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iolence。 。 。 。 I suppose that by this time you will have developed into a full blown barrister; and I need not tell you that from my heart I wish you every success。 You ought to try for an appointment as Attorney…General in a colony (Crown); as you have the pull of private practice in addition to your official employment in such an office。
It is evident that when Sir Melmoth Osborn wrote thus of the death of Cetewayo as having taken place on July 21; 1883; he was deceived by some false rumour which had reached the Reserve from Zululand proper。 Cetewayo did not really die until February 8; 1884; and Osborn saw his corpse before it was quite cold。 An account of the circumstances of his death; which Sir Melmoth told me afterwards he believed to have been caused by poison; will be found on pp。 28 and 29 of the Introduction to the 1888 and subsequent editions of my book “Cetewayo and his White Neighbours。”
I think that we left Ditchingham; which at the time I thought I had let for some years to a gentleman who unhappily died before he took possession; at the beginning of 1885; about ten years after I began life in South Africa。 Now with a wife and three children I was practically beginning life again in a small furnished house in West Kensington at the age of twenty…eight or thereabouts。
I remember; as one does remember trifles; that we drove in a railway bus from Liverpool Street to the West Kensington house; which personally I had not seen。 We passed down the Embankment; and my little son; whom I was destined to lose; kneeled upon the seat of the bus and stared at the Thames; asking many questions。
After my arrival in London I began to attend the Probate and Divorce Court。 Soon I found; however; that if I was to obtain a footing in that rath