Stephen Orpin, with the goods of earth
in his waggon and the treasures of heaven in his hand,
chanced to be passing over a branch of the Amatola
Mountains when the torch of war was kindled and sent
its horrid glare along the frontier. Vague news
of the outbreak had reached him, and he was hastening
back to the village of Salem, in which was his bachelor
home.
Stephen, we may remark in passing,
was not a bachelor from choice. Twice had he
essayed to win the affections of Jessie McTavish, and
twice had he failed. Not being a man of extreme
selfishness, he refused to die of a broken heart.
He mourned indeed, deeply and silently, but he bowed
his head, and continued, as far as in him lay, to fulfil
the end for which he seemed to have been created.
He travelled with goods far and wide throughout the
eastern districts of the colony, became a walking
newspaper to the farmers of the frontier, and a guide
to the Better Land to whoever would grant him a hearing.
But Stephen’s mercantile course,
like that of his affections, did not run smooth.
At the present time it became even more rugged than
the mountain road which almost dislocated his waggon
and nearly maddened his Hottentot drivers, for, when
involved in the intricacies of a pass, he was suddenly
attacked by a band of “wild” Bushman marauders.
The spot chanced to be so far advantageous that a
high precipice at his back rendered it impossible
to attack him except in front, where the ground was
pretty open.
Orpin was by no means a milksop, and,
although a Christian man, did not understand Christianity
to teach the absolute giving up of all one’s
possessions to the first scoundrel who shall demand
them. The moment, therefore, that the robbers
showed themselves, he stopped the waggon at the foot
of the precipice, drew his ever-ready double-barrelled
large-bore gun from under the tilt, and ran out in
front, calling on his men to support him. Kneeling
down, he prepared to take a steady aim at the Bushman
in advance, a wild-looking savage in a sheepskin kaross
and armed with an assagai. The robbers were
evidently aware of the nature of a gun, for they halted
on seeing the decided action of the trader.
“Come on!” shouted Orpin
to his men, looking back over his shoulder; but his
men were nowhere to be seen: they had deserted
him at the first sight of the robbers, and scrambled
away into the jungle like monkeys.
To resist some dozens of savages single-handed
Stephen knew would be useless, and to shed blood unnecessarily
was against his principles. He therefore made
up his mind at once how to act. Rising and turning
round, he discharged his gun at the precipice, to prevent
the Bushmen from accidentally doing mischief with
it; then, sitting down on a piece of fallen rock,
he quietly took out his pipe and began to light it.
This was not meant as a piece of bravado,
but Stephen was eccentric, and it occurred to him
that there was a “touch of nature” in a
pipe which might possibly induce the Bushmen to be
less rude to him personally than if he were to stand
by and look aggrieved while his waggons were being
pillaged.
In this conjecture he was right.
The robbers rushed towards the waggon without doing
him any harm. One of them, however, picked up
the gun in passing. Then the leader seized the
long whip and drove the waggon away, leaving its late
owner to his meditations.
Stephen would have been more than
human if he could have stood the loss of all his earthly
goods with perfect equanimity. He groaned when
the oxen began to move, and then, feeling a desperate
desire to relieve his feelings, and a strong tendency
to fight, he suddenly shut his eyes, and began to
pray that the robbers might be forgiven, and himself
enabled to bear his trials in a becoming manner.
Opening his eyes again, he beheld a sturdy Bushman
gazing at him in open-mouthed surprise, with an uplifted
assagai in his hand. Stephen judged that this
was the chief of the band, who had remained behind
to kill him. At all events, when he ceased to
pray, and opened his eyes, the Bushman shut his mouth,
and poised his assagai in a threatening manner.
Unarmed as he was, Stephen knew that
he was at the man’s mercy. In this dilemma,
and knowing nothing of the Bushman language, he put
powerful constraint on himself, and looked placidly
at his wallet, in which he searched earnestly for
something, quite regardless, to all appearances, of
the deadly spear, whose point was within ten feet of
his breast.
The Bushman’s curiosity was
awakened. He waited until Stephen had drawn
a lump of tobacco from his pouch-which latter
he took care to turn inside out to show there was
nothing else in it. Rising quietly, the trader
advanced with a peaceful air, holding the tobacco out
to the Bushman, who looked suspicious-and
distrustfully shook his assagai; but Stephen took
no heed. Stopping within a couple of yards of
him, he held out the tobacco at the full length of
his arm. The Bushman hesitated, but finally
lowered his assegai and accepted the gift. Stephen
immediately resumed his pipe, and smiled pleasantly
at his foe.
