Page:Wanderings of a Pilgrim Vol 2.djvu/418

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from the town, an agreeable distance. Bought two handsome Cape riding horses; they carried me pleasantly at times, but were both very timid; they tell me timidity is the general fault of the horses at the Cape,—it was absurd the trouble these horses gave ere you could induce them to pass a flock of sheep. They would make a handsome pair for a carriage, and would sell well as such in Calcutta, besides paying their passage.

Nov. 26th.—Drove to Wynberg; saw an arum in Mrs. Usher's garden that I thought remarkable. On the large bright green leaf were white transparent marks; the length of the flower thirty inches, the breadth eight inches; the inside of the flower was of a deep, beautiful, and rich claret colour. How profuse of beauty is nature to the flowers at the Cape! There was also an aloe at the same place of such enormous size, it was quite a sight,—a gigantic plant. I regret very much I did not sketch or measure it; it was the finest aloe I ever beheld.

Never did I meet with such servants as those at the Cape,—drunkards, thieves, and liars,—the petty annoyances these people give are enough to destroy the pleasure of living in this fine climate and beautiful country; had it not been for the plague of the servants I should have felt sorrow in quitting Africa. A Malay man-servant of ours, speaking of his family, said, "My father was only a lieutenant, but the father of my wife's eldest son, he was a very great man!—he was a colonel! he gave her the cottage. Though the son is but a boy he has so much English spirit in him, that I am afraid of beating him; don't you think the other children are very like me? The friends of many women are only captains or lieutenants; my wife's friend was a colonel!—we are all like this!"

In India, if a man is ashamed of his poor relations, the following is applied to him: "The mule was asked, 'Who is your father?' He said, 'The horse is my maternal uncle[1].'"

My Malay servant had no shame at all: "There is no physic for false ideas[2]." To have attempted to have enlightened his mind on the subject in which he took pride, would have been as

  1. Oriental Proverbs and Sayings, No. 131.
  2. Ibid. No. 132.