Robert Moffat 
 
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Title: Robert Moffat The Missionary Hero of Kuruman 
Author: David J. Deane 
Release Date: March 16, 2005 [EBook #15379] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROBERT 
MOFFAT *** 
 
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ROBERT MOFFAT 
The Missionary Hero of KURUMAN. 
BY 
DAVID J. DEANE, 
AUTHOR OF "JOHN WICLIFFE, THE MORNING STAR OF THE 
REFORMATION," "MARTIN LUTHER, THE REFORMER," ETC. 
FIFTH EDITION. TWENTY-FIFTH THOUSAND. 
FLEMING H. REVELL COMPANY 
NEW YORK CHICAGO TORONTO 
_Publishers of Evangelical Literature._
[Illustration] 
 
PREFACE. 
The record of a life like that of Robert Moffat, the South African 
missionary, can never be devoid of interest until all appreciation for 
noble deeds and patient endeavour becomes extinct in the heart of man. 
Till then, our pulses will quicken and our enthusiasm kindle as we read 
of dangers encountered and overcome, of the true courage that could 
undismayed encounter the king of beasts roaming on the African plain, 
and of passing the time with savage chiefs, beneath the spears and clubs 
of whose warriors thousands had been slain. Or our sympathy is 
awakened as stories of sickness and suffering, of hunger and terrible 
thirst, of trying disappointments, continued year after year, are related. 
Anon, gratitude causes the tear to start to our eye as we witness the love 
that prompts the effort to win the heathen to the Saviour, and see the 
once benighted ones clothed and subdued, learning in mind and heart 
the truth of the Gospel. Gratitude arises that we have men, heroic 
Christian men, who count nothing dear to them, not even their lives, 
that they may win sinners to the love of Jesus Christ. 
Such an one was he, whose memoir we present to our readers, with the 
earnest desire that his strong faith may strengthen ours, that his quiet 
courage may excite us to perseverance in well-doing, and that his 
deliverance from manifold and very real dangers may lead us to place 
reliance upon Him in whom Moffat trusted, and who never forsakes 
those that trust in Him. May we all see, and especially the youth of our 
land, as we read the records of such noble lives, that true godliness 
detracts not from true manhood, but rather that it glorifies and ennobles 
it, until evil is overcome, and the wicked are put to silence. 
In writing this brief sketch of the life of the Rev. Dr. Moffat, the author 
has been much indebted to those who have trodden the path before him; 
especially to the two well-known works, "Robert and Mary Moffat," by 
their son John S. Moffat, and to Robert Moffat's own book, 
"Missionary Labours and Scenes in South Africa." He also owes his 
acknowledgments to "The Missionary Magazine," "The Chronicle of 
the London Missionary Society," to the Reports of various Missionary 
Societies, "A Life's Labours in South Africa," and to other works from 
which information upon the subject has been gathered. To the two first
named the author especially refers those of his readers who wish for 
fuller details than are given in this volume. 
[Illustration] 
[Illustration] 
CONTENTS. 
I. PIONEER MISSIONS IN SOUTH AFRICA, 9 
II. CHILDHOOD AND YOUTH, 18 
III. DEPARTURE FOR THE CAPE, 27 
IV. MARRIAGE AND ARRIVAL AT LATTAKOO, 49 
V. THE MANTATEE INVASION, 63 
VI. VISIT TO MAKABA, 71 
VII. THE AWAKENING, 85 
VIII. VISIT TO ENGLAND, 101 
IX. THE SECHWANA BIBLE, 118 
X. CLOSING SCENES, 141 
XI. CONCLUSION, 150 
[Illustration] 
 
ROBERT MOFFAT. 
 
CHAPTER I. 
PIONEER MISSIONS IN SOUTH AFRICA. 
The history of missions in South Africa abounds in interesting facts and 
incidents. Stories of heroism, strange adventures, and descriptions of 
journeyings among savage tribes and through countries frequented by 
beasts of prey, form part of its details. Its theme is love to God and love 
to man, and its facts have been called into existence through the efforts 
of noble-minded and true-hearted men and women to bring their 
coloured brethren and sisters to the knowledge of the Saviour, Jesus 
Christ. 
Many names are held in veneration in connection with these missions, 
names of those who, having laboured faithfully upon earth, have been 
called to their reward; among these none stands forward with greater 
prominence than that of Robert Moffat.
A brief glance at the development of the colony at the Cape of Good 
Hope, and at the early efforts made to evangelise the native races, may 
enable the reader better to understand the    
    
		
	
	
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