Mentzel, O.F.
A complete and
authentic geographical-topographical description of the famous and (all things
considered) remarkable African
Wherein is
described clearly and accurately the rural parts according to their division
into districts, mountains and rivers; the Christian inhabitants and their
customs; the agronomy and viticulture, stock farming, the ordinary expeditions,
game hunting and finally also the aborigines, namely the Hottentots, besides
many other lately discovered curiosities
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Revised and edited by H.J.
Mandelbrote Translated from the German
by G.V. Marais and J. Hoge ISBN of Reprint: 0-9584522-0-2 |
In
this third volume of Mentzel's account of life at the
In general there are more marriageable women at
the Cape than bachelors. Hence if at some time one finds four, five or
more daughters in a house, and only
one or two sons, and one teases the daughters by saying that there are so many girls and so
few men in the country, they immediately reply: “Oh! That is no trouble. The
suitors come from the Fatherland (
The country girls have few opportunities for a tęte-a-tęte with men, so that one seldom,
very seldom hears of a girl having gone too far and fallen. But in
All women at the
When the country girls do get shoes and stockings
on their feet either to attend a wedding or as brides to appear with their
bridegroom before the Marriage Board, it is comic to see how high they lift their legs so as not to knock
against something with their heels; for they have a feeling as though they were
walking on stilts. As soon as the honeymoon is over, the shoes are laid aside
and not produced again until such time as they go to town or attend a wedding
or church service. The men, on the other band, even if they wear no shoes
except on such festival days, do wear little “veldschoens”
of raw hide and also wrap their feet in fine many-coloured
handkerchiefs, and then think themselves very smart in their way.
The language of the country people is just as far
from being pure Dutch, as that of the German farmers is from pure German. The
men have a broad accent and the women folk use certain expressions that are
sometimes really ridiculous. For instance, if one were to ask them whether they
have no Bible, the reply is: “Ounz heeft geen
Byhcl”: which means “Us has no Bible”. If one
were then to ask them: “How many ‘Onze’ (ounces) in a pound:" they
would blush. They are very fond of hearing High German spoken and still more of
hearing it sung. They also understand a High German better than one from
I have given a detailed account of the country
women within the second class of farmers, since they represent that group of
their sex that stands between the higher and lower class, and one can judge the
others in relation to them. The daughters of the landowners of the first class
rank with the City ladies, while those of the third class may be reckoned with the working class, but those of
the fourth class with the simplest and uncivilised
kind, for these latter are brought up more among the slaves or rather among the
Hottentot men and women and show the least degree of
good breeding.
The third type of African farmers may rightly he
called the industrious class. Among them there are no slovenly owners,
drunkards, or such as find the weather too cold and wet during the ploughing and sowing season and too warm and windy during
harvest time and who neglect and diminish their sources of income by leaving
all the work to a few slaves. Industrious farmers let no hour pass unused. Even
in the season between Sowing and harvesting, when the countryman could
sometimes have an easy time, they keep themselves and their servants busy:
and when the weather is so inclement that nothing can be done Outside,
the slaves under cover of a roof, in the barn or in their dwellings, will at
least make ropes and cords out of old anchor cables, for tying oxen and
knee-haltering horses; for when horses are driven to the fields and meadows, a
rope is bound to their