CHAPTER X. 



OUR SERVANTS. 



A retrospective vision — Phillis in her domain — Iler destnictiveness — 

 Her ideas on personal adornment — The woes of a mistress — Eye- 

 service — Abrupt departure of Phillis — Left in the lurch — Nancy 

 and her successors — Cure of sham sickness — The thiefs dose— Our 

 ostrich-herd — A bride purchased with cows — English and natives 

 at the Cape — Character of Zulus and Kaffirs. 



" Man's work is from sun to sun, 

 But woman's work is never done. " 



It is always amusing, for those who have tried house- 

 keeping in South Africa, to hear people in England 

 talk of their " bad " servants. Ladies — who, after the 

 short quarter of an hour devoted to interviewing the 

 cook and giving the day's orders, need trouble them- 

 selves no more throughout the twenty-four hours as to 

 the carrying out of those orders, but are free to pursue 

 their own occupations, uninterrupted by a constant 

 need of superintending those of their domestics, — sit 

 in their beautifully-kept diawing-rooms or at their 

 well-appointed dining-tables, — whose spotless linen and 

 bright glass and silver are so delicious a novelty to eyes 

 long accustomed to the Karroo's rough-and-ready back- 

 woods style, — and, much to your surprise, complain 



