Shepstone appointed Special missioner to Transvaal — Wide powers — H。 R。 H。 on Shepstone’s staff — Umslopogaas attached to mission — To Pretoria by ox…waggon — Thirty…five days — Melmoth Osborn and Major Marshal Clarke on mission — First acquaintance with Boers — “Opsitting” — President Burgers — Danger to Transvaal from Cetewayo’s Zulus and Secocoeni’s tribe — Arrive Pretoria — H。 R。 H。 acpanies Osborn and Clarke on Mission to Secocoeni — Rough journey — Indaba at his kraal — Plot to murder English Mission — Frustrated by an accident — Safe return to Pretoria。
At the end of 1876 Sir Theophilus Shepstone was appointed Special missioner to the Transvaal。 His mission was a wide one; for; although this was not known at the time; it gave him powers; if he thought fit; to annex the country; “in order to secure the peace and safety of our said colonies and our subjects elsewhere。” When the vastness of the territories and the questions concerned are considered; this was a great authority to leave to the discretion of a single man。 But thus was the British Empire made before the days of cables; when everything depended upon the judgment of the officers on the spot。
On his way out to Natal from England he was shipwrecked on the coast not very far from Cape Town; an event that some might have thought a bad omen。 I asked him what he thought of while as yet they did not know whether they would escape。
“I thought that I should like to die decent;” he answered; “and spent the time in hunting for my trousers。”
Exactly how I came to acpany Sir Theophilus on his important and history…making Mission I cannot now recall。 At any rate I went as a member of his staff。 Here is a list of us:
Mr。 Osborn; afterwards Sir Melmoth Osborn。
Major Clarke;