[8] Five Years in Kaffirland, with Sketches of the Late War in that Country. Written on the Spot. By Harriet Ward. Two vols. London, 1848.

The Cape and its Colonists, with Hints to Settlers, in 1848. By George Nicholson, Jun., Esq., a late Resident. London, 1848.

Three Years' Cruise in the Mozambique Channel, for the Suppression of the Slave Trade. By Lieut. Barnard, R.N. London, 1848.

[9] Five Years in Kaffirland, vol. ii. p. 167-8.

[10] Five Years in Kaffirland, vol. i. pp. 35-6.

[11] Fingos, Kaffirs, and Hottentots, make use of a band or handkerchief, drawn tightly round the body, to deaden the pain of hunger; as the gnawing agony of famine increases, the ligature is tightened accordingly.—Five Years in Kaffirland, vol. i., p. 102.

[12] Five Years in Kaffirland, vol. i. p. 304.

[13] Ib., vol. ii. p. 191-2.

[14] The Cape and its Colonists, p. 114.

[15] Eastern Life, Past and Present. By Harriet Martineau.