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THE SIEGE OF MAFEKING
BY
J. ANGUS HAMILTON
PREFATORY NOTE
I have to
acknowledge gratefully permission to publish in this book certain articles
contributed before and during the siege of Mafeking to The Times and Black
and White. To the editor of the latter paper I am indebted also for leave
to reproduce photographs taken by myself and published, from time to time, in
that journal.
I would
acknowledge, too, in anticipation, any kindly toleration my readers may extend
to me for the many shortcomings, of which I am dismally conscious, arising from
the hasty preparation of this volume. When I explain that between the date of
my return to England and this datewhen I start for Chinabarely a fortnight
has elapsed, I shall make good, perhaps, some small claim upon the indulgence
of the critics and the public.
J. A. H.
July 21,
1900
CONTENTS
CHAPTER PAGE
I.
AT SEA
II.
A GLANCE AHEAD
III.
ON THE ORANGE FREE STATE BORDER
IV.
BRICKS OF STRAW
V.
DIAMONDS AND WHITE FEATHERS
VI.
TWO DAYS BEFORE WAR
VII.
THE SKIRMISH AT FIVE MILE BANK
VIII.
THE FIRST DAY OF BOMBARDMENT
IX.
THE ADVENT OF "BIG BEN"
X.
A MIDNIGHT SORTIE
XI.
CANNON KOPJE
XII.
A RECONNAISSANCE
XIII.
THE TOWN GUARD
XIV.
WASTED ENERGIES
XV.
SHELLS AND SLAUGHTER
XVI.
A SOFT-WATER BATH
XVII.
THE ECONOMY OF THE SITUATION
XVIII.
A VISIT TO THE HOSPITAL
XIX.
A LITTLE GUN PRACTICE
XX.
THE ATTACK UPON GAME TREE
XXI.
THE ADVENT OF THE NEW YEAR
XXII.
NATIVE LIFE
XXIII.
BOMBAST AND BOMB-PROOFS
XXIV.
SOME SNIPING AND AN EXECUTION
XXV.
LIFE IN THE BRICKFIELDS
XXVI.
FROM BAD TO WORSE
XXVII.
THE FIRST ATTACK UPON THE BRICKFIELDS
XXVIII.
THE SECOND ATTACK UPON THE BRICKFIELDS
XXIX.
THE NATIVE QUESTION
XXX.
POLITICAL ECONOMY
XXXI.
"A HISTORY OF THE BARALONGS"
XXXII.
'TIS WEARY WAITING
XXXIII.
TWO HUNDRED DAYS OF SIEGE
XXXIV.
THE EPICUREAN'S DELIGHT
XXXV.
THE LAST FIGHT
XXXVI.
RELIEVED AT LAST
XXXVII.
THE END
CHAPTER I R.M.S. Dunvegan Castle, September 16th, 1899.
A breeze was
freshening, tufting the heaving billows with white crests and driving showers
of spray and clots of foam upon the decks of the Dunvegan. Passengers
stood in strained attitudes about the ship, fidgeting with the desire to be ill
and the wish to appear comfortableeven dignified. In the end, however,
circumstances were too strong for the passengers, transforming them, from a
state of calm despair, into a condition of sickness and temporary dejection.
Every one was perturbed, and those delicate attentions which the sea-sick
demand were being offered by a much-worried deck steward. Here and there groups
of more hardy voyagers were spending their feeble wit in unseasonable jokes;
here and there bedraggled people, wet with spray and racked by the anguish of
an aching void, were clutching at the possibility of gaining the privacy of
their cabins before their feelings quite overpowered them. In this mad rush,
not unlike the scramble of a shuttlecock to escape the buffetings of the
battledore, I also joined, fetching my berth with much unfortunate
sensation. Alas! I am a wretched sailor, and travelling far and near these many
years, crossing strange seas to distant lands at oft-recurring periods, has not
even tutored me to stand the stress of the ocean wave. I cannot endure the sea.
The Dunvegan
Castle was steaming to the Cape, carrying the mails, together with a number
of tedious and most tiresome people, whose hours aboard were passed in periods
of distracting energyin deck quoits, in impossible cricket matches, in angry
squabbles upon the value of the monies which, day by day, were collected by the
crafty from the foolish and pooled in prizes upon the daily run of the steamer.
It was said that these were pleasant gambles, but the Gentiles paid and the Hebrews,
returning to their diamonds, their stocks and shares, scooped the stakes. It is
a way that the people of Israel and Threadneedle Street have made peculiarly
their own; and, indeed, the multitude and variety of Jews upon this
evil-smelling steamer suggested that she might have held within her walls the
nucleus of an over-sea Israelitish colony, such another as the Rothschilds
founded.
Time was
idle, dreary, and so empty! There was nothing to do, since nothing could be
done. The monotony was appalling, and if this were the condition in the saloon,
how distressful must have been the lot of the third class, who constituted in
themselves, as good a class of people as that contained in the saloon. Surely
in these days of systematic philanthropy something more might be done to
brighten the lot and welfare of third-class passengers. Is it, for example,
quite impossible to supply them with that not uninteresting development of the
musical-boxthe megaphone? Of course it should be quite
possible; but antiquated, even antediluvian, in its arrangements, the Castle
Company cannot initiate anything which has not yet been adopted by the other
lines of ocean shipping. And yet I have been told by numerous merchant captains
that it is the steerage which provides the profits, making lucrative the
business of carrying cargoes of goods and human freight from our shores to more
distant lands. But that also is the way of the world; yet when a rude
prosperity enables the emigrant Jew and Gentile to throng the saloons, making them
altogether impossible for the gentler classes, we shall find the economy of the
third class appealing to an ever-increasing and ever-superior body of people
until these "superior" people will not endure the dirt, unwholesome
surroundings, and fetid atmosphere of the steerage accommodation of ocean-going
steamers, but will cry to Heaven upon the niggard's policy which controls the
vessels.
As the days
wore away, and Madeira came and went, even the flying fishes ceased to attract,
and the noises of the ship grew more distant, the people less obtrusive.
Moreover, I became at rest within myself, and the gaping, aching void which has
filled my vitals these many days, became assuaged. It was then we began to
inspect the passengers; to consider almost kindly the African Jew millionaire
who ate peas with his fingers and mixed honey with his salad, thought not
disdainfully of the poor lady his wife, who, suffering the tortures of the
damned when at sea, shone at each meal valiantly and heroically until the menu
was pierced by her in its entirety, and she made still further happy by the
administration of an original preventative against mal de
mer of sweet wine biscuits bathed in plentiful and sticky treacle. It was
her way of pouring oil on troubled waters. Oh, those were dreadful people,
never ill, always eating, ever complaining of a curious dizziness which,
nevertheless, occasioned them no loss of appetite. Surely they, of all others,
were indeed of the specially select! Then there was Mr. Clarke, a friend of the
two Presidents, who, undaunted by the most violent motions of the steamer, kept
to the deck in a constant promenade, discoursing amicably the while, and
punctuating his utterances, of a somewhat patriarchal order, with brief pauses,
in which he stroked, with much dignity, a long white beard. He was a dear old
man, and, unlike other Boers, he did not quote from the Scriptures, a
concession which, to be properly appreciated, demands the lassitude and extreme
prostration of violent nausea. There is something inordinately irritating about
the man who proposes to soothe the irruptions attendant upon sea voyages by the
assurance that such discomfiture is to be endured, since in Chapter i., verse
1, of a pious writer, the Lord hath there written that the ungodly shall be
everlastingly punished. Personally I objected only to the form of punishment.
The friend
of the President, a fine specimen of sturdy masculinity, touching eighty-two
years of age, was quite the most impressive figure aboard this particular
Castle packet. He had been a sojourner in the Orange Free State for forty
years, coming to it from Australia shortly after the riots at Ballarat
goldfields. The old fellow had fought against the Boers, championed their arms
against the Basutos, raided the blacks in Queensland, and tumbled through a
variety of enterprises ranging from mining in Australia to
successful sheep farming near the Fickersburg. I liked him, taking an intense
anxiety in his future movements, and wondering whether this fine old specimen
of life would also become our enemy. Who could tell! So much depended upon the
situation, so much upon the action of the President and the will of Providence.
He stood, as he himself was apt to remark, upon the border of the next
worldlooking back upon a span of four score years, possessing a knowledge of
the affairs of these African Republics which had obtained for him the
friendship of President Steyn and President Kruger; indeed, they had been
comrades-in-arms, Oom Paul and himself, while he had seen Steyn spring into
manhood from a stripling, and when his thoughts dwelt upon those days the voice
of the old man became flooded with emotion. These tears of memory were a
sidelight to his real character, and I was convinced that if he shouldered arms
at all these earlier friendships were held by such ties as were too sacred to
be violated. In his heart he hated fighting, yearning merely for the attentions
of his children, the cool delights of his mountain home. In his domestic
environment he was a happy man, since prosperity had brought him certain cares
of office, much as the dignity of his age had brought him the respect of his
fellow-burghers. And yet he figured as an illustration of countless hundreds,
each one of whom was in close relationship with the crisis in the politics of
the country.
Morning,
noon and night he strolled, the one figure of interest in the ill-assorted
company of passengers which the good shipto my nostrils an evil-smelling
tubwas carrying to the Cape. There were few others of importance upon this journey. There was a colonel of the Royal Engineers, who had a
snug billet in the War Office, and who was leaving Pall Mall to inspect the
barracks at Cape Town, St. Helena, Ascension, and all those other places to
which certain preposterous War Office officials devoted that attention which
should so much more properly have been paid to the defenceless condition of the
frontiers in South Africa. But then, after all, what is the destiny of the War
Office unless to meddle and make muddle? If Colonel Watson might be said to
have represented the Imperial Government among the passengers, Mynheer Van der
Merure, Commissioner of Mines in Johannesburg, might be considered as
representing the Pretorian Government. It seemed to me that these two worthies
were quite harmless, representing, each in his own way, the acme of good
nature, the gallantall colonels imagine that they be gallantcolonel by reason
of his advanced age; the worthyall commissioners imagine that they be
worthycommissioner because he lived off the spoil of the mines. But even the
spectacle of these threethe grand old man, the War Office attaché, the
wealthy Randsmandid not suffice to break the hideous monotony of a most
depressing voyage.
With the
peace of nature enveloping us in a feeling of security, it was difficult to
realise that each day we drew a little nearer to a possible seat of war. There
was much rumour aboard; the stewards hinted that the hold was filled with a
cargo of munitions of war. The captain flatly denied it, even the War Office
pensioner thought it improbable. "You must understand, sir," said he
one morning, across the breakfast table, "that it is contrary to the
custom of her Majesty's Government, and, if I may say so,
sir, especially contrary to the custom of her Majesty's War Office, to squander
the finances of our great Empire upon unnecessary munitions of war because the Times and other papers choose to send half a dozen irresponsible individuals to South
Africa. Now, sirpooh!" When Colonel Watson broke out like this the friend
of the President would intervene, suggesting in his kindly, paternal fashion
that "the War Officegiven half a dozen colonels, gallant or
otherwisemight well afford to follow the lead of the Times newspaper." "It has been my experience," the Colonel retaliated
on one occasion, "that when people begin to interfere they cease to
understand." It was always quite delightful to watch these two cross
swords; the elder invariably took refuge in his age when the sallies of the War
Office could not be directly countered. "Experience! You are only old
enough to be my son." The Colonel splutteredcolonels do. By these means
the elder man usually carried off the honours, replying, as it were, by a flank
movement to the frontal attack of his superior adversary.
The farmer
from the Orange Free State talked much to me, giving me, towards the end of the
voyage, an invitation to his home. It was a visit in which I should have found
much pleasure, since the splendour of his years, his gentleness and nobility of
character were attractive. It seemed to me that among all sorts and conditions
of men this one was indeed, a man, and I do most sincerely hope that the end of
the war may find him still living and enjoying his farm in his usual
prosperity. He was so set against the war, and dreaded the consequences of
hostile invasion into the Orange Free State, insomuch that he realised, if some
immunity were not guaranteed, the ruin and desolation which
would spread over the land. In August as we left England there was nothing
known about the future action of the Orange Free State. The question was one of
debate, altogether confused, almost intangible, and this man, knowing Steyn as
he knew Kruger, was convinced that the Orange Free State would alienate itself
from the Transvaal difficulty. But who can tell? We look to the sea for our
answer, and it throws back to us only the echoes of the sighing waves, the
pulsing throbs of the screws pounding the green masses of water in an effort to
reach the Cape. Nevertheless, I am inclined to believe that there will be war.
I hope that there may be, since it is to be my field of labour.
The journey
nears its end, and the weather breaks, for a few hours into grey cold; while
the sea, where it laps the bay at Cape Town, darkening into thin ridges of
foam, tumbling and tossing amid the eddies of the bleak water, looks menacing.
A fog lies off the land, dense and weighty, impeding the navigation and
impressing no little conception of the perils of the deep upon the minds of
timorous passengers, and folding the surface of the ocean in its expanse. The
weather threatens to be wild. All day the sea fog broke and mingled, merging,
as the day wore on, into one conglomerate mass of cloud, impenetrable to the
mariner and screening the signs of the sea from those who were upon land. Here
and there, low down upon the horizon, the storm fiend from the shore had broken
into the garland of mist which hung so drearily upon sea as upon moor,
detaching parcels of cloud from the main and toying with them with the coy and
heartless grace of Zephyr! But as yet the wind only came in minor lapses, and
was followed by intervals in which there was no movement in
the fog. From the waste of sea came a ceaseless, muffled roar which seemed
loudest and most full of mystery when carried upon the wings of the wind. Then
these echoes of mighty waters, tumbling upon the rocks off the land, seemed
ominous and charged with deadly peril, and, as the fog belts lifted or
dispersed before the gusts of the wind, the sea would look as though swept with
growing anger, heaving in tremulous passion, until the great reach of quivering
waves was flecked with white. Closer and closer lapped the tiny waves, until,
under the pressure of the freshening wind they mingled their crests, rising and
falling in foam-capped billows of growing volume and increasing majesty. Thus
developed the storm; the wind beating on the face of the waters and breaking
against the clouds until rain fell, in the end assuaging, by its raging
downpour, the tempest of the ocean. Down came the storm in one panting burst of
tempestuous deluge. The heaving waves threw sheets of foam from their
rain-pierced summits, and the wind whistled and screamed as it swept through
the rigging. Flashes of lightning and thunder claps parried one another in
quick succession. The rain fell in torrents, the decks, shining in the
lightning flashes, roared with rushing water. So that night we rode at anchor,
rocking idly at our cables within the shadow of the mountain, and upon the
morrow, beneath the light of coming dawn, we drew nearer through the cool
greyness of the bounding ocean. At first the figures, the walls of the fort,
the cranes, the shipping, and the scarred and crinkled facing of the mountain
were silhouetted in black against the grey of early morning, but as the day
broke more firmly across its slopes, the finer and more subtle light
gave to everything its actual proportion. All kept growing clearer and yet
clearer, and more and more thoroughly outlined, until the sun, shooting over
the horizon, bestowed upon the coming day its first wink of glory.
And so we
landed, passing from a sluggish state of peace into a world where everything
was lighted with martial glamour.
CHAPTER II Cape Town, September 20th, 1899.
To be in
Cape Town in September would seem to be visiting the capital of Cape Colony in
its least enjoyable month; since, more especially than at any other time in the
year, the place be thronged with bustling people, who plough their way through
streets which, by the stress of recent bad weather, are choked with mud and
broken by pools of slush and rain-scourings. The rain is falling with a
determination and force of penetration which soaks the pedestrian in a few
minutes and makes life altogether miserable. Moreover, there are signs of
further foul weather. There is a white mist upon the mountain and a sea fog
enshrouds the shipping in the harbour: everywhere it is cold, colourless and
damp. Everywhere the people are depressed. It is as though the wet has drenched
the population of the town to the bone and drowned their spirits in the
cheerless prospect which the rainy season in Cape Town provides. If the sun
were to shine the aspect might be brighter, a little warmth might be infused in
the character and disposition of the constantly shifting streams of
mud-splashed, bedraggled pedestrians who, despite the rain
and mud and an air of general despondency, impart some little animation to the
dirty thoroughfares.
Other than
this air of depression there is but little external evidence of the momentous
crisis which impends. It may be that the Cape Town colonist has forgotten the
responsibilities of his colony in the cares of his own office, and is become
that mechanical development of commerce, a money-making man. Who can tell? Is
it even fair to hazard an estimation of the man in his present environment? But
it would assuredly seem that the troubles of the Government, the menace which
is imposed upon the colony by the Bond Ministry, do not touch him, do not even
stir his loyalty to the ebullition of a little doubtful enthusiasm. Just now,
although there may be war upon his borders, although the spirit of disturbed
patriotism be in the air, and although his neighbours may be thinking of
joining some one of the Irregular Corps who are advertising for recruits, the
ordinary inhabitant of Cape Town is unmoved. He is too lethargic, or is it that
his loyalty is not of that degree which regards with concern the arming of the
border republics, the near outbreak of bloody war? It would seem that each,
after his own caste, be happy if he be left alone; the money grubber to gain
more shekels, the idler and the casual to bore each other with their
stupendous, even studied indifference to the propinquity of the latest national
crisis. Within a few days, it may even be within a few hours, our questions
with the Pretorian Government will have reached their final adjustment or their
perpetual confusion, and it may be that we shall be at war. It may be also,
although it be difficult to believe, that a peaceful
solution will be derived. At this moment the services of such pacific measures
as can be adopted should be utilised, since if war should come within a brief
measure the position of the people of this country will indeed be gravethe
utter absence of adequate defensive measures, the entire lack of efficient
military preparations being factors which are calculated to incite to rebellion
those who incline to the Dutch cause, and indeed, most positively, their name
is Legion. There is, I think, the essence of revolt beneath this heavy and
depressed condition of the people: it were not possible otherwise, to exist
within such intimate proximity to a state of war and be unmoved; it is not
possible either to find other explanation. It may be that in their hearts, as
in their heads, they are weighing the consequences of revolt, succouring one
another in their distress of mind and body with seditious sympathies,
maintaining a spirit of antagonism to the Imperial fusion under pretence of the
mere expression of a lip loyalty. And in their immediate prospect there is
everything which may be calculated to disturb their equanimity, and to force
upon them the consciousness of their impotency. It is perhaps this knowledge of
their actual weakness which subdues them since they cannot afford to openly
avow feelings which are inimical to us and which would betoken their own
hostility. Nevertheless, Great Britain can do nothing which could encourage
these people in their loyalty; nor can they themselves, in reality, assist to
remove their unfortunate predicament, since they must needs sacrifice their
possessions to substantiate their views, and to do this implies complete
disintegration of their fortunes. This they will not do; since they cannot
suffer it. They will remain discontented partisans, however;
slaves of commerce, restrained by the possibilities of further aggrandisement
from declaring their mutual connection, and manacled by the bonds of free trade
and crooked dealings. They will be neutral, as indeed the greater proportion of
the inhabitants of the towns along the coast and within the littoral zone will
be, since with every feeling of unctuous rectitude in relation to the values of
their trade, they will leave to the provincial areas, which lie between the
borders of the Orange Free State and the metropolitan circuits, the onus of the
situation, the work of supplying active and more potential supporters of the
Republican arms.
This is the
middle of September, and I am assured that the crisis should not be expected
before the middle of October, inclining to the first two weeks of the coming
month. If this be possible, and the information is difficult to discount, our
sin of indifference is the greater, our apathy the more criminal. Indeed,
everywhere there is nothing doingGod forbid that the steady warlike
preparations of the Transvaal Government should intimidate us, but let us at
least be heedful and not over sleepy. If we can gauge the situation by the
public press of the Empire it is most critical, and the time is rather overripe
in which we also should indulge in a few military exercises. There is a
situation to be faced which will tax all the resources of the Castle, and
strain even the vaunted excellence of the home administrationthat army for
which Lord Wolseley has claimed such splendid mobilisation, such insensate
volition. If these fifty thousand men were here now the turns of the political
wheel would not be regarded with such intense apprehension, while in their
absence there lies perhaps the answer to the rain-drenched dulness
of the population. The land is naked; from Basutoland to Buluwayo and back to
Beira, mile upon mile of smiling frontier rests without protection of any sort.
We are inviting invasion, and it is impossible that such a movement will not be
attempted. To invade our territoryit will sound so well round the camp fires
of the Boer laagersa mere scamper across the frontier, a pell-mell,
hell-for-leather retreat to their own lines, and the manuvres would be
executed felicitously and with every sign of success. But such a contingency is
submerged under an accumulation of theories and official explanations each of
which deny the possibility of the Boer taking upon himself the responsibility
of rushing the situation. Moreover, it does not seem that the Boers require
much instigation to attempt such an act. We have laid open our borders to such
an enterprise, even taking the trouble to leave unguarded many towns whose
adjacency to the border is singularly perilous. In many cases a Boer force need
only make a short march to arrive in the very heart of some one of these border
towns, when, should they appear, the turn of affairs could be said to be
complex; and some emotions might be felt by those worthy and effete military
noodles who so persistently shout down the "pessimists" who, knowing
the country, the ambition and resourcefulness of the Boers, persist in
declaiming upon the hideous neglect which characterises our frontier defences,
and strenuously assert the probability of Boer invasion into those districts
which superimpose themselves upon the borders of the Transvaal and Orange Free
State Republics, and which, possessing values of their own, can be held as
hostages against the slings and arrows of an outrageous fortune elsewhere.
It is the duty of the Crown at the present juncture to bear this
contingency in mind, to confront it with the determined resolution to repair
the negligence of the past at once and at all costs, and to allow neither the
opinion of the Bond Ministry, nor the ignorance of the existing military
advisers to the Governor, to persuade the Executive from adopting the only
course which remains to us, which is to push men and materials of war to the
border with the least possible delay. If we do not take these steps now it will
be too late in a little time, and the course of the war must necessarily be the
more protracted. There are many who would have us delay lest our premature acts
should expedite the despatch of the ultimatum, and we should lose the opportunity,
which the next few days will give to us, of receiving delivery of the troops
who are already upon the water. But the presence of these men means little and
forebodes, in reality, a slight accentuation of the gravity of the actual
situation. It is with the forces that we can control at this moment that we
must count, and it is with them that we must deal. It does not suffice to have
parade-ground drills in Cape Town as a preliminary flourish; we should at least
show ourselves as ready as the Boers be willing. This of course we cannot do,
since, with a handful of exceptions, we have not a modern piece of artillery in
the country. Moreover we do not quite know what armaments the Transvaal
Government possess; it is with a pretty display of pretence that we conceal the
nakedness of our borders and bolster up the situation. There is Kimberley,
Ramathlabama, and Buluwayowhat is to happen upon the western
frontier?and although it be doubtful if the Boers would pierce the Rhodesian
border and seize Buluwayo, it is not too much to expect that if
they should inaugurate any movement into the Colony from the Orange Free State,
even if their activity only should assume the shape of a demonstration against
Kimberley, that this southern advance would receive sympathetic co-operation
from a parallel movement in a northerly direction by which they might
temporarily secure possession of our line of communication and menace Buluwayo
by encroaching upon Rhodesia.
Then there
is the position of Natal, which must be more or less hampered by the war in the
Transvaal if it does not become actually and potentially concerned. That Natal
will play an important rôle is elaborately evident from the Boer patrols
who, even now, are reported to be in possession of all strategical points in
the mountains, and who are also said to be busily engaged in fortifying the
rocky fastnesses of the Drakensburg Mountains, and to dominate Laing's Nek
tunnel as well as the line of railway which curvets through the chain, by
having emplaced some heavy ordnance upon prominent and immediate commanding
slopes. It would seem as though Natal may play a part, so distinctive and so
vitally important in its own history as a colonial dependency, that the
prospect of the war there may become a campaign in itself, and one which will
be almost detached and isolated from the movements in the Orange Free State and
Transvaal, where I have reason to believe there is some intention of
formulating, what may be regarded as a dual campaign, which will avoid all
invasion of the Transvaal territory until the Orange Free State has been
completely pacified and the lines of communication effectively and securely
held. In support of this scheme it is generally conceded that it will be impossible to carry war into the Transvaal until every
provision has been made against the risk of local rising in the areas of the
Orange Free State, and thus endangering our lines of communication, as well as
our flanks.
These, then,
are the signs of the day, and in such signs do we read something of the
terrible struggle upon which we are so soon to be engaged, and in appreciation
of which, local opinion is in such marked contrastI almost wrote conflictwith
the opinion and views of the special service officers from India and England.
To whom, then, belongs the honours of accurate estimation; to the man from home
as it were, or to the man who has passed his life in South Africa and
understands the Dutchman as the mere military interloper can never hope to
understand him? There is, I think, no doubt as to what point of view be
erroneous, and it is because we so persistently ignore the worth and
reliability of the men who are upon the spot, that we shall have the falsity of
our intelligence some day brought home to us by the tidings of a terrible disaster.
South Africa is already the grave of too many fine reputations; but let us, at
least, hope that we shall not add to the disgrace of the private individual any
loss of national prestige. The wind soughs ominously just now, however, while
there is a note in it which I do not like, and which I cannot understand. At
the Castle they talk airily of being home by Christmas! If they be sailing
within twelve months they will be lucky, and at Government House Sir Alfred
Milner is beset with the difficulties of his very onerous position. For the
moment he takesI am glad to be able to say it, since I would have him upon the
side of sound common sensea somewhat depressed view of the
general outlook. Kimberley and Ramathlabama were his especial concerns when I
called there today, insomuch that they extend an especial invitation to the
mobility of a Boer commando, while it is quite beyond his powers to save them
from their fate. It seemed to me that he despairs of these towns in particular,
but I will withhold his remarks upon them until I myself have been there. Yet
it may be taken as granted that, should Sir Alfred Milner be concerned for
their immediate and eventual safety, the gravity of their situation is extreme,
pointing even to the closeness of the danger which would arise from a Boer
invasion into those areas.
But in this
hurried letter I am dealing with the colony, and singularly enough we have to
consider how our colonists will behave, what may be their attitude, and how
near are we to rebellion? It is of course an all-important question, and one
which, in relation to a British colony, is untoward. If I were asked to
localise the possible area of revolt I should decline, since the question be so
serious and infringes so much upon the life and existencethe central forcesof
the colony that it would be difficult, definitely and evenly, to demarcate any
zone of loyalty, as opposed to any area of disaffection, without unduly
trespassing upon the sentiments of less favoured districts. But I do think that
the possibilities of this question are enormous, emanating as it does from the
life teachings and doctrines of the people of the country, and however much we
try to draw a line between what constitutes due loyalty and what infringes the
spirit as well as the letter of the individual's allegiance, we must
unconsciously perpetrate much injustice either upon the one or upon the other
side of the question, which, owing to the dualistic
temperament and inclinations of no small majority of the people, it is
impossible to avoid, and which will have to be endured by individuals, loyal or
disloyal, as their penalty. The spirit of the Dutch pioneers still impregnates
much of Cape Colony; its presence south of the Orange Free State and in the
actual territory of the colony receiving direct support and sympathy by the
increasing numbers of the Dutch population in these African Republics; an
increase which, being unrestricted in its development, has spread far and wide
until it has created a partial exodus from the recognised centres of Dutch
influence and Dutch population into those areas from which the traces of the
earliest Dutch occupation were rapidly vanishingif they have not altogether
disappearedand which has been the medium of resuscitating a feeling of
sympathy and clanship which, augmented by still closer ties of commerce, has
promoted the functions of matrimony and friendship and gradually released a
current of feeling throughout the district which was avowedly Dutch, and,
equally avowedly, in silent and semi-subdued opposition to the instincts and
ideals of the Anglo-Saxon colonist. And it is against the rapid spread of this
feeling which we have to contend, much as we must guard against the conversion
of these prejudices into tacit support and effective co-operation with the
armed burghers of the sister Republics should their arms secure any initial
successes. With this danger in our midst, in itself an almost insurmountable
obstacle, no precaution which could render the safety of these districts the
less precarious should be omitted; and to effect thisand it is quite essential
to our temporal salvationmen and materials of war should be in readiness to
forestall, or, at least, to circumvent, the consummation of
the Boer operations. If we can accomplish even so little, it maybe possible to
prevent the no small proportion of the colonists discharging their obligations
to the Crown by combining with the Boer forces. To this end our efforts will
have to be seriously directed, and the sooner this simple fact is realised by
the authorities in South Africa as in London, the more convincing will the
scope and measures of our policy become. At present it is chimerical, and we
hesitate.
CHAPTER III The Camp, De Aar, Africa was
streaming past the dusty windows of the railway carriage, presenting an endless
spectacle of flat, depressed-looking country, with here and there a hut, here
and there a native. I am in the earliest stages of a journey which should lead
to Ramathlabama, and the command of Colonel Baden-Powell. Slowly and with much
effort the train drags itself along; the road is steep, the carriages hot and
uncomfortable, and there is nothing to attract attention, nothing to fill the
emptiness of the mind. I slept at intervals, to awaken at some roadside station
where fussy people were struggling to eat too much in too short a space of
time. There, for a moment, was the scamper of bustling, hurrying passengers,
who pushed and menaced one another in a thirsty rush to the refreshment room;
with a cloud of officers, orderlies, and troopers I stood apart, listless,
bored, and travel-stained, feebly interested, more feebly talking in
disconnected phrases, until, with shrill blasts of his whistle, the guard
signalled the departure of the train. Then off again, the
jerking, swaying flight of eighteen miles an hourthe rumbling monotony of
express speed which was conducive to drowsiness and nothing more. The landscape
faded in the distance, a raucous voice sang of 'Ome, while, in a monotonous
buzz of nothingness, I slept again.
The train
was slowly thrusting itself forward as, with much panting and purring and some
screaming, it cut the borders of the Great Karoo. Slowly the wheels clenched
the metals as the waggons rocked in a lullaby of motion, and the passengers
were fanned with draughts of scented air. The Great Karoo, lying in the shades
of evening, hearkening to the secret calling of mysterious voices, heeding not
the ravages of time, wearing majestically the massive dignity of its grandeur,
threw back its barriers of resistance to our intrusion and delighting our
senses with ever-changing and oft-recurring glimpses of its beauty. But the
picture faded with the passing of the train, the golden and crimson delights of
the overgrowing flowers gave place to a soulless expanse destitute of beauty.
I stopped at
De Aar, which is the junction where the Orange Free State and Transvaal lines
connect with the Cape Colony system. At De Aar I was anxious to observe the
press of traffic. From Cape Town for Kimberley, Borderside, Fourteen Streams,
and Mafeking, truck loads of horses and mules, waggon loads of general military
stores were passing northwards to the front. In the interval, there were
Imperial troops and men of the Cape Mounted Police. Indeed, the scene upon the
platform was animated by martial spirit. If the train from the south was loaded
with war material, the trains from the two Republics were packed
with fugitives, among whom were many men who, in the hour of necessity, will,
it is to be hoped, consider flight as the least satisfactory means of
procedure. However, no goods are going through to the two Republics from Cape
Colony, unless Mr. Schreiner has passed more ammunition over the Cape lines to
the Transvaal. But things are working more satisfactorily down in Cape Town
since it became known that the Cabinet would be discharged by the Governor,
unlessand to a discerning politician of the Bond, whose income depends upon
his salary from the House, a blank conveys many wholesome home truths.
Travelling,
even with the variety of emotion which the Karoo excites, is no great comfort
in South Africa. One lives in an atmosphere of dust and Keating's. If the
trains go no faster to Cairo when the rails be through, than they do to
Buluwayo, the steamers will still retain the monopoly of passenger traffic. It
takes a "week of Sundays" to reach railhead at Buluwayo, but there is
some small consideration in the fact that such a journey has been made. It will
become a feature in our Sabbatarian domesticity some day, and among railway
journeys at the present time it is unique. Where else do express trains arrive
several hours in advance of their scheduled time? Where else do goods trains
arrive several days late? These are but the manifold and maddening perplexities
of railway travelling in Africa. Yet if one kicks against the uncertainties of
the desert service, there is sure to be an Eliphaz somewhere upon the train,
whose philosophy being greater than his hurry, recognises that the element of
expedition, when his train does arrive, is greater than the
prospect of moving at all where no train comes. Time passes somehow on these
journeys, and the chance prospect of obtaining a good meal, when one is dead
certain to get a bad one, is enlivening. If it were not for such trifles, the
journey would have no interest. To look forward to luncheon and an afternoon
nap, to anticipate dinner and then digest it, makes the day run with pleasant
monotony into the night. And night is worth the inspection. The beds in the
train are comfortable enough, but the night is vested with misty beauty, and
its fascination woos the traveller from his rest. There is the roar of the
engine, the rumble of the carriages, the buzz of insects, and the faint rustle
of the night wind over the plains. Then, looking into the night, one falls
asleep, tired and stunned by the spectacle of the never-ending desert. But, in
the morning there comes a change. The stretches of the Karoo are past, and
breakfast at De Aar is in sight.
