SOUTHERN AFRICA. 
275 
woman in the whole party had a fingle fheep's flcin thrown 
over her fhoulders, which was very induftrioufly pointed out 
by the farmers as a proof of their having fuffered from this 
horde. 
Before the men were fent away from the waggons a large 
prefent was made to each of tobacco, beads, knives, flints, and 
fteels ; and they were defired to tell all their countrymen they 
fhould happen to fee, that whenever they fhould defift from 
ftealing the cattle of the colonifts, and fhould come to any of 
the farm-houfes without bow and arrows, or other weapons, 
and fay they were in want, as many or more fheep fhould be 
given to them than they could poffibly obtain by plunder : that 
our prefent journey into their country was for no other inten- 
tion than to give rhern an opportunity of p'utting a final ftop to 
all expeditions againft them, if, by a change of condudt, they 
were inclined to avail themfelves of it ; and they were affured 
that not a fingle fhot would have been fired upon their horde 
had they not firft difcharged their arrows upon the farmers. 
Having remained with us very contentedly for a few days, 
they returned to their kraal highly pleafed with the treatment 
they had met with, and with the prefents they had received. 
The horde or kraal confifted of five-and-twenty huts, each 
made of a fmall grafs-mat bent into a femicircle, and faftened 
down between two flicks ; open before, but clofed behind with 
a fecond mat. They were about three feet high and four feet 
wide, and the ground in the middle was dug out like the neft 
of an oftrich ; a little grafs ftrewed in this hollow ferved as 
N N 2 ' their 
