INTRODUCTION. 
When the late Captain Clapperton made his way to Soccatoo for the first 
time, in the year 1824, he received the most flattering attentions, and every 
mark of kindness, from Bello, the sultan of the Fellans, as they call them- 
selves, or Fellatas, as they are called by the people of Soudan. This chieftain 
may be said to rule over almost the whole of that part of North Africa which 
is distinguished by the name of Houssa, though he appears to have lost a con- 
siderable portion of what his father, Hatman Danfodio, first overran; and 
many of the petty chiefs still continue in a state of rebellion, some of them 
within a day’s journey of his capital. In the course of frequent conversations 
held with this chief, at his usual residence of Soccatoo, Clapperton was given to 
understand, that the establishment of a friendly intercourse with England 
would be most agreeable to him ; that he wished particularly for certain 
articles of English manufacture to be sent out to him to the sea-coast, where 
there was a place of great commerce belonging to him, named Funda : he 
also expressed a wish that an English physician and a consul should be 
appointed to reside at another sea-port, called Raka ; to the former of which 
places, he said, he would despatch messengers to bring up the articles from 
England ; and to the latter he would send down a proper person to transact 
all matters of business between the two governments, through the interven- 
tion of the English consul; and he made no difficulty in declaring his readi- 
ness to adopt measures for putting an entire stop to that part of the slave-trade 
supposed to be carried on by his subjects with foreigners. 
On the arrival of Clapperton in England, Lord Bathurst, then secretary 
of state for the colonies, considering this so favourable an opportunity of esta- 
blishing an intercourse with the interior of Africa, and probably of putting 
an effectual check, through this powerful chief, to a large portion of the 
