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND. A Cheap Edition with Maps. 2 vols. Small 8vo, cloth, 7_s._ 6_d._
SOUTH AFRICA. 2 vols. Large crown 8vo, with Maps. Fourth Edition, £1 10_s._
SOUTH AFRICA, 1 vol. Crown 8vo, 6_s._
_VÉRON (EUGÈNE)_—
ÆSTHETICS. Translated by W. H. ARMSTRONG. Large crown 8vo, 7_s._ 6_d._
“It is utterly impossible, within our limits, to go far into so vast a subject as æsthetics, which M. Véron himself can only treat briefly and summarily in a volume of 473 pages. We can only say that it is, on the whole, by far the best book on the subject we ever met with. M. Véron is at the same time a master of his subject and singularly free from those traditional prejudices which usually hamper the judgment of a Frenchman in art matters. He is quite independent of the stupid and tiresome official teaching, and in perfect sympathy with true artistic genius in its various manifestations.”—_Saturday Review._
_WHITE (WALTER)_—
HOLIDAYS IN TYROL: Kufstein, Klobenstein, and Paneveggio. Large crown 8vo, 14_s._
“A delightful holiday volume, full of pleasant chat and valuable hints. Mr. Walter White has an eye that sees everything, a memory which forgets nothing, a judgment to discriminate between what is and is not worth repeating, and a fluent and cheery style, neither striving artificially at epigram, nor relapsing through feebleness into platitude.”—_World._
LONDONER’S WALK TO THE LAND’S END, AND A TRIP TO THE SCILLY ISLES. Post 8vo. With 4 Maps. Third Edition. 4_s._
MONTH IN YORKSHIRE. Post 8vo. With a Map. Fifth Edition. 4_s._
“These volumes are written with intelligence, and are full of information which should be welcome to every reader. There are few parts of England which will not yield delight to the pedestrian: but the counties visited by Mr. White are inexhaustible in wealth of association and beauty of scenery, and if his pleasantly written books excite a desire for home travel they will not have been published in vain.”—_Pall Mall Gazette._
_WORNUM (R. N.)_—
ANALYSIS OF ORNAMENT: THE CHARACTERISTICS OF STYLES. An Introduction to the Study of the History of Ornamental Art. With many Illustrations. Sixth Edition. Royal 8vo, cloth, 8_s._
_WYLDE (ATHERTON)_—
MY CHIEF AND I; or, Six Months in Natal after the Langalibalele Outbreak. With Portrait of Colonel Durnford. Demy 8vo, 14_s._
“We may add that the book is extremely interesting. Written simply, but in good, plain English, without any attempt at ‘word-painting,’ the very first pages gain the reader’s sympathy, and when the last is reached, he parts from Mr. Wylde with regret.”—_Examiner._
_YOUNGE (C. D.)_—
PARALLEL LIVES OF ANCIENT AND MODERN HEROES. New Edition. 12mo, cloth, 4_s._ 6_d._
OFFICIAL HANDBOOK FOR THE NATIONAL TRAINING SCHOOL FOR COOKERY. Containing Lessons on Cookery; forming the Course of Instruction in the School. With List of Utensils Necessary, and Lessons on Cleaning Utensils. Compiled by “R. O. C.” Large crown 8vo. Fifth Edition, 8_s._
“The good point about the book is that it presupposes complete ignorance on the part of the pupil; nothing is left to haphazard; every quantity is given in its exact and due proportion, and the price of each ingredient carefully set down. All these lessons, moreover, have been practically tested in the National Training School, and may therefore be accepted in good faith. It is not, however, to be supposed that any cunning recipes or rare and costly dishes are to be found in this book; the ‘first principles’ of good cookery is the lesson it professes to teach, and certainly the method of tuition is direct and easy to follow.”—_Times._
FORTNIGHTLY REVIEW.—First Series, May, 1865, to Dec. 1866. 6 vols. Cloth, 13_s._ each.
New Series, 1867 to 1872. In Half-yearly Volumes. Cloth, 13_s._ each.