At De Aara
sea of tents with here and there a manthere begins the outward and visible
signs of preparation against the necessities of the coming struggle. There are
men and arms at De Aar and munitions of war, comprising the Yorkshire regiment,
a wing of the King's Own Light Infantry under Major Hunt, and a section of the
Seventh Field Company of Engineers under Lieutenant Wilson; but their numbers
are impossible, much as their supplies be limited and seriously insufficient;
and, as a consequence, I must not talk much about the interior linings of the
British camp which has sprung up at De Aar, and which, within a few days of
what must be the turning point of the present crisis, is so little able to cope
with the exigencies of the situation. It is a protective
measure, this little camp at the junction of the divergence in the railway
system of the colony, placed in its present situation to guarantee the safety
of the permanent way, and to ensure a modicum of safety to the traffic which is
crowding north over the points at the meeting of the rails. It is a gorgeous
piece of impudence; this minute establishment of British soldiers, and if it be
impressed with the might and majesty of our Imperial Empire, it is also beset
with the innumerable difficulties and trials which attend an isolated State.
We are
guarding the lines of communication between De Aar Junction and Norvals Pont,
the bridge across the Orange River which unites the territory of the Orange
Free State with the land of the Colony, between De Aar and the Camp at Orange
River, between De Aar and many miles to the south in the direction of Cape
Town. I believe that the practical influence of this particular unit extends so
far south as Beaufort West, where the custody and patrol of the line is handed over
to the care of the railway authorities, whose men are detailed to the
all-important duty of guarding the culverts and bridges of the system. The
greatest menace to our weakness in the present situation springs from the vast
lines of communication over which we must watch and which, although lying well
within our own borders, are endangered through the contributary sympathy of the
Dutch who, resident and settled within our own Colony, and boasting some sort
of idle observance of the obligations entailed upon them by such residence,
have seldom by word, and not at all in spirit, forsworn their entire and
cheerful assistance to the cause of the Transvaal. In any other campaign these
fatigues would be unnecessary, and the services of the
innumerable small detachments delegated to the duty would be released for more
active work, but with this war the safe maintenance of our lines of
communication will become a problem of most vital concern, and will be
necessarily imbued with absorbing interest. Moreover, whatever the nature of
the scheme for efficiently guarding these lines may be, due attention must be
paid and every consideration given to the superior mobility of the Boer forces
to that of our own troops, an advantage which will increase their facilities and
chances of success should they exert themselves to harass any particular
section of our inordinately long lines of communication.
With the
formation of a camp at De Aar, the trend which our campaign may assume becomes
more definite. De Aar is but a little removed from Norvals Pont, an important
bridge into the Orange Free State, which it is proposed to protect from the
immediate base of the troops at De Aar, or to hold altogether from an ultimate
base in the same direction at Colesberg. I propose to visit there before the
next mail departs, since it be rumoured here that the town of Colesberg has
been left entirely undefended by the military authorities, and that the end of
the bridge, remote from this border and within the limits of the Orange Free
State, is in the hands of an armed patrol from that Republic. When these things
happen, and De Aar becomes the centre of a big base camp, the position will
constitute another link in the chain of towns which are to be occupied by the
Imperial forces along the western and southern borders of the Orange Free
State, and whose occupation, should the troops arrive in time thus to execute
the initiative, indicates our probable line of advance to be from a number of points, so that General Joubert will be unable to
concentrate his troops before any one force. Upon our side, also, those
frontier detachments that may be in occupation of the towns, will harass
Transvaal and Free State borderside, suppress any rising within our own border
areas, and be entirely subsidiary to the main columns, which will be
simultaneously thrown forward from these three or four special points on the
same extreme line of progression.
Moreover,
this plan of operations accentuates the detached and especial character of the
Natal Field Force, restraining them to service in that colony, and restricting
their activities to that sphere. These troops will occupy Laing's Nek, the ten
thousand men already assembled in that Colony being reinforced before
hostilities are declared, until the Field Service footing of the Natal Field
Force will equal that of an army corps. The critical points in the present
situation are the western and eastern borders of the Transvaal, where the young
bloods from the backwoods are mostly gathered, and in their present state eminently
calculated to force the hand of Oom Paul into an impromptu declaration of
belligerency. The movements of the Natal forces will be confined for the moment
to holding Laing's Nek, maintaining communication with the permanent base at
Ladysmith and Pietermaritzburg, and in occupying Dundee, Colenso, and all such
towns as fall within the limits of its exterior lines.
From De Aar
a division will support the left flank of the advance of the First Army Corps,
divided, for purposes of more speedy concentration upon its ultimate base, into
two divisions, which will reunite at Burghersdorp, viâ the railways, to
Middelburg and Stormberg Junction from their immediate bases of disembarkation
at Port Elizabeth and East London. The total force will then advance in exterior
lines upon the Orange Free State, maintaining the railway system upon their
individual western flanks, so far as possible, as their individual lines of
communication.
While the
Second Army Corps supports the situation in Natal, it is hoped that our forces
in the Orange Free State border will either crush or drive the Boers back upon
their ulterior lines towards Bloemfontein, which, with the assistance of the De
Aar flanking column traversing the watershed of the Modder River in the
direction of Kimberley, and in possible co-operation with a force from that
base, they should be in a position to occupy. The capital will be held by the
De Aar and Kimberley divisions, upon whom will then fall the work of protecting
the lines of communication of the Southern Army Corps as it advances.
After
supporting De Aar, Kimberley, and the lines of communication with defensive
units, and maintaining a western column by employing the service of the
Mafeking force, the First Army Corps will begin the move upon Pretoria, in
collaboration with the Second (Natal) Army Corps, the former once again
advancing in twin columns from a mutual base. The western border will probably
be held from Kimberley to Fort Tuli by the forces composing the western column,
while a flying column is to be in readiness lest a wider area be given to the
theatre of war, and it become necessary to cross the Limpopo River. It would
appear, too, that there is also some possibility of a column moving from
Delagoa Bay. By this advance Pretoria becomes the objective of the campaign
after the occupation of the Orange Free State, but this depends to a great
extent upon the policy pursued by General Joubert and the
nature of the Natal operations. If the Boers give way and, acting upon interior
lines, fall back upon Pretoria, as General Jackson fell back upon Richmond in
1864-1865, the Transvaal capital will at once become the objective of the
British forces advancing upon exterior lines, the object of the campaign, once
the Transvaal has been invaded, being to force a battle upon the combined
forces of the Boers or to beset Pretoria. It will thus be seen that the theory
of the British advance favours the concentration of troops upon the Transvaal
and Orange Free State frontiers so that the Boer forces may be dislocated,
retaining the railways and their lines of communication and, leaving the actual
protection and pacification of the frontier to the local mounted police and to
the special service corps assisted by a few detachments of Imperial troops,
while no progressive movement will be made from any one point until the
exterior line, upon which the entire advance will be conducted, has been
thoroughly established. For the nonce extraordinary precautions are being taken
to conceal the movements of troops, and I have withheld from publication at
this moment much which could be given in support of the lines by which I have
suggested our advance will be governed. This plan of campaign reads very
prettily, but it seems to me, that we are making no allowances for possible
disasters, for possible defeats, for unavoidable delays, which, should they
occur, will hamper the mobility of our advance and restrict the celerity of our
movements to a great and most serious extent. Despite the fact that the massing
of troops at the selected points between De Aar and Mafeking, between Cape
Town, Port Elizabeth, East London, and the ultimate and interested bases will proceed almost immediately, the successful evolution of
our plans, the wisdom or foolishness of which are so soon to be put to the
test, demands much greater forces than are calculated to be available during
the next few weeks. At present, and until the latter days of October, the
combined strengths of the Regular and Irregular forces in South Africa will not
equal twenty thousand men, and yet we are dabbling with and making preparations
against a plan of campaign which requisitions two Army Corps at least, and will
probably require the services of not less than one hundred thousand men. I
dread to think of what may happen if war should come within a few days, but we
can do nothing but face what is a most intolerable position, and one which most
easily might have been avoided. The outlook in the absence of efficient men and
stores is indeed disheartening.
Since I
arrived upon the Orange Free State border I have omitted no opportunity to
discuss with the Boers the question of the war. A friendly Boer, hailing from
Utrecht, suggested the probable direction which the Boer plans, so far as they
concerned Natal, might assume, and while they appear to be feasible, they
reveal how curiously predominant among them is the idea that their arms will
again defeat the British troops. The Transvaal Boers from Vryheid and Utrecht
propose to attempt raids upon Natal and Zululand as the preliminaries to a rush
upon Maritzburg and the southern district of Natal, by Weenen and Umvoti;
Orange Free State Boers from the border areas will harass our soldiers as they
move towards Laing's Nek, and, thus drawing the attention of the British
troops, the road will be clear for those marching south on their attack upon the capital of Natal. All approaches to Laing's Nek upon the
Dutch side of the border, already alien, have been fortified, fourteen guns
being actually in position at the more important points. The British troops
soon after leaving Ladysmith will have the Transvaal Boers on one side, the
Free State Boers upon the other, and long before the Imperial troops can occupy
the extreme border a commando of Boers from Wakkerstroom will have concentrated
upon it. In the opinion of the Boers the effective occupation of Laing's Nek by
either force will decide the war. The Boers all seem convinced that they can
sweep the British forces from South Africa. The procedure of a campaign which
finds much favour in their eyes includes the rising of the Swazis, the Zulus
and the Basutos, who will be permitted to devastate Natal and as much of the
south as they can penetrate, and whom they claim will be easily stirred against
the Rooineks. The Boers will then feint with a small force upon the centre of
our military occupation, while their entire army marches down upon Port
Elizabeth, East London, or Cape Town, or proceeds by railway if they can secure
the lines. They will hold open no lines of communication, because by that time
Imperial arms will have been defeated, and it will only remain for President
Kruger to dictate peace from Cape Town.
This is
actually the opinion of a Boer who administers for the Transvaal Government an
important district, and who is under orders to proceed to the Natal border
without loss of time. Surely he must be consumed with delusion and impotent
fanaticism; nevertheless, educated Boers from the border side and living in the
Cape Colony, who have come to the camp to invite the officers to a cricket
match or some buck shooting, have all expressed this view.
At present I have not met the Boer who can conceive the defeat of his own
countrymen, while both Imperial and Republican Governments count upon the
assistance of the natives. Upon the other hand, however, I am informed that
there are many Boers who do not wish to fight, since they recognise the
futility of any effort which they can direct against British troops; but, at
the same time, should they be called out upon commando, there is no fear of
their declining to obey, while, so far as my inquiries go, they have failed to
elicit anything which would show the Boers to be moved by any view so eminently
sound as this would be.
CHAPTER IV The Camp, Orange River, Soldiers and
sandclouds of sand whirring and eddying through the air, drifting through
closed windows, piling in swift-mounting heaps against barred doors. That is
the camp here, stretching upon both sides of the railway line in orderly rows,
flanked upon either extremity by a ragged outspan of waggons, empty to-day but
soon creating work for numerous fatigue parties when the orders come to push
forward the supplies. At present it is only a small cluster of tents, many more
tents than menthis to confuse the friendly Boers who, visiting the railway
station refreshment bar for the purposes of espionage, stop to drink in an
effort to gauge the strength of the camp by counting the ranks of dirty white
tents which flap and quiver in the breezes. Such an impossible little camp, but
so impressed with the true spirit.
Colonel
Kincaid, R.E., commands at Orange River, and his force comprises a few
companies of the Loyal Lancashire Regiment, a troop or two of the Cape Police
District II., sections of the Field Company of Engineers, a composite field
battery and a few storesbut a general numerical
insufficiency of men and munitions. Major Jackson, with Major Coleridge,
commands the companies of the Loyal Lancashires that were detailed with him
from Kimberley, where his regiment lies, for duty at this camp. Surgeon-Major
O'Shanahan takes care of the field hospital which has been attached to the
camp, and Captain Mills, R.A., controls the artillery. It is a happy family,
this British camp in which the necessity for hard work is understood and the
members of whose circle willingly endure the difficulties and privations of
their situation. From the ends of the earth they have come together to be
dumped down upon the Orange River flats, where for many days they will remain
an important unit in the scheme of preparation, but one which stands alone and
aside from the general hurry and scurry of our belated movements. There is a
bridge across the Orange River at this point, and it is the duty of protecting
it and guaranteeing it from the attentions of the Boers, guarding its
approaches by cunningly contrived gun emplacements and enveloping its definite
security in a network of defensive measures, which is, for the time, the sole
objective of the various officers and detachments that compose Colonel
Kincaid's command.
The
conformation of the country abutting upon Orange River presents those composite
peculiarities of construction which contribute more generally to the setting of
the high veldt. Orange River is broken by hills and river-beds, dry courses
with rock-strewn banks, patches of sand, sparsely grassed and destitute of
bushes. The land to the west rolls smoothly to the watershed of the river,
breaking into bush and short rises about the banks of the stream. The water clatters among stones and rocks to the north-west,
leaving to the south-west and due west the same barren open sand flats. Upon
the east there is a slight contrast to the evenness of the pastureless country
which meets the sunset; but the fall of the land due south, south-east,
south-west, is unchanging, the compass shifting due east and north-east before
the abrupt and rugged lines of the country are exposed. Then, and then only,
does the face of the country reveal its uncouth and uncomfortable character.
East, whence the waters stream beneath the railway bridge, the watershed is
herring-backed, concealing, beneath rough folds of rising ground, stretches of
bush veldt and stony patches. High ridges debouch at right angles to the
stream, with uncertain contours and abrupt declivities; detached kopjes rise
from upon the face of the country, claiming classification with the ages around
them, but standing aloof with forbidding miena formidable menace to the chance
of successful storming. Parallel hills and ridges distinguish the hinterland of
this watershed so far inland as the areas of the Orange Free State, while the
broken and dangerous character of the country east-north-east, continuing until
the watershed of the Modder River, still further prolongates these disturbing
features. The valley of the river, within a mile from the stretch of flats
which rolls away from the bases of the hills, converges until the sides lie
within a few hundred yards of each other. There the stream rushes and roars
with some force, until the wider reaches of the plain give to the pent-up
waters a greater space of revolt. From the mouth of the valley the river
wanders with easy indifference across a broader course to the west; gathering
its volume from the seasons, and leaving in the hot weather
a margin of shining stones upon both sides of the river bed. The hills are in
pleasant contrast to the even tenour of the veldt, and the cool waters of the
river invite repose. Small game lurk within the cover of the scrub, mountain
duck haunt the mountain cataract; cattle roam across the land, snatching
mouthfuls of dry herbage, while just now the sides of the hills throw back the
echo of the military occupation, the noises of the camp, the calls of the
horses upon the picket lines, the heavy thudding of the picks, the shrill
rasping of the shovels in the places where the men are throwing up the
necessary field works.
Everywhere
is the spectacle of orderly bustle. The summits of the hills are crowned with
earthworks, brown lines of trenches traverse the valley, block houses command
the entrances of the bridge. These are the signs of the times, encompassed in
an unremitting rapidity of execution. Colonel Kincaid rides from point to
point, throwing advice here, praise there, and expressing general satisfaction
over the labours of his men, as the scheme of defences runs to its conclusion.
Out across the plain, upon Reservoir Hill, the sappers are constructing an
entrenched position under the direction of Captain Mills, R.A., and especially
designed to protect the water supply. Roads have been cut across the rear face
of the hill, a breastwork of stones and earth encircles the Reservoir, and gun
emplacements flank either extremity. It is a pretty work, carefully conceived,
skilfully constructed, commanding the portion of the camp, and sweeping the
approaches to the bridge. From the top of Reservoir Hill, no great eminence,
the surrounding country is easily inspected, and the more one scans and studies
the peculiarities of its formation, the more one becomes
impressed with the fact that it presents the gravest obstacles to the British
principles of military operations. A well-equipped and mobile force will hold
the hills for eternitybut God help the troops who are launched against these
awful kopjes which create the strength of such positions. The officers
commanding these detached units along this border have received instructions to
prepare extensive lines of fortifications round their bases, and at De Aar, as
at Orange River and elsewhere, these commands have been complied with, until
now the positions need only the service of some good artillery to be made
impregnable. When cables be at the disposal of a possible enemy, it is as well
to be reticent upon the cardinal weaknesses within our lines, but already there
are signs of the extreme haste with which the troops have been despatched to
the front. No unit would appear to be complete, despite the months of warning
in which there has been ample opportunity to prepare. Everything is rushed
through at the last, and although urgent orders be issued to make ready against
attack, no artillery is available for the purpose. Everything is obscured in
idle talk or deferred by empty promise, and the authorities appear to be
continuing a policy which gives to the Boers some justification of their hopes
of success. The Imperial authorities, in relying so much upon the moral effect
of their artillery, appear to forget that the better it is, the more important
the results it achieves; the more important the position to be defended, the
better it should be. The Boers lose nothing by possessing modern weapons of
defence. But with a wing only of the King's Own Light Infantry to occupy De
Aar, and four companies of the Loyal Lancashires to hold
Orange River, the need of strong artillery support is manifest. It has been
laid down that the proportion of guns to men is as near as possible three guns
to one thousand men, but this proportion must depend upon the nature of the
service upon which the force is to be employed, the topography of the theatre
of war and the quality of the troops. A force intended more for the occupation
of strong positions, must have a larger proportion of guns than an army
intended for offensive operations in the field. De Aar, as one base of operations
toward the lines of least resistance to the western, southern, and
south-eastern approaches to the Orange Free State, is even more important than
our position at Orange River, which is intended, in the event of any campaign,
to protect the railway bridge and the lines of communication with the north.
But at De Aar the lines of railway, which converge upon it, link Pretoria and
Bloemfontein to Cape Town, connect the north with the south, join Cape Town
with the south and south-east by a stretch of line almost parallel with the
southern border of the Orange Free State. Yet, so dilatory have been the
efforts of headquarters to obtain the necessary artillery, that, having reduced
South Africa to a condition of war, they split up between De Aar, Orange River,
and other defenceless, but important, strategic positions along the western
border, improvised field batteries drawn from any garrison lumber room which
came handy.
The
artillery at present upon this border is, as a consequence, the seven-pound
muzzle-loader which was obsolete when the passing generation of officers were
at the "shop." The inadequacy of the artillery is a matter of the
gravest concern, since, even if the troops at these places be sufficient to
police the disaffected areas, and to hold in check the local
disposition to rebel, in face of the weapons of precision with which the Boer
forces be armed, it would be impossible, should they move forward, for the
British artillery to maintain any position which was incumbent upon the
possession of good artillery. So well is this realised by our Intelligence
Department, that elaborate precautions are taken by that Bureau, as well as all
commanding officers, to prevent the enemy from discovering that, in its main
part, the strength of the batteries in opposition has been drawn from derelicts
in the garrison stores. These improvised field batteries might be of service in
maintaining the line of communication if any advance of British troops be made,
but as an actual factor in any defensive or offensive movements which the
forces may undertake, their restricted utility escapes all serious
consideration, and puts our present artillery almost at once out of action. The
physical configuration of the country urgently calls for the immediate despatch
of modern weapons, similar to those which the Sirdar used in his Soudan
campaign. In addition to this an exchange, piece by piece, between these
seven-pounder muzzle-loading monstrosities and the converted twelve-pounders,
breech-loaders and high-velocity quick firers, might be seasonably effected.
Five-inch howitzers, too, should also be sent forward. But the lack of reliable
artillery is scandalous, and the sooner that guns, of a calibre which is in a
true proportion to the importance of the positions which they will command,
arrive upon the scene, the less uncertain will be the results of any actual
contact between our forces in their present deplorable condition and those of
the African Republics with whom we are so soon to be at war.
The Camp, Kimberley, This usually
dull and dirty mining station has now been occupied by a small detachment of
British troops. The force arrived here from the camp at Orange River within the
week, and include the 1st Loyal North Lancashire, with its usual complement of
machine guns, No. 1 Section of the 7th Field Company of Royal Engineers, 23rd
Company of Garrison Artillery with 2·5 seven-pound muzzle-loaders on mountain
carriages (which are almost useless and certainly obsolete weapons), an
organised Army Medical Staff, and a transport most indifferently equipped if it
be intended for immediate and prolonged field service. Yet it is claimed that
nothing has been omitted which could make this force an imposing factor in the
chance of attack to which, from its exposed situation, the hapless Kimberley is
threatened. The Loyal Lancashire Regiment is in full strength, but the
battalions have been divided between the positions here and the camp just south
of the Orange River. It is, of course, doubtful whether much be gained by
splitting up our forces along the border into small units,
but at the present juncture, when so few troops be in the colony, this policy
is receiving its own justification. We are all urgently hoping for the arrival
of troops, since if there were a general advance of the Dutch troops, a
contingency not by any means altogether remote, upon any one of these
well-defined but indifferently manned places, the task of maintaining the
advanced lines would be a severe strain upon the efforts of the very limited
number of men that are available at each point. It is surely only within the
limits of the British Empire that a frontier line over 1,500 miles in extent
would be kept absolutely without any defensive measures; while it is Boer
activity during the past few weeks that has induced the Colonial authorities to
adopt their present precautions. Our troops are now more or less efficiently
prepared at certain points along this Western boundary, and, if no order has
yet come for their mobilisation, the steps necessary to effect it have all been
completed. At Kimberley, in the few days which have elapsed, wonders in the
preparation of the town's defences have been worked, and the alarm which caused
so much panic there before the arrival of the soldiers has now, in part,
subsided.
For many
hours before the arrival of the troops at Kimberley crowds of interested
spectators besieged the railway station and thronged the dusty thoroughfares of
the town. The Imperial men detrained very smartly to the sound of the bugle,
off-loading the guns and ammunition to the plaudits and delights of an admiring
crowd. The actual detraining took place at the Beaconsfield siding, two miles
from Kimberley, the men not making their camp in the town until the next
morning. For the time the transport was stored in the goods
sheds, and the troops arranged to bivouac beside the railway. The traffic
manager had prepared fires and boiling water before the men came, so that soon
after their arrival they were all served with dinner. The detailing of guards,
posting of sentries, and other evolutions incidental to open camp, permitted
Kimberley to indulge its taste for military pomp and vanities. Imperial troops
have not been here since two squadrons of the 11th Hussars passed through from
Mashonaland in November, 1890, and the presence of the troops has inspired the
townfolk with a magnificent appreciation of the gallant men who have come up
for their protection. It is hoped that special means will be taken to interest
the troops in the few hours which they have free from work. At present all
attention is being devoted to the construction of the defences of the town, to
the formation of adequate volunteer assistance, to the arrangement of a
complete system of alarm and rallying spots. Lieut.-Colonel Kekewich, in
command of the Imperial camp here, is anxious to assist the people in rifle
practice and field-firing; while the Diamond Fields Artillery and the De Beers
Artillery are to be called out for temporary service in conjunction with the
Imperial Artillery.
The rumour
that a Boer force is within the vicinity of Kimberley has done much to assist
in the speedy formation of local forces, and now that the train mules and
private bullock teams have been requisitioned for the Imperial service, there
is much solemn speculation upon the date of hostilities. The fact is that no
one here can, with any certainty, predict an hour. A shot anywhere will set the
borderside aflame. Moreover, the Boers are daily growing more impudent.
At Borderside, where the frontiers are barely eighty yards apart, a field
cornet and his men, who are patrolling their side of the line, greet the
pickets of the Cape Police who are stationed there with exulting menaces and
much display of rifles. But if the Dutch be thirsting in this fashion for our
blood, people at home can rest confident in the fact that there will be no
holding back upon the part of our men once the fun begins. Seldom has such a
determined and ferocious spirit animated any British force as that one which is
now stimulating the troops in South Africa. Every man is sick of the Cabinet's
delay, but they find consolation in the fact that the slow movement of the
Ministerial machine is undertaken to avoid any precipitation of the crisis before
the forces to be engaged have arrived upon the scene. Then it is every man's
ambition to take his own share in "whopping" Kruger.
I did not
hurry to leave Kimberley; but the place where the diamonds come from, the least
admirable of any town on earth, is no longer essential to my existence. It has
neither charm nor elegance, and it is sufficiently irregular in its
construction to be the most barbarous example of architecture in South Africa.
It greets the traveller enveloped in the haze of heat, and it bids him farewell
through a cloud of sand. But if one has once imagined what the appearance of
the mining town may be, let him give it a wide berth. It is a conglomerate
jumble of tin houses with dusty streets dedicated to modern industry, and
palpitating with the mere mechanical energy of native labour.
MAJOR LORD EDWARD CECIL, C.S.O.
Kimberley,
however, was a convenient immediate base between Orange River and Mafeking.
Around these two places rumour was spreading a well-woven net
of probabilities, intimate yet inherently impossible. War, bloody and fierce,
was alternately looming large in the horizon just above their situations, so
for the moment I tarried, watching the approach of impending battle from afar
off. It was a fine feeling, the constant thrill caused by the mere vividness of
martial rumours. They came from Buluwayo in the North, they came from Cape Town
in the South, they were brought daily from Bloemfontein; and if they gave
infinite zest to the passing hours, it was but the happenings of the hour that
they were doomed to be misbelieved. To listen to the gossip and rumours of
Headquarters at once became the most serious interest which our life contained
just now. Spies are seen everywhere. Within the shade of every shadow there is
said to lurk a Boer secret service agent, and, as a consequence, the attitude
of the public is one in which each figuratively lays a grimy finger to his nose
and breathes blasphemies in whispers to his confiding friend. The spy mania
which swept through France but a few weeks ago has appeared here, endowed with
magnificent vitality. At Mafeking it has dominated both the military and the
public, and, as an illustration, I append the official notice, on page 46, in
which many of these gentry are warned from the town by Lord Edward Cecil, Chief
Staff Officer to Colonel Baden-Powell.
NOTICE.
SPIES
There are in town today nine By order,
E. H. CECIL, Major, Mafeking,
7th Oct.,
1899.
THE NOTICE TO SPIES ISSUED BY COL. BADEN-POWELL.
Kimberley
has not yet gone so far as this notice, but a similar step is in serious
consideration, and the notice will soon be promulgated. What with spies, war
scares, reports of Boer invasion, and of active hostilities having commenced,
the Western border is living in a seethe of excitement, and appreciating the
crisis with but doubtful enjoyment, and many signs of such indisputable terror.
Kimberley has called forth its volunteers, who in name are
glorious, but in utility uncertain. The Town Guard, after fortifying itself
with much Dutch courage, has taken unto itself a weapon of precision of which
it knows nothing. Infantry and musketry drill have not existed for the town of
diamonds; they are for the Cape Police, for the Mounted Rifles, for Imperial
troops; but for those who are regular in their mining, but irregular in their
drill, there is none of it. These heroes shake with terror in private, but they
gnash their teeth with impotent valour in public; at heart they are rank
cowards, for the most part leaving to the few decently spirited the duties of
volunteer defence, and to the soldiery and constabulary the rigours of the
coming battle.
Nothing
perhaps has been so discreditable as the hurried flight of men from these towns
which are within the area of possible hostilities. It is perhaps different
where they belong to the Transvaal, but one would expect Englishmen, who have
seen their womenfolk to places of security, to proffer such service as could be
turned to account in these hours of emergency. It is an unpleasant fact to
reflect upon that the leaders of the general panic and consequent exodus from
these towns are mostly Britishers. From sheer force of numbers the
white-feathered brigade merits solicitous contempt.
Such is
Kimberley in the passing hour, and as I waited there to see whether the rumours
would crystallise into actualities, the word was passed round that three
commandos of the Boers were concentrating upon Mafeking. Heavens! how the
specials skittled! By horse and on foot, by cab and cart, they dashed to the
station. Lord! and the train had gone some hours! But, with the instinct of
true war-dogs, they fled in special expresses to the scene
where attack was threatened. They might have crawled from Kimberley to Mafeking
on hands and knees, for Boers may camp and Boers may trek, but war is still
afar off. Had we not travelled in such haste, the journey might have proved of
interest, but impatience made the time speed quickly, and the frontier posts
upon the road went by unnoticed. Just now these frontier stations are of public
interest. At Fourteen Streams, at Borderside, at Vryburg, Boer commandos have
laagered within a few yards of the frontier fence, and since human nature is
ever prone to politeness, it has become the daily fashion for Boer and
Britisher to swear at one another across the intervening wires. John Bosman, a
Borderside notoriety, implicated in a late rising of the natives against
Imperial authority, is in command of one hundred and fifty "cherubs,"
as the Boer captain dubs his gallant band. Matutinal and nocturnal greetings
have enabled the two forces to become acquainted with one another, and it is
held to be a sporting thing for men, from either force, to invade each other's
territory, inviting blasphemies and creating some excitement, since at
Borderside the friendly relations between the two countries be altogether
gainsaid.
CHAPTER VI The Camp, Mafeking, Mafeking
lies a day's journey by the train from Vryburg, and was once the terminus of
the Cape railway system pending its extension northwards. Just now it is the
embodiment of a fine Imperialism. There is the dignity of empire in the shape
of her Majesty's Imperial Commissioner, Major Gould Adams, C.B., C.M.G.; the
majesty of might, as suggested by Colonel Baden-Powell, of the Frontier Force;
by Colonel Hore, of the Protectorate Regiment; by Colonel Walford, of the
British South Africa Police; by Colonel Vyvyan, base commandant; and there are,
too, the various strengths attached to the respective commands. For weeks this
little place has been terrorised by Boer threats, until the presence of the
military has reassured them. Now, however, the veldt beyond the town has been
effectively occupied by the different commands, while within the town, or
beyond its outer walls, noise and bustle everywhere embody the grim reality of
war. It has not been possible to visit the different camps, in time for this
mail, since the exigencies of war have interfered with the
dispatch of the English letters from the more remote districts, and until the
country is more settled the night train service is altogether discontinued.
This week's mail is two days in advance of its usual fixture; but perhaps we
are fortunate, since the mail coach to Johannesburg has discontinued running,
its last journey from Mafeking being confined to taking back to the Transvaal
the few things which belonged to it in Mafeking. The supplementary coach was
behind, its harness was stored in sacks upon the top, and thus it made its
departure. It had better have remained at Mafeking, for no sooner had the coach
passed the border-line than its mules were commandeered for transport by order
of the Transvaal Government.
Mafeking has
entered into warlike preparations with commendable zeal, but in reality men are
uncertain whether to face the music or to skip with their women and children.
Ostensibly they wish to bear the brunt of an attack upon their town, but as
time wears on and the numbers of the Boer force concentrated upon the border
increase, the number of men available for actual volunteer service grows
beautifully less. Mines have been laid down, fortifications thrown up, the
volunteers and local ambulance services have been called out, and an armoured
train patrols the line. The staff officers are everywhere, a crowd of
journalists drifts about smothered beneath a variety of secret reports. Every
one wears a worried look, and still the expected does not happen. To break the
monotony of false alarms, of the sound of armed feet marching anywhere, of
bells by day and rockets by night, of irresponsible gossips chattering upon
subjects they do not understand, of the plague of locusts thick as fleas on
Margate Sands (a plague as great as the military bore)there
is lacking but one thingWAR. The
troops want it to prove their efficiency, the journalists demand it to justify
their existence, the countryside approves since it has sent the price of
foodstuffs and of native labour to a premium, the Boers want it as the first
step in that great scheme by which they hope to reduce London to ashes and
sweep the red-vests of Great Britain into complete oblivion.
But if the
path of glory lies in that direction for the Boer sharpshooter, Mafeking will
present him with a splendid spectacle just so soon as the curtain rises upon
the drama of mortal combat between Boer and Britisher. It is a straggling town
this Mafeking, and covers an area wider than its dignity demands. But should
Commandant Cronje, who is hovering upon the border at Louw's Farm with 6,000
Boers, come down, in that spirit of unctuous rectitude which epitomises the
Scripture and so distinguishes the Boers, a bill will be settled by this little
town against the man who, already the hero of many historical iniquities,
baulked Jameson of his raid.
Upon this
point Colonel Baden-Powell's notice to the inhabitants is instructive:
NOTICE.
DEFENCE MINES.
"The
inhabitants are warned that mines are being laid at various points outside the
town in connection with the defences. Their position will be marked, in order
to avoid accidents, by small red flags.
"Cattle herds and others should be warned accordingly.
"Mafeking:
Dated this 7th day of October, 1899."
If this
throws a sidelight upon the situation here, the second notice paints in the
background with gloomy shadows:
"Notice.It is considered desirable to
state to the inhabitants of Mafeking what is the situation up to date.
"Forces
of armed Boers are now massed upon the Natal and Bechuanaland Borders. Their
orders are not to cross the border until the British fire a shot, and as this
is not likely to occur, at least for some time, no immediate danger is to be
apprehended. At the same time a rumour of war in Natal or other false alarm might
cause the Boers upon our border to take action, and it is well to be prepared
for eventualities.
"It is
possible they might attempt to shell the town, and although every endeavour
will be made to provide shelter for the women and children, yet arrangements
could be made with the railway to move any of them to a place of safety if they
desire to go away from Mafeking, and it is suggested that some place on the
Transvaal border, such as Palapye Siding, or Francistown, might be more
suitable and less expensive places than the already crowded towns of the
colony. The men would, of course, remain to defend Mafeking, which, with its
present garrison and defences, will be easy to hold. Those desirous of leaving
should inform the Stationmaster, Mafeking, their number of
adults and children, class of accommodation required, and destination.
