I saw Hottentots again,four of them,from some remote corner,so the race is not quite extinct.These were youngish,two men and two women,quite light yellow,not darker than Europeans,and with little tiny black knots of wool scattered over their heads at intervals.They are hideous in face,but exquisitely shaped -very,very small though.One of the men was drunk,poor wretch,and looked the picture of misery.You can see the fineness of their senses by the way in which they dart their glances and prick their ears.Every one agrees that,when tamed,they make the best of servants -gentle,clever,and honest;but the penny-a-glass wine they can't resist,unless when caught and tamed young.They work in the fields,or did so as long as any were left;but even here,I was told,it was a wonder to see them.
We went on through the Paarl,a sweet pretty place,reminding one vaguely of Bonchurch,and still through fine mountains,with Scotch firs growing like Italian stone pines,and farms,and vineyard upon vineyard.At Stellenbosch we stopped.I had been told it was the prettiest town in the colony,and it IS very pretty,with oak-trees all along the street,like those at Paarl and Wagenmakkers Vley;but I was disappointed.It was less beautiful than what I had seen.Besides,the evening was dull and cold.The south-easter greeted us here,and I could not go out all the afternoon.The inn was called 'Railway Hotel',and kept by low coarse English people,who gave us a filthy dinner,dirty sheets,and an atrocious breakfast,and charged 1L.3S.6D.for the same meals and time as old Vrow Langfeldt had charged 12S.for,and had given civility,cleanliness,and abundance of excellent food;-besides which,she fed Sabaal gratis,and these people fleeced him as they did me.
So,next morning,we set off,less pleasantly disposed,for Capetown,over the flat,which is dreary enough,and had a horrid south-easter.We started early,and got in before the wind became a hurricane,which it did later.We were warmly welcomed by Mrs.
R-;and here I am in my old room,looking over the beautiful bay,quite at home again.It blew all yesterday,and having rather a sore-throat I stayed in bed,and to-day is all bright and beautiful.But Capetown looks murky after Caledon and Worcester;there is,to my eyes,quite a haze over the mountains,and they look far off and indistinct.All is comparative in this world,even African skies.At Caledon,the most distant mountains,as far as your eye can reach,look as clear in every detail as the map on your table -an appearance utterly new to European eyes.
I gave Sabaal 1L.for his eight days'service as driver,as a Drinkgelt,and the worthy fellow was in ecstasies of gratitude.