From January, 1873, to June 30, 1879, in Half-yearly Volumes. Cloth, 16_s._ each.
WHYTE-MELVILLE’S WORKS.
CHEAP EDITION.
_Crown 8vo, fancy boards, 2s. each, or 2s. 6d. in cloth._
UNCLE JOHN. THE WHITE ROSE. CERISE. BROOKES OF BRIDLEMERE. “BONES AND I.” “M., OR N.” CONTRABAND. MARKET HARBOROUGH. SARCHEDON. SONGS AND VERSES. SATANELLA. THE TRUE CROSS. KATERFELTO. SISTER LOUISE. ROSINE. ROY’S WIFE. BLACK BUT COMELY.
CARLYLE’S (THOMAS) WORKS.
LIBRARY EDITION COMPLETE.
Handsomely printed in 34 vols. Demy 8vo, cloth, £15.
SARTOR RESARTUS. The Life and Opinions of Herr Teufelsdrockh. With a Portrait, 7_s._ 6_d._
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. A History. 3 vols., each 9_s._
LIFE OF FREDERICK SCHILLER AND EXAMINATION OF HIS WORKS. With Supplement of 1872. Portrait and Plates, 9_s._ The Supplement _separately_, 2_s._
CRITICAL AND MISCELLANEOUS ESSAYS. With Portrait. 6 vols., each 9_s._
ON HEROES, HERO WORSHIP, AND THE HEROIC IN HISTORY. 7_s._ 6_d._
PAST AND PRESENT. 9_s._
OLIVER CROMWELL’S LETTERS AND SPEECHES. With Portraits. 5 vols., each 9_s._
LATTER-DAY PAMPHLETS. 9_s._
LIFE OF JOHN STERLING. With Portrait, 9_s._
HISTORY OF FREDERICK THE SECOND. 10 vols., each 9_s._
TRANSLATIONS FROM THE GERMAN. 3 vols., each 9_s._
GENERAL INDEX TO THE LIBRARY EDITION. 8vo, cloth, 6_s._
EARLY KINGS OF NORWAY; also AN ESSAY ON THE PORTRAITS OF JOHN KNOX. Crown 8vo, with Portrait Illustrations, 7_s._ 6_d._
CHEAP AND UNIFORM EDITION.
_In 23 vols., Crown 8vo, cloth, £7 5s._
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION: A History. 2 vols., 12_s._
OLIVER CROMWELL’S LETTERS AND SPEECHES, with Elucidations, &c. 3 vols., 18_s._
LIVES OF SCHILLER AND JOHN STERLING, 1 vol., 6_s._
CRITICAL AND MISCELLANEOUS ESSAYS. 2 vols., £1 4_s._
SARTOR RESARTUS AND LECTURES ON HEROES, 1 vol., 6_s._
LATTER-DAY PAMPHLETS. 1 vol., 6_s._
CHARTISM AND PAST AND PRESENT. 1 vol., 6_s._
TRANSLATIONS FROM THE GERMAN OF MUSÆUS, TIECK, AND RICHTER. 1 vol., 6_s._
WILHELM MEISTER, by Göthe. A Translation. 2 vols., 12_s._
HISTORY OF FRIEDRICH THE SECOND, called Frederick the Great. Vols. I. and II., containing Part I.—“Friedrich till his Accession.” 14_s._ Vols. III. and IV., containing Part II.—“The First Two Silesian Wars.” 14_s._ Vols. V. VI., VII., completing the Work, £1 1_s._
PEOPLE’S EDITION.
_In 37 vols., small Crown 8vo. Price 2s. each vol. bound in cloth; or in sets of 37 vols. in 18, cloth gilt, for £3 14s._
SARTOR RESARTUS.
FRENCH REVOLUTION. 3 vols.
LIFE OF JOHN STERLING.
OLIVER CROMWELL’S LETTERS AND SPEECHES. 5 vols.
ON HEROES AND HERO WORSHIP.
