Swallow

A TALE OF THE GREAT TREK

by H. Rider Haggard


Contents

[CHAPTER I. WHY VROUW BOTMAR TELLS HER TALE]
[CHAPTER II. HOW SUZANNE FOUND RALPH KENZIE]
[CHAPTER III. THE STORY OF THE SHIPWRECK]
[CHAPTER IV. THE SHADOW OF THE ENGLISHMEN]
[CHAPTER V. A LOVE SCENE AND A QUARREL]
[CHAPTER VI. THE COMING OF THE ENGLISHMEN]
[CHAPTER VII. THE SIN OF VROUW BOTMAR]
[CHAPTER VIII. THE WISDOM OF SUZANNE]
[CHAPTER IX. HOW SUZANNE SAVED SIHAMBA]
[CHAPTER X. THE OATH OF SIHAMBA]
[CHAPTER XI. A FIGHT AND A SHOT]
[CHAPTER XII. WHAT THE COW SHOWED ZINTI]
[CHAPTER XIII. THE SCHIMMEL’S FIRST RACE]
[CHAPTER XIV. THE WEDDING]
[CHAPTER XV. RALPH RETURNS INTO THE SEA]
[CHAPTER XVI. HOW RALPH CAME BACK TO THE STEAD]
[CHAPTER XVII. THE HIDDEN KRANTZ]
[CHAPTER XVIII. WHAT PASSED IN THE HUT]
[CHAPTER XIX. HOW THE SCHIMMEL CROSSED THE RED WATER]
[CHAPTER XX. THE OMEN OF THE WHITE SWALLOW]
[CHAPTER XXI. THE VISION OF RALPH AND SUZANNE]
[CHAPTER XXII. THE WAR OF THE CLEAN SPEAR]
[CHAPTER XXIII. HOW SUZANNE BECAME A CHIEFTAINESS]
[CHAPTER XXIV. THE MADNESS OF RALPH KENZIE]
[CHAPTER XXV. THE GREAT TREK]
[CHAPTER XXVI. HOW GAASHA BROUGHT GOOD LUCK]
[CHAPTER XXVII. SWART PIET SETS A SNARE]
[CHAPTER XXVIII. THE COMING OF THE IMPI]
[CHAPTER XXIX. THIRST]
[CHAPTER XXX. SIHAMBA PREVAILS]
[CHAPTER XXXI. SIHAMBA’S FAREWELL]
[CHAPTER XXXII. THE PASS OF THE QUATHLAMBA]
[CHAPTER XXXIII. RALPH FINDS THE DREAM MOUNTAIN]
[CHAPTER XXXIV. THE AVENGER OF BLOOD]
[CHAPTER XXXV. THE SCHIMMEL’S LAST RACE]

Ditchingham, 20th May, 1898.

My dear Clarke,

Over twenty years have passed since we found some unique opportunities of observing Boer and Kaffir character in company; therefore it is not perhaps out of place that I should ask you to allow me to put your name upon a book which deals more or less with the peculiarities of those races—a tale of the great Trek of 1836.

You, as I know, entertain both for Dutchman and Bantu that regard tempered by a sense of respectful superiority which we are apt to feel for those who on sundry occasions have but just failed in bringing our earthly career to an end. The latter of these admirations I share to the full; and in the case of the first of them, as I hope that the dour but not unkindly character of Vrouw Botmar will prove to you, time softens a man’s judgment. Nor have I ever questioned, as the worthy Vrouw tells us, that in the beginning of the trouble the Boers met with much of which to complain at the hands of English Governments. Their maltreatment was not intentional indeed, but rather a result of systematic neglect—to use a mild word—of colonies and their inhabitants, which has culminated within our own experience, only, thanks to a merciful change in public opinion, to pass away for ever. Sympathy with the Voortrekkers of 1836 is easy; whether it remains so in the case of their descendants, the present masters of the Transvaal, is a matter that admits of many opinions. At the least, allowance should always be made for the susceptibilities of a race that finds its individuality and national life sinking slowly, but without hope of resurrection, beneath an invading flood of Anglo-Saxons.