Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,077 pages of information about Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa.

Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,077 pages of information about Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa.
Kisaka’s people were ravaging the fine country on the opposite shore.  They came down with the prisoners they had captured, and forthwith the half-castes of Senna went over to buy slaves.  Encouraged by this, Kisaka’s people came over into Senna fully armed and beating their drums, and were received into the house of a native Portuguese.  They had the village at their mercy, yet could have been driven off by half a dozen policemen.  The commandant could only look on with bitter sorrow.  He had soldiers, it is true, but it is notorious that the native militia of both Senna and Kilimane never think of standing to fight, but invariably run away, and leave their officers to be killed.  They are brave only among the peaceable inhabitants.  One of them, sent from Kilimane with a packet of letters or expresses, arrived while I was at Senna.  He had been charged to deliver them with all speed, but Senhor Isidore had in the mean time gone to Kilimane, remained there a fortnight, and reached Senna again before the courier came.  He could not punish him.  We gave him a passage in our boat, but he left us in the way to visit his wife, and, “on urgent private business,” probably gave up the service altogether, as he did not come to Kilimane all the time I was there.  It is impossible to describe the miserable state of decay into which the Portuguese possessions here have sunk.  The revenues are not equal to the expenses, and every officer I met told the same tale, that he had not received one farthing of pay for the last four years.  They are all forced to engage in trade for the support of their families.  Senhor Miranda had been actually engaged against the enemy during these four years, and had been highly lauded in the commandant’s dispatches to the home government, but when he applied to the Governor of Kilimane for part of his four years’ pay, he offered him twenty dollars only.  Miranda resigned his commission in consequence.  The common soldiers sent out from Portugal received some pay in calico.  They all marry native women, and, the soil being very fertile, the wives find but little difficulty in supporting their husbands.  There is no direct trade with Portugal.  A considerable number of Banians, or natives of India, come annually in small vessels with cargoes of English and Indian goods from Bombay.  It is not to be wondered at, then, that there have been attempts made of late years by speculative Portuguese in Lisbon to revive the trade of Eastern Africa by means of mercantile companies.  One was formally proposed, which was modeled on the plan of our East India Company; and it was actually imagined that all the forts, harbors, lands, etc., might be delivered over to a company, which would bind itself to develop the resources of the country, build schools, make roads, improve harbors, etc., and, after all, leave the Portuguese the option of resuming possession.

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Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.