PAST AND PRESENT.
CRITICAL AND MISCELLANEOUS ESSAYS. 7 vols.
LATTER-DAY PAMPHLETS.
LIFE OF SCHILLER.
FREDERICK THE GREAT. 10 vols.
WILHELM MEISTER. 3 vols.
TRANSLATIONS FROM MUSÆUS, TIECK, AND RICHTER. 2 vols.
THE EARLY KINGS OF NORWAY; also an Essay on the Portraits of John Knox, with Illustrations. Small crown 8vo. Bound up with the Index and uniform with the “People’s Edition.”
DICKENS’S (CHARLES) WORKS.
ORIGINAL EDITIONS.
_In Demy 8vo._
THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD. With Illustrations by S. L. Fildes, and a Portrait engraved by Baker. Cloth, 7_s._ 6_d._
OUR MUTUAL FRIEND. With Forty Illustrations by Marcus Stone. Cloth, £1 1_s._
THE PICKWICK PAPERS. With Forty-three Illustrations by Seymour and Phiz. Cloth, £1 1_s._
NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. With Forty Illustrations by Phiz. Cloth, £1 1_s._
SKETCHES BY “BOZ.” With Forty Illustrations by George Cruikshank. Cloth, £1 1_s._
MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT. With Forty Illustrations by Phiz. Cloth, £1 1_s._
DOMBEY AND SON. With Forty Illustrations by Phiz. Cloth, £1 1_s._
DAVID COPPERFIELD. With Forty Illustrations by Phiz. Cloth, £1 1_s._
BLEAK HOUSE. With Forty Illustrations by Phiz. Cloth, £1 1_s._
LITTLE DORRIT. With Forty Illustrations by Phiz. Cloth, £1 1_s._
THE OLD CURIOSITY SHOP. With Seventy-five Illustrations by George Cattermole and H. K. Browne. A New Edition. Uniform with the other volumes, £1 1_s._
BARNABY RUDGE: a Tale of the Riots of ’Eighty. With Seventy-eight Illustrations by G. Cattermole and H. K. Browne. Uniform with the other volumes, £1 1_s._
CHRISTMAS BOOKS: Containing—The Christmas Carol; The Cricket on the Hearth; The Chimes; The Battle of Life; The Haunted House. With all the original Illustrations. Cloth, 12_s._
OLIVER TWIST and TALE OF TWO CITIES. In one volume. Cloth, £1 1_s._
OLIVER TWIST. Separately. With Twenty-four Illustrations by George Cruikshank.
A TALE OF TWO CITIES. Separately. With Sixteen Illustrations by Phiz. Cloth, 9_s._
⁂ _The remainder of Dickens’s Works were not originally printed in Demy 8vo._
LIBRARY EDITION.
_In Post 8vo. With the Original Illustrations, 30 vols., cloth, £12._
_s. d._ PICKWICK PAPERS 43 Illustrations, 2 vols. 16 0 NICHOLAS NICKLEBY 39 ” 2 vols. 16 0 MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT 40 ” 2 vols. 16 0 OLD CURIOSITY SHOP and REPRINTED PIECES 36 ” 2 vols. 16 0 BARNABY RUDGE and HARD TIMES 36 ” 2 vols. 16 0 BLEAK HOUSE 40 ” 2 vols. 16 0 LITTLE DORRIT 40 ” 2 vols. 16 0 DOMBEY AND SON 38 ” 2 vols. 16 0 DAVID COPPERFIELD 38 ” 2 vols. 16 0 OUR MUTUAL FRIEND 40 ” 2 vols. 16 0 SKETCHES BY “BOZ” 39 ” 1 vol. 8 0 OLIVER TWIST 24 ” 1 vol. 8 0 CHRISTMAS BOOKS 17 ” 1 vol. 8 0 A TALE OF TWO CITIES 16 ” 1 vol. 8 0 GREAT EXPECTATIONS 8 ” 1 vol. 8 0 PICTURES FROM ITALY and AMERICAN NOTES 8 ” 1 vol. 8 0 UNCOMMERCIAL TRAVELLER 8 ” 1 vol. 8 0 CHILD’S HISTORY OF ENGLAND 8 ” 1 vol. 8 0 EDWIN DROOD and MISCELLANIES 12 ” 1 vol. 8 0 CHRISTMAS STORIES from “Household Words,” &c. 14 ” 1 vol. 8 0
THE LIFE OF CHARLES DICKENS. By JOHN FORSTER. A New Edition. With Illustrations. Uniform with the Library Edition, post 8vo, of his Works. 10_s._ 6_d._
THE “CHARLES DICKENS” EDITION.