The Bushman appeared to be unable
to resist this. He grinned hideously; then,
turning about, made off in the direction of his comrades
as fast as his naked legs could carry him.
It was Booby, the follower of Ruyter
the Hottentot, who had thus robbed the unfortunate
trader, and, not two hours afterwards, Ruyter himself
fell in with Stephen, wending his way slowly and sadly
down the glen.
Desiring his men to proceed in advance,
the robber chief asked Orpin to sit down on a fallen
tree beside him, and relate what had happened.
When he had done so, Ruyter shook his head and said
in his broken English-
“You’s bin my friend,
Orpin, but I cannot help you dis time. Booby
not under me now, an’ we’s bof b’long
to Dragoener’s band. I’s sorry, but
not can help you.”
“Never mind, Ruyter, I daresay
you’d help me if you could,” said Stephen,
with a sigh; then, with an earnest look in the Hottentot’s
face, he continued, “I’m not, however,
much distressed about the goods. The Lord who
gave them has taken them away, and can give them back
again if He has a mind to; but tell me, Ruyter, why
will you not think of the things we once spoke of-that
time when you were so roughly handled by Jan Smit-about
your soul and the Saviour?”
“How you knows I not tink?”
demanded the Hottentot sharply.
“Because any man can know a
tree by its fruit,” returned Orpin. “If
you had become a Christian, I should not now have
found you the leader of a band of thieves.”
“No, I not a Christian, but
I do tink,” returned Ruyter, “only
I no’ can onderstan’. De black heathen-so
you calls him-live in de land. White
Christian-so you calls him-come
and take de land; make slabe ob black man, and
kick ’im about like pair ob olé boots-I
not onderstan’ nohow.”
“Come, I will try to make you
understand,” returned Orpin, pulling out the
New Testament which he always carried in his pocket.
“Some white men who call themselves
Christians are heathens, and some black men
are Christians. We are all,-black
and white,-born bad, and God has sent us
a Saviour, and a message, so that all who will, black
or white, may become good.” Orpin here
commenced to expound the Word, and to tell the story
of the Cross, while the Hottentot listened with rapt
attention, or asked questions which showed that he
had indeed been thinking of these things since his
last meeting with the trader, many years before.
He was not very communicative, however, and when the
two parted he declined to make any more satisfactory
promise than that he would continue to “tink.”
Stephen Orpin spent the night alone
in a tree, up which he had climbed to be more secure
from wild beasts. Sitting there, he meditated
much, and came to the conclusion that he ought in
future to devote himself entirely to missionary labours.
In pursuance of that idea, he made his way to one
of the Wesleyan mission stations in Kafirland.
On the road thither he came to a Kafir
kraal, where the men seemed to be engaged in
the performance of a war-dance.
On being questioned by these Kafirs
as to who he was, and where he came from, Orpin replied,
in his best Kafir, that he was a trader and a missionary.
The chief looked surprised, but, on
hearing the whole of Orpin’s story, a cunning
look twinkled in his eyes, and he professed great friendship
for the missionaries, stating at the same time that
he was going to one of the Wesleyan stations, and
would be glad to escort Orpin thither. Thereafter
he gave orders that the white man should be taken to
one of his huts and supplied with a “basket”
of milk.
The white man gratefully acknowledged
the kind offer, and, asking the name of the friendly
chief, was informed that it was Hintza. Just
then a court fool or jester stepped forward, and cried
aloud his announcements of the events of the day,
mixed with highly complimentary praises of his master.
Stephen did not understand all he said, but he gathered
thus much,-that the warriors had been out
to battle and had returned victorious; that Hintza
was the greatest man and most courageous warrior who
had ever appeared among the Kafirs, to gladden their
hearts and enrich their bands; and that there was great
work yet for the warriors to do in the way of driving
certain barbarians into the sea-to which
desirable deed the heroic, the valiant, the wise, the
unapproachable Hintza would lead them.
Orpin feared that he understood the
meaning of the last words too well, but, being aware
that Hintza was regarded by the colonists as one of
the friendliest of the Kafir chiefs, he hoped that
he might be mistaken.
Hintza was as good as his word, and
set out next day with a band of warriors, giving the
white man a good horse that he might ride beside him.
On the way they came on a sight which filled Orpin
with sadness and anxiety. It was the ruins of
a village, which from the appearance of the remains
had evidently been occupied in part by white men.
He observed that a gleam of satisfaction lit up Hintza’s
swarthy visage for a moment as he passed the place.
Dismounting, the party proceeded to
examine the ruins, but found nothing. The Kafirs
were very taciturn, but the chief said, on being pressed,
that he believed it had been a mission station which
wicked men of other tribes had burned.
