@Romeo Fabulini,
Sir Henry Rider Haggard was in South Africa for seven years from 1875 0n the staff of Sir Henry Bulwer in Natal and later of Sir Theophilus Shepstone in Transvaal. It was he who raised the Union Jack in Pretoria and read out the proclamation of annexation.
He reports that Zulu males were not allowed a woman "until they had dipped their spear in the blood of the enemy".
It was a custom which the British felt needed to be eradicated in order to render them less fierce.
Cecil Rhodes, the founder of the Rhodes Scholarship in the US, an attempt to seed the best Americans with civilised values, when asked what to do about the natives replied "**** 'em white". Bill Clinton was a Rhodes Scholar.
Haggard was a good friend of Teddy Roosevelt the 26th President of the USA.
If you like a good laugh Romeo you will enjoy King Solomon's Mines. And Ayesha. He is a much underestimated writer and an expert on agriculture. He was also charged by the Government to tour the colonies to find new homes for demobbed soldiers after the end of WW1. So they were not all ex-convicts. Convicts were also transported to the US.