356 APPENDIX. 
joyed more outward peace than they; we never came into 
unpleasant collision with the enraged Caffers, as some of 
our friends did; we met with no interruption in our meet- 
ings morning and evening for worship with the people : this 
peace we, under God, owed in some measure to the: same 
individual who acted so praiseworthy a part in reference 
to the trader. | 
«On one occasion she succeeded in defeating a powerful 
combination which had been formed against us. She ap- 
pears to have been unable by arguments to effect her ex- 
cellent purpose, and we are told when these failed she had 
recourse to tears. Had she not after all been heard in our 
behalf, she told those who wished to plunder, if not to kill 
us also, that she would have no more to do with people that 
would kill their best friends, and that she would retire to her 
father, a Tambookie Chief. I hope that if this individual 
can be found, she will be separated from those who have 
arrayed themselves against us, and be treated ‘as a friend.” 
Intelligence has been received, up to 23rd of May, from 
the Cape of Good Hope, by which it appears that the Chief 
Hintza pertinaciously refused to comply. with the demands 
of the Governor, until hostilities had actually commenced, 
and a severe chastisement inflicted on his people; when, 
finding it impossible to stand against the British troops, he 
surrendered. himself, with fifty of his principal men, agree- 
Ing, it is stated, to deliver up the persons concerned in the 
massacre of the English traders, with fifty thousand head 
of horned cattle, and one thousand horses, and to comply 
with such other terms as the Governor in justice thought 
fit to impose. The Caffer war may therefore now be con- 
sidered as happily terminated, the troops being on their 
march back to the Colony. 