"Colonel Baden-Powell, "October
7th, Mafeking."
One turns
from this to learn that streets in the town are barricaded, that the houses are
sandbagged, that the railway is patrolled by an armour-plated train, which is
imposing if incapable of much resistance. It is fitted with Nordenfeldt and
Maxim quick-firing machine guns, and provided with a phonophone and an
acetylene searchlight which stands like a fiery dragon at one end of the car.
The train is in three parts, the engine being placed between two trucks. Each
of the vehicles is about thirty feet long, mounted on four pairs of wheels, and
is capable of holding sixty men. The entire train is covered over with ¾-inch
steel armour-plate over double iron rails, but at some recent trial the bullets
from Lee-Metfords and Martinis penetrated at 200 yards' range through all
thicknesses of armour.
Mafeking is
situated upon a rise about three hundred yards north of the Molopo River, and
from time to time its history has been associated with military enterprises. It
is not an unimportant town, and in that day when it has been connected by
railway with the Transvaal and its present system has been improved, its
commercial importance will receive material increase. The present railway,
which cuts through Mafeking in its journey to Buluwayo, is to the west of the
town, running north and south and crossing the Molopo River by an iron bridge,
at which point the trend of the railroad inclines to the west. To the west of
the railway again is the native stadt, extending to both
sides of the river, and commencing about half a mile from the railway. The
stadt extends to the west from the base of a rise beyond the bed of the river
which, at present, covers the exterior line of the western outposts. Near the
railway the ground slopes gradually for a considerable distance, while the
country around Mafeking is flat in general, but across the Molopo, to the south
and south-east, it commands the town, while the ground to the west of the stadt
commands the stadt. The native village rests upon this western face, and, owing
to the rough character of the country upon which the stadt lies, this native
town has received the name of "The Place among the Rocks." About a
mile from the town, and slightly east, there is an old fort called Cannon
Kopje, a hideous collection of stones, which is held by a detachment of the
British South Africa Police. It has an interior diameter of some thirty yards.
The native location lies between Cannon Kopje and the town, on the southern
bank of the river. The native stadt consists of Kaffir huts. Further east, and
between the native location and Cannon Kopje, on the northern bank of the
river, extend the brickfields, while a little further in the same direction is
MacMullan's Farm. Between the farm and the ground to the north-east is the
racecourse and the waterworks, which are connected by a pipe with The Springs,
a natural water-hole to the east of the town. Cannon Kopje is due south of the
town, the cemetery north, the native stadt west, the racecourse east. Between
these points there are a few buildings which serve as local landmarks. There is
the Convent to the north-east corner, Ellis's Corner south-east, the Pound
south-west, and the British South Africa Police Barracks west.
OUTPOST AND ENTRENCHMENTS, SOUTHERN FRONT.
The town of Mafeking has been built upon a rock, the centre of the town
being the market square. Buildings extend at all points from the square,
running into the veldt, showing an irregularity of design and no architectural
perfection. The town is principally composed of bungalows, built of mud-bricks,
with roofs of corrugated iron. The population in time of peace includes some 2,000
whites and some 6,000 natives. Just now there are perhaps 1,500 whites, 8,000
natives, the ordinary population of the native village being swelled by the
influx of some native refugees from the Transvaal. The perimeter of the
defences is between five and six miles. The armoured train protects the
north-west front. Between the railway on the north-west and the Convent, there
are some trenches, built with an eye to their future use. Upon the western and
eastern bases of the town there are further trenches, manned by the
Protectorate Regiment, the Town Guard, and other local volunteer corps. The
town was garrisoned by the Cape Police under Inspector Marsh and Inspector
Brown. Colonel Walford held Cannon Kopje with the British South Africa Police.
Colonel Hore commanded the Protectorate Regiment, which was scattered about the
defences of the town under its squadron officers. The western outposts were
entrusted to Major Godley, while in this direction there were also the Women's
Laager and the Refugee Laager in Hidden Hollow. To the south-west was Major
Godley's headquarters. Below this, and further to the west, was Captain Marsh's
post, upon the other side of which, along the eastern front of the town, there
are many forts in process of construction. There are De Koch's, Musson's,
Ellitson's Kraal, Early's Corner. These forts will be garrisoned by the Town Guard, and it is hoped that they will be provided with adequate
protection from the enemy's artillery. The Railway Volunteers garrisoned the
cemetery and controlled an advanced trench about eight hundred yards to the
front. In the meantime, every effort is being made to press forward the work of
constructing the defences, and every one appears to be willing to assist. The
aspect of the town is gradually changing, and in the little time that is left
to us we hope to ensconce ourselves behind something of an impregnable defence.
CHAPTER VII The Camp, Mafeking, Early this
morning a mounted patrol under Captain Lord Charles Bentinck reported the Boers
in strong position to the north of the town, and engaging them at once a
general fight ensued.
Colonel
Baden-Powell, upon receiving this information, instructed Captain Fitzclarence,
D Squadron Protectorate Regiment, which is commanded by Colonel Hore, to cover
the right flank of the armoured train, which had already moved out to support
the patrol of A squadron, and which, under the direction of Captain Williams,
British South Africa Police, drove the Boer artillery from two positions.
It may be
said that this movement began the more serious and certainly the more
determined portion of the engagement. Captain Fitzclarence was accompanied by
seventy men. Upon the termination of the fight he had twelve wounded, two dead,
and two others wounded so seriously that they since died. The firing-line at no
time contained more than two troops, who, in extended order,
and having seized the little cover which was available, hotly contested the
position against four hundred Boers. Upon the arrival of the squadron under
Captain Fitzclarence the Boers again began to fall back, and withdrawing their
right flank from its propinquity to the armoured train, they projected their
entire force well beyond the right flank of Captain Fitzclarence. The two
forces both in extended order, the one falling back upon the lines of a
position which had been carefully selected and which was admirably adapted to
their methods of fighting, the other pursuing, then prepared to settle matters
between themselves. Had Captain Fitzclarence but realised it, and had this
young officer not been so intrepid, he would have recognised in this Boer
movement the ruse by which they hoped to entice the "Red necks"
within range of a position from which they could be more effectually
surrounded. The motive in their movement to the rear was to secure the ample
protection which was offered to them by the low ridge covered with timber,
scrub, large masses of rock, and cut up by many little sluits, which extended
along the line of their retreat. When once the Boers had gained this ridge they
faced about, though it must not be imagined their retirement was in any way a
mad gallop. They fell back in as good order as our squadron advanced, but so
soon as they had lined up upon the ridge it could be seen how very greatly the
Boer detachment out-numbered the men opposed to them. Moreover, in a little
their artillery again spoke for itself, impressing the situation with still
greater gravity. When the Boer guns opened fire Captain Fitzclarence very
wisely availed himself of the shelter of three native huts, for the better
protection of the horses and any wounded that might come on.
Leaving his horses here, he advanced with his men in extended order, until he
had secured a line of front immediately adjacent to the Boers. Indeed, our
firing-line was at first only four hundred yards from the ridge; but, after a
short experience of such close quarters, it was found to be wiser to take up a
position some four hundred yards further off. The action of Captain
Fitzclarence in endeavouring to meet the Boer commando was one of those
inopportune acts of gallantry where loss, should the fight be successful, is
overlooked. Technically speaking, of course, the strategy was all at fault, and
it soon was seen how very serious the situation of Squadron D had become. By
good luck I had joined this squadron in its move to the front, and it was very
interesting to observe how a force, whose composite qualities were quite
unknown, showed itself to be worthy of the utmost respect, and a corps upon
which every reliance could be placed. Our men did not seem to mind the
formidable odds against which they contended. The only disconcerting thing at
the outset of the action being the position of the artillery on the Boer side,
but for some reason the Boers ceased their shell fire very shortly after the
action had begun. This again is another of those extraordinary blunders which
creep into most fighting. The Boers might have wiped Squadron D out of
existence by playing their nine-pounders upon our position. As it was, the Boer
commandant withdrew his artillery from the fight and relied solely upon his
rifles. From the little ridge, which, when our own firing-line had fallen back,
was barely five hundred yards distant, there came a shower of Mauser and
Martini bullets. The direction from which the fire came at
first suggested that the Boers were undecided as to the area of the position
which they would occupy, since shortly after the action began the enemy's line
of fire expanded until it extended beyond our front. For the moment the
firing-line developed, continuing to expand until it became evident that the
fire of their either flank was here most effectually enveloping the rear of our
position, and endangering our line of retreat as well as those who had been
sent to the improvised hospital in the native huts. But it was impossible to
avoid such a contingency with the numbers against which we had to contend.
Indeed, there was no point from which this enveloping movement could be
escaped, since the men with Captain Fitzclarence were already unduly extended.
The rifle fire was very heavy.
From the
ridge of the Boer position our complete formation and the situation of each
unit could be seen. It merely required a little sharpshooting, keen sight, and
sufficient energy to cause a disaster. Our men lay upon the ground seeking
cover where they could find it, but they had neither the trees, nor the
low-lying shrubs, nor the rocks, nor the sluits which had lent themselves to
the Boers' shelter. They simply lay, a determined body of men, individually
keen for distinction, and individually keen to put the Boers out of existence.
The firing became hot and so rapid that in a very short time the heavy drain
upon our ammunition was beginning to have effect. This again establishes the
position of D Squadron. There were no supplies, nor was there any artillery
support until too late. There was no ambulance, and no effective preparation
for retirement. The horses behind the huts, the men in the front, were each in
a position from which it certainly seemed that escape was
impossible. The Boers, upon the contrary, had a train of supplies and an
excellent line of cover for retreat.
The first
Boer shell killed two horses and reduced to ruins a hut from the group which
had given some protection to the wounded. The second shell fell wide,
exploding, with no effect, into a sand heap. Between the intervals of shelling,
the fire from the Boer Maxims whistled across the open spaces between the two
firing-lines with a discord which was altogether out of harmony with the
calmness and coolness of our men who, so soon as they had settled down to the
serious business of the engagement, did not seem at all to mind the firing.
Two cousins,
Corporal Walshe and Corporal Parland, Irishmen, were shot dead very soon after
the engagement opened, but the absence of ambulance arrangements prevented
those who were wounded in the advanced position from falling back to the rear.
With a quiet and unsuspected courage they just stopped where they were shot
until they could muster sufficient strength to drag themselves to the rear.
Each wounded form became, as it crawled along, the objective of the Boer rifle
fire, and no few of those who had been hit in action were hit again as they
made their way to the field hospital. Here Major Anderson, with whom I remained
from the moment of my arrival until we retiredwho told me afterwards that it
was a mere chance which caused him to accompany the squadron to the field,
since in the confusion and din no one had thought to give him his orderswas
busily dressing the men as they came in. The total area of the improvised
dressing station was perhaps half a dozen yards; into that crowded six or seven
horses, seven or eight wounded men, the Surgeon-Major, his
orderly, and all those others who made their way through the firing-line from
time to time. There seemed to be indescribable confusion in this little spot.
The wounded men lay between horses' legs, rested upon one another, crouched
against the walls of the huts, each recognising that the situation was one of
gravity, and endeavouring to assist so far as he was able; those who were not
too severely wounded helped to undress those who had been less fortunately hit,
and to each as he fell back from the firing-line to have his wounds dressed,
there was thrown a merry jest from his comrades. The nature of the wounds
created no little interest among the men, since it was the first time that any
one had seen the effect, upon human beings, of the Mauser bullets. One man as
he came back was advised not to sit down; another man, with extraordinary
coolness in seeing the nature of his wounds, which were seven, exclaimed with a
quaint blasphemy, that it still might be possible for him to enjoy the functions
of a married man. But if this were the scene at the hospital base, the scene at
our firing-line and at that upon the Boer side was very different. We possibly
occupied a line of front some eighty yards in extent, and as the Boers saw that
the hospital hut was becoming the centre of our position, so they extended
their lines until a direct cross fire from the extremities of the two flanks
were added to the direct fire from the centre; each man, therefore, was under a
converging fire from three distinct points, and had it not been that the Boers'
aim was not so good as their range our losses would have been much more serious
than has happily proved to be the case. We could see the Boers sitting in the
branches of the trees; we could see them crouching beneath bushes; we could detect them, from the fire of their rifles, in the
shelter of the rocks and in the depths of the sluits. It soon became the first
serious consideration with our men to try to hit them as they sat in the
branches of the trees, and it was because Private Wormald caught sight of a
piece of a paper as it dropped from a tree that he was able to shoot the
Dutchman who was known to have shot the two cousins. It was almost a unique
method of warfare. Anon and again our fellows enjoyed a little Boer potting
among the foliage of the trees. Here and there a body was seen to fall heavily
from a branch, or to spring up and fall heavily into a bush; that was as much
as we could gauge of the effect of our own handiwork. Those who were behind the
stones were possibly as safe as those who were in the sluits, but through the
lack of any effective support our shooting, good as it may have been, was not
sufficiently strong for us to maintain our position. If D Squadron were to save
itself from an unfortunate disaster it seemed that it would have to fall back.
The wounded men had come in so rapidly from the front, and ammunition had been
so heavily expended, that many of those situated upon the extreme flanks of our
position were completely without ammunition. In one case five men had no
ammunition left, and one volunteered to go to the rear to obtain some from
those who had been wounded, and were consequently out of action. He
successfully accomplished this errand, sustaining, however, such wounds as must
prove fatal.
Captain
Fitzclarence maintained his splendid isolation as long as possible, and just as
every one was wondering why, in the name of Heaven, no artillery had been sent
to support the squadron in a position it was never intended
to occupy, a gun detachment was seen to gallop into action on the extreme right
flank. Between our men and the gun perhaps a mile stretched, and when we could
see that they were preparing to fire, each for a brief moment stopped to
congratulate his fellow upon the succour at hand. In this they didn't think of
themselves, but they hoped that with the aid of the gun they might still be
able to maintain their position and give the enemy a hiding.
Suddenly a
cloud of smoke hung over the gun and a shell shrieked through the air. We rapidly
speculated upon the amount of damage it would make, when, with noisy force, it
burst among us. We thought at first that the shell had fallen short, and we
hoped the next would reach the enemy, but when Lieutenant Murchison, who was in
charge of the gun, dismissed his second shell, and it was so well directed as
to fall upon one of the three huts behind which we were sheltering, the
luckless position of D Squadron received unmerited but instantaneous
aggravation and aggrievement, since it was turning the tables with a vengeance
upon the enemy when the guns coming to our support set, forthwith, to shell us.
The menace which our own artillery had thus unconsciously become to one portion
of our wounded men about these huts had to be immediately removed, and I was
one of two who were permitted to carry intelligence of his mistake to the
officer in charge of the seven-pounder. In galloping across to the position of
the gun, the third shell thrown in this direction burst just past my horse's
head, the force of its wind almost lifting me from the saddle. The moment was
of interest, and I only realised my escape when, upon returning, I found the
base of the shell and my helmet lying quite close to each
other. When a new direction had been given to the guns, and their fire brought
to bear upon the position which the Boers occupied, the rifle fire from the
front of the ridge gradually slackened, while, under cover of the very
excellent work which this gun was executing, our men fell back upon the
hospital. Here an order had just arrived instructing Fitzclarence to send back
his wounded to the armoured train, those uninjured covering the movement. While
the squadron was engaged in completing this order, no shots were fired from the
position of the Boers, and we concluded that they also were engaged in
withdrawing at discretion. Captain Fitzclarence, Lieutenant Swinburne, and
myself were the last to leave the line of action, tailing off ourselves in the
same open order that the remainder of the squadron had been ordered to
preserve. As we retired Captain Fitzclarence put three wounded horses out of
their misery, leaving their bodies for the vultures that were already wheeling
in circles in the realms of space above us. These were the last shots fired in
this action, although through mistake, the Boers had fired upon the ambulance
train, mistaking it for a new instrument of destruction. Subsequently we heard
that the Boers buried their dead at Ramathlabama, and we also have heard that
all the houses in that place have been seized as accommodation for the 107
Boers who were wounded in the fight. These numbers may probably be exaggerated,
but there is no cause to doubt that their loss was much greater than ours,
since the proportion of their men to ours was greater than twelve to one.
Saturday thus initiated the Boer war along this frontier, and after the
morning's excitement the rest of the day passed without incident. Colonel Baden-Powell, Colonel Hore, and Colonel Walford, the
one as the colonel in command, the others as the commanding officers of the
Protectorate Regiment and the British South Africa Police, congratulated their
men upon the stand which they had made in the morning, and the courage which
they had displayed. Brevet-Major Lord Edward Cecil, C.S.O., described Captain
Fitzclarence's movement as brilliant. It is a question whether this movement
was not, at least, characterised by an equal amount of foolhardiness. However,
the officer himself showed such coolness in this his baptism of fire as to
deserve much congratulation upon his individual gallantry.
CHAPTER VIII The Camp, Mafeking, There was
some sign that the engagement of Saturday between the Protectorate troops and
the Boer forces investing Mafeking would have been the precursor of a series of
minor fights, which, if not of much importance in themselves, yet would have
been of interest and encouraging to the command generally.
As it
happens, however, the engagement of Saturday is the first, and, up to the present,
the only action of any importance, of any interest whatsoever, that has been
brought about between the two forces. General Cronje is evidently a man of some
humanity, though it is perhaps possible that the motives which direct his
present policy of exceeding gentleness towards the "Rooineken" that
he be besieging in Mafeking, aims at procuring for himself, when the inevitable
does come, terms perhaps not quite so extreme as would have been the case had
the Boer commandant not conducted his operations in accordance with the
articles of war.
During the
progress of the Sunday following the engagement at Five Mile
Bank, Commandant Cronje made a curiously sincere, but not altogether unhumorous
demand for our unconditional surrender. Colonel Baden-Powell very properly felt
he was unable to comply with any such demand, and with the exchange of notes of
a courteous character this incident closed.
During
Sunday the town put the finishing touches to the earthworks, lunettes, and to
the gun emplacements, which will form a more or less complete chain of
fortifications around the town. So much as possible, and so far as it lay
within the knowledge and experience of the Base Commandant, Colonel Vyvyen, and
Major Panzera, each distinct earthwork was made shell-proof.
From the
outside the town looks as if a series of gigantic mounds had been suddenly
created. At different points tiers of sandbags, several feet high, protect the
more exposed places, and to these again has been added, as an exterior facing,
banks of earth. Within such a position as I am now describing there is a deep
trench, which is of that depth which enables a man standing upright to fire
through loopholes between sacks of sand. Behind the trench is a low shelter of
deals with an upper covering of sandbags, intending to serve the garrison of
the fort as protection against shell fire.
To those
points which are exposed to the more direct attack of the enemy, a Maxim has
been detached or a seven-pounder emplaced. The Town Guard man these positions:
the work of patrolling, of forming Cossack posts, of maintaining the outer
lines of sentries, being undertaken by the Protectorate troops and the
Bechuanaland Rifles.
HEADQUARTERS, BOMB-PROOF SHELTER.
An elaborate
system of signals has been arranged. A red flag will fly
from Headquarters should the Boers be coming on, and an alarm will be rung in
the centre of the town. The streets have been barricaded with carts, and all
open places protected by traverses of a useful character. Mines have been
placed within and without the town, and an improvised field telegraph or the
telephone has been connected with every point which lies beyond the immediate
precincts of the defences. Every possible precaution that human ingenuity can
devise and the resources of the town supply for the protection of the place, is
in order.
Thus did
Mafeking prepare for the Boer bombardment, and upon the Monday following this
took place; but it is perhaps no exaggeration to say that nothing so ludicrous
in the history of modern warfare has been propagated as the gigantic joke which
Commandant Snyman, who directed the fire of the artillery, played off against
us that day. For many weeks we, along this frontier, had heard what the Boers
proposed to do once war should be declared. These forecasts had indeed been
sanguinary; the heads of the English people, had we believed in these rumours,
were to lie upon the veldt like the sand upon the sea shore.
The
bombardment as such was totally ineffective, and so curiously amateur, so
wholly experimental, as to move one to astonishment rather than derision. It
began at 9.15 a.m., and the first shell fell blind. The second and the third
also pitched short, but once the bombardment had been initiated, the feelings
of those who had dreaded such an event, more on account of their women and
children than on account of themselves, were unperturbed. When the shells began
to fall into the town it was found that they were of such poor
quality as to be incapable of any explosive force whatever. Judging from their
effect the area of damage was not three square feet.
Shortly
after the first few shells had been dropped the Boers found the range, and from
Signal Hill, their position to the east of the town, threw several shells at
the hospital and monastery. Strange as it may seem our most grievous cause of
complaint against the Boer plan of war is that they do not respect sufficiently
our Red Cross flag. Commandant Snyman had given us no time in which to remove
our women and children, and, as a consequence, we established somewhat
hurriedly a laager, in which they were confined and which it was hoped would be
beyond the fire of the Boer, since we afforded it the protection of the Red
Cross flag. This, so far as the laager was concerned, luckily proved to be the
case, since on the occasion that Commandant Cronje sent in to apologise for the
firing upon the Red Cross by his younger roughs during the Five Mile Bank
fight, Colonel Baden-Powell took the opportunity of pointing out to him the
precise significance of this flag, and the exact whereabouts of the buildings
which enjoined its protection. In the absence of direct evidence of the enemy's
intention upon this day, in the repugnance with which one would charge them
with wilful abuse of the Red Cross, it is good to believe that Colonel
Baden-Powell's letter was not communicated to Commandant Snyman previous to
this action, for from the moment that this officer opened the bombardment until
his artillery ceased fire for the day, each individual missile was thrown
directly across the hospital and monastery. It was unfortunate that these
buildings should have been in the line of fire, and it was a fact greatly to be
deplored that the hospital should be filled, at such a
moment, with women and wounded, the former magnanimously devoting themselves to
the work of looking after those who had been disabled in Saturday's engagement.
It was perhaps unavoidable, with such a line of fire, that the shells should
not drop upon the hospital and monastery. Fearing this as we did, the garrison
was filled with consternation when, so abruptly that we had scarcely realised
what had been the actual object of the nameless dread by which the camp was
suddenly depressed, the inevitable happened and we knew that a shell had burst
within the hospital itself. Had this shell been of the quality and explosive
character that we had been led to expect, one entire side of the hospital would
have been reduced to ruins; as it was, however, the area of destruction most
remote from the point of penetration was not three feet in circumference. A
little of the masonry was destroyed, a few boards of the floor ripped up, and
that was all. Dust and dirt, however, covered everything.
Two more
shells penetrated the same building in the course of the attackthe one burst
in the principal waiting-room, the other played havoc with the children's
dormitory. Fortunately no one was injured, and it was a happy omen for future
shelling that throughout the whole of the first bombardment no human life was
lost in Mafeking. There were no casualties, and three buildings, the hospital,
the monastery, and Riesle's Hotel, alone were struck. The dead comprised one
chicken. There were many narrow escapes. My horse was fastened to the
hitching-post outside Riesle's Hotel at the very moment that a shell burst
against the steps of the verandah, but this animal would seem to
enjoy a happy immunity from shell fire, since at the Five Mile Bank engagement
there was a shell which burst within three or four feet of him.
Our guns
made no return whatever to the fire of the Boers, beyond a chance shot which
exploded by accident. After this very ineffective and amusing bombardment had
continued for some hours the enemy ceased firing, and from their position only
2,000 yards from the town, and to which they had moved from Signal Hill, where
the attack had begun, the usual messenger, half herald, half spy, was
despatched to our lines. It has become quite a feature of the Boer operations
against Mafeking for them to enjoy at every few hours a cessation of hostilities
under a flag of truce, and, I regret to say, that these constant messages in
the middle of an action, from the Boer Commandant to Colonel Baden-Powell, are
sent with an ulterior motive. The Boer Commandants would appear to lack that
experience of the conditions of warfare which should enable them to perceive
the folly and futilityif not the guiltof such procedure as they have been
following since operations against this town began. It was, perhaps, as much
through our own ignorance of the character of the enemy whom we were fighting
as anything, that they secured any profitable information by these tactics,
since we had expected that they would observe the unwritten regulation which
restricts the progress of a flag of truce to a point half-way between the lines
of the two forces. Upon no occasion at this period in the investment did the
Boers recognise this custom, but securing cover where they could they crept
down to our lines under protection of the white flag. By these means they
secured valuable intelligence.
The Boer emissary was allowed safe conduct into our lines, and was
escorted by Captain Williams, of the British South Africa Police, who was in
command of the armoured train, and Lieutenant the Honourable Hanbury-Tracy of
Headquarters Staff, who had been sent out to meet him. The messenger was
conducted to Colonel Baden-Powell, who received through this medium a second
demand for unconditional surrender. Commandant Snyman presented his compliments
to Colonel Baden-Powell, and desired to know if, to save further bloodshed, we
would now surrender. Colonel Baden-Powell received this message with polite
astonishment, and while not telling the deputy of Commandant Snyman that his
shell fire had only spilt the blood of a fowl, and knocked small pieces out of
three buildings, replied, that so far as we were concerned, we had not yet
begun. While the Headquarters Staff were deliberating upon the reply to such a
momentous message, the messenger was regaled with beer and bread and cheese. He
was escorted back at 4.45 p.m., and for the time being shell fire ceased.
On Monday
the armoured train took up a position in advance of the town, and in such a
manner that it was completely sheltered from the Boer position. It so happened
that the Boer messenger came directly upon this train, which was patiently
waiting for the enemy's line of fire to be advanced a few hundred yards
further, before opening its artillery. The little ruse which we had so
carefully planned was thus forestalled, and to prevent further disclosures
being made the herald was therewith blindfolded. It was a strange spectacle to
see this Boer being brought through our lines with a somewhat soiled
handkerchief across his eyes. His flag of truce comprised three
handkerchiefs tied to a bamboo, and as he came forward it waved with a motion
in which fright played as great a part as dignity.
The Boer
Commandant had evidently determined to shell Mafeking from three positions, but
force of circumstances, and the undesirability of throwing up earthworks under
the telling fire which would have been poured into him from our own trenches,
prevented him bringing his heavy artillery into position. He had stormed
Mafeking from Signal Hill with a twelve-pound Krupp, but when he advanced into
a range of 2,000 yards he fell back upon a seven-pounder, and a nine-pound
high-velocity Krupp. These guns were quite unprotected by earthworks and could
be easily seen from the town. Indeed it was the possibility of their being put
out of action by our guns which instigated the Commandant to secure a cessation
of hostilities by despatching his messenger upon some fatuous errand to Colonel
Baden-Powell while he and his entire force busied themselves in erecting
breastworks about his field pieces.
The Boer
emissary arrived at 2.30 p.m., and no sooner had he been received by us than
the Boers began to work with pick and shovel, continuing their labours
throughout the conference. By the time that their herald had returned two
emplacements had been prepared and their locality partially concealed by a
quantity of small bushes and scrub with which they had been covered.
It may be
that Commandant Snyman was unaware of the breach of faith he was committing in
working upon his trenches under a flag of truce. It is our hope that this
should prove to be the case, since we would not willingly believe that the
Boers be so lost to the sense of fairness which should
underlie the provisions which prevail during any cessation of hostilities as to
promote a condition of truce for interests of their own. But should this be,
indeed, the extent of the ignorance of the Boer Commandant upon the conditions
governing war, let us trust that he may soon furbish up his knowledge upon
these especial points.
When the
messenger returned to his lines, the Boers proceeded to advance in force upon
the waterworks, and, driving in our outposts, they have since maintained a
control over our water supply. The town, therefore, is wholly without water
from this source, although we be not in any way frightened at the loss of the
springs, since many wells have been opened out and many promising springs have
been located within the radius of the town, some of which watered the troops of
the Warren expedition. When we consider that to the majority this is their
first experience of war, and that the length of the siege is unknown and more
than likely to be protracted, it must be admitted that Mafeking is bearing
itself wonderfully well. The few women and children who remained here show a
dauntless front, while the men are only too anxious, and indeed too willing, to
indulge in some sniping on their own account.
Nevertheless,
the position of Mafeking at the present moment is one which, if giving no cause
for alarm, is at least unsatisfactory. Our wires are still cut to north and
south. Our line is up, and all around us the Boers are supposed to be encamped,
yet as the days go on it is becoming harder and harder to realise that we are
seriously engaged in war, and we are more inclined to believe in the cheery optimism of Colonel Baden-Powell. It is very like some gigantic
picnic, although it may doubtless be food for disquieting reflection.
Occasionally we sleep out at night, and are in the trenches all day, but upon
the whole it is quite impossible to believe that we are engaged in repelling an
enemy who already are investing us.
To get away
from the hotels, to get more into contact with the spirit of the siege, I have
been camping out for some days at the most outlying position upon the west
facing of the town, but even by such means it is infinitely difficult to find
much that is instinctive with active and actual campaigning. We perform the
duties of a vedette, watching by day and night, sleeping at oddly-snatched
moments, ever ready, and straining our vision in wild efforts to find trace of
the foe. But it amounts to but little in the end.
Since Monday
we have seen small detachments of the Boers daily, we have even exchanged
outpost fire with them, while we have on three different occasions turned our
guns upon their position at the waterworks; but these occurrences are purely
incidental and not wholly relative to the main features of the situation. It
has become quite necessary for us to justify our own existence, and since there
be but such vague signs of war around us, this desire has become infinitely
more difficult of fulfilment. As the time passes we receive messages daily from
different units in the Boer commando to friends in Mafeking, which are
sometimes amicable, sometimes impudent in character; but to increase the irony
of our situation, if we be engaged in the press of battle at dawn, it is
certain that at dusk we shall be dining with no small degree of luxury at the
hotel.
At present there has been no misery, for there has been no war, and
apart from the five lives that have been lost already, Mafeking to-day is as it
was a month ago. It would seem as though this gigantic war, which so many
people have been urging upon the Government, in relation to the operations of
the enemy along this frontier may develop into a series of cattle raids by
armed Boers. But if there be little in the immediate situation to alarm us,
there is behind the rose and silver of the clouds a dark spot, a spot which
growing bigger, ever bigger as the days go by, implies that signs of the times
are not wanting to prove that our official optimism, forecasting the siege as
but of three weeks' duration, is based upon anything less secure than the
imaginings of a man who, knowing the hollowness of his words in his own heart,
seeks but to cheer the hearts of the garrison. There was little sign of
readiness in the Imperial troops, little to show that they can relieve Mafeking
before the year dies out in the birth of the closing twelve months of the
nineteenth century. But it were heresy to say so now. The idle singer of an
empty day dares not pronounce the denunciation of his country in her hour of
danger. Nevertheless, if Mafeking be not relieved before the Christmas season,
the hour of our existence will be an hour of travail, impressed with the echoes
of much suffering and saddened by the memories of many who will be dead. But
for the time we will ignore the gravity in our situation, mock at our splendid
isolation, our scanty resources, since to dwell too long upon the guilty
splendour of the naked truth is to beget an earnestness which will depress our
spirits, allowing us to read out the future of the siege in words of deadly
omen.
CHAPTER IX Mafeking, October 25th, 1899.
To-day is
the third day of the bombardment by which Commandant Cronje is attempting to
realise his threat of reducing Mafeking to ashes. Up to the present it has been
impossible to consider very seriously the attempt of the Boers to besiege
Mafeking. The earlier bombardment and the series of events which have occurred
during the interval have not augmented the gravity of the situation. The Boer
Commandant endeavoured to carry out his word by opening the second bombardment
of Mafeking upon the day which he had notified Colonel Baden-Powell. We had
been incredulous at the threat of the Boers to send to Pretoria for some siege
guns. Monday, therefore, was a day of some anxiety for us, and each was curious
to know what result the enemy's fire would produce. Upon this occasion,
however, the townsfolk had reckoned without taking into account the intentions
of Colonel Baden-Powell, and it was a very pleasant surprise to find that the
bombardment of Mafeking by the Boers had been converted into the bombardment of
the Boers by Mafeking. At a very early hour, two guns, which had been placed near the reservoir, opened fire upon the enemy's artillery in
position at the water springs. The artillery duel which was thus started
continued for some hours, and if it did not do much damage to either side it
made manifest to the Boers that the defences of Mafeking were not altogether at
their mercy. About noon, however, the Boers, who had been observed to place
some guns in position upon the south-west side of the town, threw shells at
Cannon Kopje. Here again, fortunately, no material damage was done.