_In Crown 8vo. In 21 vols., cloth, with Illustrations, £3 9s. 6d._
_s. d._ PICKWICK PAPERS 8 Illustrations 3 6 MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT 8 ” 3 6 DOMBEY AND SON 8 ” 3 6 NICHOLAS NICKLEBY 8 ” 3 6 DAVID COPPERFIELD 8 ” 3 6 BLEAK HOUSE 8 ” 3 6 LITTLE DORRIT 8 ” 3 6 OUR MUTUAL FRIEND 8 ” 3 6 BARNABY RUDGE 8 ” 3 6 OLD CURIOSITY SHOP 8 ” 3 6 A CHILD’S HISTORY OF ENGLAND 4 ” 3 6 EDWIN DROOD and OTHER STORIES 8 ” 3 6 CHRISTMAS STORIES, from “Household Words” 8 ” 3 6 TALE OF TWO CITIES 8 ” 3 0 SKETCHES BY “BOZ” 8 ” 3 0 AMERICAN NOTES and REPRINTED PIECES 8 ” 3 0 CHRISTMAS BOOKS 8 ” 3 0 OLIVER TWIST 8 ” 3 0 GREAT EXPECTATIONS 8 ” 3 0 HARD TIMES and PICTURES FROM ITALY 8 ” 3 0 UNCOMMERCIAL TRAVELLER 4 ” 3 0
THE LIFE OF CHARLES DICKENS. Uniform with this Edition, with numerous Illustrations. 2 vols. 7_s._
THE ILLUSTRATED LIBRARY EDITION.
_Complete in 30 Volumes. Demy 8vo, 10s. each; or set, £15._
This Edition is printed on a finer paper and in a larger type than has been employed in any previous edition. The type has been cast especially for it, and the page is of a size to admit of the introduction of all the original illustrations.
No such attractive issue has been made of the writings of Mr. Dickens, which, various as have been the forms of publication adapted to the demands of an ever widely-increasing popularity, have never yet been worthily presented in a really handsome library form.
The collection comprises all the minor writings it was Mr. Dickens’s wish to preserve.
SKETCHES BY “BOZ.” With 40 Illustrations by George Cruikshank.
PICKWICK PAPERS. 2 vols. With 42 Illustrations by Phiz.
OLIVER TWIST. With 24 Illustrations by Cruikshank.
NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. 2 vols. With 40 Illustrations by Phiz.
OLD CURIOSITY SHOP and REPRINTED PIECES. 2 vols. With Illustrations by Cattermole, &c.
BARNABY RUDGE and HARD TIMES. 2 vols. With Illustrations by Cattermole, &c.
MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT. 2 vols. With 40 Illustrations by Phiz.
AMERICAN NOTES and PICTURES FROM ITALY. 1 vol. With 8 Illustrations.
DOMBEY AND SON. 2 vols. With 40 Illustrations by Phiz.
DAVID COPPERFIELD. 2 vols. With 40 Illustrations by Phiz.
BLEAK HOUSE. 2 vols. With 40 Illustrations by Phiz.
LITTLE DORRIT. 2 vols. With 40 Illustrations by Phiz.
A TALE OF TWO CITIES. With 16 Illustrations by Phiz.
THE UNCOMMERCIAL TRAVELLER. With 8 Illustrations by Marcus Stone.