On the outbreak of this war some of
the missionaries remained by their people, others
were compelled to leave them.
The station just passed had been deserted.
At the one to which Hintza was now leading Orpin
the missionaries had remained at their post.
There he found them still holding out, but in deep
dejection, for nearly all their people had forsaken
them, and gone to the war. Even while he was
talking with them, crowds of the bloodstained savages
were returning from the colony, laden with the spoils
of the white man, and driving thousands of his sheep
and cattle before them. In these circumstances,
Stephen resolved to make the best of his way back to
Salem. On telling this to Hintza, that chief
from some cause that he could not understand, again
offered to escort him. He would not accompany
him personally, he said, but he would send with him
a band of his warriors, and he trusted that on his
arrival in the colony he would tell to the great white
chief (the Governor) that he, Hintza, did not aid
the other Kafir tribes in this war.
Stephen’s eyes were opened by
the last speech, and from that moment he suspected
Hintza of treachery.
He had no choice, however, but to
accept the escort. On the very day after they
had started, they came to a spot where a terrible fight
had obviously taken place. The ground was strewn
with the mangled corpses of a party of white men,
while the remains of waggons and other signs showed
that they had formed one of the bands of Dutch emigrants
which had already begun to quit the colony.
The savages made ineffectual attempts to conceal their
delight at what they saw, and Orpin now felt that
he was in the power of enemies who merely spared his
life in the hope that he might afterwards be useful
to them.
The band which escorted him consisted
of several hundred warriors, a few of whom were mounted
on splendid horses stolen from the settlers.
He himself was also mounted on a good steed, but felt
that it would be madness to attempt to fly from them.
On the second day they were joined-whether
by arrangement or not Orpin had no means of judging-by
a band of over a thousand warriors belonging to a different
tribe from his escort. As the trader rode along
in a dejected state of mind, one of the advance-guard
or scouts came back with excited looks, saying that
a large band of Dutch farmers was encamped down in
a hollow just beyond the rise in front of them.
The chief of the Kafirs ordered the scout sternly
to be silent, at the same time glancing at Orpin.
Then he whispered to two men, who quietly took their
assagais and stationed themselves one on either side
of their white prisoner-for such he really
was.
Orpin now felt certain that the group
of principal men who drew together a little apart
were concerting the best mode of attacking the emigrant
farmers, and his heart burned within him as he thought
of them resting there in fancied security, while these
black scoundrels were plotting their destruction.
But what could he do-alone and totally
unarmed? He thought of making a dash and giving
the alarm, but the watchful savages at his side seemed
to divine his intentions, for they grasped their assagais
with significant action.
“A desperate disease,”
thought Orpin, “requires a desperate remedy.
I will try it, and may succeed-God helping
me.” A thought occurred just then.
Disengaging his right foot from the stirrup, he made
as if he were shortening it a little, but instead,
he detached it from the saddle, and taking one turn
of the leather round his hand, leaped his horse at
the savage nearest him and struck him full on the forehead
with the stirrup-iron. Dashing on at full speed,
he bent low, and, as he had hoped, the spear of the
other savage whizzed close over his back. The
act was so sudden that he had almost gained the ridge
before the other mounted Kafirs could pursue.
He heard a loud voice, however, command them to stop,
and, looking back, saw that only one Kafir-the
leader- gave chase, but that leader was
a powerful man, armed, and on a fleeter horse than
his own. A glance showed him the camp of the
emigrant farmers in a hollow about a mile or so distant.
He made straight for it. The action of the
next few seconds was short, sharp, and decisive.
The Dutchmen, having had a previous
alarm from a small Kafir band, were prepared.
They had drawn their waggons into a compact circle,
closing the apertures between and beneath them with
thorn-bushes, which they lashed firmly with leather
thongs to the wheels and dissel-booms or waggon-poles.
Within this circle was a smaller one for the protection
of the women and children.
Great was the surprise of the farmers
when they heard a loud shout, and beheld a white man
flying for his life from a solitary savage. With
the promptitude of men born and bred in the midst
of alarms, they seized their guns and issued from
their fortified enclosure to the rescue, but the Kafir
was already close to Orpin, and in the act of raising
his assagai to stab him.
Seeing the urgency of the case, Conrad
Marais, who was considered a pretty good shot among
his fellows, took steady aim, and, at the risk of
hitting the white man, fired. The right arm of
the savage dropped by his side and the assagai fell
to the ground, but, plucking another from his bundle
with his left hand, he made a furious thrust.