Somewhat
early in the afternoon, the look-outs reported tremendous activity in the Boer
camp. Across the veldt, those who cared, might have seen the enemy engaged upon
some enormous earthwork, which the general consensus of opinion very quickly
determined to be the emplacements for the siege guns. They were about three
miles away from the town, and in a position different from that from which the
guns had shelled the kopje in the morning. The frequency with which shells had
exploded within the limits of Mafeking, had rendered the people somewhat
callous of the consequences, and despite an official warning which was issued
to the town, a large number of people stood discussing, in excited groups, the
value of this news, while no small proportion of the population had gathered
upon the west front to watch with their glasses the completion of the enemy's
earthworks. It was three miles across the veldt, a mere black shadow upon the
skyline, distinguished by its proximity to a local landmark, the "Jackal
Tree," where the Boers had intrenched their Creusot gun. It was not so
much that there were no other guns around us which had drawn the crowd, as the
morbid curiosity to see for themselves what perhaps in a few
hours they might never see again. At different points upon the eastern and
western heights the Boer guns had been stationed. To the south-east there was a
twelve-pounder at a very convenient range, and so placed as to act as a
flanking fire to the direct onslaught of "Big Ben." Upon the extreme
east there were two seven-pounders, one in position at the water springs, the
other covering the entire front of the town. Upon the west and to the north the
enemy had similarly placed their guns. There was a seven-pounder emplacement,
with a Nordenfeldt support due west, 1,400 yards from the native stadt. Below
that, and between it and the north, the Boers had a Maxim. It is, perhaps,
somewhat extraordinary that an enemy who has procured the best available
artillery advice, should proceed to attack the town in such a fashion, and much
of the failure which has distinguished the Boer bombardment is due to the fact
that, instead of concentrating their fire upon a series of given spots, they
have maintained simultaneous shelling from isolated points. As their shells
fell, the damage which they caused was scattered over a wide area, and confined
to a building here and there. Indeed, the greater portion of the shells had
merely ploughed up the streets. However, it was not to be confirmed that
afternoon. An hour after noon on the following day the alarm rang out from the
market place, the red flag was seen to fly from headquarters, and the
inhabitants were warned to take immediate cover. Within a few minutes of the
alarm, the proceedings for that day began, and the first shell thrown from the
Boer battery burst over our camp. Presently on the distant skyline a tremendous
cloud of smoke hurled itself into the air. The very foundations upon which Mafeking rests seemed to quiver, all curiosity was set at
rest, and there was no longer any doubt as to the nature of the new ordnance
which the Boers had with them. With a terrific impact the shell struck some
structures near the railway, and the flying fragments of steel spread over the
town, burying themselves in buildings, striking the veldt two miles distant,
creating a dust, a horrible confusion, and, an instant, terror throughout the
town. For the moment no one seemed to know what had happened, when the sudden
silence which had come upon the town was broken by the loud explosion of the
shell as it came in contact with some building. It was a scene of unique
interest, the rush of air, the roar of its flight, the final impact, and the
massive fragments of steel and iron which scattered in all directions, gave no
time for those who had been exposed, to realise the cause of the disturbance.
Much as people throng to the spot where some appalling catastrophe has
occurred, so, a minute after the shell exploded, people appeared from all
directions to run to the scene, and although the shell had caused no very great
damage, the noise which it had made, its unusual size and explosive force, did
not tend to pacify people. Many were convinced that Mafeking was doomed, and
although no loss of life occurred, there were few who did not think that their
days were numbered. In the course of the afternoon, after a rain of seven-and
nine-pound shells, the Boers opened with this gun again, and although happily
no loss of life occurred, the missile wrecked the rear of the Mafeking Hotel,
falling within a few feet of Mr. E. G. Parslow, the war correspondent of the Chronicle.
The force of the explosion hurled this gentleman upon a pile of wood, blew the
walls out of three rooms, set fire to a gas engine, and
effectually littered the yard of the hotel. With the curious inconsequence
which has marked the Boer proceedings in their investment of Mafeking, the
enemy threw no more of these heavier shells during the afternoon, contenting
themselves with discharging at odd moments those of lesser calibre.
The two
shells which had been fired during the afternoon gave the inhabitants of
Mafeking some little ground by which to judge the nature of the bombardment on
the morrow. After the cessation of hostilities word was passed round that the
two shells which had been launched at Mafeking were a 64lb. howitzer and a
94lb. breech-loading siege gun, and that it might be reckoned that these were
but the preliminary shots by which to measure the range. Officially it was
notified that every precaution must be taken to remain within the bomb-proof
shelters which the inhabitants of Mafeking had been advised to construct. It is
the presence of these pits which explains the slight loss of life that has
occurred during the Boer bombardment of Mafeking. Up to to-day the effect of
the terrible hail of shells which has poured into the town has been but a few
slight wounds. But there could be no doubt that the more serious fighting was
at last to take place, and it seemed to us only natural to expect a general
advance upon Mafeking in the morning. The night passed with every man sleeping
by his arms and at his post. The women and children had been removed to their
laager, the horses were picketed in the river-bed, and once again all
preparations for defence, and all those measures which had been taken to secure
immunity from shell fire were, for the last time, inspected. Firing began very
early on Wednesday morning, a gun detachment under
Lieutenant Murchison opening with a few shells from our position to the east of
the town. When the light had become clear the Boers brought their new siege
guns once more into play. We estimated at nightfall that the enemy must have
thrown rather more than two hundred shells into Mafeking, and if Mafeking be
saved for future bombardment its salvation lies in the fact that it is,
relatively speaking, little more than a collection of somewhat scattered houses
with tin roofs and mud walls. Any other form of building would have been shaken
to its foundations by the mere concussion of these bursting shells. Where
bricks would have fallen, mud walls simply threw down a cloud of dust. But if
Mafeking be still more or less intact, it can congratulate itself upon having
withstood a most determined and concentrated shell fire.
It is
difficult to defend the action of the Boers in laying upon Mafeking the burden
of these siege guns. We have heard no little from Commandant Cronje upon the
rules of warfare, as set out by the Geneva Convention, by time-honoured
practices, and by that sense of custom and courtesy which at the present day
still brings back some slight echo of the chivalry which distinguished the wars
in dead centuries. Nevertheless, there is a grim and ill-savoured travesty in
the Boer bombardment of this town. We do not complain, and we must be forgiven
if we find some ironical and melancholy interest attaching itself to our
situation. Three times has Colonel Baden-Powell pointed out to Commandant
Cronje the buildings which enjoy the immunity of the Red Cross flag, yet these
buildings are still deliberately made the objective of the Boer artillery;
twice have we received flags of truce from the Boers, ignoring altogether the
fact that they were but the clumsy subterfuge by which an
unprincipled enemy secured to itself some new and advantageous position for its
guns; then, as a crowning act of mercy, we have this Boer Commander, so blatant
a gentleman that he is by sheer force of his aggressive impudence worthy of our
attentions, training upon a defenceless town a 64lb. howitzer and a 94lb.
breech-loading siege gun, pieces whose action is relegated by these self-same
observances of civilised warfare to towns who possess, in the first place,
strong fortifications; in the second, masonry and concrete in their
construction.
After the
early morning hours had been whiled away Commandant Cronje made preparations
for a general advance upon the town under the protection of his cannon fire.
This was the moment which each of us had longed for. As the Boer advance seemed
to be concentrated upon the eastern side, I proceeded to the redan at De Koch's
Corner under Major Goold-Adams, and, later on, to another a little lower down
in the same quarter of the town under Captain Musson. At this time, any one who
can, is supposed to bear arms to defend our position, and, so as to more
completely identify themselves with the movement for protection of this place,
the correspondents that are here are each carrying their rifle and bandolier,
and taking up their stand in some one of the trenches. The correspondent of the Chronicle, Mr. E. G. Parslow, the correspondent for Reuter's, Mr. Vere
Stent, and myself, requested Captain Musson, a local dairy farmer, who has been
placed in charge of one of the redans upon the east front, to allow us to
assist him in the protection of his earthwork, and it was from there, as a
consequence, that I watched the bombardment of Mafeking, taking an active part
in any rifle practice which Captain Musson permitted to his
men. At Major Goold-Adams's there had been stationed a Maxim detachment, and it
was not long before its sharp rat-a-tat-tat was heard speaking to the enemy.
The warm reception which was accorded to the Boers from this redan soon began
to draw their fire. With "Big Ben" discharging its 94lb. shells in
every quarter of the town, and a 12-pounder from the north-west dropping
shrapnel with much discrimination over that quarter, the enemy upon the east
side soon followed the example so shown them and discharged shells at the
redans along their front. The range was singularly good, and in a very few
minutes shells were dropping over and in very close proximity to our two
redans. Between the two, and but a little removed from the line of fire, was
the building of the Dutch Reformed Church, and several of the shells intended
for the Maxim in Major Goold-Adams's fort found lodgment in its interior. The
front of this church had been penetrated in several places by the shells, when
the gun was slewed suddenly round upon the hospital and a shell fell in an
outhouse attached to the monastery with disastrous effect. When the smoke had
cleared away little was left of the building beyond a pile of smoking ruins.
Above Captain Musson's redan our untimely visitors constantly burst and
scattered, and we began to realise fully the value of the bomb-proof shelters.
In a little while, however, the Boers relaxed their shell fire, and beyond
maintaining sufficient fire to cover their advance, the heavier guns were for
the time silent. With this, the Boers began to open out in extended order upon
the east side of the town, advancing on our west to within 900 yards of our
defences. At each point the Boer advance was protected by the guns, the heavy
artillery to the south-west seeming to be the centre of a circle of armed men, who were advancing slowly upon this gallant
little town. At no time did the enemy, however, beyond the few upon the west
side, come within effective range of our rifles or our Maxims, contenting
themselves with taking up positions at 2,000 yards, and dealing out to us
prolonged rifle fire with some intermittent shelling. The firing was very
rapid, very general, and more or less impotent. Indeed their expenditure of
rifle ammunition and their extreme prodigality in shells was as much playing
into our hands as reaping them any advantage.
By night we reckoned
that over two hundred shells had been fired alone, though it was very doubtful
whether there be two hundred pounds worth of damage to credit to them. We have
had two men wounded, while here and there it is believed that certain of the
enemy received their quietus. Whether we beat them off or whether they lacked
the spirit to attack us it be impossible to determine, and it is enough to say
that, whatever may have been their intention, Mafeking remains as it was before
the first shot was fired. At night, after the attack, Colonel Baden-Powell
issued a general order congratulating his forces and the people in Mafeking
upon their calmness during the heavy fire to which they had been subjected.
As we are
situated at present, it is impossible for us to leave our trenches in order to
give battle to the enemy, but we are still buoyed up by the hope of being able
before long to take in our turn the offensive. In the meantime, most of us live
with our rifles in our hands, our bandoliers round our shoulders, existing upon
food of the roughest kind, peering over sandbags at the distant position of the
Boers, or crouching in the shell-proof trenches as their shells burst
overhead. There is much gravity in our isolated position; there is the danger
that, by good luck more than by skill, Mafeking may be reduced, but there is no
reason to fear that the determination and courage of the town will give way.
Above all else that may be calculated to endure.
CHAPTER X Mafeking, October 28th, 1899.
Last night
there occurred one of those isolated instances of gallantry by which the
British sustain their high reputation. For some days, in fact ever since the
Boers secured their siege guns from Pretoria, the enemy has been building a
circlet of trenches around Mafeking. At the least distance they are perhaps
2,500 yards, unhappily beyond the reach of our rifle and Maxim fire. We have
seen them lounging in their breastworks, we have seen them gathered around
their camp fires, and the inability of Mafeking to shake off these unwelcome
intruders has been daily a source of irritation. We have not, of course,
allowed them to enjoy, undisturbed, the seclusion of their own earthworks, and,
as a continual goad in their side, little expeditions have been despatched to make
night fearsome to our besetting foe.
Another of
these midnight sorties was undertaken last night, proving in itself to be the
most important move on our side since Captain Fitzclarence and his men engaged
the Boers two weeks ago. The same officer, 55 men of D Squadron Protectorate Regiment, with Lieutenant Murray and 25 men of the Cape Police,
were the prime movers in an attempt to rush the first line of earthworks of the
Boer position. Shortly after 11 o'clock Captain Fitzclarence, Lieutenant
Swinburne and their men started on the perilous undertaking. In the faint light
of the night we could see their figures from our own redans, silently hurrying
across the veldt. In the blue haze of the distance a black blur betokened the
position of the enemy, and it seemed that at any moment the hoarse challenge of
the Boer outpost would give the alarm. The men crept on in slightly extended
order, holding themselves in readiness for the supreme moment. Nearer, and yet
nearer, they drew to the Boer entrenchments. The silence was intense. The heavy
gloom, the mysterious noises of the veldt at night, the shadowy patches in the
bush, all seemed to heighten the tension of one's nerves. In a little while our
men were within a few yards of the enemy; then furtively each fixed his bayonet
to his rifle, and as the blades rang home upon their sockets the gallant band
raised a ringing cheer. Instantly the Boer position was galvanised into
activity, figures showed everywhere, shots rang out, men shouted, horses
stampeded, and the confusion which reigned supreme gave to our men one vital
moment in which to hurl themselves across the intervening space. Then there was
a loud crash, for, as it happened, many of our men were nearer the
entrenchments than had been anticipated, and their eager charge had
precipitated them upon some sheets of corrugated iron which the Boers had torn
from the grand stand of the racecourse for protection from the rain. With our
men upon the parapet of the trench, a few rapid volleys were fired into the enemy,
who, taken completely by surprise, were altogether
demoralised. Those in the first trenches seemed to have been petrified by
fright. Where they were, there they remained, stabbed with bayonet, knocked
senseless with the rifle's butt, or shot dead by the fire of their own men.
Captain Fitzclarence himself, with magnificent gallantry and swordsmanship,
killed four of the enemy with his sword, his men plying their bayonets
strenuously the while. This was the first trench, and as the fight grew hotter,
some little memory of their earlier boasts, inspired the Boers to make a stand.
They fought; they fought well. Their vast superiority in numbers did not enter
into their minds, since Commandant Botha told Lieutenant Moncrieff, who had
charge of the flag party that arranged for an armistice upon the following
morning, that he thought that at least a thousand men had been moved against
his position. The long line of front held by the enemy flashed fire from many
hundred rifles. Houses in the town caught the bullets, the low rises to the
east of the position threw back the echo of the rifle shots. Our men became the
centre of a hail of bullets. The Boers fired anywhere and everywhere, seeming
content if they could just load their rifles and release the trigger. Many thousands
of rounds of ammunition were expended in the confusion of the moment, the enemy
not even waiting to see at whom, or at what, they were aiming.
After the
first fury had been expended, our men charged at the bayonet point right across
the line of trenches. It was in this charge that the Boers lost most heavily.
So soon as the squadron reached the extremity of the Boer position they
retreated independently, their movement covered by the flanking fire of the
Cape Police, which added still further to the perplexities
of the enemy. The galling fire of the Cape Police disturbed them for some time
longer than was required in the actual retirement of the force.
The Boers
had been completely unnerved by the onslaught of the Protectorate men, and a
feature of the hours which elapsed between the final withdrawal of our force
from the scene of conflict, and the advent of dawn, was the heavy firing of the
enemy, who still continued discharging useless volleys into space. The loss to
us in this encounter had been 6 killed, 11 wounded, and two of our men taken
prisoners, but the gravity of the loss which the enemy sustained can be most
surely measured by the fact that, until a late hour this afternoon, they could
not find the spirit to resume the bombardment. It is said in camp here that one
hundred Boers will have reason to remember the charge of the Protectorate
Regiment.
The way in
which these respond to the duties asked of them is shown by their conduct
during this night attack. Nevertheless, when the enrolment of the Protectorate
Regiment began in August, 1899, any practical opinion upon the future value of
its individual units, as upon its possible mobility, was the merest hazard.
When Colonel Hore accepted the command of the regiment, and endeavoured, by
every means in his power, to promote its development, there were many who
expressed, after witnessing the preliminary parade of the recruits at
Ramathlabama Camp, the verdict that the short space of time which was allowed
to the officers to knock the squadrons into shape would not permit the men
attaining any proficiency whatsoever. In those early days of the war volunteers
came from near and far, from Johannesburg upon the one side, from Cape Town,
Port Elizabeth, and East London upon the other, to enlist in
the service of her Majesty. Time-expired men threw up their billets when the
opportunity presented itself of rejoining the colours, and while enlistment was
proceeding, the immediate vicinity of Ramathlabama and the roads from the
Transvaal into Mafeking presented the appearance of a district which has been
made the final destination of some mining rush. Pedestrians from the Transvaal
humping their swags, passengers by train from the south, well-to-do youngsters
from different parts of the Protectorate or from the back-lying areas of the
colony, all made their roads converge upon Mafeking. At that time, however,
when the work of enlisting was in its infancy, and the services of able-bodied
men were much required, the Colonial Government, at the instigation of Mr.
Schreiner, whose dubious policy was cheerfully endorsed by his colleagues,
refused to allow her Majesty's soldiers, who were in process of enlistment for
that special purpose, to afford Mafeking the moral value of their presence. No
sooner had word reached the ears of the Colonial Cabinet that the work of
recruiting was proceeding around Mafeking, than the recruiting officers were
ordered to withdraw immediately from the precincts of the colony so long as
they continued to act in a way which might give some possible offence to the
dear friend, guardian, and patron saint of Cape Colony, Paul Kruger. After a
very decorous and manly remonstrance, Colonel Hore withdrew his headquarters
and his men sixteen miles across the border to Ramathlabama Camp, from which
point the enlistment of the Protectorate Regiment was continued.
The
Protectorate Regiment is strictly an irregular soldiery, composed of men drawn
from every rank of African life, many of whom are gentle by
birth and education and possessed of no little means. In the ranks of the
regiment there are those who have been at the university and public schools;
there are also mechanics, miners, farm hands, and men who have known office
life. The nationalities of the men are as varied as their occupations in peace
times are diffuse. There are a few Americans, some Germans, and Norwegians,
although for the most part the regiment is British; as a whole, perhaps, it is
an ill-assorted assembly of adventurers, animated with the same love of
fighting and the glories of war, of lust and bloodshed which characterised the
lives of the buccaneers of old. In other days, and in other lands, they would
be sailing the sea for treasure, or combining in the quest for gold in some
hidden extremity of the world's surface. The prospect of free rations, of
uniform, and allowance of pocket money, was of course sufficient to draw a few;
but, as a body, the idler upon the farm, the bar-loafer from the town, and the
thoroughly incompetent are as distinguished by their absence, as the general
tone of the regiment is suffused with martial ardour. It is quite impossible to
treat these men with the cast-iron regulations which enthral the Imperial
soldier. He does not understand the petty exactions, the never-ending restraint
which would be imposed upon him had he accepted the conditions which govern and
regulate life in our army. He experiences and gives voice to a very genuine
aversion to fatigues of every description, and it has required the exercise of
much tact and no little personal persuasion to induce the men to become
reconciled to the labours of their calling. They have accepted with some
diffidence the fact that it is necessary for them to fulfil,
at the present moment, many irritating, but essentially important fatigues
which may not have entered into their original forecast of the duties which
would be allotted to them. They frequently indulge in outbursts of choice
expletives, at the expense of their non-commissioned officers, while they do
not hesitate to correct, or at least to argue about what they imagine to be
wrong in the execution of some order.
The
conditions under which these men were enrolled were supposed to admit those
only who could ride as well as shoot, and before the initial tests were applied
the standard of the regiment upon paper was exceptionally high. After the first
parade, however, it was seen that by far the great majority of the regiment was
incapable of managing their horses. Upon parade, when horses and men were put
through cavalry exercises, detached and riderless steeds would be seen
galloping and bucking in all directions. However, those who were unproficient
did not propose to allow their cattle to hold the mastery for any longer than
was absolutely necessary, and many was the tough fight fought to a bitter end
between the raw recruit and his unbroken, unmanageable mount. After many days
and an inordinate amount of hard work, the troop officers managed to lick their
men into a very presentable appearance until, with the beginning of the war,
the squadrons of the Protectorate Regiment were as capable and efficient a body
of irregular mounted infantry as any that had been enrolled by local movement
in South Africa. During the siege there has been no chance to continue those
early exercises, and it is not at all unlikely that when they become mounted
once more the former difficulties will again assert themselves and,
bearing this in mind, it is difficult to conclude that as a fighting force they
will not be more at home upon their feet than in the saddle, since they will
find their attentions occupied as much by the management of their steeds as
with the handling of their weapons.
If they be
not quite so mobile in the field as more experienced troops, there is no doubt
that they present a determined front to the fire of the enemy. They have a keen
relish for any preparation which appears to lead to some immediate collision,
while they profess an equally profound disgust at their enforced inactivity.
How these men might act if, through the smoke-filled air, they saw an array of
sparkling bayonets, or heard the serried ranks of hostile lines advancing to
the charge, it is impossible to say; but in the few fights which we have had
the personal element has been strong, and the individual courage high. We have
lacked the spectacle of the many-coloured, steel-edged columns impelled forward
by the impulse of some dominant power, with the dusty faces of the men, the
stumbling, sore-stricken feet, the gasping breath of the stragglers who tired,
dead beat, and thirsty, limp to the rear; but the play of human passion in our
little fighting force has not been absent. We have had the wager of life
against life, the angry, turbulent crash of fierce-blooded men, fighting under
the shadow of death, with their emotions strained as they struggled in the very
atmosphere of passion. And it has done us good to see how reliable the force
has been about which so much doubt existed. Unlike the Imperial service, these
irregular corps act as much for the unit as they do for the mass, as animated
by terror or by valour, by a fatal despair, or by a blooded triumph, they fight for an individual supremacy. That is the moment of
their triumph, and it is these splendid qualities of savage and physical
animalism which makes it more easy to treat them with a wider latitude than is
usual. Their magnificent hardihood, their splendid fighting gifts, their lurid
blasphemy, their admiration for officers who are men, their appalling
debauchery, gives to them the ideal setting of the rough but very gallant soldier
of fortune, who, scorning his enemy and hating a retreat, has played so
omnipotent a part in the history of the universe.
CHAPTER XI CANNON KOPJE
Mafeking, October 31st, 1899.
Cannon Kopje
is in itself a hideous cluster of stones, perched upon a rocky ridge, which
commands the town, a mile across the veldt. It is impossible to conceive any
more positive death-trap than that which was contained in this kopje, and
whatever may have been the determining element in its original construction, it
is infinitely to be regretted that the possibilities of its being under shell
fire were never very seriously contemplated. It was thrown up during the Warren
expedition, and much as these things go, was neither removed nor replaced until
Monday's bombardment established its complete uselessness under shell fire, and
the folly of which Colonel Baden-Powell was guilty in leaving it unprotected.
It is too late to say much now, but we have paid a heavy price for our neglect
and carelessness. We found it here when we came; we put men into it, we are
maintaining men there, and it is essential to the safety of our town that we
should still hold it. Since the action an effort has been made to improve it; a
splinter-proof shelter has been thrown across the trench, and traverses have
been thrown out, but the work of the past few days has
perhaps prepared the kopje for further shelling at the enemy's convenience. As
a pièce de résistance in the defence of Mafeking, Cannon Kopje is the
most strategically important position near Mafeking, and we may reckon that, at
the moment when these wretched shepherds who are besieging us, secure this
fort, to Mafeking itself there remains but a few hours.
Colonel
Walford had under his command at the fort forty-four men with a Maxim detachment
from the Protectorate Regiment. The fairest estimate of the men against him
would place the Boer forces at no less than eight hundred with four guns.
Sunday night, the look-out from Cannon Kopje saw a body of Boers making their
way to a point somewhat nearer the town than had hitherto been their custom,
and our expectations having been aroused by this movement we were inclined to
believe that the enemy might attack upon the following morning. Our
anticipations were further grounded upon the fact that the Boers to the
south-west of the town, had by no means despised the claims of Cannon Kopje
upon their attentions, and to every three shells which their guns had thrown
into the town during the days which the siege had lasted, one, in a proportion
of one in three, had been fired at Cannon Kopje. It has gradually come to be
considered, therefore, that Cannon Kopje was a point against which the Boers
would, sooner or later, direct an attack, since its capture was necessary to
the successful execution of any general movement against the town.
CANNON KOPJE.
The
detachment of Police, who formed the garrison at Cannon Kopje, upon this day
performed a most brilliant service for the town by their
determined and gallant stand. Perhaps in war more than in anything else, chance
is a greater arbiter than we like to consider, and if it had not been for the
chance attack against Cannon Kopje, which resulted in the defeat of the Boer
forces, it is not improbable that Mafeking itself would have been invaded by
the enemy. The subjugation of this point, in reality the turning point in the
siege, was, however, of vital concern to Commandant Cronje, since it had been
his intention to bombard the south-east portion of the town, and to carry it
with a large force which he had assembled during the night in the adjacent
valley of the Molopo River. When day had dawned, the look-out from Cannon Kopje
had already reported to Colonel Walford that there was unusual activity in the
Boer camp; at the moment this was stirring news, and indeed the fatigues for
the night had been barely dismissed when an experimental shell from the Boer
artillery to test the range, opened the action. During the night, and about the
close of Sunday, the enemy's artillery had taken up their position, and as the
grey of dawn ushered in the fatal day, a large force of Boers moved out from
their laager and occupied any point by which they might command the area of the
fort. It seemed to me, as I witnessed their disposition, that at least a third
of the forces before Mafeking had been concentrated upon Cannon Kopje, and if
so great a tragedy had not attended the action, we could have afforded to laugh
at the efforts of an enemy so hopelessly incompetent as the Boer force has
proved itself to be. Against a mere gun emplacement and forty-four men, shell
fire from four guns was directed, and the services of eight hundred men
utilised. In the extreme west there was "Big Ben"
and a seven-pounder; in the extreme east there was a twelve-pounder. Within a
circle from these two points, and within effective range, a seven-pounder and
quick-firing Maxim-Nordenfeldt had been stationed. The big gun took no part at
all in this attack upon the kopje, but at every moment that the enemy's shell
fire lapsed, the Boer marksmen opened with their Mauser rifles. Their rifle
fire stretched from the extremities of either flank and enfiladed the interior
trenches of the kopje. Nothing perhaps in the history of their operations along
this frontier, was so calculated to prove successful as the Boer attack upon
Cannon Kopje. They had the guns, the men, and they held all commanding points,
while they themselves were snugly ensconced behind cover almost impervious to
shell fire. With these advantages it would seem morally impossible that
forty-four men could withstand the unceasing stream of shells, the mist of
bullets, which comprised the zone of fire of which the kopje was the centre.
Had these men wavered, such a thing is easy to explain; had they fallen back
upon the town, their movement would have been in order. But by preference they
stopped at their posts, the mark for every Boer rifle, the objective of the
enemy's shell fire, until so great had been our execution upon the enemy that
the Boers themselves proclaimed an armistice under the protection of the Red
Cross flag. When this was decreed one-fourth of the detachment in the kopje
were out of action, and eight of these were killed. But the lamentable list of
fatalities had been piled up only at great cost to the enemy, since around the
circle of the fort, and not four hundred yards away, we could see the Boer
ambulances picking up their dead and wounded. It has been
stated that they lost one hundred men, and that a further fifty were seriously
wounded, but this is preposterous; while if we err at all towards our foe it is
in the computation of the losses which we claim to have inflicted upon them. It
is almost impossible to kill a Dutchman on the field, since they are as
pertinacious and industrious as beetles in seeking cover. We saw two waggon
loads pass from their firing-line to their laager, but I am inclined to doubt
if we killed and wounded forty of the enemy. To have scored that number in the
face of the most remarkable fusilade of bullet and shell which was directed
against the fort is a wonderful feat, since it should not be forgotten that to
every shot which we fired, there were at least four hundred barrels emptied at
our marksmen in return. Such was the unfortunate construction of Cannon Kopje,
however, and the gross neglect with which it has been treated to prepare for
the present war, that it was not possible for our men to use their loopholes,
and as it was most necessary to hold the fort each man who fired stood to his
feet, and exposed himself above the breastwork to the full force of the Boer
rifles. The enemy had carried out their movement so well, that under cover of
their guns, and the great annoyance of their enfilading fire, they had made it
almost impossible for the defenders of the fort to pay much attention to their
advance. They compelled men to take cover, since if anything were seen to move
behind the parapet of the fort, the Boers swept the area of the position with
most cruel and deadly volleys. But cover was sought only at intervals, and when
the hail of shells became too tempestuous, since the brave little garrison were
impressed with a courage which scorned the fire which was
turned upon them. When they manned the defences and maintained a sturdy front
the Boers were nonplussed. They had expected to carry the position whereas they
were losing men more rapidly than they were killing them. We fired by six, we
fired independently, and whenever it was possible, the Maxim swept the front of
the enemy, but, relatively speaking, nothing could prevail against the Boer
numbers. It was easy enough to hold them in check, since the first
well-directed volley made them fall back some few yards, but the heavy shell
fire would sooner or later have told its tale. It had already claimed the
majority of those who were hit, since if the shells did not burst and strike
some one of those who were lying near, they splintered upon the stones which
composed the defences of the fort and these splintered in their turn, coming
into contact with any one who was crouching behind them for shelter. Cannon
Kopje in itself was a terrible lesson; but it was also a magnificent example of
gallant conduct in the field. Captain the Hon. D. Marsham who was killed, and
Captain Charles Alexander Kerr Pechell, who died in the course of the morning
from wounds received, were individually setting as fine an object lesson to
their men as could be conceived, yet it must not be imagined that the standard
of their bravery was much finer or much greater than that of their comrades.
Colonel Walford and Colonel Baden-Powell have each expressed their high
appreciation of the conduct of the men who survived the attack, and although,
as befits their rank, the example of the officers was admirable, it was no
better in reality than the action of the men over whom they were commanding.
Captain Marsham was struck by a rifle bullet in turning to render some
assistance to a wounded comrade. As he attempted to do this
a second bullet passed through his chest, and a moment later he was dead, just
as a third bullet passed through his shoulder. It was as fine a death as any
soldier could perhaps have chosen, and it had the crowning mercy of being
instantaneous.
Captain
Pechell was busying himself in directing the rifle fire from the fort, and
thereby directly drew the attention of the enemy. He, with a detachment of six
men, ranged up from time to time, and picked off the enemy with well-aimed
volleys. They had taken up their position behind the eastern wing of the kopje,
engaging a body of the enemy whose flank fire enfiladed our position. The first
shell which came at these six men fell short, and the second and the third
bursting in the same place, scattered the outer covering of the breastwork.
Pechell ordered his men to retire from the direct line of shell fire, when just
as they were shifting their position a shell struck the stone parapet, and
burst among them. Private Burrows was killed at once, just as he had been
admiring the shooting of a comrade. Sergeant-Major Upton and Captain Pechell
received some terrible injuries; poor Pechell died of injury extending from the
thigh to the shoulder. No one regrets, so much as his comrades, Captain
Pechell's gallant act, since had he not been endowed with most magnificent
courage he would have preserved discretion in the method by which he exposed
himself to the enemy, and by the death of these two officers, Captain Marsham
and Captain Pechell, her Majesty loses two officers of exceptional promise and
soldierly qualifications.
The
casualties of this action alone were eight killed and three
wounded, four being killed upon the spot, four dying of their wounds within
twelve hours of the action. Captain Marsham, Sergeant-Major Curnihan, Private
Burrows, and Private Martin were killed in the fort; Captain Pechell,
Sergeant-Major Upton, Private Nicholas and Private Lloyd died of wounds;
Sergeant-Major Butler, Corporal Cooke and Private Newton were wounded.
That night
the garrison paid its farewell duties to those gallant men who were killed at
Cannon Kopje. Their interment took place at six o'clock, and as we followed in
the wake of the cortège we felt the shock which brought home to each of
us the bitter fact that we should henceforth know them no more. The attack of
the Boers upon Cannon Kopje had been so sudden, so utterly unexpected, and the
manner in which these men of the British South Africa Police had met their
death, had been so valorous that the sympathies of the entire town had been
most keenly aroused and overcome by the appalling swiftness of the tragedy;
there was no one who did not feel that in some way he was himself a mourner
even though the men who had been killed were quite indifferent to him.
Doubtless before the siege terminates we shall become accustomed to our
situation, and realise that after all it is but the natural issue to a condition
of belligerency that no one can quite tell what sorrow the day will bring
forth. But at present these tragedies come upon us with a vivid freshness which
is almost unnerving and which stimulate disquietening fancies in the minds even
of the most callous.
The cemetery
here is in close proximity to the Boer lines, and lies to the north of the
town. It is a small enclosure banked by white rough stones, and set amid green trees, where gentle fragrance imparts a balminess to the
breeze. It is as quiet and peaceful, by force of contrast to the dried-up veldt
around, as some oasis in the desert. There is a winding path from the hospital
to the cemetery; a road which at the present moment is flanked in two places by
the forts of the Railway Division, and kept well defined by the footsteps of
those who bear their burdens to the tomb. Since the siege began we have lost
twenty-five, and with one engagement following rapidly upon another, nightfall
usually ushers in a scene in which a small body of men may be seen gathered
round an open grave, waiting irresolutely to take some share in the rites of
the burial service. We paced slowly and solemnly along this veldt track,
depressed not so much by the fate which had befallen them, as by the hideous
realism with which the appalling uncertainty of war had been brought home to
us. In the darkness of the evening we could see across the veldt the fires of
the enemy's position, and as the cortège wound its way from the hospital
we marched to the boom of the Boer artillery, while passing bullets sang the
notes of our evening hymn above our heads, and dropped about us in the sand.