GREAT EXPECTATIONS. With 8 Illustrations by Marcus Stone.
OUR MUTUAL FRIEND. 2 vols. With 40 Illustrations by Marcus Stone.
CHRISTMAS BOOKS. With 17 Illustrations by Sir Edwin Landseer, R.A., Maclise, R.A., &c. &c.
HISTORY OF ENGLAND. With 8 Illustrations by Marcus Stone.
CHRISTMAS STORIES. (From “Household Words” and “All the Year Round.”) With 14 Illustrations.
EDWIN DROOD AND OTHER STORIES. With 12 Illustrations by S. L. Fildes.
HOUSEHOLD EDITION.
This Edition consists of 22 Volumes, containing nearly 900 Illustrations by F. Barnard, J. Mahony, F. A. Fraser, C. Green, &c. Price £3 14_s._ 6_d._ in cloth; and £2 15_s._ in paper binding.
OLIVER TWIST, with 28 Illustrations, cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._; paper, 1_s._ 9_d._
MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT, with 59 Illustrations, cloth, 4_s._; paper, 3_s._
DAVID COPPERFIELD, with 60 Illustrations and a Portrait, cloth, 4_s._; paper, 3_s._
BLEAK HOUSE, with 61 Illustrations, cloth, 4_s._; paper, 3_s._
LITTLE DORRIT, with 58 Illustrations, cloth, 4_s._; paper, 3_s._
PICKWICK PAPERS, with 56 Illustrations, cloth, 4_s._; paper, 3_s._
BARNABY RUDGE, with 46 Illustrations, cloth, 4_s._; paper, 3_s._
A TALE OF TWO CITIES, with 25 Illustrations, cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._; paper, 1_s._ 9_d._
OUR MUTUAL FRIEND, with 58 Illustrations, cloth, 4_s._; paper, 3_s._
NICHOLAS NICKLEBY, with 59 Illustrations, cloth, 4_s._; paper, 3_s._
GREAT EXPECTATIONS, with 26 Illustrations, cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._; paper, 1_s._ 9_d._
OLD CURIOSITY SHOP, with 39 Illustrations, cloth, 4_s._; paper, 3_s._
SKETCHES BY “BOZ,” with 36 Illustrations, cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._; paper, 1_s._ 9_d._
HARD TIMES, with 20 Illustrations, cloth, 2_s._; paper, 1_s._ 6_d._
DOMBEY AND SON, with 61 Illustrations, cloth, 4_s._; paper, 3_s._
UNCOMMERCIAL TRAVELLER, with 26 Illustrations, cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._; paper, 1_s._ 9_d._
CHRISTMAS BOOKS, with 28 Illustrations, cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._; sewed, 1_s._ 9_d._
THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND, with 15 Illustrations, cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._; paper, 1_s._ 9_d._
AMERICAN NOTES and PICTURES FROM ITALY, with 18 New Illustrations, cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._; paper, 1_s._ 9_d._
EDWIN DROOD; REPRINTED PIECES; and other STORIES, with 30 Illustrations, cloth, 4_s._; paper, 3_s._
CHRISTMAS STORIES, with 23 Illustrations, cloth, 4_s._; paper, 3_s._
THE LIFE OF DICKENS. By JOHN FORSTER. With 40 Illustrations. Cloth, 4_s._ 6_d._; paper, 3_s._ 6_d._
Messrs. CHAPMAN & HALL trust that by this Edition they will be enabled to place the works of the most popular British Author of the present day in the hands of all English readers.
_THE CHEAPEST AND HANDIEST EDITION OF_
THE WORKS OF CHARLES DICKENS.
THE POCKET VOLUME EDITION.
_30 vols., small fcap. 8vo, £2 5s._
MR. DICKENS’S READINGS.
