APPENDIX. wok 
It is said the River Kei is to be the future boundary of the 
Colony, and that the country between the present Colonial 
frontier and that point will be appropriated as the future 
residence of the Fingoes; and also that those ‘Tambookies 
under Vadanna, and Caffers under Pato, Kama, and Cobus 
—who have shown such unswerving fidelity to the Colo- 
nists throughout this trying period—are to have a share of 
the forfeited territory. The whole, however, of this country 
is, it is said, to be subject to British control, and the people 
amenable to British jurisdiction. 
‘After perusing the foregoing statements, it will, no doubt, 
be inquired, where now is the influence that Christianity 
has been said to exercise over the minds of these people, 
and what have the Missionaries accomplished for Caffraria, 
seeing that the natives appear the same sanguinary men, 
and that deeds as savage and relentless have marked the 
present invasion, as any that have characterized their former 
history. : 
To this it may be replied, that the operation of Christian 
principles over a savage mind is usually slow and gradual, 
and that the labours of a few Missionaries amongst so vast 
a population, who, from their pastoral habits, are of neces- 
sity scattered over an immense tract of country, could not 
reasonably be expected in so short a period to have effected 
any great change over the body of the people ; nevertheless, 
amongst that portion which the Missionaries have been 
enabled to assemble together for instruction at the different 
Stations, the effects have been most cheering and satis- 
factory. It is said that not one individual who had embraced 
the doctrines of the Bible has joined his countrymen in their 
invasion of the Colony; they have all to a man reprobated 
the measure as pregnant with the greatest evil, and as 