Stephen Orpin, swaying aside, was only grazed by
it. At the same time he whirled the stirrup
once round his head, and, bringing the iron down with
tremendous force on the skull of his pursuer, hurled
him to the ground.
“Stephen Orpin!” exclaimed
Conrad Marais in amazement, as the trader galloped
up.
“You’ve got more pluck
than I gave you credit for,” growled Jan Smit.
“You’ll need all your
own pluck presently,” retorted Orpin, who thereupon
told them that hundreds of Kafirs were on the other
side of the ridge, and would be down on them in a
few minutes. Indeed, he had not finished speaking
when the ridge in question was crossed by the black
host, who came yelling on to the attack,-the
few mounted men leading.
“Come, boys, let’s meet
them as far as possible from the waggons,” cried
Conrad.
The whole band of farmers, each mounted
and carrying his gun, dashed forward. When quite
close to the foe they halted, and, every man dismounting,
knelt and fired. Nearly all the horsemen among
the enemy fell to the ground at the discharge, and
the riderless steeds galloped over the plain, while
numbers of the footmen were also killed and wounded.
But most of those savages belonged to a fierce and
warlike tribe. Though checked for a moment,
they soon returned to the attack more furiously than
before. The Dutch farmers, remounting, galloped
back a short distance, loading as they went; halting
again, they dismounted and fired as before, with deadly
effect.
There is no question that the white
men, if sufficiently supplied with ammunition, could
have thus easily overcome any number of the savages,
but the waggons stopped them. On reaching these,
they were obliged to stand at bay, and, being greatly
outnumbered, took shelter inside of their enclosure.
Of course their flocks and herds, being most of them
outside, were at once driven away by a small party
of the assailants, while the larger proportion, with
savage yells and war-cries, made a furious attack
on their position.
Closing round the circle, they endeavoured
again and again to break through the line or to clamber
over the waggon-tilts, and never did savage warriors
earn a better title to the name of braves than on that
occasion. Even the bristling four and six-inch
thorns of the mimosa-bushes would not have been able
to turn back their impetuous onset if behind these
the stout Dutchmen, fighting for wives and children,
had not stood manfully loading and firing volleys of
slugs and buckshot at arm’s-length from them.
The crowded ranks of the Kafirs were ploughed as
if by cannon, while hundreds of assagais were hurled
into the enclosure, but happily with little effect,
though a few of the defenders-exposing
themselves recklessly-were wounded.
While Conrad Marais was standing close
to the hind-wheels of one of the waggons, watching
for a good shot at a Kafir outside, who was dodging
about for the double purpose of baulking Conrad’s
intention and thrusting an assagai into him, another
active Kafir had clambered unobserved on the tilt
of the waggon and was in the very act of leaning over
to thrust his spear into the back of the Dutchman’s
neck when he was observed by Stephen Orpin, who chanced
to be reloading his gun at the moment.
With a loud roar, very unlike his
usual gentle tones, Orpin sprang forward, seized a
thick piece of wood like a four-foot rolling-pin, and
therewith felled the savage, who tumbled headlong into
the enclosure.
“Oh, father!” exclaimed
a terrified voice at that moment, while a light touch
was laid on Conrad’s shoulder.
“What brings you here, Bertha?”
said Conrad, with an impatient gesture. “Don’t
you know-”
“Come, quick, to mother!” cried the girl,
interrupting.
No more was needed. In a moment
Conrad was in the central enclosure, where, crowded
under a rude erection of planks and boxes, were the
women and children. An assagai had penetrated
an unguarded crevice, and, passing under the arm of
poor Mrs Marais, had pinned her to the family trunk,
against which she leaned.
“Bertha could not pull it out,”
said Mrs Marais, with a faint smile on her pale face,
“but I don’t think I’m much hurt.”
In a moment her husband had pulled
out the spear, found that it had penetrated her clothing,
and only grazed her breast, took time merely to make
sure of this, and then, leaving her in Bertha’s
hands, returned to the scene of combat.
He was not an instant too soon.
A yell was uttered by the savages as they rushed
at a weak point, where the thorn-bush defences had
been broken down. The point appeared to be undefended.
They were about to leap through in a dense mass when
ten Dutchmen, who had reserved their fire, discharged
a volley simultaneously into the midst of them.
It was a ruse of the defenders to draw the savages
to that point. Whilst the Kafirs tumbled back
over heaps of dead and dying, several other farmers
thrust masses of impenetrable mimosa bush into the
gap and refilled it. This discomfiture checked
the assailants for a little; they drew off and retired
behind the ridge to concert plans for a renewed and
more systematic attack.