_Fcap. 8vo. sewed._
CHRISTMAS CAROL IN PROSE. 1_s._ CRICKET ON THE HEARTH. 1_s._ CHIMES: A GOBLIN STORY. 1_s._ STORY OF LITTLE DOMBEY. 1_s._ POOR TRAVELLER, BOOTS AT THE HOLLY-TREE INN, and MRS. GAMP. 1_s._
A CHRISTMAS CAROL, with the Original Coloured Plates; being a reprint of the Original Edition. Small 8vo, red cloth, gilt edges, 5_s._
LEVER’S (CHARLES) WORKS.
THE ORIGINAL EDITION WITH THE ILLUSTRATIONS.
_In 17 vols. Demy 8vo. Cloth, 6s. each._
CHEAP EDITION.
_Fancy boards, 2s. 6d._
CHARLES O’MALLEY. TOM BURKE. THE KNIGHT OF GWYNNE. MARTINS OF CROMARTIN. THE DALTONS. ROLAND CASHEL. DAVENPORT DUNN. DODD FAMILY.
_Fancy boards, 2s._
THE O’DONOGHUE. FORTUNES OF GLENCORE. HARRY LORREQUER. ONE OF THEM. A DAY’S RIDE. JACK HINTON. BARRINGTON. TONY BUTLER. MAURICE TIERNAY. SIR BROOKE FOSBROOKE. BRAMLEIGHS OF BISHOP’S FOLLY. LORD KILGOBBI. LUTTRELL OF ARRAN. RENT IN THE CLOUD and ST. PATRICK’S EVE. CON CREGAN. ARTHUR O’LEARY. THAT BOY OF NORCOTTS. CORNELIUS O’DOWD. SIR JASPER CAREW. NUTS AND NUT-CRACKERS.
_Also in sets, 27 vols., cloth, for £4 4s._
TROLLOPE’S (ANTHONY) WORKS.
CHEAP EDITION.
_Boards, 2s. 6d.; cloth, 3s. 6d._
THE PRIME MINISTER. PHINEAS FINN. ORLEY FARM. CAN YOU FORGIVE HER? PHINEAS REDUX. HE KNEW HE WAS RIGHT. EUSTACE DIAMONDS.
_Boards, 2s.; cloth, 3s._
VICAR OF BULLHAMPTON. RALPH THE HEIR. THE BERTRAMS. KELLYS AND O’KELLYS. McDERMOT OF BALLYCLORAN. CASTLE RICHMOND. BELTON ESTATE. MISS MACKENSIE. AN EYE FOR AN EYE. LADY ANNA. HARRY HOTSPUR. RACHEL RAY. TALES OF ALL COUNTRIES. MARY GRESLEY. LOTTA SCHMIDT. LA VENDÉE. DOCTOR THORNE. IS HE POPENJOY?
SOUTH KENSINGTON MUSEUM SCIENCE AND ART HANDBOOKS.
_Published for the Committee of Council on Education._
THE INDUSTRIAL ARTS IN SPAIN. By JUAN F. RIANO. Illustrated. Large crown 8vo, 4_s._
GLASS. By ALEXANDER NESBITT. Illustrated. Large Crown 8vo, 2_s._ 6_d._
GOLD AND SILVER SMITHS’ WORK. By JOHN HUNGERFORD POLLEN. With numerous Woodcuts. Large crown 8vo, 2_s._ 6_d._
TAPESTRY. By ALFRED CHAMPEAUX. With Woodcuts. 2_s._ 6_d._
BRONZES. By C. DRURY E. FORTNUM, F.S.A. With numerous Woodcuts. Large crown 8vo, 2_s._ 6_d._
PLAIN WORDS ABOUT WATER. By A. H. CHURCH, M.A., Oxon. Large crown 8vo, sewed, 6_d._
ANIMAL PRODUCTS: their Preparation, Commercial Uses and Value. By T. L. SIMMONDS. Large crown 8vo, 7_s._ 6_d._
FOOD: A Short Account of the Sources, Constituents, and Uses of Food; intended chiefly as a Guide to the Food Collection in the Bethnal Green Museum. By A. H. CHURCH, M.A., Oxon. Large crown 8vo, 3_s._
SCIENCE CONFERENCES. Delivered at the South Kensington Museum. Crown 8vo, 2 vols., 6_s._ each.
