288 
ATTENDANCE ON WORSHIP. [1820. 
hundred. At three p. m. we turned towards the 
S.W., in the direction of the Cradock River, 
and halted on its bank, near a Coranna kraal, to 
which our thirsty oxen ran with great speed, and 
drank greedily. 
The river where we halted presented a grand 
appearance, being about a quarter of a mile 
broad, with high banks thickly covered with 
trees ; but from the serpentine manner in which 
it ran, about two miles only could be seen from 
one spot. 
In the evening a few of the Corannas attended 
worship in the tent. I addressed them by means 
of a Griqua interpreter, and Stoffles prayed in 
the Hottentot language, which the Corannas un- 
derstood pretty well, being very similar to their 
own. 
27th. Both Bushmen and Corannas assembled 
for worship in the morning. Most of the former 
had come from the other side of the river. Jan 
Goeman addressed them, and they seemed to 
listen with attention. The people were employed 
in repairing some of the wheels of the waggons, 
the dry weather and the heat having made the 
timbers shrink and become loose. Therm, at 
noon 84. 
