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。 And yet after all was it so? He did what was right; and he did it well。 The exigencies of our home politics; stirred into action by the rebellion of the Boers; appeared to wreck his policy。 At the cost of I know not how many English lives and of how much treasure; that policy was reversed: the country was given back。 What ensued? A long period of turmoil and difficulties; and then a war which cost us twenty thousand more lives and two hundred and fifty millions more of treasure to bring about what was in practice the same state of affairs that Sir Theophilus Shepstone had established over twenty years before without the firing of a single shot。 A little more wisdom; a little more firmness or foresight; and these events need never have occurred。 They were one of Mr。 Gladstone’s gifts to his country。
But the very fact of their occurrence shows that Shepstone; on whose shoulders everything rested at the time; was right in his premises。 He said in effect that the incorporation of the Transvaal in the Empire was an imperial necessity; and the issue has proved that he did not err。 I say that the course of history has justified Sir Theophilus Shepstone and shown his opponents and detractors to be wrong; as in another case it has justified Charles Gordon and again proved those same opponents and detractors to be wrong。 On their heads be all the wasted lives and wealth。 I am sure that the future will declare that he was right in everything that he did; for if it was not so why is the Transvaal now a Province of the British Empire? Nothing can explain away the facts; they speak for themselves。
How shocking; how shameless was the treatment meted out to Shepstone personally — I presume for purely political reasons; since I cannot conceive that he had any individual enemies — is well shown by the following letter from him to me which through a pure accident chances to have been discovered by my brother; Sir William Haggard; amongst his own papers。
Pietermaritzburg; Natal:
July 6; 1884。
My dear Haggard; — I am afraid that I cannot take much credit to myself this time for giving you practical proof that I think of you by writing you a letter; for although I do as a matter of fact think of you both; almost as often as old Polly the parrot calls me a “very domde Boer;” an expression which you taught the bird and which it has not forgotten; yet this is essentially a selfish letter written with selfish ends; but let me assure you that it is nevertheless leavened; as strongly as ever; with the same old love。
The fact is that the Treasury at Home have made a fierce and ungenerous attack on my Transvaal accounts; and threaten to surcharge me with all items to the extent of several thousand pounds for which receipts or vouchers of some sort are not forthing。 Among these are two small payments to you: one they call a gratuity of 25 pounds; an acknowledgment of your services to the mission for which you received no pay; and the other 20 pounds as pensation for a horse that died on your journey as missioner to Sikukuni; and I want you to be good enough to send a certificate acknowledging the payment of each of these items and stating that you signed a receipt for each when it was paid。 They are under the impression that Colonel Brooke; who kept the accounts; never took care to get receipts: the fact being that he was most careful on this point; but that the vouchers and some of the accounts also were; most of them; lost during the siege of Pretoria。
The officers of the Treasury have reflected upon my personal honesty; and Mr。 Courtney has amused himself by writing some facetious paragraphs; this has of course furnished more or less amusing reading for the society journals。 The Colonial Office defended me very vigorously; but I have strongly resented such treatment and shown the injustice and untruthfulness of it; or any foundation for it; in a memo。 to the Secretary of State。 Meanwhile the Treasury withhold my pension。
This letter is horribly egotistical so far; but I could not help it; as I explained on the first page。
As things have turned out; it was a fortunate thing that you left this country when you did。 Our condition as Englishmen; or rather the condition of our Government in regard to this country; reminds me strongly of the craven soldiers under Baker Pasha when they were beaten by the Arabs at Teb: they are described as meekly kneeling to meet their fate。 That is exactly what the British Government have been doing; since Majuba; in Africa。 The Boers have now taken possession of Central Zululand; and they are quite right to do so。 The Government allowed anarchy to run rampant on their 'the Boer’s' border; and then publicly declared in the House of mons that they intended to leave the Zulus to settle their affairs in their own way; and they called in the Boers to settle them for them on the promise of giving them land。 They have made the boy Dinizulu king; and have helped the Usutu party to destroy Sibelu; who was made independent by the British Government within boundaries formally assigned and pointed out to him。 This was part of their bargain。 Now they 'i。e。 the Boers' are negotiating for the land they are to get; and as the king’s party have got all they wanted to get out of the Boers; I shall not be surprised if some difficulty should arise between them。 It was at one time feared that the Boers might not respect the Reserve; and so bring on a collision between them and the Government; and that would of course mean a very serious difficulty in the whole of South Africa; but I hope that there is no fear of this for the present at any rate。
Poor old Osborn seems to be quite worn out by all the worry that he has had ever since he left the Transvaal; and I do not wonder at it; he has not been allowed to rule; and yet has been required to interfere; so in the eyes of the Zulus; as indeed in those of everyone else; he is neither fish; flesh nor good red herring。 。 。 。 Sir Henry Bulwer has a very bad time of it; he sees and says what ought to be done; but there is no response; and things are left to drift; until some eddy or other in the stream strands them。 I am very sorry; often; for him; and I 'think' that if it were not fo