VOL. I.—Physics and Mechanics.
VOL. II.—Chemistry, Biology, Physical Geography, Geology, Mineralogy, and Meteorology.
ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY. By ANDREW MURRAY, F.L.S. APTERA. With numerous Illustrations. Large crown 8vo, 7_s._ 6_d._
HANDBOOK TO THE SPECIAL LOAN COLLECTION of Scientific Apparatus. Large crown 8vo, 3_s._
THE INDUSTRIAL ARTS: Historical Sketches. With 242 Illustrations. Demy 8vo, 7_s._ 6_d._
TEXTILE FABRICS. By the Very Rev. DANIEL ROCK, D.D. With numerous Woodcuts. Large crown 8vo, 2_s._ 6_d._
IVORIES: ANCIENT AND MEDIÆVAL. By WILLIAM MASKELL. With numerous Woodcuts. Large crown 8vo, 2_s._ 6_d._
ANCIENT & MODERN FURNITURE & WOODWORK. By JOHN HUNGERFORD POLLEN. With numerous Woodcuts. Large crown 8vo, 2_s._ 6_d._
MAIOLICA. By C. DRURY E. FORTNUM, F.S.A. With numerous Woodcuts. Large crown 8vo, 2_s._ 6_d._
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS. By CARL ENGEL. With numerous Woodcuts. Large crown 8vo, 2_s._ 6_d._
MANUAL OF DESIGN, compiled from the Writings and Addresses of RICHARD REDGRAVE, R.A. By GILBERT R. REDGRAVE. With Woodcuts. Large crown 8vo, 2_s._ 6_d._
PERSIAN ART. By MAJOR R. MURDOCK SMITH, R.E. Second Edition. With Additional Illustrations. [_In the Press._
FREE EVENING LECTURES. Delivered in connection with the Special Loan Collection of Scientific Apparatus, 1876. Large crown 8vo, 8_s._
CHAPMAN AND HALL’S
LIST OF DIAGRAMS.
_Issued under the Authority of the Science and Art Department, South Kensington_,
For the use of Schools and Art and Science Classes.
LARGE DIAGRAMS.
ASTRONOMICAL:
TWELVE SHEETS. By JOHN DREW, Ph. Dr., F.R.S.A. Prepared for the Committee of Council on Education. Sheets, £2 8_s._; on rollers and varnished, £4 4_s._
BOTANICAL:
NINE SHEETS. Illustrating a Practical Method of Teaching Botany. By Professor HENSLOW, F.L.S. £2; on rollers, and varnished, £3 3_s._
CLASS. DIVISION. SECTION. DIAGRAM. { { Thalamifloral 1 { { Calycifloral 2 & 3 Dicotyledon { Angiospermous { Corollifloral 4 { { Incomplete 5 { Gymnospermous 6
{ Petaloid { Superior 7 Monocotyledons { { Inferior 8 { Glumaceous 9
BUILDING CONSTRUCTION:
TEN SHEETS. By WILLIAM J. GLENNY, Professor of Drawing, King’s College. In sets, £1 1_s._
GEOLOGICAL:
DIAGRAM OF BRITISH STRATA. By H. W. BRISTOW, F.R.S., F.G.S. A Sheet, 4_s._; on roller and varnished, 7_s._ 6_d._
MECHANICAL:
DIAGRAMS OF THE MECHANICAL POWERS, AND THEIR APPLICATIONS IN MACHINERY AND THE ARTS GENERALLY. By DR. JOHN ANDERSON.
8 Diagrams, highly coloured on stout paper, 3 feet 6 inches by 2 feet 6 inches. Sheets £1 per set; mounted on rollers, £2.
DIAGRAMS OF THE STEAM-ENGINE. By Professor GOODEVE and Professor SHELLEY. Stout paper, 40 inches by 27 inches, highly coloured.