Along the eastern front of the town as it lay behind us, an occasional blaze of
light in the sky told us where the shells of the enemy were bursting, and to
many came the thought that perhaps even of those who had remained to do their
duty in the trenches, there were some who, less fortunate than others, might
have already kept their last vigils. In time we reached the grave side, then as
we gathered round the open spaces which had been so quickly prepared, those who
felt their loss the keenest, those who had been comrades and close friends of
the killed, paid their last homage to their memory by
placing some little trinket, some slight token of personal friendship and
affection, upon the winding sheet. At this juncture, when war is all around us,
when every able-bodied man is standing to his arms, it is not possible to
provide the dead with anything better than a simple sheet. The men who fall in
these days are interred in their blood-stained uniforms, since there be no time
in which to dress their bodies. Those upon whom the funeral service was about
to be read lay in two waggons, silent shrouded witnesses to the fleeting vanity
which attends all heroes. Around the entrance to the cemetery the officers of
the staff, the commanding officers of the outposts, representatives of every
corps and every troop had foregathered, following closely upon the heels of
those who, bearing the grim burdens upon their shoulders epitomised in their
action the horrors of war. It seemed as we stood there waiting, listening to
the solemn words of the service, punctuated now and then as they were, by the
screams of shells, by the angry snap of the Mauser, and the droning of the
Martini bullets, that these men who were now dead had achieved the full honour
of their calling. Indeed, many were there who would have given gladly their own
lives in exchange for that of their friend, while there was not one who did not
feel that the manner in which their end had come to them was impressed with all
that was most noble.
For a moment
after the service had concluded, we stood listening to the strains of the Last
Call. As its solemn notes died away, and we retraced our steps to the various
trenches and earthworks which, for the moment, gave us shelter, we little
imagined that within a few hours, those of us who were correspondents would follow the body of one from amongst ourselves once more
upon this road. The following night Lieutenant Murchison, who was in charge of
the guns, wilfully shot with his revolver Mr. E. G. Parslow, war correspondent
of the London Daily Chronicle. The horror of such a crime still hangs
over us, and is not in any way diminished by the fact that an officer who had
already distinguished himself by his career, should now be awaiting the verdict
of a Field Court Martial upon the gravest charge in the criminal calendar. Poor
Parslow had endeared himself to everybody by the genial sympathy which he
extended to those who were themselves in trouble. He had won the admiration of
many by the calmness with which he conducted himself under the heaviest fire.
CHAPTER XII A RECONNAISSANCE
Mafeking, November 7th, 1899.
A short
canter from Mafeking across the sloping expanse of the veldt and the interior
lines of its western defences lie before one. It can be said that Cannon Kopje
to the south-west and Fort Miller to the north-west are the two most outlying
extremities of the outposts on this front. Between them there is an almost
unbroken chain of earthworks, manned by detachments from squadrons of the
Protectorate Regiment, from the British South Africa Police, from the Cape
Police, and even from the Native stadt. These men live the lives of soldiers
whose every moment is engaged in watching a foe that might at any opportunity
which is given them charge down upon our lines. Unlike the Boers, we do not
despise the native interests, and much of the weakness of our position emanates
from the fact that we have incorporated within the mystic circle of our armed
defence the most outlying areas of the native reserve. These, indeed, can very
properly be considered the exterior lines of the western outposts. It would
have been a very simple thing for Colonel Baden-Powell to
have ordered the destruction of the Native stadt, compelling its inhabitants to
seek what protection they could from the inclemency of the elements, from a
benign Providence, and the rapacious Boer. Mafeking, without the Native stadt,
could have been much more easily defended, since the base of the slopes, across
which our advanced trenches now extend, would have been defended from the
ridges of the acclivities which rise from them. This would have given to the
advanced outposts some commanding heights from which the western plains could
have been more easily swept. As it is, however, the policy which Colonel
Baden-Powell is adopting towards the native tribe, whose huts were here many
generations before white men ever set their feet in this part of the country,
is one which extends to them the same Imperial protection as he has extended to
the colonists in Mafeking. Where the Native stadt had been included in any
portion of the defences, the Baralongs have been assisted to defend, and have
been instructed in the means by which they might secure immunity for themselves
and for their stadt.
The
entrenchments of the Boers rise like mole-hills from the surface of the plain,
although there is a curious regard for what has been humorously termed
"three mile limit." The valley of the Molopo River sets a background
to the Boer position, the placid waters of the stream wind through their lines,
while their chief laagers have been constructed upon the ridges of its
watershed. From Cannon Kopje a commanding view of the whole country on all
sides of Mafeking may be obtained, the Boer laagers giving to the expanses of
the valley the aspect of a mining camp. From different points of observation
the daily life of the enemy can be noted. In the early
morning the smoke of many fires swings in thin spirals to the sky, and the
silence of the plain is broken by the echoes which echo back the noises of the
camp. It would seem that they are as regular in the ordering of their camp life
as we are. When the sun has warmed the air, and evaporated the morning dew from
the grass, we can see them out-pinning their horses, driving their cattle to
fresh pastures, and endeavouring by the establishment of sentries and Cossack
posts to take the siege of Mafeking as a very serious element in their lives.
Everywhere there is the green of early summer covering the plain with the sheen
of Nature's youth. Between the lines of the two camps graze herds of cattle, in
themselves affording tempting bait to the predatory instincts of the Boers,
who, if they did not lack the courage of their desires, would have already
attempted to raid the browsing oxen. So far as our own outposts are concerned,
along this line there are many days in which nothing whatever happens, just as
there are others in which the dawn of day is made hideous by the scream of
shells, the singing of the Mauser, the angry rustle of the Nordenfeldt and
Maxim. The Boers have many guns along this side, and from time to time they
treat us to bombardments, lacking both purpose and any definite result, beyond the
expenditure of much ammunition. When the shells are falling every one who can
seeks cover, watching with some impatience their passing, and could we in these
moments but give existence to our wishes, it would be that opportunity might
come at once to turn the tables upon our enemy. It is neither very honourable
nor very pleasing to have to preserve discretion as the better part of valour,
but, while remain the objective of their fire, our pent-up energies are
developing a fine hatred against the foe. Colonel Baden-Powell has some hope of
giving indulgence to the spirit which animates his men, and, even if the moment
be somewhat uncertain, no small contentment is derived from such belief.
Morning and night we gird our loins for the attack, but night and morning we
awaken to a sense of infinite disappointment, yet when it comes they may expect
an avalanche, and, in result, an overthrow.
Day is
dreary, sun-swept, dusty, teased with insects, and infinitely wearisome, but
with the coming of night, the fragrant coolness of the air, the soft lisping of
the evening breeze bringeth contentment. Each evening, when the peace of the
camp be settled and the men resting, there is always an outpost standing within
a few hundred yards of the Boer camp. If the night be fine, he lies behind the
stones of a neighbouring kopje; but whether it be fine or wet, the guard is
posted; the safety of the camp depending upon his vigilance. Sometimes he is
relieved hourly, sometimes his watch is of four hours' duration. It depends upon
the proximity of his post to the enemy's lines, but, lying there within earshot
of the Boers, it is just possible to realise the full gravity of our situation.
The element of danger is greater in these nocturnal hours, and men go to rest,
their spirits buoyed up with the infinite zest which comes from anticipating a
night attack. They sleep beside their arms, their posts are doubled, and the
officers of the watch make hourly rounds. In the distance, across the plain and
enveloped with the darkness of the veldt, the difficulty of seeing intensified
by shadows, the outline of the Boer laagers can be demarcated. Their camp fires
die down one by one, and presently, beyond the restless
moving of their cattle, no sign of life animates their position. It is in such
moments that those who lead us deplore the paucity of the numbers under their
command, since, were it possible to spare the men, there have been several
occasions, when a midnight dash, after the fashion of Captain Fitzclarence, or
the repetition of the reconnaissance at daybreak such as Major Godley so
gallantly led, could have been organised with equally satisfactory results.
MAJOR A. J. GODLEY OF THE WESTERN OUTPOSTS ON
THE LOOK-OUT.
However,
within the last few days, Colonel Baden-Powell has taken advantage of the
enemy's position upon this front to order the western outposts to spend some
few hours in worrying the enemy. It was a very pleasant little outing for us,
and eminently beneficial, since the excitement attendant upon such a manuvre
was as wholesome as a bumper of champagne. Word had already reached me of this
contemplated move upon the enemy, and Lieutenant Paton, of C Squadron, was good
enough to offer the hospitality of his hut for the night in question. We dined,
not with the guilty splendour of the Trocadero or amid the sombre magnificence
of Prince's, but in the rough-and-ready fashion which falls to those who,
carrying their lives in their hands, have at most but a moment to spare for
such unimportant incidents as breakfast and dinner. As a humble offering to the
board I had drawn from the Army Service Stores a tin of canned mutton, and
procured somewherewhich may or may not have been a private gardena luscious
marrow, and with these I hied myself to Lieutenant Paton's quarters. Along this
western front there are many delightful and very genial officers. There is
Major Godley, who is in command of the whole line; Colonel Walford, who
commands Cannon Kopje; there are Captain Vernon and Captain
Marsh, who, with Major Godley, are Imperial special service men; Lieutenant
Holden and my host. The distances between their quarters are but slight, and
perhaps the most entertaining moment in the siege is that which enables us to
foregather at Major Godley's, chatting with eagerness and charming frankness
upon the possibilities of the war as they are suggested by our immediate
environment. By the time that I had arrived Lieutenant Paton's boy had prepared
a savoury stew, and such was the scarcity of fresh meat that we had no
hesitation in dedicating the canned mutton to some other meal. We ate, and
pleasantly indulged in lime juice and water, smoking with contented elegance
some choice cigarettes. After we had dined a short conference was held at Major
Godley's, and then to rest, perchance to spend the night in sleeping, or
perchance, to scratch; for fleas and flies, the parasitic mosquito and the
insidious ant, make both day and night a source of irritation.
The men of C
Squadron under Captain Vernon, the Bechuanaland Rifles under Captain Cowan, and
three guns under Major Panzera and Lieutenant Daniels, of the British South
Africa Police, were engaged in the movement, and distinguished themselves in
what they did as well as can be expected. At a quarter to two we turned out.
Greatcoats had been left behind, men slinging their waterbottles and bandoliers
upon their shoulders. We were to meet at the base of a hill rising a few
hundred yards across the veldt from Major Godley's. Night hung heavily upon us,
the sky was dark, and everything seemed to point to the wisdom of choosing such
a night. We stepped out briskly, although to our strained
nerves the soft tread of the men sounded as the rumble of a juggernaut.
However, we proceeded very quietly, and the sheen of sand, the white lustre of
the road, the rustle of the thorn bushes were presently left behind as we took
our stand in the rear of Major Godley's troop. In the valley at the base of the
hill we halted. Before us, a scarcely perceptible rise silhouetted against the
sky, the bushes lining the summit throwing themselves into prominence against
the grey, black, background, while here and there trees tossed their arms
silently and warningly in the breeze. All around us there was the hum of insect
life, that monotonous dead level buzz of countless insects and the baying of
the bull frogs. And we waited, when out of the darkness came Major Godley, a
tall, thin figure impressed with energy and determination, inspecting the
lines.
The squadron
was dismounted, and had fallen in by troops, the dull khaki of the Protectorate
Regiment scarcely showing up against the grey-blackness of the night; and at
either end of the line there was a squad of Bechuanaland Rifles and a
contingent of natives. As they stood there, there were nearly one hundred men,
and, though the order had been given to be in this position at 2.30, and the
hour had come, we were waiting for the guns. Presently, as we waited, barely a
mile from the Boer laager, there was the rumble of artillery in the distance.
As we heard it officers and men believed that at any moment the Boer camp would
sound the alarm. We could hear the guns rising over hillocks, falling heavily
upon stones, or crushing back upon some boulder. Indeed there was noise enough
to wake the dead themselves. The rattle of the limber was only a little more
acute than the tension on our nerves. Men swore silently at
the guns and showed their restlessness as the noise grew louder. In a little
the Major bustled up all eagerness and fluff and worry, and then as the guns
trailed behind us and the little column moved on, it seemed that every step we
advanced further would have brought the Boers tumbling about our ears. Much as
one creeps about a house at night treading on every board which creaks in
preference to those which do not creak, so was the march of the column. As the
guns came on they seemed to find stones everywhere. Wheels fell into snug
hollows, jammed in ragged holes, and bumped with such heaviness that the night
was made hideous by the echo of their rumble. Occasionally we stopped, as
though to allow the peace of night to settle. Then we moved forward once again
and in a little we halted for the final stage. The guns took up their position
to the left of the column, the hundred men lying in extended order across the
veldt. Before us there was the ridge of rising veldt and scrub, and so we
rested, fretting with curious impatience at the signs of life which began to
animate the enemy's camp. When we stood up we could see the dull white of their
waggons bent in position for their laager; we could see the fires within, we
could hear in the still silence of early dawn the chopping of wood as the axe
fell upon the logs. The sides of the valley threw back the noise until, echoes
echoing back, the sound caught our ears, and so we watched and waited until
gradually dawn came.
The
dull-black beauty of the night passed, slipping into grey and leaving the
uncertain mystery of an early morning sky. A red streak across the east threw
glimpses of light into the canopy of heaven, when, as a signal of its birth,
there came the words to fire; then the line of creeping
figures which had gained the ridge pressed their rifles through the scrub and
bush which hedged the top, and, crouching to the ground, opened the
reconnaissance. The objective of the night attack which Major Godley was
commanding had been to effect a reconnaissance in force against the western
laagers of the Boers. In respect to the constant increase of the force that
surrounds Mafeking, almost the one means of temporarily checking their advance
which remains to us is through the medium of these attacks. Information had
been brought into headquarters that the Boers were massing upon the east side
of the town, the small laager on the west being temporarily evacuated. The
night dash would both surprise and annoy the enemy, and anything which combined
such benign ends was very welcome. The guns were to throw a few shells, the men
were to fire a few volleys; when the squadron would fall back by troops their
reconnaissance completed. We opened by volleys poured incontinently into their
camp, but so soon as the guns had discharged the first shells into the laager,
the little signs of order which had animated the natives disappeared, and
although they maintained their line they began an independent practice. It was
the first time that native arms had been incorporated with our men, and it is
to be hoped, before the next experiment is repeated, they will have been got
more under control. Excellent as they may be on their own account, they are
almost altogether useless when removed from the immediate spheres of utility.
Our fire at first was high, and many rounds of bullet and shell fire were
absolutely wasted. Presently Daniels secured the range for the guns, and
shells, prettily planted, ruined many waggons. The sortie,
so far as we were concerned, proceeded merrily, doing no material damage, but
making a hell of a lot of noise. The glories of the early morning were soon
enveloped in the heavy smoke from the rifles of the natives, who still
continued blazing independently and indifferently at the enemy's position and
who also generally struck the earth a few yards short of their own front of
fire. The opportunity which was thus afforded of both surprising and annoying
the enemy was very welcome, and the night dash was entered into with infinite
zest. So soon as the guns had discharged their first shell our men began to
fire by volleys, but the sortie had not progressed very far when the activity
in the Boer lines showed that they were preparing to repel a force much larger
than the mere reconnoitering party which was actually before them. In the
uncertain light of rising morn a body of 600 Boers could be seen riding from
the main laager upon the western front to the support of the minor camp. We
have hitherto thought the Boers timid at close quarters, but in this case there
was every sign of haste and eagerness on the part of the reinforcements to
arrive upon the scene of action. We could see them dismounting as they came up
and run to the laager, some of them firing as they ran, others of them forming
into detached parties and firing from isolated positions. After volleying for
some minutes our men fulfilled the object of their morning excursion and were
preparing to retire by troops, when, owing to the presence of the
reinforcements, firing became general. Our rifles replied to their rifles, our
two seven-pounders replied to their guns, but beyond this nothing was permitted
to interfere with the successful completion of our work. It mattered very
little to us how fiercely the enemy's Nordenfeldts spat out defiance
or what their rifles said, for we fell back steadily, the different troops
doubling fifty, one hundred, and one hundred and fifty yards each time. The
fire as the various troops took up the retirement became very hot, the enemy
cheerfully Mausering into space. For some hours after our men had gained the
security of their own trenches the enemy maintained a heavy fire upon the
several outposts along the western front. During the retirement of C Squadron
Major Godley had ordered Captain Cowan to occupy Fort Eyre, a rifle trench,
with a detachment of Bechuanaland Mounted Rifles, so that he might check any
signs of advance which the enemy might display. In consequence of this, Major
Godley, Captain Cowan, Lieutenant Feltham, and their men experienced as severe
a fire as any which has, at present, been received from the Boers. The enemy
made a determined rifle attack upon the work, but lacking the courage to
charge, after some few hours' rifle firing, they withdrew.
These little
encounters are all that the outposts have with which to pass their time, and
the success with which they have been conducted has been sufficient to check
the enemy, and to cause him to reflect upon the relative value of the means at our
command. The defence of the western front lies wholly in the hands of men from
the Protectorate Regiment and a few native contingents. The Town Guard is not en
evidence upon the west side, the area of their exertions being confined to
the more immediate precincts of the town. And by this it does not seem that the
Town Guard will have much opportunity to distinguish itself, since, unless its
members volunteer to take part in any sniping expedition, those manning the
interior line of our trenches, which are those occupied by
the Town Guard, have received positive orders to withhold their fire until the
enemy is upon the point of rushing the town. Several times it has been thought
that this was going to happen, and the local defensive force had hopes of justifying
its existence, but hitherto the valour which underlies the good intentions of
the Boers is not sufficient to inspire them to convert an excellent suggestion
into a practical experiment. Thus despite the Boer telegrams to Europe there
has been no battle round Mafeking; a few slight skirmishes upon our part, much
proud boasting upon the part of the Boers is the limit of mutual operations
which have centred around Mafeking. We are waiting, and in the interval,
preparing. That is all which can be said.
CHAPTER XIII THE TOWN GUARD
Mafeking, November 15th, 1899.
The straits
of a beleaguered city are only just beginning to come to Mafeking. A retrospect
of the history of the Franco-Prussian war reveals how very great were the
sufferings of those unfortunate people who were unlucky enough to be besieged
by the Prussian armies. Their difficulties, the dangers to which they were
constantly subjected, their constant struggle against the extortionate demands
of the few who had been able to "corner" the provisions can perhaps
be taken as conveying a general impression of the hardships of a siege. Yet,
however, when we come to consider the siege of Mafeking in its more elemental
details, the picture is not unlike those presented by the farcical melodrama.
It is now nearly six weeks since Mafeking was proclaimed as being in a state of
siege, and, although there has been no single opportunity of any commercial
reciprocity between ourselves and the outside world, the ruling prices are at
present but very little above normal, distress is wholly absent, danger is
purely incidental, and, indeed, it would seem, as Colonel Baden-Powell said in
a recent order, that "everything in the garden was
lovely." This somewhat happy state of things is, of course, to be
attributed to the extraordinary foresight and sagacity which characterises the
arrangements that the well-known firm of contractors in South Africa, Julius
Weil, concluded for provisioning the town. Immense stocks of foodstuffs had
been stored in the town before the war, and it is the knowledge of the valuable
stores which are lying here which has inspired the Boers to court us so
assiduously. The tale might have been different had the Colonial Government
been permitted to arrange for any such emergency as a siege. In this respect,
so completely opposed to any preparation were Mr. Schreiner and his Cabinet,
that it was not even possible to procure through such an agency any adequate
means of defence, much less to obtain the essential food supplies. When
Kimberley appealed to Mr. Schreiner for permission to send up from Port
Elizabeth some Maxims which had been ordered by the De Beers Company, the
licence was refused on the ground that there was no cause to strengthen the
defences of that town, nor any reason to believe that the situation demanded
such precautions. The Colonial Government repeated their policy in relation to
Mafeking, and when urgent appeals were sent to Mr. Schreiner, to the Castle
authorities, and to Sir Alfred Milner, the influence of the Cabinet was such
that no notice was taken of their request.
Nothing
perhaps can excuse such an obstructive policy as that which was followed by the
Colonial Government upon the very eve of hostilities. It is only when we come
to deal with the situation which their neglect has created that we can
adequately measure the full extent of their culpability. The claim of so
important a centre as Mafeking upon their attention was
wilfully ignored with a persistence which is positively criminal, and when
taken into consideration with the repeated warnings which were sent to them by
leading members of the community of Mafeking it is difficult to believe that
the Colonial Cabinet, by so flatly contravening the spirit of their loyalty to
the Imperial Crown, were not directly conniving with a hostile oligarchy for
the downfall of this colonial town. Had Mafeking been anything but Anglo-Saxon
at heart, had it possessed that proportion of debased Dutch and renegade
British colonists which is to be found in Vryburg and those other hostile areas
in our own colony, the story of Mafeking would have been a story of treachery
and deceit, of broken allegiance, and of palsied faith. As it was, when the
petition for extra armaments was ignored, the town, disdaining the danger which
confronted them, proceeded to stand their ground, and to show, at any rate, a
firm front to any enemy that might assail them. While Colonel Baden-Powell
organised the defences of the Western Border, the men of Mafeking, under the
supervision of Colonel Vyvyen, base commandant, strongly entrenched the
position of their town, which hitherto had been open to every corner of the
earth. In times of peace Mafeking is a collection of buildings placed upon the
veldt, lacking both natural and artificial protection, the centre into which
all roads come and from which all classes of people go. It is a thriving
mid-African township which, more by good management than by good luck, has
become at the present time an important outpost of our Empire. In these days,
when the boom of cannon destroys the silences of our splendid isolation, and
the scream of shell disturbs the harmony of night, Mafeking rests with patient
steadfastness behind its hastily improvised earthworks,
seeking shelter when the shells of the enemy press too hotly upon one another,
yet always ready for work at the outposts, prepared for the fitful turbulence
of our invading foe. Possibly from the Boer trenches Mafeking may look an
armoured citadel. Possibly it is the sturdy appearance of our ramparts which
have caused the Boers to bring their heavy artillery to bear upon our mud brick
walls. Yet there is humour in this situation, since the gravity of our position
accentuates the grim travesty of our defences. We have not so much as appears,
and it would be unfair to give such a moment as the present the correct
estimate of dummy camps which have been built, dummy earthworks which have been
thrown up, of dummy guns which are in position. The situation between the Boers
and ourselves may be likened to a game of poker, Mafeking possessing no hand,
yet retains the privilege of bluffing. In the end it will be seen that the
dignity of our impudence has swept the board, although we may be excused from
wishing to renew the game. But there is perhaps a finer spirit in the tribute which
this place has paid to Queen and country than mere courage. We have the faith
of our affections, the steadfastness of a duty which, if inspired, is equally
impressed with reverence. Such strain as the siege has put upon the loyalty of
the colonists of Mafeking has been welcomed by reason of the opportunity which
it has given for the many who have never seen the Queen to show, their
honourable allegiance to her Majesty.
From time to
time Colonel Baden-Powell has issued orders congratulating the townspeople upon
their spirit, and commiserating with them upon their unfortunate predicament.
They are indeed deserving of great sympathy, since the
manly way in which they have come forward in support of the situation has very
materially aided the successful resistance given by Mafeking. The forts upon
the eastern facing of the town are manned altogether by the Town Guard; these
are particularly warlike when beneath the protection of their bomb-proof
shelters, and it would be almost a pity should the siege close without any
opportunity arising of testing their efficiency. Throughout day and night they
are compelled to remain idle in their trenches, and from 9 till 6, and again
from 6 till 9, they are not permitted upon any pretence whatever to leave their
posts. The life they are leading is of the roughest description, and it
certainly appears that by far the greatest proportion of the hardships of the
siege has fallen to the share of the Town Guard. At the beginning of the siege,
when, according to official reports, there was no ground to believe that it
would be of long duration, few people were animated by anything but the plain
determination to enjoy any actual hostilities which might eventuate. Now,
however, as the fifth week of the siege draws to an end the rigours of the
confinement to which the townspeople have been subjected are beginning to tell.
The work, the most laborious, the least interesting, and totally without
compensation, is that performed by the Town Guard, and as a body this defence
force presents strangely contrasting features as the siege progresses. Their
hours are early and late, they stand to arms at 4.30 in the early morning, and
at intervals during the day the full strength of the fort is mustered. There is
nothing with which these men can occupy their minds, and if their inactivity is
beginning to irritate them, if the poorness of their food
is affecting them, it is to be hoped that the work which they are doing now
will receive full and satisfactory acknowledgment, both at the hands of the
staff, and of the Government. As a body, the Town Guard is a medley of local
salamanders, and if it be possible, by the force of their surroundings, they
should become inspired with soldierly instincts, and although after their
fashion they may be expected to fight, their greatest wish at the present
moment is to obtain from the Government, imperial, colonial, and military, some
adequate explanation of the causes determining their present situation. They
feel that they have been neglected by Mr. Schreiner and I am quite certain that
if that political chameleon were here now, he would suffer as much by reason of
his own sins, as for the trouble and worry he has caused the industrious, if
benighted, citizens of Mafeking. For the most part the Town Guard is a collection
of civilians, who are accustomed to the full enjoyment of comparative
affluence, and who, through the exigencies of the siege, are at present living
under conditions which would test the endurance of the most experienced
soldier. They are penned up within the limits of Mafeking, unable to move with
any degree of safety, and condemned to an inactivity which is very irksome to
those who have been pressed as volunteers into the defences of the town. They
did not expect, in the early days of the crisis, to be actively engaged in
defending their town, since, with some hope of having their views adopted, they
repeatedly urged upon the general staff the fallacies which distinguished the
official forecast of the situation, but the staff was incredulous and Colonel
Baden-Powell was impressed with an optimism which now seems strangely at fault.
If one is to believe important respected members of the
community here, it would seem that they made special and very urgent overtures
to the colonel commanding upon the defenceless condition of Mafeking, and now,
as they stand to their posts, throughout the heat of an African summer, beneath
the deluges of the rainy season, they cull but little satisfaction from the
Ministerial refusal adequately to protect their town by sending troops and
armaments to it. They say that they were derided, that no notice was taken of
their request, that their petition was overruled, leaving to them the work of
warding off from the town such a day of bitterness, of exceeding danger, of very
genuine disaster, as might have been expected to result from the unprotected
condition of the place. The irregular soldiers of the Protectorate Regiment do
not, perhaps, deserve so much commiseration, since in all probability their
present circumstances are little worse than those which they anticipated when
they were enlisting. But there is some force in the case which the inhabitants
of Mafeking can bring against the Colonial Government, and it is to be hoped
that the work which they are now doing will receive full and satisfactory
compensation at the final adjustment. But there exists little possibility that
they will be given any compensation which will be in any way commensurate,
since to those who have followed the history of such Ministerial compensation
as comes within the region of political economy it will be known that the
accidents of war put a somewhat close limit upon the accidence of compensation.
Their businesses have in many cases been absolutely ruined, those who were
farmers upon the outskirts of the town have had the melancholy satisfaction of seeing their homesteads set fire to by the enemy and their
cattle raided. These facts are the simple home truths that do not tend to make
them appreciative of the honour and glory which falls to them by playing so
prominent a rôle in the defence of their town. They expect, however, to
receive medals. Those who were local merchants, men of peace for the most part,
with no very keen enthusiasm for martial glory, have seen the industry of a
lifetime completely wrecked by the diffidence of the general staff and the
unwillingness of the Government to take such precautions as would have placed
the town beyond the probability of attack; but, although every one recognises
the worthlessness of the material which was placed at the disposal of Colonel
Baden-Powell, there exists no reason which can defend the absence of efficient
military stores in the town. Upon the termination of the war let us hope that
Colonel Baden-Powell will be asked to explain, but for the present the
townspeople of Mafeking are singularly unanimous in their desire to co-operate
with the military authorities.
Under their
direction the Boers have been repulsed for seven weeks, just as without the
walls of Mafeking an almost impregnable defence has been constructed. It is
perhaps a detail if our defenders be armed with Sniders, Enfields, a few
Martinis, and a still less number of Lee-Metfords. Moreover, we have none too
much ammunition, our seven-pounders are incapable of sustaining the brunt of an
action without being sent to the repairing shop upon its termination, and if
our Maxims be beyond reproach, our Hotchkiss and Nordenfeldt are both obsolete
and unreliable. These are the more material elements of our defences, and to
them may be added the strength of the Protectorate
Regiment, Cape Police, British South Africa Police, Railway Division, the
Bechuanaland Rifles, and the numerous native contingents numbering, with the
Town Guard, some fifteen hundred men. Against this we must place an enemy whose
tactics are surprising everybody, whose artillery fire is admirable, whose guns
are numerous and first class. They stand off five miles and shell the town with
perfect safety, while under cover of their fire they project their advanced
trenches daily a few feet nearer the town. We have endeavoured with our
artillery and by night sorties to check their progress, but the sapping of
Mafeking continues, and is, at once, a very serious, if not our sole, danger.
Should their trenches advance much further it will be impossible to move about
during daytime at all, and, although we have thrown up bales of compressed hay
and sacks of oats to act as shields against the enemy's bullets, and the flying
splinters of passing shells, there is no hour in the day in which the streets
of the town are not sprayed by Mauser bullets. It is not possible for us to
advance very far from our own lines, since, as eagles swoop down upon their
carrion, so would the Boers from other quarters attempt to rush the town. Yet
there is no doubt that such movement would be very welcome, affording as much
keen pleasure to the volunteers of the town as to the newly-raised units of the
garrison. We nurture a wild desire to attempt to spike "Big Ben," and
it may be that before long Providence will turn from the side of the enemy by
presenting us with some such golden opportunity. The big gun is hedged around
by barbed wire, guarded in front by mines, flanked upon the one side by a
Nordenfeldt-Maxim and upon the other by a high-velocity Krupp. Truly, they could deal out a very warm reception to those who chanced
their luck, but a little novelty these days atones for many hours of tiring
inactivity, and if the Colonel chose to put a price upon the task there would
be no trouble in enlisting for the venture some five hundred volunteers. The
siege, as it progresses, seems to give fewer opportunities for coming into
positive contact with the enemy; such occasions as there have been are few and
far between, and, although Colonel Baden-Powell holds out the promise of such a
venture, it has been so constantly deferred that we are for the most part
becoming incredulous.
CHAPTER XIV WASTED ENERGIES
Mafeking, November 22nd, 1899.
Within a few
weeks of Major Godley's daybreak attack upon the western laager, it was decided
to repeat the experiment against the main position of the Boers upon the east
side. Had this but come off, from the estimate of the men and guns engaged, the
movement would have been as important as any which have taken place. It had been
arranged to open a general fire upon the emplacement of the hundred-pound gun
and the advanced trenches of the Boer position a short time before sunset,
since the closing of day would make it impossible for the enemy, in the absence
of aiming-posts and clinometers, to train their artillery upon the town. Now
that the enemy have begun to sap Mafeking by a system of advanced galleries,
the military authorities here have been waiting for them to come within a
certain radius of the town so that we might counter-gallery their position and
enfilade their trenches. From their entrenchment at the brickfields, rather
more than fifteen hundred yards from the town, Boer sharpshooters have been
sniping the town with comparative impunity. When this plan was first projected, natives, under Corporal Currie, Cape Police, were
sent up the river-bed, which runs at this particular point within three hundred
yards of the Boer flank, to build a trench as near as possible to the position
of the snipers in the brickfields. With the successful execution of this piece
of work the first steps towards the contemplated reconnaissance had been taken,
since this new post, which was constructed under cover of night, completely
outflanked the advance trenches of the Boers. When they began to fire upon the
town in the morning they were somewhat surprised at receiving a volley from
what appeared to be little more than a mud heap. Corporal Currie and his
natives drove back the Boers from their advanced post in the brickfields to the
first line of trenches in their position, and so long as we retained the
river-bed post the brickfields ceased to give shelter to the Boer
sharpshooters; moreover, when the Boers had been effectually quieted in the
brickfields a little more of the original conception was carried out. Captain
Lord Charles Bentinck and A squadron and Captain Fitzclarence with the
Hotchkiss detachment were sent to support the native outposts, while a
seven-pound gun under Lieutenant Daniels moved into an emplacement in the
river-bed. Major Panzera took command of the gun which was to support the Maxim
under Major Goold Adams in the north-east corner of the town. In conjunction
with this, the extreme eastern flank of the town was defended by a detachment
of the Cape Police with a Maxim, and a supplementary force of the same police,
under Inspector Marsh, were entrenched across the eastern front of the native
location. Thus upon Monday night were the plans arranged. Shortly before
midnight Major Panzera, who has charge of the artillery, gave
me a courteous permission to accompany Lieutenant Daniels to his emplacement in
the river-bed, from which point it was possible to move to our advanced
trenches further up the stream. Mafeking had gone to rest when the gun started,
and although the wheels were padded and every precaution taken to muffle the
noise, it seemed that at any moment, the town would have been aroused. In a
little the immediate precincts of Mafeking had been left behind, and the
challenge of the last sentry answered. As we moved down to the river-bed the
gun detachment hung upon the rear of the gun straining to prevent the shake and
rumble of its descent. Silently we crept on; no murmur of human voices, no
steel rang a "care-creating" clatter, no rumble of tumbril or gun
broke through the darkness to the sentries of the enemy; in about an hour the
gentle lapping of the river told us that the journey was at an end, and as we
crossed the stream and reached the party working upon the emplacement there was
much feeling of relief that the enemy had not sounded the alarm. While
Lieutenant Daniels arranged the emplacement of the gun, he permitted me to try
my hand at superintending native labour. There were thirty of them, who,
commencing about midnight, were to have completed by daybreak, the task upon
which they were engaged. It reminded me of the days at college when the house
whips stood over the team urging them and coaching them in their game. There
was every necessity for speed, and as the night was cold one made the most of
the opportunity. The working party was divided into those with picks and those
with shovelsthe one breaking up the ground, the others heaping up the
earthwork. In addition to the natives who were digging
there was a small party filling sacks with sand which, when they had been
filled, were piled up around the rapidly-rising parapet of the gun. As they
worked they sang, droning a war-song which seemed to give zest to their
labours. As an experience it was rather fine to feel that even in this
perfunctory fashion one was attempting work of some importance. About the scene
there was the usual feature of the veldt by night: there was the subdued murmur
of the waters tumbling gently over stones or causing stray groups of bullrushes
to shiver; then from the bank there spread the veldt, rising in soft-clad
hillocks, or falling in snug hollows, the green expanse tinted with the silvery
light of the moon. Beyond ourselves and our cordon of sentries there should
have been no one, although occasionally we thought that, just above the
skyline, lights played about the shadowy outline of the Boer gun. But if they
heard us they took no notice, and as dawn broke across the east the finishing
touches to the gun were quickly given. Brown earth was strewn upon the whitened
patches of the bags which had not been properly covered, the humidity of the
fresh-turned soil mingling with the fumes of working natives. For the night's
work, as we gathered our tools together, the best evidence of our labours was
the grim muzzle of the gun which leered through its embrasure. It spoke
defiance, and as the day which then was breaking, drew to its close we should
know whether its sense of might had been effectually established. And so we
returned to town talking upon the strength of the emplacement and upon its
strategic value. As we left the gun we were alone, when suddenly, without a
sound, the figure of the Colonel was seen coming across the veldt. He passed us quickly, and as we followed him we wondered what he
knew, but before noon those who had been informed of the contemplated attack
had learned the news. As he had crept up the lines he had passed detached
parties of Boers withdrawing from the extreme rear of their position. The
explanation was obvious, but he stayed until daybreak to make certain of his
ground, and by the light of early dawn the trenches which we were so shortly to
fire upon were found deserted. Thus do the spies work within our camp, taking
to the enemy news of everything which happened, and thus does the Colonel
circumvent them. However, if we did not attack them with our guns, for the
remainder of the day the advanced squadrons in the river-bed justified their
position by keeping down the crew from the big gun. They poured in volleys at
1,400 yards, and, for the first time in the siege, no shells were thrown. As
they retired from their trenches, so they withdrew their gun, and we had a day
of peace.
