A Winter Tour in South Africa eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 98 pages of information about A Winter Tour in South Africa.

A Winter Tour in South Africa eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 98 pages of information about A Winter Tour in South Africa.
his numerous native workmen.  In the mill itself there are 160 men employed, everyone of whom is a Coolie.  There is not a single white man on the premises, excepting two English clerks in the counting house.  I was astonished at the perfect order which reigned in the mill, where I spent some time.  Everyone appeared to perform his allotted task with activity, cheerfulness, and untiring perseverance.  Monsieur Dumat told me he could never get the same steady work from white workmen.  He seems to govern them all with perfect tact and kindness.  Some of them have been with him for many years.  There are about 900 other men, Kafirs and Coolies, employed on the farm.  I was shown all the various processes of sugar manufacture, from the crushing of the cane, to the crystallising of the sugar.  The first sorts are ready for sale in forty-eight hours; other qualities require a week, and again even as much as six months to perfect them.  There is some wonderful machinery in the mill.

The Trappist establishment at Marionhill is one which should be seen by everyone visiting Natal.  It is reached by rail from Durban in about an hour’s ride to the Pine Town station.  A drive from thence of about four miles brings a visitor to Marionhill.  The monks, as is well known, are under a vow of strict silence.  I was met by one of them at the station, who drove me in a waggonette to the Trappist farm.  Here I was met by, and presented to, the Abbot.  He is the real leader and director of this remarkable establishment.  He devoted three hours to taking me over it, and showing me all the various industries and works which are carried on.  About two hundred brothers are there at present, but more are expected shortly, and upwards of one hundred sisters, and about three hundred Kafirs.  The latter are taught, not only the ordinary branches of a practical education (of course including religion), but all sorts of handicraft.  It is, emphatically, a school of technical education.  Everything is manufactured and made at Marionhill, from the substantial bullock wagons, and the delicate spiders, to the baking of bread, the building of houses, stables, and cattle lairs, the printing of periodicals, and book-binding.  Work is the great and leading feature of the Trappist creed.  The motive power is religion.  Its controlling influence is here complete.

I came away quite amazed at all I saw, as well as pleased at the attention I received from the Abbot.  He is certainly a very remarkable man, of great natural gifts, and indomitable energy and power.  He is sixty-five years of age.  He was born on the shores of Lake Constance; and before he took to studying for the Roman Catholic Church in a German University, he was employed, as he told me, in early life in the care of cattle at his native home.

The Trappist farm is beautifully situated, and within its area contains some really fine scenery.  The Kafir women’s part of the establishment is distinct, and quite half a mile distant from the men’s quarters.  Women are taught to sew, and sing, to cut out and make dresses, to cook, clean, and go through all the usual routine of household work.  The costume of the female Trappists, who, as well as the male, are highly educated, is scarlet serge, with white aprons.  The men are clothed in brown serge.

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A Winter Tour in South Africa from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.