Sets of 41 Diagrams (52½ Sheets), £6 6_s._; varnished and mounted on rollers, £11 11_s._
MACHINE DETAILS. By Professor UNWIN. 16 Coloured Diagrams. Sheets, £2 2_s._; mounted on rollers and varnished, £3 14_s._
ZOOLOGICAL:
TEN SHEETS. Illustrating the Classification of Animals. By ROBERT PATTERSON, £2; on canvas and rollers, varnished, £3 10_s._
The same, reduced in size on Royal paper, in 9 sheets uncoloured, 12_s._
THE FORTNIGHTLY REVIEW.
Edited by JOHN MORLEY.
THE FORTNIGHTLY REVIEW is published on the 1st of every month (the issue on the 15th being suspended), and a Volume is completed every Six Months.
_The following are among the Contributors_:—
SIR RUTHERFORD ALCOCK. PROFESSOR BAIN. PROFESSOR BEESLY. DR. BRIDGES. HON. GEORGE C. BRODRICK. SIR GEORGE CAMPBELL, M.P. J. CHAMBERLAIN, M.P. PROFESSOR SYDNEY COLVIN. MONTAGUE COOKSON, Q.C. L. H. COURTNEY, M.P. G. H. DARWIN. F. W. FARRAR. PROFESSOR FAWCETT, M.P. EDWARD A. FREEMAN. MRS. GARRET-ANDERSON. M. E. GRANT DUFF, M.P. THOMAS HARE. F. HARRISON. LORD HOUGHTON. PROFESSOR HUXLEY. PROFESSOR JEVONS. ÉMILE DE LAVELEYE. T. E. CLIFFE LESLIE. RIGHT HON. R. LOWE, M.P. SIR JOHN LUBBOCK, M.P. LORD LYTTON. SIR H. S. MAINE. DR. MAUDSLEY. PROFESSOR MAX MÜLLER. PROFESSOR HENRY MORLEY. G. OSBORNE MORGAN, Q.C., M.P. WILLIAM MORRIS. F. W. NEWMAN. W. G. PALGRAVE. WALTER H. PATER. RT. HON. LYON PLAYFAIR, M.P. DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI. HERBERT SPENCER. HON. E. L. STANLEY. SIR J. FITZJAMES STEPHEN, Q.C. LESLIE STEPHEN. J. HUTCHISON STIRLING. A. C. SWINBURNE. DR. VON SYBEL. J. A. SYMONDS. W. T. THORNTON. HON. LIONEL A. TOLLEMACHE. ANTHONY TROLLOPE. PROFESSOR TYNDALL. THE EDITOR.
&c. &c. &c.
THE FORTNIGHTLY REVIEW _is published at 2s. 6d._
CHAPMAN & HALL LIMITED, 193, PICCADILLY.
BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO.,] [PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
Footnote [68] is referenced twice from page 135.
Obvious typographical errors and punctuation errors have been corrected after careful comparison with other occurrences within the text and consultation of external sources.
Some hyphens in words have been silently removed, some added, when a predominant preference was found in the original book.
Except for those changes noted below, all misspellings of names and words in the text, and inconsistent or archaic usage, have been left unchanged.
Pg viii: page number ‘23’ replaced by ‘273’. Pg 56: ‘retractation of the’ replaced by ‘retraction of the’. Pg 124: ‘African Rupublic’ replaced by ‘African Republic’. Pg 295: ‘the beleagured camp’ replaced by ‘the beleaguered camp’. Pg 348: ‘Schumbrucker’ replaced by ‘Schermbrucker’. Pg 398: ‘where-ever the enemy’ replaced by ‘wherever the enemy’. Pg 439: ‘casualities were’ replaced by ‘casualties were’. Pg 457: ‘will send yon’ replaced by ‘will send you’.
Catalog Pg c6: ‘trace ou the’ replaced by ‘trace out the’. Pg c9: ‘knowledge, terary’ replaced by ‘knowledge, literary’. Pg c23: ‘Sheets, £2 2.’ replaced by ‘Sheets, £2 2_s._.