But how
wearily the time passes; moreover we are still enduring the straits of a siege
and the torments of a bombardment. For almost seven weeks we have defied an
enemy who encircle us upon every side, and who has summoned to its aid, for the
purposes of breaching our trivial earthworks, the finest guns from their
arsenal in Pretoria. The Boers outnumber us in men and in artillery, and not a
day has passed since the siege began that they have not thrown shrapnel and
common shell, omitting minor projectiles, into the town. And still we live,
with just sufficient spirit to jeer across our ramparts at the enemy. They
Mauser us, and shell us; they cut our water off, and raid our cattle; they make
life hell, and they can do so, so long as it may please them;
but no one was ever so deluded if they think that by such means Mafeking
surrenders. From time to time we have given them a taste of our quality, and if
on occasion we have lost some few, it is a source of melancholy satisfaction to
know that their loss has been the greater. It is not long since the Boers
attempted to blow the town to atoms through the agency of dynamite, though, similia
similibus curantur, they went to heaven prematurely by an undesirable
explosion. It was night, and the town was just about to rest, when it was
shaken to its foundations by a most deafening roar; sand and stones, fragments
of trees came down as hail from the skies, the whole place being lighted with
the lurid glow of blood-red flame. To the north of Mafeking, and so close to
the cemetery that it might have been a pillar of fire coming to earth to claim
its own, an immense arc of fire and smoke was ejected out of the ground. After
it there came silence, broken here and there by the rattle of the débris upon the roofs of the houses, and by the shouts and shrieks of a town in the
confusion of a panic. That night those who slept had dreams of the day of
judgment, while those who lay awake were restless, quaking with an insidious
terror. In the morning the cause explained itself, since barely half a mile up
the line was an enormous rent in the ground, the line itself being strewn and
scattered with the rubbish of an earthquake. The Boers, with much ingenuous
enterprise, had despatched upon a purely friendly mission a trolly load of
dynamite; unfortunately, where they had started their infernal machine the
declivity of the line had precipitated the truck backwards toward their own
camp, and having very foolishly lighted their time-fuse before they had surmounted the crest of the rise, they had not the courage to
stop the progress of the somewhat novel engine of destruction. Apparently it
had rolled slowly downwards, tracking the instigators of such a deed with very
fatal persistence, until the time-fuse met the charge, and powder and dynamite
went off together. Upon the morrow there was much sadness in the Boer camp, and
much silence.
Dynamite has
played a not unimportant rôle in the history of our siege. Cronje has
heard from native spies, and from his friends in our camp, that Mafeking is set
within a circle of dynamite mines, and he has protested against its use in
civilised warfare. Since then, however, he has not only discharged dynamite by
trolly loads into the town, but he has threatened, in his vague and shadowy
fashion, to send to his capital for some dynamite guns. It would seem, then,
that a warm time is coming to Mafeking; the pity of it being that we are kept
so long and in such unnecessary suspense. If Cronje were the gallant warrior
whose dignity he assumes in addressing the garrison, he would have either taken
or abandoned Mafeking some weeks ago. As it is, however, with occasional
letters of regret for such untimely procedure, he still elects to bombard an
inoffensive and unoffending township. The other morning, after the usual series
of dull days, the activity in the Boer camp suggested to us that the town was
about to be attacked. From the south-west the big Creusot opened fire at
intervals of twenty minutes, the intervening periods being pleasantly filled in
with Mauser and Martini fire and shells from two nine-pound high-velocity
Krupps. In a very short space of time the list of fatalities included a native
dog, a commissariat mule, and many buildings. After such a
bloodless bombardment the Boer legions gallantly rode round to the east with
the apparent intention of attacking the town. Then we thought that, in that
moment, our defence would be justified, but he is wisest who determines what is
to be the nature of the Boer movement when that movement has taken place. Down
the serried lines of armed Dutchmen old Piet Cronje, as his friends call him,
or General Cronje, as a sycophantian Boer press describe him, rode. He was a
gallant sightalbeit we could only just see him some two thousand yards
distant. After a temporary and casual inspection of his force, General Cronje
turned his head towards Mafeking, and waving violently one arm in the air,
cantered with much solemn apprehension towards our trenches. He had covered in
this desperate effort some thirty yards, when perhaps a natural superstition
caused him to turn his head. Was there a man dismayed in the Boer lines? Not
one; but nevertheless, they were not taking any such manuvre just then. Cronje
stopped and cantered back again, seeming to hold an indaba with his petty
officers. They gathered round him, they talked to him, pointing towards their
lines, and shouting at one another; but there it ended. In a little while we
saw a silent figure, moody and taciturn, guarded by two orderlies, ride slowly
around from the east front to the headquarters of the executive on the
south-west. Thus Cronje failed, not through any fault of his, but because the
idle braggarts who form his army have not the spirit of whipped curs. Since
then Cronje has made no effort to storm Mafeking, and it is very much to be
doubted whether until the siege be raised the attempt will be renewed.
One must sympathise a little with Cronje since he has not been able to
sustain in his attack upon Mafeking the high reputation which he enjoys among
his countrymen. Now that he has been recalled to Natal, we here hope that he
may be able to find some opportunity to distinguish himself. His force without
Mafeking is a raw, lawless body of Western Boers, the majority of whom have
followed him on his march. We say Natal, but there is no very positive ground
for believing that it is in that direction that the new field of his activity
lies. It may be that he has gone South, and if such should happen to be the
case, it will not be long before he will come in contact with men who will test
his mettle to the utmost. There have been many rumours of reinforcements: some
people, addicted with a greater faculty of imagination than power of veracity,
have even seen the advanced outposts of the relief, which, of course, is
ridiculous. They mistake some scattered party of Boers for advanced scouts. We
do not think that there is much real chance of the siege of Mafeking being
raised before the New Year, since such would be opposed to the stately and
insular procedure of the Imperial and Colonial War Offices. Hitherto it has
apparently ignored the claims of Mafeking. All conditions of people here united
in their efforts to secure some more or less reliable armament from the
Government, but the reason, above all others, which made this impossible was
that the Imperial authorities at home, in their fatuity, could not bring
themselves to believe that the war, which South Africa knew to be imminent,
would come to pass. Nevertheless, in face of their neglect, we are snug in
Mafeking, although our artillery be hopeless; and since the war began we have
gradually added to our defences. After many days'
bombardment a breach was effected in one only of the town's earthworks. That
was very quickly repaired, so quickly indeed that before nightfall it had
already been restored.
CHAPTER XV SHELLS AND SLAUGHTER
November 30th, 1899.
The Boers
continue to shell Mafeking daily, and to concentrate upon the streets of the
town their customary rifle fire. At first we experienced a terror of the
dangers of shell fire, but the daily and constant presence of exploding shells
has brought about an unusual degree of familiarity with its attendant feeling
of contempt; people now are too careless, seeming to rest under the delusion
that, one and all, enjoy an absolute immunity. The folly of it is that
occasionally the error of their way is illustrated by a longer list of
fatalities through one shell claiming half a dozen victims. Europeans perhaps,
are less careless of the consequences of shell fire than is the native
population, and it is a pity that it has not been found possible to impress
into the mind of the Kaffir a better appreciation of the possible result of
their intrepidity. We have had many more natives killed than whites, and the
element of tragedy in this becomes the greater and more acute since, as a rule,
the native, employed in building bomb-proof shelters for the whites, lacks the
energy to turn to his own profit his knowledge of the manner in which shell cover should be constructed. They lie about under
tarpaulins, behind zinc palings, wooden boxes, and flimsy sheds of that
description, and perhaps for days their shelter may escape the line of fire;
but there comes a moment made hideous by the scream of shell as it bursts in
some little gathering of dozing, half listless natives. At such a moment their
bravery is extraordinaryis indeed the most fearful thing in the world. The native
with his arm blown off, with his thigh shot away, or with his body
disembowelled, is endowed with extreme fortitude and most stoical resolution.
Unless he is seen, he lies where he is struck, not caring to take the trouble
to make his wounds known to some one who could sympathise and assist him. When
the gaze of the curious is turned upon his mangled and wounded form he attempts
to laugh, makes every effort to assist himself, and even if he knows that his
injuries be fatal, he makes no sign. There is thus much to admire in these
natives, but for the most part, people are quite indifferent to their
sufferings.
A few
moments ago, indeed as I was writing the concluding words of the last sentence,
a terrific explosion, a shower of gravel and leaden bullets upon my roof,
foretold the fact that somewhere near at hand one of these untimely instruments
of destruction had burst. As I went to the door a crowd of people could be seen
running towards the Market Square, the air was filled with the strong perfume
of the bursting charge. I ran with the throng to where the shell had first
struck in Market Square before delivering its full effect upon the windows of
the local chemist. Amid the splintered glass and the consequent disorder of the
chemist's shop lay the writhing figure of an unhappy native. As an illustration
of the appalling wounds which these shells inflict, I am
purposely dilating upon this very pitiful scene. As the shell rebounded from
the ground leaving a hole many feet long, narrow, and arrow-headed, it had come
in contact with a native before it wrecked the apothecary's store. Mingled with
the fragments of glass and the contents of the shop were shreds of cloth and
infinitesimal strips of flesh, while the entire environment of the scene was
splashed with blood. The poor native had lost an arm, a foot lay a few yards
from him, and his other leg was hanging by a few shreds of skin. In an angle of
the wall formed by the junction of the shop-front of the chemist and the tin
protrusion of his neighbour's building, something was sticking. For the moment
it had escaped the gaze of the sordid few, who, drawn by idle curiosity, were
standing about without the inclination to help, or even a smattering of the
first aid to the injured. When the bleeding body was put upon a stretcher, and
the mangled extremities gathered together, the Hospital Orderly caught sight of
the bunch which was clinging to the recess in the wall. As he went forward to
seize it, the trickling streams of fluid which escaped from it revealed only too
plainly its true character. So great was the force of the shell, and so near
had its unfortunate victim been to the galvanised iron wall, that as body and
shell met, the terrible violence of the impact had wrenched away the lump to
hurl it, in the same moment, through the exterior wall of the adjacent
premises. Despite his fearful injuries, which were beyond the scope of human
power to aid, he was not dead, feebly exclaiming as they put him in the
stretcher, "Boss, Boss, me hurt." The ruin of the building had
scarcely been realised, and the vapour of chemicals from
the shell, mingling with the scattered perfumes of the shop, with the scent of
the ploughed-up earth, and with that curious, insidious scent of a wounded body
dissipatedwhen a second shell screaming its passage through the air hurled
itself with a terrible velocity against the other window of the same building.
In effect it added a little more to the ruin of the premises, escaping by a
miracle five men who had been standing in the interior of the premises, but
killing an unfortunate corporal, who had gone from the scene of the death of
the native to get a "pick-me-up" from the adjoining bar in Riesle's
Hotel. In such a manner does the death roll pile itself upwith the impending
slowness of a juggernaut and the haunting persistency of fate. If these were
the actual numbers of the killed upon this date, there were also two who were
wounded, one of whom has since died, thus giving to one day a terrible trio.
With such a sad lesson before one it would seem that, beyond those who were
compelled to be out and about, no one would venture in the streets under shell
fire, much less employ their leisure in endeavouring to unload those of the
enemy's shells that might have fallen into the town, yet, but two days ago a
local wheelwright blew himself and two other men to an untimely end by the
explosion of a shell from which, with a steel drill, he was endeavouring
to extract the charge. One of these men was killed almost instantaneously,
another had his leg blown off, while the third sustained terrible wounds upon
his body. There is not a day now without fresh victims being claimed in
different parts of the town. Almost the first question asked as the shell
bursts is for the name of the unfortunate owner of the wrecked house, and the
number of the killed and wounded. In the early part of the
siege when people were thoroughly scared by the introduction of this new
element of destruction, bomb-proof shelters became quite popular, but lately
with the good luck which the people in town have enjoyed, the shelters have
been rather abandoned, but there is no doubt now, that the number who have been
killed in this past week has somewhat unnerved the town. If it induces people
to stay beneath their shelters, from out of the fearful misfortunes which have
fallen upon the few, may be derived almost universal salvation.
EFFECTS OF SHELL FIRE. The hospital
in these times, is the centre of melancholy interest to the town. It is perhaps
a quarter of a mile beyond the outskirts of the town, but so situated that
apart from the flag under whose protection it should lie, it would be
impossible for the enemy not to be unaware that it was a natural shelter for
the sick and wounded. Much as the town in general, the Convent which adjoins
the hospital, and the hospital itself show the stress of the bombardment. The
walls of the hospital have been riddled with Martini and Mauser bullets, while
shells have perforated the galvanised iron roofing, torn holes in the walls of
the ward, wrecked outstanding buildings, and in brief, played such direful
havoc as would be considered impossible in a war with any nation that has
subscribed to the articles of the Geneva Convention. Only the most strenuous
opposition from Colonel Baden-Powell, who threatened the severest pains,
penalties, and reprisals upon Commandant Cronje and Commandant Snyman, for
their neglect of the Red Cross flag, has saved the building in its entirety.
Nevertheless that degree of consideration, which we secured from the Boers for
our hospital was denied by these infamous barbarians to the Convent and its gentle inmates. Their home has tumbled about its
foundations, the wall which faces the enemy's fire has been hit in numerous
places. Shells have ruined the children's dormitory, burst with a magnificent
effect in the interior of what would have been the operating room, shattered a
corner stone to pieces, and rendered rotten and wholly impossible for any
further habitation our subsidiary hospital. The sisters, however, still stick
to their posts and minister the comforts of religion, though seeking their
share in the task of nursing, and setting, by their subdued heroism, an example
to the entire community. Never has any hospital been saddled with such a work
as the local one in Mafeking. War had taken every one so suddenly that like
everything else in Mafeking at the crucial moment, it was wanting in much which
was cardinal to its existence. The corps of nurses was made up of those ladies
from the town who were willing to volunteer, and if there was an absence of the
professional nursing service, there were equally a dearth of dressers, of
surgical appliances, of medical comforts. The Victoria Hospital in times like
these possesses no Rontgen Rays, and many times indeed have the medical staff
regretted that so important an instrument should not have been sent in good
time. Indeed all that the Director-General of Hospitals has done for Mafeking
was to send Surgeon-Major Anderson out from England, and had it not been that this
gallant officer supplied, at his own expense, a large quantity of medical
stores which he believed to be necessary, with the best intentions in the
world, it would have been impossible to cope with the requirements of the
wounded.
It has been
interesting, however, to observe from the point of view of the medical
profession the nature of the wounds caused by the Mauser
and Martini rifles and shell-fire. The Mauser perforates, the Martini
splinters, the shell pulverises. The point of entry of the Mauser bullet is
somewhat smaller than the circumference of a threepenny piece, and if it passes
through the bone it does not appear to set up any undue amount of splintering.
The hole through which it emerges is usually, except where the path of the
bullet has been deflected, as small as the point of penetration. The Mauser
does not, as a rule, set up in the body, and in the greater number of cases
passes clean through. It is a humane wound, and infinitely less injurious than
the Martini and Dum-dum. A Martini destroys a large internal surface making
beneath the point of contact a wound between two and three inches in diameter,
with an even greater area of exit. It sweeps everything before it, shredding
arteries, shattering the bones, while its process of recovery is, in
consequence, the more protracted. I have already described the wounds from
shell-fire, adding to that account, however, the fact that the merest fragment
of a shell is as capable as the shell itself, of making most terrible injuries.
EFFECTS OF SHELL FIRE. CHAPTER XVI A SOFT-WATER BATH
Mafeking, December 6th, 1899.
As
compensation to the inhabitants of beleaguered Mafeking for the many dull days
we have had lately, yesterday was replete with incidents and crowded with a
constant succession of events of more than ordinary interest. We have had our
days of activity, when the boom of artillery and the rattle of musketry have
impressed into a few brief hours the full measure of martial excitement, we
have endured our days of lonesome and tiring idleness when the hot winds of the
Kalahari Desert have swept eddies of whirring, biting sand across the trenches,
when the pitiless sun has spent its energies upon the heat-stricken garrison.
But yesterday we experienced the effect of a combination between that
Providence which the Boers claim as their special and benign guardian and the
elements themselves. It was a reconnaissance in force by nature. A union of
extreme subtlety and one against which it was impossible to contend. It came,
it swept everything before it, and it left us drenched with rain, surrounded by
small lakes of mud, streams of water, and without dry garments to our names.
When the mischief was complete the deluge ceased. The
general physiognomy of the scene can be described at once. When dawn broke in
the morning across the sky there glowered the haze of heat, which in Africa, as
elsewhere, denotes a more than usually tropical day. To those, however, who
knew the signs of the sky, the fleeting masses of black cloud, low down upon
the horizon, foretold a day of evil tempest. Slowly the rising wind drove them
together until, shortly before noon, clouds were bunched high up across the sky
and over the Boer laager. From where we were in the town it was quite apparent
that the temporary centre of the storm was almost above the emplacements of the
enemy's artillery. Before the breeze had increased the Boers had thrown a few
shells into the town, but presently, as the force of the gale struck us, it was
evident that the rain-filled clouds were discharging their contents upon the
extreme limits of the veldt. For an hour or two the Boers received the full
effect of the storm, and but few drops of rain fell into the town, as the wind
swept before its path the débris of the veldt, portions of broken trees,
of scrub, and bushes. The deluge quickly left the south-east, concentrating a
little beyond and over the town, and so soon as it began to trouble us it
seemed to have deserted the Boers. Possibly the wind carried with it a
rainspout, since the effect of the streaming water was as though from somewhere
in the sky buckets were being emptied on to the place beneath. The veldt was
quickly flooded, the dried-up spruits were soon charged with foaming cataracts,
Mafeking itself lay under water, the earthworks around the town were swept
away, trenches and bomb-proof shelters were choked with eddying streams,
everywhere was ruindestruction and complete chaos reigned
until the storm had spent itself. Down the acclivity upon which Cannon Kopje is
placed there rolled the surging tide, carrying in its might the stores of the
fort, the blankets of the men, the bodies of struggling animals, who, if they
succeeded in coping with the force of the stream, were dashed to pieces upon
the rocky facing of the hill. The women's laager, which has hitherto rested in
snug seclusion at the base of the hills forming the western outposts, was, in a
few minutes, flooded with the off-pourings from the sluits of the veldt, while
the trenches were quickly submerged or silted with the refuse of the torrent. A
cart which went to the assistance of the inmates of the laager found itself
water-bound through the tremendous force of the tortuous cataracts. In the
town, bomb-proof cellars were vacated, and the people, discarding their shoes
and stockings, made their way from point to point by paddling and fording the
footpaths across the streets. To the north of the town, below the exterior
outposts, the men stripped to the skin, allowing the full strength of the
streaming downpour to beat upon them. The Market Square was a sheet of running
water, rising with such rapidity that it seemed that the houses bordering the
square would be inundated.
From Market
Square, upon two sides, the roads make something of a descent, and down these
slight inclines volumes of water, yards in width and some feet in depth
precipitated themselves to the river-bed. As the storm increased it was seen
that it would be impossible to retain any longer our advanced positions in the
river-bed. The first to go was the trench occupied by Corporal Currie and his
native sharpshooters. As the water swept from bank to bank through this post,
which we, but a few days before, had won so gallantly from
the enemy, the men clambered up the banks to the veldt and made their way as
best they could to the base. With the flooding of this position, so rapidly did
the river rise, that those occupied by Captain Fitzclarence and his squadron
were equally untenable. As they were abandoned the stream rushed by them with
the roar of a river in flood, while the crash of boulder upon boulder turned
masses of rock into shattered fragments. Within an hour the river had risen
eight feet, and so unexpected was the flood that for the time being it was not
possible to rescue from the rising stream the 7-pounder gun, which was in
position some way down the river. As the rain continued the wind died down,
until in the height of this storm it scarcely possessed the strength to
dissipate the white mists which were rising from the veldt. They hung low upon
the ground, prevented from rising by the strength of the downpour, and making
it difficult to see the progress of events in the enemy's lines. From time to
time above the hissing of the rain and the roar of the rivers we heard the angry
cough of the Nordenfeldt, the shrieks of their quick-firing guns, and the heavy
and more stately boom of "Big Ben." Ofttimes there was the echo of
the Mauser, the grating rustle of the Martini, and it soon became evident that
the enemy did not propose to let us endure the misery of the storm altogether
undisturbed. From these omens, as some slight diminution in the downpour
allowed the mists to rise from the ground, we expected to hear the sound of
exploding volleys coming through the fog, and to find that the fight had become
suddenly desperate; but the Boers lacked the individual courage, and the charge
which they might have made under cover of the tangle of the
brushwood and the bewilderment of the fog never took place. They were satisfied
with cannonading our position; and across the ground, heavy with rain, upon
which the mist laid dense, the red flashes of the gun and the sparkle of the
rifles had a weird effect as they flared and vanished through the eddying
masses of vapour and fantastic columns of smoke. The tumbling volumes of mist
and the grey-black masses of smoke mingled and curled in distorted pillars,
forming at a moment when the sun shone briefly, as the tears of heaven dried
off into space, an evanescent and iridescent canopy of colour. The respite was
momentary, and as the sun withdrew, the groups of men that had been seen about
the Boer lines were quickly obscured in clouds of grosser vapour. Their fire,
however, continued, while about them tossed the thick white fog, as above us occasionally
rolled the thunder of their guns. The area of the storm included the most
advanced trenches of the Boers, and as the wind shifted the gloomy masses of
vapour we saw through the whirling mist and smoke-charged air, the Boers,
rain-soaked as ourselves, standing disconsolately upon their muddy parapets.
They did not seem to understand what they should do. They could hear their own
guns firing on our positions, happily beyond the later centre of the storm, but
these men themselves stood still, shaking the water from their limbs,
attempting to dry their weapons. At night, with the darkness to cover our
misfortunes, the town was busily constructing fresh earthworks, draining those
shelters from which any further use could be obtained, and making such amends
as were possible for an occurrence, almost unprecedented in the annals of war.
CHAPTER XVII THE ECONOMY OF THE SITUATION
December 12th, 1899.
The
importance of the resistance which Mafeking has made to the attacks of the
Boers should be viewed in the light of its relationship to the two
Protectorates, Bechuanaland and Matabeleland, since had this place fallen, its
position as a depôt for the Northern trade would have made it a
comparatively easy task for the victorious Boers to have secured the control of
the intermediate areas. They would have at once seized the rolling stock of the
railway whose headquarters are temporarily invested in Mafeking, and could, by
that means, have mobilised their forces in a fashion and with a degree of
acceleration which would have brought them in a completely equipped and
efficient condition to the borders of Rhodesia. Indeed, from what one can learn
now, it is not at all improbable that the plan of the northern operations of
the Boer forces from their base at Mafeking provided for the seizure of
Mafeking with its stores and rolling stock, with their subsequent enlistment of
this material in the work of occupying Bechuanaland and assisting our enemy in
the concentration of their forces upon Rhodesia. With the
railway in their hands small forces would have been stationed at the important
points such as are afforded by the natural drifts, and while they maintained by
this system of custodianship an open line of communication, they would, at the
same time, have been free to utilise, in a combined and united mass, all of
these scattered parties of Boers who were engaged upon marauding expeditions
between here and Middle Drift. The history of Mafeking then would have been but
the story of Vryburg, where, once its sympathy to the Boer cause was proclaimed
and the place effectually occupied, the Boer commandant withdrew the greater
portion of his men to fresh spheres of activity. With Mafeking in the hands of
the enemy, our chief stand would have been around Buluwayo, where Colonel
Baden-Powell and Colonel Plumer would have united their commands, thereby
presenting to the enemy greater resistance than would have been possible had
the forces been engaged upon their own initiative. In a way, therefore,
Mafeking has forged an important link in the chain of outposts, by which the
safety of the Protectorates has been guaranteed and the independence of the
country still preserved to Imperial rule. It must not be forgotten, however,
that the success which Plumer's column has enjoyed at Rhodes' Drift and at
Middle Drift gave to Southern Rhodesia a certain immunity from hostile
invasion, while in any estimate of the economy of the victories which Colonel
Plumer's men and our own here have scored against the Boers, it should be borne
in mind that had they vanquished our forces at Middle Drift or Rhodes' Drift,
further Imperial territory would have been invaded, and the road upon which
they might have marched to besiege Buluwayo would have been
open to them. Colonel Baden-Powell has, of course, been chiefly instrumental in
preventing the investment of Buluwayo, since the determined stand which he made
caused General Cronje to hold an aggregate number of Boers, amounting to 8,000
men, and by far the larger portion of the Western Division of the S.A.R.
forces, under his control for Mafeking; but without in any way disparaging this
work, so important in its achievements, so vital in its issues, nothing perhaps
has proved so integral a factor in the work of maintaining our occupation and
dominion over these important adjuncts of our Empire in Africa, as the defence
which Colonel Plumer so successfully and gallantly accomplished. However we
here may have assisted in the preservation of those Protectorates as Imperial
dominions, there can be no doubt we should have lost, for the time being, all
claim to their moral and practical possession had Colonel Plumer's force
retired. With 8,000 men investing Mafeking, and various minor bodies scattered
up and down the border between here and Fort Tuli, the enemy could have spared
6,000 men for co-operation with these subsidiary bodies, and still have
maintained the siege and bombardment of this town. It did not need, then, its
downfall to give the Boers important belligerent rights throughout the
Protectorate and Southern Rhodesia, and although our surrender might have
materially facilitated their progress, our successful opposition did not
necessarily, nor altogether, impede it. The strategical value of the drifts
made their safe custody a matter of momentous importance, since through them,
as much as from Mafeking, might entry have been made and
territorial supremacy for the moment acquired. Indeed, it is very much to be
doubted whether the chief value of the stand by which Mafeking has
distinguished itself is not found in the lesson which it has read to the Colony
itself. Had we gone the way of Vryburg, or had we surrendered after some slight
stand, it is almost certain that our fall would have been the signal for the
general uprising of the Dutch in the northern areas of the Colony as well as in
British Bechuanaland. How near we are to a mare's nest in Mafeking is
uncertain, but after much inquiry amongst the chief people (business) in the
town, there is no doubt that had the inhabitants of Mafeking been able to
conceive the difficulties and trials which were about to beset them, the losses
in business at the moment, and the temporary stagnation which will follow the
war, they would have preferred to have worshipped the Golden Calf, and to see
Colonel Baden-Powell and Colonel Hore remove their headquarters to some spot in
the Protectorate, while the sleek and prosperous merchants of Mafeking were
thus enabled to follow their occupation and to turn over their money while they
lived amid the baneful protection of a temporary and purely commercial
allegiance to the Transvaal Republic. It is not, it would seem, that
individually Mafeking is disloyal, but that it is essentially a commercial
centre, governed, impressed, and inherited by commercial instinct, and
reflecting, in its inhabitants, a gathering of the peoples of the world in more
or less confused proportion. There is a small German community, there is an
American colony, there are French, and Jews of every nation. They have made money
in Mafeking; they own much property; they are even friendly
to the Transvaal since they have large trade interests among Dutch towns which
are near the border. They came here in the days when this part of Africa was
unknown to white man; they trekked from Kimberley, from the Transvaal, even
across the African desert from the coast, and if they have lived beneath the
protection of our standard, they have amassed their wealth by trading with the
flags of all nations. They care very little indeed for the Uitlander in the
Transvaal, for his wrongs or for his rights, but they would respect him much if
he came with his cattle and his sheep, with his waggons and his chattels, and
some superfluity of money, for then they could add still further to their hoard
of shekels and trade with him for his cattle. It is a weird and motley crowd
that constitutes Mafeking: disgusted with Imperial government, wishing to have
vengeance upon the Colonial Government, and boasting to Heaven at one moment
about their gallant resistance, crying out against the ill-wind that has
brought them the siege. They move with the current of the Colony, and can be as
easily disturbed to patriotism as they can rouse themselves to a passionate
criticism of the follies of the Imperial protection under which they exist.
When they are moved to sympathy with the Dutch, it is difficult to believe that
they are the self-same loyal inhabitants of Mafeking who are now beleaguered,
since by daily contact, by union of marriage, by personal friendship, they have
consciously or unconsciously assimilated the cause of the Boer, and reveal the
profundity of their sympathies in these times of distress.
An
interesting side issue to the siege of Mafeking has been the chain of events
relating to the departure of Lady Sarah Wilson from Mafeking upon the night of the day during which war was declared, her temporary
sojourn at Setlagoli, from where she supplied the garrison with news, and acted
as the chief medium by which Baden-Powell managed to get his dispatches through
to the Government in Cape Town; her retirement from Setlagoli, when her work
was discovered, to General Snyman's laager before Mafeking to request from that
gentleman a safe permit into Mafeking; her eventual arrival in the town in exchange
for the prisoner Viljoen. Lady Sarah Wilson experienced no very extraordinary
adventures and was treated with that consideration which is due to her sex by
the Boers, despite the fact that they might have made her position somewhat
unpleasant, since she had quite voluntarily taken up active participation in
the siege by endeavouring to keep the garrison supplied with news.
December 12th, 1899.
The week has
been a dull one, which in relation to the siege implies that the passing days
have not borne what we have now come to regard as their full quota of shells
and bullets. We here are somewhat sceptical of the lapses of the bombardment
since tactics which the Boers have already adopted have led us to believe that
intervals of some hours' duration be planned deliberately so that when shelling
should be renewed, it may please Providence, ever on the side of the Boers, to
have the streets thronged with people. Upon one or two occasions we have been
lulled into a fancied security by the cessation of shell fire; but with the
lamentable occurrences of last week, we are disinclined to be again caught
napping. Accordingly, although there has been a week of extraordinary
desistence upon the part of the enemy, those who were about were careful enough
to take their airing within a short distance of their bomb-proof shelters. In a
fashion, this gave to the environments of the town and the town itself, the
appearance of a rabbit warren, where at sunset the little animals may be seen
bunched about the entrance to their retreats. A few ladies
enjoyed the novelty of tea al fresco, with possibly, a keener
appreciation for their propinquity to some bomb-proof, than for the light
refreshment in which they were indulging.
