Two volumes, 356 + 402 pages, lithographic frontispiece in each volume, 1 lithographic plate of 'Chaka King of the Zoolos', modern half maroon morocco with matching cloth boards, spine titled gilt and faded,light foxing on the text and the plates, uncut edges, a good copy.
Mendelssohn (Sidney) South African Bibliography volume 1, page 761: Mr. Isaacs left England at the age of fourteen for St. Helena, where he arrived in October 1822. In 1825 he joined Lieutenant King, and proceeded with him to Natal in search of Farewell, but, on their arrival at the coast, they were wrecked in crossing the bar ; they escaped with their lives, however, and soon came in contact with Lieutenant Farewell. The latter had established himself in Natal, having been granted a large tract of land by Chaka. Soon after the shipwreck, Mr. Hatton and some of the crew commenced to build a vessel to assist them in escaping from the country, and the ship was finally launched three years after, on March 10, 1828, and Messrs. Farewell, King, Hatton, and an embassy from Chaka, embarked on May 1st for Algoa Bay, where they arrived three days later. The chiefs were dissatisfied at their reception, owing to the attitude of Major Cloete, and finding out that the British Government intended to protect the native tribes from the Zulu king, the envoys clamoured to return, and they were sent back in H.M.S. Helicon, with some insignificant presents for the king. On the voyage, Lieutenant King fell ill, and on his arrival gradually got worse, expiring in September 1828. Chaka is described as being " about thirty-eight years of age, upwards of six feet in height, and well proportioned," but " a savage in the truest sense of the word, though not a cannibal. He had an insatiable thirst for the blood of his subjects, and indulged in it with inhuman joy. . . . He was a monster, a compound of vice and ferocity, without one virtue to redeem his name from that infamy to which history will consign it." Soon after the arrival of the Helicon, Chaka was assassinated by Dingaan, who succeeded to the throne, and who, according to the author, was " a despot," with " many redeeming qualities.
The volumes contain a history of the reigns of Chaka and Dingan, with valuable notes on the country, its language, population, and customs of the natives.
Louis Herman: 'What is known of the life story of Nathaniel Isaacs presents a strange contrast to the background of respectable, bourgeois, Anglo-Jewish families of Kent whence he issued. Natal pioneer and explorer, ivory hunter and trader, temporary subject of Chaka, and courtier at the Great Kraal, this would-be empire builder begins a fresh career at the age of 24 on the west coast of Africa. There as merchant and shipper and proprietor of a tiny island, his activities, not all creditable, are hardly less remarkable; and in the end, he retires and settles down in England two years before his death as "Nathaniel Isaacs of Kentville, Egremont, in the County of Chester, Gentleman."'
- Overall Condition: A Good Copy
- Size: 8vo (210 x130mm)
- Sold By: Clarke's Africana & Rare Books
- Contact Person: Paul Mills
- Country: South Africa
- Email: [email protected]
- Telephone: 021 794 0600
- Preferred Payment Methods: Visa & Mastercard via PayGate secure links and Bank transfers.
- Trade Associations: ABA - ILAB, SABDA
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