Thus it came
that I was visiting the hospital, chatting with the physicians upon the stoep
of the building. Beneath the shelter of the verandah lay the forms of many who
had been wounded, and who now were sufficiently recovered to sit outside; here
and there a man limped painfully with the aid of crutches, to talk to a comrade
who, with his arm in a sling, was not altogether inappreciative of the fact
that he had been wounded in a recent sniping affray against the enemy's
position in the brickfields. As we sat upon the stoep with our legs dangling to
the ground, behind us in the building there was the complement of battle: the
wounded, the nurses, and the doctors; but in front of us there was the
expansion of the veldt, green and peaceful. The heat haze lay upon it,
simmering in an endless stretch of floating vapour. There was every appearance
of the provincial and rural simplicity which goes to make up the daily life of
those who live upon the veldt. There were homesteads which, but a few months
ago, had been the centre of some small and flourishing agrestic community, but
were now charred and blackened, epitomising the destruction which the Boers
deal out to unoffending people; in the place of the herds which formerly had
grazed upon the scene, there were the white covers of the Boer laagers; there
were the lines of the Boer horses, there were the mobs of cattle, of sheep, of
goats, which, raided from the countryside, had been collected in the rear of
the enemy's encampments. Upon the skyline, from the steps
of the hospital, the emplacement of "Big Ben" could be seen outlined
quite distinctly in the bright sunlight. The position of the gun was known by
the glint of the sun as it played upon the burnished metal.
Presently,
as we talked, there came the boom of cannon, and the enemy had turned upon the
stadt their quick-firing Krupps. Instinctively, since the habits which rule the
enemy are well known to us, a wounded man called out to us that was the five
o'clock gun, and for the moment we were uncertain as to whether the peace of
the afternoon would be further disturbed. But in a little a column of smoke,
white and heavy, hung over the position of "Big Ben," and we at once
settled down for further shelling during the remainder of the time that daylight
lasted. In the distance, out on the furthest limits of the Stadt, there came
echoes, echoing back the noise of the explosion when the hundred-pound shell
burst amid a collection of native huts. It is so seldom that these greater
projectiles miss their victims, that preparations were at once made for any
casualties that might have been sent to the hospital. With these measures
taken, we waited while the firing grew heavier. It was just one of those
moments which we had been anticipating from the fashion which our friend the
Boer had already set, and in a little it was proved that whatever had been our
expectations they would be fully realised. When the firing began, the scene
upon the stoep of the hospital gradually changed; the wounded were carried back
to their wards, Surgeon-Major Anderson, the Imperial officer who has been sent
out here; Dr. Hayes, who in the virtue of the rank of P.M.O. conferred by
Colonel Baden-Powell, has charge of the hospital, and his
brother, both local practitioners, waited the course of events upon the steps
of the building. For the time firing seemed confined to the artillery and
rifles from the Boer trenches in the brickfields, the south-eastern front of
the town and the eastern facing of the native location receiving the brunt. By
degrees the entire position of the enemy upon that side dropped into line,
giving cause and effect to the wisps of smoke which broke into the air about
the advanced trenches of the foe. In about half an hour from the time the first
shell exploded over the stadt, a stretcher-party appeared coming from the town
and began to descend into the trench which led to the hospital. As they crossed
the recreation ground, a large white flag which was carried in advance of the
party, heralding to the Boers the passing of wounded, attracted the attention
of the enemy and was promptly fired upon. It is these wilful acts which make it
difficult to consider the Boer in any way removed from a savage combatant, and
although the flag-bearer waved repeatedly to the enemy's trenches, the fire
from that direction did not diminish. With no little heroism the
stretcher-party, which was under Sergeant-Major Dowling, a resident physician
in Cape Town, who volunteered his services for the campaign, and who has charge
of the subsidiary hospital in the native location, made their way across the
zone of fire to the doors of the hospital. Then in a moment all that had been
peaceful and serene before, became impressed with the horrible effects and the
fearful injuries which are derived from war.
The
stretcher was taken to the operating-room, where nurses had already begun to
arrange the table, to prepare the carbolic lotion, to lay out the lint and bandages, the dressing dishes, sponges, and a fine array of
instruments; then when the stretcher had been placed beside the table, willing
and gentle hands lifted the inanimate form by the corners of the brown and
blood-stained mackintosh sheet in which the body had been enshrouded. Dr. Hayes
snicked the strings which had caught the ends of the sheet about the injured,
and as he threw back the flaps Surgeon-Major Anderson gently separated the
clothing where, matted with blood, it had congealed into a sticky mass about
the injuries. The doctors and the surgeon, bending with callous diffidence
about the inert and prostrate form, then proceeded rapidly with their
examination. Through the western windows of the room there came the ruddy rays
of the sun as it sank to its rest. The light caught the bottles on the shelves,
flickered for a moment upon the silvery brightness of the instruments, and
played about the hair of the nurses, who, passing to and fro across the window,
were as much interested in their work as in the nature of the patient's
injuries. In a corner of the room Sergeant-Major Dr. Dowling explained to
Surgeon-Major Anderson that the patient, who was a native woman of some repute,
had been washing clothes upon the banks of the Molopo, when a flight of
one-pound steel-pointed Maxim shells burst about her. The pelvis and the femur
had been shattered completely, besides internal wounds of a most fatal
character in the abdominal regions. The left foot was also pulverised, the
extraordinary part being that any one, after suffering such severe injuries and
sustaining so great a shock to the system, should yet be living. The
examination completed, Dr. Hayes, turning to the head nurse, said that it was
impossible to do anything which would save the woman's life, inquiring,
as Surgeon-Major Anderson dissolved a grain of morphia in a wine-glass, if any
one knew the name of the native. As the nurse was about to reply, the patient,
moaning feebly, expressed in excellent English, that her name was Martha. Then
it appeared that she was recognised as being the wife of a Fingo in the
location, one who before marriage had been a member of the oldest profession
which the world has ever known, but since lawful wedlock had consummated her
union, she had passed, after the manner of her tribe, a life of great
austerity. The air of the operating-room was becoming oppressive, the moaning
of the patient merging with the heavy scent of the iodoform and the lighter
evaporation of the carbolic liniment began gradually to dominate the nerves. To
the casual observer such as myself, the scene was striking. The insensitiveness
of those assembled in the operating-room, in reality the outcome of great
experience in a particular profession, enforced a calmness of feature and of
feeling with which I was far from being actually animated. The mechanical industry
of the surgeons, the automatic regularity with which the hospital orderly waved
his fly whisk above the head of the dying woman, imparted a coldness to the
scene which one could not help observing. In a fashion, all that human skill
could do had been accomplished, since had the foot been amputated at the ankle,
or the thigh removed at the hip, the labour would have been unnecessary, the
extra shock to the system serving only to accelerate the end. Very gently they
sponged the mouth and nose of the woman and cooled her brow, very gently they
administered morphia and sips of brandy, but one by one the doctors, rinsing
their hands and lowering their shirt-sleeves, put on their
jackets. At the door of the operating-room Dr. Hayes and Surgeon-Major Anderson
paused to impart a few brief instructions to the nurses. They were not to
forget, said the P.M.O., to remove the tourniquet from the pelvis when the end
had come; Surgeon-Major Anderson adding to this an order to continue waving the
fly whisk so long as there existed the necessity.
And the
incident had closed.
CHAPTER XIX A LITTLE GUN PRACTICE
December 23rd, 1899.
We take a
keen interest in our artillery, although we never cease to deplore the fact
that the War Office did not think it necessary to send to Mafeking anything
better than old muzzle-loading seven-pounders of the Crimean period. Their
range is restricted, and their mobility is greatly inferior to more modern
types; but if they have not enabled us to do very much, we have at least been
able to return their fire. In this way quite a little flutter of enthusiasm has
been aroused through having unearthed an antiquated sixteen-pounder gun. It
would seem to have been made about 1770, and is identical with those which up
till very recently adorned the quay at Portsmouth. Its weight is 8 cwt. 2 qr.
10 lb., and it was made by B. P. and Co. It is a naval gun, and is stamped
"No. 6 port." How it came here is uncertain, and its origin unknown;
but one gathers that it must have been intended more for privateering than for
use in any Government ship of war, since it is wanting in all official
superscription. This weapon, which we have now christened "B.-P." out
of compliment to the Colonel, has been lying upon the farm
of an Englishman whose interests are very closely united with the native tribe
whose headquarters are in Mafeking Stadt. Mr. Rowlands can recall the gun
passing this way in charge of two Germans nearly forty years ago. He remembers
to have seen it in the possession of Linchwe's tribe, and upon his return to
the Baralongs, after one of his trading journeys, he urged the old chief to
secure it for use in defence of the Stadt against the attacks of Dutch
freebooters. The chief then visited Linchwe and bought the gun for twenty-two
oxen, bringing it down to Mafeking upon his waggon. In those days it had three
hundred rounds of ammunition, which were utilised in tribal fights. With the
exception of visits which the gun made to local tribes, it has remained here
and is now in the possession of Mr. Rowlands. It has recently been mounted, and
is in active operation against our enemies. We have made balls for it, and are
intending to manufacture shells, in the hope that we shall at least be able to
reach the emplacement of "Big Ben." The first trial of
"B.-P." in its new career gave very satisfactory results. With two
pounds of powder it threw a ball of ten pounds more than two thousand yards.
The power of the charge was increased by half pounds until a charge of three
pounds threw a ball of the same weight as the first rather more than two miles.
We, therefore, have pinned our hopes upon it, and commend to the responsible
authorities the reflections which may be derived from the fact that our chief
and most efficient means of defence, lie in such a weapon.
After many
weeks of inactivity upon our part, we have lately taken the initiative against
the foe, whose present mode of war, so far as this place is
concerned, would seem to give preference to the chastened security of laagers
already beyond the three-mile limit from the town. Upon two occasions during
the last week we have celebrated dawn with many salvoes of artillery, securing
sufficient noise and effect from our shell fire display, to excite the town to
no little enthusiasm. Moreover, up to the present, reaction has not set in, and
we are even more cheerful to-day than we were at the beginning of the siege.
Dingdaan's Day, the earlier of the two events, was distinguished by the Boers,
as by ourselves, with a bombardment, which opened with a hundred-pound shell
from "Big Ben," landing in the Headquarters Office at half-past two
in the morning. Fortunately no one sustained any injury from this untimely
marauder of our rest, the corner of the building alone being shattered, and the
town itself sprinkled with fragments of masonry and shell. A few hours later
the enemy again started firing, while our guns upon the east front proceeded to
give a good account of themselves. About seven o'clock firing for the day
ceased from the Boer lines, since they devoted themselves to psalm singing and
prayer gathering in their laagers in commemoration of their day of
independence; but we, upon our part, threw four rounds at noon into their camp,
and then we, too, enjoyed the comparative peace of the siege. For the next few
days our guns remained quiet, and "Big Ben" kept its nose pointed
upon the furthest limits of the Stadt or Cannon Kopje, until the impression
gained ground that the Boers had shifted the gun round to a position upon which
they were very busily engaged on the western side of the Stadt. There were
those even who were willing to lay odds that, when the gun fired again, it would be found to have taken up a new site. And so
universal was this idea that it was not altogether discarded by members of the
Staff. With a view to disproving this illusion Colonel Baden-Powell arranged
that all our available artillery, under Major Panzera, should effect a
reconnaissance of the Boer lines upon the east of the town, from which it could
easily be learnt whether the fire of the big gun still dominated that front.
There had
been some little talk of a movement against the five-pound gun, which the enemy
had located at Game Tree, and upon Sunday night I camped with Captain Vernon,
from whose fort upon the western outposts, the sortie would have taken place.
However, nothing happened, and although a few shells fell about us at daybreak,
there was nought to interest one beyond the usual routine of daily life upon
the western outposts. Upon returning to town I learnt that the following
morning might reveal something more important than a mere artillery exchange.
Towards nightfall, to those who knew about the contemplated move, Mafeking
appeared to present much unusual animation. Artillery officers, whose duty
detained them at points distant from the town, gathered at Headquarters to
receive Major Panzera's final instructions before setting out for their
emplacements, as at the same time small detachments of men moved to reinforce
the entrenchments along the eastern front. For the most part the town went to
its rest in ignorance of the surprise which was being laid for the enemy at
daybreak upon the following morning, and by nine o'clock the nocturnal aspect
of the town was eminently peaceful. The transformation from the harsh and
biting sunlight of the day to the soothing and eerie light
of night impressed the hour with grandeur and solemnity, which was in striking
contrast to the labour upon which we were engaged. From the town, those guns
which were not already in position moved to their stationsone, the Hotchkiss,
being despatched to an emplacement which had only been completed the preceding
night. It was a pleasant scramble to this position across the veldt, and so
near to the enemy's lines that we could hear the murmur of their voices as they
called to one another in the trenches and discerned their gloomy figures
silhouetted against the skyline. The Hotchkiss, which was our extreme piece
upon the north-east of the town, was to direct its fire upon the enemy at the
waterworks and the opposing corner of their advanced trenches. Its precise
utility was uncertain, since it was not possible to see the object at which its
fire would be directed, but, as the gun party moved to the emplacement, the
officer in charge arranged with the nearest entrenchment in the rear to signal
the accuracy of his range. Then we set out to visit the outposts and the
different emplacements. Time and distance passed rapidly in the starlight
expanse of the night, and few things could have been more impressive than the
calm which had come upon the town. From the veldt, as we cut directly across
from the Hotchkiss to the nearest post, it seemed as though we were passing
some walled-in city of the ancient days. At short distances the outlines of the
forts showed out against the buildings, and it became almost difficult to
suppress the cry to the sentry, "Watchman, what of the night?" As we
made our rounds it was interesting to note how some points had received heavier
fire than at others. The ground round the Dutch Church was
ploughed and furrowed by shell, and at Ellis's Corner and across the front of
the location to Cannon Kopje there were numerous traces of the enemy's
bombardment. Presently the rounds were concluded, and Major Panzera went to
snatch a few hours' rest before he opened fire in the morning. As upon
Dingdaan's morning, so this time did I attach myself to the emplacement under
the direct control of Major Panzera, at the Dutch Church, and around this, as
he arrived there, the hour of midnight chiming from the church towers, there
were the sleeping figures of the gunners. For the time we slept together, and
when Major Panzera aroused us in the morning the rawness of the morning air
foretold the earliness of the hour.
The mists of
night were still rising from the veldt about the Boer lines, and as we looked
through our field-glasses, figures here and there, were busily engaged in
gathering brushwood for the matutinal fire. Then, as it was yet early, and they
were about to prepare their coffee, we boiled up ours, and, passing round the
billy, filled our pannikins to the health of the enemy. It was but a grim jest,
and one perhaps which shows the indifference of the men to the accidents of
fate, but as we drank, he who was number one said, raising his tin to the air,
"We will drink with you in hell." But the hour of jesting was soon
over and the gun party prepared for their morning's work by running up the gun
into the embrasure. Number one laid the gun, and number two stood with his
lanyard in his hand ready to connect the friction tube. Number three hung upon
the trail piece, and he, with the sponge and ramrod, was prepared for immediate
service. Within a few feet of them were two who were actively adjusting the time fuses. At their side there was a pile of common shell and
shrapnel, and with this, the local colour of the picture is completed. Of a
sudden Panzera gave the order to the man who fed the gun"Common shell,
percussion fuse, prepare to load," and as it passed from the hands of the
man to the muzzle of the gun, one found oneself muttering a prayer for the
souls of the Boers who were so speedily to be sent into perdition.
"Load," said Panzera rapidly, and the gun was loaded. Then, as I focussed
my glasses upon the scene, the Major took one last squint down the sights of
the gun. It was well and truly laid, and as he straightened himself to the
precision of the parade ground the end came rapidly. "Prepare to
fire," said he, and number two stepped forward, dropping the friction tube
into the vent. "Fire," said Panzera, and one raised the glasses to
fix them upon a party of Boers whom we could see drinking their coffee, as they
sat upon the parapet of the trench. There was a roar, a cloud of smoke, and a
red fierce tongue of flame leapt from the muzzle of the gun. Dust and smoke and
sand enveloped the place where those Boers had been sitting, and I found myself
wondering and endeavouring to believe that the breach in the parapet foreboded
no great harm to anybody. The battle, if battle it were to be, had been started
by a well-directed shell. Quickly the gun was trained and loaded again, and I
felt the excitement entering into my soul. The feelings of humanity left me,
and I began to hope that we should kill them every time. Again our gun fired,
falling short, but giving the signal to the others along the front to join in
the comparative splendour of the cannonade. Away down in the river-bed our guns
boomed; beyond it and between that emplacement and Cannon
Kopje there were the jets of smoke from the Nordenfeldt like the spurts of
steam from a geyser. Above us there was the Hotchkiss and the merry rattle of
the Maxim. So far as noise, and numbers of the pieces engaged, went the press
of battle was about us. All down our front there broke the whistling rush of
Lee-Metford rifles, as the eastern line of the defence dropped into action. For
the moment the Boers were surprised at the manner and method of our onslaught,
and beyond a few desultory rifle shots our guns fired some few rounds before
any shells came back in answer. As Major Panzera had opened the fight so they
threw their first shells upon his emplacement, and a well-directed flight of
one-pound steel-topped base fuse Maxim broke in a cloud of dust about us,
flinging their sharp-edged fragments in all directions. Then we fired again,
raking the parapet of the Boers' trench, and wondering whether the big gun
would reply to us, or whether those who had speculated upon its removal would win.
The music of the fight grew louder and louder, the quick-firing guns of the
enemy paying their tribute. From where we were we could see the gun in the
river-bed emplacement doing remarkable execution. The smoke of our own hung
heavy upon us, mingling with the dust from the Maxim shell, as the enemy
continued to pepper our emplacement. We were beginning to find it difficult to
see, while the roar of the guns made it almost impossible to catch the
officer's orders. Suddenly, as our gun again broke forth, the bell clanged in
the distance six times. It was the signal that the big gun had fired, the six
strokes indicating that it was pointed upon us. We heard it and crouched in the
dust, and as we crouched we wondered. There was a screaming
tumult in the air, a deafening explosion at our feet shook the ground; earth
and dust, stones and bits of grass fell all about us, and the roofs of
buildings upon either side of us rattled with the fragments of the shell as it
burst within a circle of twenty-five yards from the gun. It was a moment rather
fine than frightful, with just sufficient danger in it to make it interesting,
but, if anything, somewhat quickly over. We wiped the dust from our faces,
shook the grass from our shirts, and laid again: once more fired, and chuckled
to see, through rifts in the battle smoke, that it had landed in the very
centre of the trench. Again the bell clanged sonorously, and a building not
fifteen yards from us was blown to pieces. They were getting nearer, and making
magnificent shooting, when the Nordenfeldt turned its fire upon "Big
Ben" itself. From where we were we could see the thin columns of smoke
rising, as the bullets burst before and behind the emplacement. If anything
were calculated to check its fire it was the irritating and penetrating
possibility of the armour-piercing Nordenfeldt. With the introduction of
"Big Ben" into the morning's festivities, the Boers opened from their
trenches, with their Mauser and Martini rifles. In the intervals between the shells
from "Big Ben," the Maxim, and quick-firing nine-pounders, the enemy
swept our emplacements with their rifle fire. They came through the embrasure
with quite fatal accuracy, dropping at our feet and raising dust all around us,
but the tale of the one is the tale of the many, and the same scene was
occurring throughout the entire eastern front. For a moment it became
impossible to serve the gun, and we desisted with apologies to the enemy, but
anon rifle fire was deflected, and we again trained the gun
upon those very advanced trenches of the enemy; but, as we fired, the bell
rang, and for the third time their shell, passing ours in its flight, tore up
the ground in front of us. And then the Nordenfeldt spoke again, shooting into
the very smoke of the gun as though they were anxious to drop projectiles into
the breach itself. And to the north of us the Hotchkiss spitted, as though
resenting the intrusion of this big bully. But there unfortunately it ended,
and no more big shells came our way, and we contented ourselves with a parting
sally.
Then the gun
was sponged and laid to rest in the trench, and the spare shell put back into
the box as the engagement closed. Then Panzera called his men together and
thanked them, expressing his admiration for their courage and their coolness.
Then we cheered him, and returning thanks for thanks, we went to breakfast, but
in the distance we could see the Red Cross upon the white background, floating
in tragic isolation, above a waggon, which was stopping ever and anon at places
where we knew our shells had broken. That was in the Boer lines, but in our own
the bugle sounded us to breakfast.
CHAPTER XX THE ATTACK UPON GAME TREE
Mafeking, December 27th, 1899.
Barely had
the celebration of Christmas Day passed in Mafeking when the order to prepare
for immediate action was sent out from Headquarters, and in the early hours of
Boxing Day two dismounted squadrons began to move to the front. We had spent a
pleasant holiday that day, which of all days brings glad tidings and goodwill
throughout the civilised and Christian world; but when, hereafter, we come to
speak of the Christmas season of 1899, our stories will be impressed with the
sinister memories of the tragic events which have for us marked the time as one
of lamentation. Nothing could have been in more complete contrast to the
happiness of Christmas Day, imbued with much real meaning to beleaguered
Mafeking, than those early morning preparations which were made as the day
closed. For some little time we have been desirous to attack the enemy's
position at Game Tree, and in my last letter I mentioned the fact that, in
anticipation of such an event, I had camped one night recently with Captain
Vernon at his western outpost. That attack, however, did not take place, and,
although the town and garrison were disappointed, there was
a very strong feeling that it would not be long before they were compensated
for their disappointment.
Game Tree,
against which our force moved, is a strongly fortified position of the enemy,
about two miles from the town, and it has been from this spot that our front to
the north-west has been subjected to a persistent rifle and artillery fire
during many weeks. The attack was ordered for the purpose of breaking the
cordon around Mafeking, with a view to ultimately reopening our communications
to the north. D and C Squadrons of the Protectorate Regiment, under the
Imperial Service officers, Captain Vernon, of the King's Royal Rifles, and
Captain Fitzclarence, of the Royal Fusiliers, were detailed to carry out the
attack from the east, under the protection of the armoured train, and Captain
Williams and twenty men of the British South Africa Police, with a one-pounder
Hotchkiss and Maxim. This right flank was further supported by Captain Cowan
and seventy men of the Bechuanaland Rifles, the whole of the wing being under
the command of Major Godley. The left wing comprised three seven-pounders, one
cavalry Maxim, and a troop of the Protectorate Regiment under Major Panzera;
Captain Lord Charles Bentinck with two troops of A Squadron holding the
reserve. The entire operations from this side were conducted by Colonel Hore.
Colonel Baden-Powell and his staffMajor Lord Edward Cecil, Chief Staff
Officer, Captain Wilson, A.D.C., and Lieutenant the Hon. A. H. C.
Hanbury-Tracywatched the progress of the fight from Dummie Fort.
Our guns
moved into position during the night, throwing up emplacements for the attack,
and as soon as they could see, Major Panzera opened fire.
It was yet dark, although there came a faint glimmer of light from the east,
but not sufficient to prevent the flashes from the muzzles of the guns and the
glow of the bursting shells from being plainly visible. Until that moment there
had been no sign of any living thing about the veldt between us and the Boer
lines, and there was no sound. We had seen C and D Squadrons creeping to their
positions under the guidance of the scout Cooke. Captain Lord Charles Bentinck
had deployed across the front of the Boer position, taking up his place upon
the left of the line. Close to him and but little in advance, the gunners had
ensconced themselves behind a few sods of earth and sacks of sand. These
operations marked the preliminary of the fight, from which, as the armoured
train steamed to its post, completing the units in our attack, nothing had been
omitted which might increase our chances of success.
At 4.15 a.m.
our first shells were thrown upon the enemy's position, the shells bursting
short and beyond Game Tree with no very striking effect. Upon the left of Game
Tree and extending to the receding wall of the fort, some sixty yards distant,
there was a heavy overgrowth of bushes, upon which, as the enemy seemed to be
firing from concealed pits in their midst, the cavalry Maxim concentrated its
fire. Away to the right there was the automatic rattle of the Maxim in the
armoured train, and the sharp crack of the Hotchkiss. For the first
three-quarters of an hour the attack was left to Major Panzera, who, it was
hoped, would effect a breach in the parapet through the agency of his guns.
But, unfortunately, the damage inflicted upon the fort did not materially aid
the charge which our men were so soon and so very gallantly
to make, and which, when completed, revealed the fact that Colonel Baden-Powell
had also organised a frontal attack upon an entrenched and impregnable
position, with most lamentable results. A few of the enemy were put out of
action by our shrapnel shells bursting in such a manner as to search out the
interior of the fort with their sharp-edged segments, but the strength of the
fort was so great and had been so increased during the night, that the
artillery which was available was not sufficiently heavy for our purpose, while
the wisdom of using the guns at all is eminently questionable. The character of
our attack needed a movement which was quietly delivered, and which was in the
nature of a surprise. So far as the fact is of value, in appreciating the
appalling disaster which upon that morning befell our arms, our gunfire simply
warned the garrison in the fort to stand to their arms. There is no doubt that
the employment of the guns was a blunder in keeping with the conception of the
attack. Colonel Baden-Powell, one has to say regretfully, upon this occasion was
instrumental in bringing about quite needless loss of life. Presently, as we
watched, we could see the signal being given to the armoured train "to
cease fire," and a moment afterwards the base notes of the steam whistle
boomed forth, when, as though waiting for this signal, "Big Ben,"
whose emplacement was some 6,000 yards to the south-east in the rear, began to
shell the armoured train. As the echoes of the big gun died away, a roll of
musketry from our own line and from the fort swept across the veldt, and for a
few brief moments the hail of bullets was like the opening shower of a tropical
deluge. Upon the east Captain Vernon with C and D Squadrons had begun the
charge. Their position at this moment was in echelonCaptain Sandford with a troop of C Squadron was upon the right extremity, with
Captain Vernon in the centre, and Captain Fitzclarence upon his left. As
Captain Vernon gave the word to charge they opened out into skirmishing order,
maintaining the while successive volleys with perfect accuracy. The advance was
well carried out; indeed, its order and style were worthy of the best
traditions of our army, and received tributes of admiration from all the
commanding officers present. As they advanced the fire of the enemy was
principally delivered from the front of the fort and the rifle intrenchments in
the scrub. For a moment it seemed as though the face opposed to the rush of
Captain Vernon and Captain Sandford was a mere wall requiring only to be scaled
for the fort to be captured. But, when the men approached within three hundred
yards of the fort, rifles rang out from every possible point, and the ground
was swept by Mauser and Martini bullets. The men who charged through this zone
of fire suffered terribly, and the conclusion must have forced itself upon
their minds that they were going to their death. As each face of the fort
became engaged the fire of the enemy began to have a telling effect upon our
charging line. Captain Sandford was the first to fall, mortally wounded with a
bullet in the spine. He fell down, calling to his men to continue the charge;
but where he had fallen, he died. Our men now began to drop rather rapidly, and
Captain Fitzclarence was disabled with a bullet in the thigh. His place was
taken by Lieutenant Swinburne, who at once continued the charge, that officer
and Lieutenant Bridges, of the same squadron, being among the nine who, upon
the termination of the fight, were unwounded. The ground around the fort was
becoming dotted with the figures of our wounded men, who,
although they were but an irregular soldiery, followed their officers with the
pluck and dogged determination of veterans. The brunt of the fight now fell
upon the companies under the immediate command of Captain Vernon, who,
undaunted by the impossibility of his task, steadily fought his way forward. As
they approached still nearer, his men, undisturbed by the shower of bullets
which fell about them, cheered repeatedly, the echo of those cheers, giving
rise to the impression that the capture of the position was imminent. The
steady rush of our men, undeflected by the worst that the enemy could do, was
rapidly demoralising those who were firing from behind the loopholes in the
fort, and it may have been that, had we not had our responsible officers shot
or killed before we reached the walls of the fort, a different story might have
to be told. As it happened, when Captain Vernon, with whom was Lieutenant
Paton, steadied his men for the wild impetuosity of the last charge, a bullet
struck him in the body. For a brief interval he stopped, but, refusing the
entreaty of Lieutenant Paton that he should fall out, he joined that officer
once more in taking the lead. From the point which they had gained the
character of the fort was seen, and the heavy fire under which it was defended
showed it to be impregnable. It rose some seven feet from the ground, from the
edges of a ditch with sides that it was almost impossible to climb. It was
certain death which stared them in the face within twenty-five yards, but not a
man was dismayed. They continued. The ditch was before them, the fort above
them, and through double tiers of loopholes came the enemy's fire. Our men from
one side of the ditch fired point-blank at an enemy who, from behind his
loophole, fired point-blank at him. Here those who had
survived until now were either killed or wounded, and it was here that Captain
Vernon was hit again, as he, with Lieutenant Paton and the scout Cooke, whose
tunic at the end of the engagement was found to be riddled with bullets,
endeavoured to clamber into the fort. Captain Vernon and Lieutenant Paton
managed by superhuman efforts to reach the loopholes, into which they emptied
their revolvers. Their example was eagerly followed by the few who remained,
and who were shot down as they plied their bayonets through the apertures. Here
Captain Vernon, Lieutenant Paton, Corporal Pickard, Sergeant Ross, and many
others were killed. Captain Vernon was shot in the head, the third wound which
he had received within two hundred yards. Lieutenant Paton was shot in the
region of the heart. Bugler Morgan, who was the first to ply his bayonet, was
shot in three places, but it is believed that he will live. Then a mighty roar
rose up, and we who had not taken part in the charge, again thought that the
position had been carried. But it was the triumphant shout of the Boers, who,
from the quick manner in which they followed us in hoisting up the Red Cross
flag, would seem to have been partially demoralised by the keenness of our attack.
With the dead and dying about them, and the area of the wounded encircling the
fort, those of our men who were left fell back savagely and sullenly, with a
contempt of the enemy's fire and the desire to renew the attack. Further
assault was impossible, and, though we continued to fire upon the position
until stretcher-parties were sent out, the fight was practically over upon our
retirement. When they fell in again, out of the sixty men that had been engaged
in the charge only nine were unwounded. Our killed were
twenty-one; our wounded thirty, of whom four have since died. There were also
three who were prisoners in the hands of the enemy.
Soon after
the commencement of operations the chief staff officer gave me permission to
move forward from Dummie Fort, and I therefore rode over to the position
occupied by Captain Lord Charles Bentinck, and afterwards to Game Tree, joining
Surgeon-Major Anderson, when the Red Cross flag was hoisted on the scene of the
engagement. The heavy vapour from the shells still impregnated the air, and
hanging loosely over the veldt were masses of grey-black and brown-yellow smoke
clouds. Boers on horseback and on foot were moving quickly in all directions,
and mounted detachments were seen advancing at a gallop from the big laager
upon the eastern front, with their rifles swung loosely across their knees.
They had been proceeding to reinforce Game Tree Fort, upon an order from Field
Cornet Steinekamp, when the cessation of hostilities had taken place under the
provisions of the Red Cross. Game Tree Fort presented an animated picture. The
enemy thronged its walls, held noisy conversation in scattered groups, that,
breaking up in one spot, congregated the next moment in some other. The bushes
about the fort were alive with men who, with their rifles in their hands and a
few loose cartridges at their side, were prepared at any moment to resume
hostilities. The fort itself showed no traces of the shelling, although it were
impossible, from the seventy-five yards limit, up to which we were permitted to
approach, to examine it very thoroughly. It has been claimed that the fort was
strengthened during the night, but signs were absent by which one could detect
traces of the new work, and, in view of this fact, one is disinclined
to impugn the statement of Commandant Botha, who told me that he had been
expecting the attack for the past two weeks. From where we were the strength of
the fort was very apparent, seeming altogether unnecessary for the requirements
of such a post, unless definite information had been carried to the enemy about
our plans. It may be that the night attack which Captain Fitzclarence had led
against the Boer trenches upon the east of the town earlier in the siege had
prompted the enemy to strengthen all their positions. The fort itself had been
given a head covering of wooden beams, earth, and corrugated iron; the entrance
in the rear was blocked, and in every other way it appeared impregnable. When
the order came for our men to retire, Dr. Hamilton proceeded from the armoured
train with the Red Cross flag, making his way to the wounded in the face of a
heavy fire. But as soon as it was recognised by the enemy that he was desirous
of helping the sufferers the firing was at once stopped, and Commandant Botha
himself apologised. The field around the Boer position at once became dotted
with similar emblems, for the character of the charge and the severity of the
fire had confined our losses within a very small radius of the position. The
scene here was intensely pathetic, and everywhere there were dead or dying men.
The Boers moved out from their trenches and swarmed around with idle curiosity
to inspect the injuries which they had inflicted upon their foe, while a
constant procession came from the immediate precincts of the fort, bearing
those of our men who had fallen within its actual circumference. In their way
they assisted us, although for some time they would not permit the waggons of
the ambulance to approach nearer than half a mile, nor at
first would they entertain our proposal that the services of the armoured train
should be employed to facilitate the conveyance of casualties to the base.
BOERS INSPECTING THE BRITISH KILLED AT GAME TREE
HILL.
As
Surgeon-Major Anderson proceeded with his work, assisted by Dr. T. Hayes, Dr.
Hamilton and a staff of dressers, the character of the wounds which our men had
suffered gave rise to the impression that the enemy had used explosive bullets,
although it is perhaps possible that Martini rifles fired at close range would
account for the wide area of injury on those who had been wounded. In one case
a bullet in the head had blown off rather more than half the skull; in another
a small puncture in the thigh had completely pulverised the limb; while in a third,
in which the bullet had struck just above the knee-cap, it had raised a mass of
shattered flesh and bone into a pulpy mound. With these fearful injuries before
one it was scarcely possible to believe that the wounds inflicted had
originated through the impact of Mauser or Martini bullets. The Field Cornet,
with whom I conversed at some length, upon being shown the dreadful condition
of the wounds, admitted that at one time explosive bullets had been served out,
but that it was not possible that they could have been used that morning, since
he was convinced that that particular ammunition had already been expended. He
then produced a bandolier filled with Dum-dum bullets, and suggested that since
so much of the Mark IV. ammunition had been taken by them from us, our men had
been hit by bullets which we ourselves had manufactured. I pointed out that
this particular ammunition had been recalled, so far as Mafeking was concerned,
since it had been found to strip in the barrel of the rifle. The Field Cornet then said that he and his men were already aware
of the uselessness of this particular pattern of bullet, since upon many
occasions they had been hit by some curious missile from which it was evident
that the casing had stripped, and from which no injury had been sustained. It
was a strange conversation to have with a man against whom the moment before we
had been fighting, but from time to time, as we were waiting for the wounded to
be brought up, the conversation was reopened between us.
The attitude
of the Boers around us was one of stolid composure, not altogether unmixed with
sympathy. At one time almost one hundred had assembled around those who were
dressing the wounded. With their rifles upon their backs and two bandoliers
crossing each other upon their chests, they appeared a stalwart body of men;
for the most part they were big and burly, broad in their shoulders, ponderous
in their gait, and uncouth in their appearance, combining a somewhat soiled and
tattered appearance with an air of triumph. Their clothing was an ill-assorted
array of patterns and materials, altogether incongruous and out of keeping with
the campaign upon which they were then engaged. Some of them, with quite
unnecessary brutality, had doffed their own rifles and bandoliers, in order
that they might show and swing somewhat aggressively before our notice, the
spoils of the battlefield. In this manner they sported Lee-Metford rifles and
bandoliers containing Mark II. and Mark IV. ammunition. But for the most part
they behaved with a certain decorum, and it may be that the weapon which they
bore was the silent confirmation of the Field Cornet's words. Here and there
they made some attempt to rob the wounded and despoil the
dead, but when I remonstrated with the Field Cornet he expressed, with every
appearance of sincerity, his very keen regret, ordering the transgressors from
the field, and explaining that he was unable to accept the responsibility for
such acts, since, although they had instructions to respect the dead, the
younger men were so unruly as to be beyond his control. The Field Cornet
proceeded to assert that the acts of his men were neither so barbarous nor so
inhuman as those which our own soldiers had committed after the battle of
Elandslaagte, where, he said, Imperial troops had stripped the body of General
de Koch, leaving him to lie upon the field wounded and naked, and adding that
we were morally responsible, and held as such by every right-minded person in
the Transvaal and Orange Free State, for the subsequent death of the Boer
general. This opinion was loudly endorsed by a number of the enemy, who had
collected around us, one of whom stated that he had received orders from
Commandant Botha to take possession of any effects which were found upon the
bodies of the wounded or dead. I referred this man's statement to the Field
Cornet, when quite a lively altercation in Dutch ensued. The Field Cornet
denied that any such order had been given by Commandant Botha, and that, had
any orders at all been given, they referred merely to papers and to the removal
of side arms and ammunition. I pointed out to him the bodies of five of our men
whose pockets had been turned inside out, and who were at that moment being
brought up under an escort of the enemy. He was also confronted with three
wounded who declared that they had had their personal effects stolen as they
lay about the Boer trenches, their rings taken from their
fingers, and their money taken from their pockets. The Field Cornet then
promised that if any man who had done such a thing could be identified he would
be immediately punished, while the more reputable of those who gathered round
us guaranteed, if not the restitution of the property, summary conviction for
the offenders. And in this connection it must be said that during the course of
the afternoon a Boer orderly came in, under a flag of truce, to our lines to
restore to Bugler Morgan his silver watch and £3, which had been taken
from him as he lay, shot through each thigh, in the trenches of the enemy.
Very
striking was the tone of harmony which characterised this temporary intercourse
upon the field of battle between Boer and Briton. People who had been pitted
against each other in mortal combat the moment before were now fraternising with
every outward sign of decency and amity. This is doubtless due in some measure
to the strange composition of the two contending forces, since so many upon the
one side have friends and even relatives fighting against them that it seems
the most natural thing in the world for any mutual acquaintance of one
particular individual to make inquiries about his welfare. These greetings
impressed the scene with a note of pleasantness and good feeling which was in
most happy contrast to the surroundings.
CHAPTER XXI THE ADVENT OF THE NEW YEAR
Mafeking, January 3rd, 1900.
New Year's
Eve drew to itself much of the sentiment which is usually associated with that
event. We perhaps did not ring the old year out and the new year in, because
the sonorous clang of bells presages in these times the advent of shells. When
the enemy lay their gun upon the town the bell at the outlook rings once; when
its precise direction has been located it peals according to the number which
has been given to that direction. Then there comes the firing-bell, by which
time all good people should have taken cover. It will be seen, therefore, that
the ringing of bells has a particular significance, and one from which it is
inappropriate and inadvisable to depart. But our celebration of New Year's Eve
was a quiet gathering of men drawn from the various points of the town, who
assembled within the shadows of the English Church to sing a hymn and give
voice to our National Anthem. It had been raining during the evening; the air
was fresh and fragrant, and the ground was very damp. They came in their
cloaks; they carried their rifles and wore their bandoliers,
since it was not a time to chance the possibilities of an attack. There were
perhaps one hundred of them, and had it been convenient to allow a general
muster, the whole garrison would have very willingly attended. When everything
was ready the great stillness of the night was broken gently by a prelude from
the harmonium, which, dropping to a low tone, became a mere accompaniment to
the human voices. Then the volume of music grew somewhat fuller until it
carried in its depths the voices of the singers merged into one torrent of
stirring melody; then there was a fresh pause, and as the echoes of the hymn
died away, lingering in the rafters of the building until countless spirits
seemed to be taking up the refrain, the voice of the preacher broke out in
words which manfully endeavoured to cheer the congregation. We stood and
listened, rapt with an attention which gave more to the scene than to the
exhortations of the man, and waiting for the time to sing the National Anthem.
In these moments, when one is so far from the Queen and the capital of her
great Empire, the singing of the National Anthem has a weight and meaning much
finer and much greater than that imparted to the hymn when the words are sung
at home. Presently the voices took up the hymn, throwing into the darkness of
the church some whiteness of the dawn which will usher in the days of peace
upon the termination of the war. The National Anthem, sang amid these
surroundings, was incomparably beautiful, seeming to strengthen the irresolute,
even cheering those who were already strong, and imparting to every one a
happier frame of mind and a greater spirit of contentment. Scenes on a smaller
scale, but identical in purpose, were enacted at almost every one of our posts,
and the hour of midnight must have borne to the watchful
sentries of the enemy some slight knowledge of the pleasing duty upon which the
garrison was engaged. It was only for a momentjust so long, indeed, as it took
to sing the verses of the anthem. Then, when this was over, the harmony of
night fell once more upon the garrison.
The New Year
has brought to Mafeking and the garrison that is beleaguered within its walls,
no signs of the fulfilment of the prophecy that relief would come by the end of
December. Indeed, the closing year of the nineteenth century was ushered in
with the boom of cannon and the fire of small arms, and in a style generally
which does not differ from any one of the many days during which the siege and
bombardment have lasted. There was no cessation of hostilities similar to that
which characterised Christmas Day; firing began at an early hour in the morning
from the enemy's artillery, and did not terminate until the evening gun gave a
few hours' peace to the town. For quite a fortnight there has been no such
heavy fire, and it would seem that, for our especial edification, the
authorities in Pretoria had sent to the commandant of the Boer forces that are
investing us, a New Year's gift of three waggon-loads of ammunition. A new gun
was also despatched to them, and, its position being constantly shifted, its
fire has since played upon every quarter of the town. For the moment we had attached
no great importance to this new weapon, but after the first few rounds it was
discovered to be employing what are called combustible bombs. These new shells
do not usually explode, seeming to discharge a chemical liquid which ignites
upon contact with the air. They are also filled with lumps of sulphur, and so
severe might be the damage from this new agency of destruction which the Boers have turned against Mafeking that the most stringent
orders have been issued for any one finding these shells to see that they are
immediately buried. At present, beyond a few unimportant blazes in the gardens
of the town, no damage has been caused, while, in the meantime, our situation
here has in no way altered.
It would
appear that our resistance is beginning to exasperate the enemy, driving him to
a pitch in which he is determined to respect neither the Convention of Geneva
nor the promptings of humanity. Again, despite the innumerable warnings which
he has received, for two days in succession has he made the hospital and the
women's laager the sole object of his attentions. Yesterday the shells fell
sufficiently wide of these two places to justify the broad-minded in giving to
his artillery officers the benefit of the doubt; but to-day it is impossible to
find any extenuating circumstances whatever in his favour, and I very much
regret to have to state that through the shelling of the women's laager many
children's lives have been imperilled, many women wounded. From time to time
every effort has been made to give to the gentler sex the most perfect
immunity, but it would seem as though we can no longer consider as safe these
poor innocent and helpless non-combatants. The children of some of the most
respected and most loyal townspeople have been killed in this manner, just as
they were romping within the trenches which encircle their retreat. For two
hours this morning the Creusot and quick-firing guns of the enemy fired into
the laager, creating scenes of panic and consternation which it is not fitting to
describe. Nine one-hundred-pound shells burst within the precincts of that
place in the space of an hour, and in palliation of this there is
nothing whatever which can be said, since the enemy had posted a heliograph
station upon a kopje a few thousand yards distant from the point of attack. As
the big shells sped across the town to drop within the laager beyond, the
enemy's signallers heliographed their direction to the emplacement of Big Ben.
Our own signalling corps intercepted the messages from the enemy, reading out,
from time to time, the purport of the flashes. The first shell was short, and
the enemy's signallers worked vigorously. The second was too wide. The third
fell within the laager itself, the pieces piercing, when it burst, a number of
tents. To this shot the heliograph flashed a cordial expression of approval.
These actions upon the part of the Boers, as repeatedly pointed out to them,
make it almost impossible for us to regard our foe as other than one which is
inspired with the emotions of a degraded people and the crude cruelty and
vindictive animosity of savages. Just now, when the press of our feelings is
beyond confinement, there is nothing but a universal wish that we may speedily
be relieved and so enabled to enjoy the initiative against the Boers. When that
moment comes it must not be forgotten that we have suffered bitterly, and in a
way which must be taken as excusing any excesses which may occur.
THE COLONEL ON THE LOOK-OUT AT HEADQUARTERS.
As I
returned from a visit to the women's laager Colonel Baden-Powell was lying in
his easy-chair beneath the roof of the verandah of the Headquarters Office.
Colonel Baden-Powell is young, as men go in the army, with a keen appreciation
of the possibilities of his career, swayed by ambition, indifferent to
sentimental emotion. In stature he is short, while his features are sharp and
smooth. He is eminently a man of determination, of great physical endurance and capacity, and of extraordinary reticence. His reserve is
unbending, and one would say, quoting a phrase of Mr. Pinero's, that fever
would be the only heat which would permeate his body. He does not go about
freely, since he is tied to his office through the multitudinous cares of his
command, and he is chiefly happy when he can snatch the time to escape upon one
of those nocturnal, silent expeditions, which alone calm and assuage the
perpetual excitement of his present existence. Outwardly, he maintains an
impenetrable screen of self-control, observing with a cynical smile the foibles
and caprices of those around him. He seems ever bracing himself to be on guard
against a moment in which he should be swept by some unnatural and spontaneous
enthusiasm, in which by a word, by an expression of face, by a movement, or in
the turn of a phrase, he should betray the rigours of the self-control under
which he lives. Every passing townsman regards him with curiosity not unmixed
with awe. Every servant in the hotel watches him, and he, as a consequence,
seldom speaks without a preternatural deliberation and an air of decisive
finality. He seems to close every argument with a snap, as though the steel
manacles of his ambition had checkmated the emotions of the man in the
instincts of the officer. He weighs each remark before he utters it, and
suggests by his manner, as by his words, that he has considered the different
effects it might conceivably have on any mind as the expression of his own
mind. As an officer, he has given to Mafeking a complete and assured security,
to the construction of which he has brought a very practical knowledge of the
conditions of Boer warfare, of the Boers themselves, and of the strategic worth
of the adjacent areas. His espionagic excursions to the
Boer lines have gained him an intimate and accurate idea of the value of the
opposing forces and a mass of data by which he can immediately
counteract the enemy's attack. He loves the night, and after his return from
the hollows in the veldt, where he has kept so many anxious vigils, he lies
awake hour after hour upon his camp mattress in the verandah, tracing out, in
his mind, the various means and agencies by which he can forestall their move,
which, unknown to them, he had personally watched. He is a silent man, and it
would seem that silence has become in his heart a curious religion. In the
noisy day he yearns for the noiseless night, in which he can slip into the
vistas of the veldt, an unobtrusive spectator of the mystic communion of tree
with tree, of twilight with darkness, of land with water, of early morn with
fading night, with the music of the journeying winds to speak to him and to
lull his thoughts. As he makes his way across our lines the watchful sentry
strains his eyes a little more to keep the figure of the colonel before him,
until the undulations of the veldt conceal his progress. He goes in the privacy
of the night, when it be no longer a season of moonlight, when, although the
stars were full, the night be dim. The breezes of the veldt are warm and
gentle, impregnated with the fresh fragrances of the Molopo, although, as he
walks with rapid, almost running, footsteps, leaving the black blur of the town
for the arid and stony areas to the west, a new wind meets hima wind that is
clear and keen and dry, the wind of the wastes that wanders for ever over the
monotonous sands of the desert. It accompanies him as he walks as though to
show and to whisper with gentle gusts that it knew of his intention. It sighs
amid the sentinel trees that stand straight and isolated
about the Boer lines. He goes on, never faltering, bending for a moment behind
a clump of rocks, screening himself next behind some bushes, crawling upon his
hands and knees, until his movements, stirring a few loose stones, create a
thin, grating noise in the vast silence about him. His head is low, his eyes
gaze straight upon the camp of the enemy; in a little he moves again, his
inspection is over, and he either changes to a fresh point or startles some
dozing sentry as he slips back into town.
CHAPTER XXII NATIVE LIFE
Mafeking, January 10th, 1900.
During the
time which has elapsed since Christmas an interesting event has been the
deposition of Wessels, the chief of the Baralongs. At a kotla of the
tribe, to which the councillors and petty chiefs were bidden by the Civil
Commissioner, Mr. Bell notified the tribe of his decision. The deposed chief, a
man of no parts whatever, but one who unfortunately reveals all the vices of
civilisation, has been put upon sick-leave, the reins of government being
placed in the hands of his two chief councillors. Wessels had been instigating
his tribe to refuse to work for the military authorities here, and through his
instrumentality it has become difficult to obtain native labour and native
runners. He told them in his amiable fashion that the English wished to make
slaves of them, and that they would not be paid for any services which they
rendered; nor would they, added he, taking advantage of an unfortunate turn in
the situation, be given any food, but left to starve when the critical moment
came. With the change which had been adopted and which has been given the
sanction of the kotla, it is hoped that matters may progress
more smoothly and the tribe itself increase in prosperity. It was an
interesting meeting, and one which recalled the early days of Africa, when the
authority of the great White Queen was not a power paramount in the council
chambers of the tribes. Wessels, unwilling and assuming an air of injured
dignity, filled his place in the kotla for the last time; around him
there were the chiefs of the tribe, his blood relatives, and his councillors.
Their attire was a weird mixture of effete savagery and of the civilisation of
the sort which is picked up from living in touch with white Africa and
missionary societies. Many black legs were clothed in trousers, many black
shoulders wore coats. Here and there, as relics of the past, there was the
ostrich feather in the hat, the fly whisk, composed of the hairs from the tail
of an animal, the iron or bone skin-scraper with which to remove the
perspiration of the body. A few wore shoes upon naked feet, a few others
sported watch-chains and spoke English. At the back of the enclosure there was
a native guard who shouldered Martini-Henri rifles, elephant guns, Sniders, or
sporting rifles. A few of these were garmented with skins of animals upon the
naked body. After a stately and not altogether friendly greeting to the man who
had ordered the assembly to meet, the reasons which had brought about the
contemplated change in the head of the tribe were stated in English and then
translated by the interpreter. The old chief snorted with disgust and
endeavoured to coerce his people to reject the demands made upon them. But they
had been made before a body of men who were capable of realising the
worthlessness of their chief, and who, under the protection of the Imperial
delegate, did not mind endorsing the suggestions and expressing their opinions. The younger and more turbulent, who recognised, in
the failings of the chief, follies dear to their own hearts, were inclined to
express sympathy for the man who was so soon to be compelled to relinquish the
sweets of office. They spoke at once in an angry chatter and confused chortle
of sounds, which, if eloquent, were wholly insufficient. The chief then threw
himself back upon his chair, spat somewhat contemptuously, and finally
acquiesced in the decision, obtaining some small consolation from the fact that
his official allowance would not be discontinued. Then the kotla ended,
and the indunas rose up and left, standing together in animated groups around
the palisades, for the discussion of the scene in which they had just taken
part. Then, as the decision spread throughout the tribe, children and women,
young and old, banded together to watch these final indabas.
The scene
had been solemn enough beneath the kotla tree, but outside the natural
instinct of these children of the veldt soon asserted itself, and they began to
dance. They formed into small groups of about forty, to the sound of
hand-clapping, a not unmusical intoning, and much jumping and stamping of feet.
It would seem that they were dancing an old war-dance which had degenerated
into one symbolical of love and happiness. Around the joyous groups the old
crones circulated, clapping their withered hands, shrieking delight in cracked
voices, and generally encouraging the festivity. The dance was curious, and
appeared to catch echoes of many lands. There was the diffident maiden, anxious
to be loved, but bashful, modest in her manner and in her gestures, until she
saw the man that could thrill her; then she glowed, and her steps were
animated, buoyant, and caressing. A smile irradiated her
face, while a slight, almost imperceptible, movement pulsed through her body.
Behind her were her companions, the same age as herself, who imitated her with
feverish sympathy, instinctively reproducing her moods of body and of mind. The
vibration that stole through the bodies of the dancers increased gradually
until, from statues with wicked eyes, full of sensuous expression and amorous
allurement, they wavered like thin flames of love in a gust of passion. As the
potency of their feelings grew steadily stronger, they swayed in languorous
movements, throwing out sinuous arms, their feeble faces smiling, their
graceful bodies bending in eager attitudes of expectation. The air became heavy
with noise, thick with a veritable tumult, as the dancers jumped more wildly;
now they threw themselves into postures in the circle, shifting rapidly with
tiny screams of delight and a gliding, clinging motion of their arms and legs
as though, coy and eager, they would escape the cherished caresses of their
lovers. As they glided, their actions seemed always to be marked with the same
regularity, with the same regard to rhythm, and with an innate conception of
grace. When they shook their bodies it was with an abandonment that was, at
least, graceful; if they stood, rocking in a sea of easy emotion, as though
victorious, they would hug their capture with an air of conquest which was
delightful to behold. As they rose to the pinnacle of their happiness, when
their countenances were suffused with love and tenderness, they infused into
their emotions an appearance of sadness. It was as though a cloud had suddenly
fallen upon them, revealing to them that their endearments had been abortive,
that their ambitions were not to be realised and that they themselves had been flouted. Then there stole upon them the incarnation of sorrow,
in which, finding themselves alone, uncared for, unconsidered, they resolved,
in a burst of artificial tears, to have done with giddiness, and to take up
with the delights of placid domesticity. Then the dance terminated, she, who
had by her graceful contortions and sympathetic bearing moved her audience to
laughter and tears first, being considered the victorious. Thus did these
simple natives celebrate the new era.
If dancing
be one form of amusement here, the siege has also brought the means and
opportunity of indulging in a pastime of quite a different character. If
sniping be the rule by day, cattle raiding by night gives to the natives some
profitable employment. During last night the Baralongs secured, by a successful
raid, some twenty-four head of cattle, and in the course of last week another
raiding detachment looted some eighteen oxen. The native enjoys himself when he
is able to participate in some cattle-raiding excursion to the enemy's lines,
and, although the local tribe may not have proved of much value as a unit of
defence, their success at lifting the Boer cattle confers upon them a unique
value in the garrison. We were deploring the poorness of the cattle which
remained at our disposal only a few days ago, but the rich capture which these
natives have made has given us a welcome change from bone and skin to juicy
beef. These night excursions are eagerly anticipated by the tribe, and almost
daily is the consent of the Colonel sought in relation to such an object.
During the day the natives who have been authorised by Colonel Baden-Powell to
take part in the raid approach as near to the grazing cattle as discretion
permits, marking down when twilight appears the position of
those beasts that can be most readily detached from the mob. Then, when darkness
is complete, they creep up, divested of their clothes, crawling upon hands and
knees, until they have completely surrounded their prey. Then quietly, and as
rapidly as circumstances will allow them, each man "gets a move on"
his particular beast, so that in a very short space of time some ten or twenty
cattle are unconsciously leaving the main herd. When the raiders have drawn out
of earshot of the Boer lines they urge on their captures, running behind them
and on either side of them, but without making any noise whatsoever. As they
reach their stadt, their approach having been watched by detached bodies of
natives, who, lying concealed in the veldt, had taken up positions by which to
secure the safe return of their friends, the tribes go forth to welcome them,
and when the prizes have been inspected and report duly made to Headquarters
they celebrate the event with no little feasting and dancing. Upon the
following day merriment reigns supreme, and for the time the siege is
forgotten.
CHAPTER XXIII BOMBAST AND BOMB-PROOFS
Mafeking, January 20th, 1900.
Yesterday we
completed the first hundred days of our siege, and when we look back beyond the
weeks of our investment into those earlier days it is difficult to realise the
trials and difficulties which we have undergone, and to believe that the period
which has elapsed has witnessed the inauguration of a new era for South Africa.
In those early days when we first came here Mafeking was a flourishing
commercial centre, contented with its position, proud of its supremacy over
other towns, and now, perhaps, if outwardly it be much the same, its future is
impressed with only the faint echo of its former greatness. The town itself has
not suffered very much; here and there its area has been more confined for
purposes of defence, while the streets and buildings bear witness to the
effects of the bombardment. Houses are shattered, gaping holes in the walls of
buildings, furrows in the roads, broken trees, wrecked telegraph poles, and
that general appearance of destruction which marks the path of a cyclone are
the outward and visible signs of the enemy's fire. We shall leave in Mafeking a
population somewhat subdued and harassed with anxiety for
their future, since the public and private losses will require the work of many
anxious years before any restoration of the fallen fortunes can be effected.
The pity of it is that all this distress might have been so easily avoided, and
would have been, had the authorities in Cape Town and at home taken any heed of
the very pressing messages which were despatched daily to them; but it was
decreed that Mafeking should shift for itself for so long as it was able, and
thensurrender. This, however, did not meet with the approval of Colonel
Baden-Powell, with the result that we are still fighting and still holding our
own. We have even achieved some little place in the sieges of the world, and
our present record has already surpassed many of the more prominent sieges. But
there is not much consolation to be gained from contemplating the position
which we may eventually take up in the records of famous sieges, and, truth to
tell, there is such glorious uncertainty about the date of our relief that it
is perhaps possible that we may surpass the longest of historic sieges. At one
time we confidently anticipated that the siege would be over in ten days. This,
however, was in the days of our youth; since then we have learned wisdom, and
eagerly seize opportunities of snapping up any unconsidered trifles in the way
of bets which lay odds upon our being "out of the wood" in another
month. Events are moving so slowly below that it does not seem as though we
shall be relieved by the end of February. The relief column, which a month ago
appeared almost daily in "Orders," is now no longer mentioned in
polite society, although there be little reason to doubt that, at some very
remote date, the troops may make their appearance here.
The early part of November witnessed the first attempt of the
Commissariat to control the stocks of provisions in the town. All persons
holding stocks of Kaffir corn, meal, crushed meal, yellow mealies, and flour,
were ordered to declare the quantities and price at which they would be willing
to dispose of them to the authorities. Captain Ryan, the Commissariat officer,
was an energetic and painstaking individual, whose aim was to prove his
department a financial success, and so rigidly did he adhere to this resolve
that the questions involved by the Commissariat became amongst the most
important of the siege. Traders claimed that the economy of the situation gave
them a siege profit, since, as the Government had not been shrewd enough to lay
down stores, those who had done this at their own risk, and upon their own
initiative, should be permitted, at least, to make a margin of profit in
proportion to the prices which they could obtain for their goods. This
contention, however, was not upheld by the Commissariat officer, who at once
became the best hated man in Mafeking. Oddly enough, although the Government
would not allow the merchants to reap the profit, they themselves, in virtue of
the expense in connection with the issue of rations, were not above charging
these expenses to prime cost, and so exorbitantly increasing themselves the
retail price of the articles which they had taken over. What was perhaps the
most objectionable feature in the findings of the Commissariat Department was
that the merchant himself who disposed of his goods to the Government at a
ruling which allowed but the profit incidental to the transaction of business
in times of peace, was compelled to buy back, when he required goods of that
particular variety, at the price which the Government had
placed upon them. This, of course, seemed to the people unfair, and they were
quite unable to obtain any satisfactory explanation of such procedure;
satisfactory because the reasons vouchsafed assumed the right of the Government
to a certain profit, denying, however, that rate in the same ratio of
proportion to the individual. Among the chief obstacles against which Captain
Ryan had to contend was the maintenance of the daily bread ration, since the
supply of flour, of mealie meal, of oats, was not particularly great. There
were many experiments made with the bread, but those which were most
unsatisfactory failed because it had been found difficult to sift the husks
from the oats once the oats had been crushed. While the issue of this
particular bread lasted symptoms of acute dysentery prevailed, and in order to
prevent an epidemic of dysentery from breaking out the Commissariat were
compelled to adopt other methods of treatment. The bread eventually developed
into a weighty circular brown biscuit, weighing anything under six ounces,
about nine inches in circumference. These particular biscuits were less spiky,
and less liable to create acute inflammation. They were issued to the entire
garrison, excepting those who had been permitted to draw an invalid ration of
white bread, and were preserved in many cases as mementoes of the siege.
Although we have food enough to last several months this precaution is
necessary, as when the siege is raised many weeks must elapse before supplies
can come in. The garrison has been put upon a scale of reduced rations½ lb. of
bread, ½ lb. of meat per day. The reductions in bread took place in the early
part of the year, while the orders in relation to the meat supply were issued
during this week. Matches and milk are prohibited from
public sale, and the latest order prevents the shops from opening. All supplies
of biscuits, tea, and sugarpreserves alsohave been commandeered. The
shop-keepers and the hotel proprietors, and indeed anybody who can find any
possible excuse for doing so, have trebled the price of their goods, pleading
that the inflation is due to the siege. Accordingly, meal and flour have jumped
from 27s. per bag to 50s.; potatoes, where they exist at all, are £2 per cwt.;
fowls are 7s. 6d. each; and eggs 12s. per dozen. Milk and vegetables can no
longer be obtained, and rice has taken the place of the latter among the menus.
These figures mark the rise in the more important foodstuffs as sold across the
counter, but the hotels have, in sympathy, followed the example, they, upon
their part, attributing it to the increase which the wholesale merchants have
decreed. A peg of whisky is 1s. 6d., dop brandy 1s., gin 1s., large stout is
4s., small beer 2s. In ordinary times whisky retails at 5s. per bottle. This
rate has now advanced to 18s. per bottle and 80s. per case. Dop, which is usually
1s. 4d., is now 12s. per bottle; the difference upon beer is almost 200 per
cent., and inferior cigarettes are now 18s. per hundred. Upon an inquiry among
the publicans here, I was informed that the chief reason for the increase in
their prices was to hinder the local soldiery from becoming intoxicated; this
sudden regard for the moral welfare of the garrison on the part of the saloon
keepers is however, oddly at variance with their earlier practices, and is in
reality the flimsy pretext by which they seek to condone an almost
unwarrantable act. Hitherto the constantly recurring evils arising from the
sale of drink to soldiers and others performing military
duties, have been openly encouraged by the hotel proprietors, who, although
they now profess a fine appreciation for the moral obligations attached to
their trade when prices are high and profits great, took no very serious steps
at the outset to allay what was becoming a very serious menace to the
community. Moreover, the hotels have demanded from such people as war
correspondents and others brought here through business connected with the
siege, rates which are far in advance of the ordinary tariffs, with equally
preposterous demands for native servants and horse-feed. Indeed, whatever Mafeking
may lose through the absence of business with the Transvaal, many will receive
ample compensation from the high prices by which those who are able, are
endeavouring to recoup themselves, and in a way which it is not possible to
consider other than extortionate. Stores of all kinds are, however, rapidly
giving out, and it would not have been possible for Mafeking to have sustained
the siege so long had not the Government contractor, upon his own initiative,
laid in far greater stocks of provisions than were provided for by his
contract, and in this respect every credit should be given to the commercial
foresight and sagacity by which these arrangements were inspired. For
everything which is in daily want, in fact for the bare necessities of life
upon the existing scale of reduced rations, Mafeking now depends upon the
stores and bonded warehouse which represent the local branch of the contracting
firm, Messrs. Julius Weil & Co. In their hands lies the issuing of the
daily allowances of bread and meat to the garrison, of the forage for the
horses, of the feeding of the natives. Indeed, there seemed no end to the
resources of this house. When the siege began, had there
been no Weil, the Government stocks would not have lasted two months, and,
moreover, they did not know that the Weils had laid in these storesa fact
which again establishes how very meagre were the preparations made for the
siege. Therefore, when the time comes to give honour to whom honour is due,
notice should be taken of the important rôle which this firm has
fulfilled during the siege of Mafeking.
The siege
drags on, however, the days seeming to be an endless monotony in which there is
absolutely nothing to sustain one's interest. Week by week we make a united and
laborious attempt to whip our flagging energies into some activity. It is a
hideous spectacle, but this Sunday celebration reveals how very trying has
become the situation. The military authorities have been at their wits' end to
find amusement for the garrison, and this effort has developed into a
Sabbatarian charade in which we all assume an active co-operation, and try to
think that we are having a very giddy and even gushing time. Colonel
Baden-Powell, in this respect, makes an admirable stage-manager. Authors,
scenic artists, stage hands, scene shifters, there are, of course, none; but in
the middle of the week the Chief Staff Officer becomes the town crier, crying
lustily, by means of proclamation, that, by the grace of God, upon the coming
Sunday there will be a golf match or baby show, a concert or polo match, even
some attempt at amateur theatricals. The Sunday respite is, however, immensely
appreciated, and, indeed, it is a very welcome panacea to our siege-strung
nerves. Where in England you people are saying, "Oh, bother Sunday,"
"How like a Sunday," we say, "Thank God it is Sunday,"
implying, for that day in seven, a period of absolute rest
and no little contentment. We are warriors on Sunday: bold, bad, and brave. We
have our horses out on Sunday and take a toss as elegantly as we take our
neighbour's money at cards in the evening, when fortune favours. We drink, we
accept one another's invitations to meals of unsurpassing heaviness; we even
invite ourselves to one another's houses. We drink, we eat, we flirt, we live
in every second of the hours which constitute the Sunday, and upon the passing
of the day it is as though we had entered into another world. As midnight
arrives, we hasten back to our trenches filled with the good things of the day,
even with the zest to penetrate the mysteries of another week of siege. In the
morning we stand-to-arms at four o'clock, not because there is any special
purpose for doing so, but rather that we may satisfy ourselves that we are
soldiers; and then the labour of the day begins, and for six more days we
stand-to-arms and wonder when the devil the enemy are coming on. We are very
brave then, and at times we take ourselves so seriously that into each breast
there comes the spirit of the Commander-in-Chief. Then we criticise the war,
talk fatuously of what we would do, struggle somewhat ingloriously with the
archaic jargon of the army, until, if our speech betrays our ignorance, we,
nevertheless, make a mighty lot of noise. Then we are satisfied, though
doubtless each thinks the other somewhat of a fool.
To the man
who looks on at all this, the gradual change which has come over the garrison
is plainly discernible. In the beginning, when the Boers made war upon us,
there was a contempt for bomb-proofs; there was a contempt for many other
things besides, since each individual knew better than his Post Commander, and
did not hesitate to tell him so, or rather to imply that he
had told him so; but the scorn of bomb-proofs was mightier than the sword. In
those days we feared nothing beyond mosquitoes and the creeping things of
earth, but the change came silently, and although few people commented upon it,
the transformation was completed within the first month of the siege. It grew,
as it were, in a single night, from a village of mud-walled houses into one in
which every other man owned something of a dug-out. For the first few days,
while scorn of dug-outs was rife, he who built himself a haven kept it to his
inner conscience, recalling it, when its existence was forced upon him, with
something of an apologetic air. Thus we existed; then the staff built an
underground room, and upon the Sunday that followed this momentous event many
there were who visited it, and who, gathering wrinkles, went quietly to their
gardens and did likewise. Thus insidiously came the transformation, and
although there are still a few who talk disparagingly of these bomb-proof
shelters, their faces wear an anxious look when the enemy are shelling, and
strangely enough, as the fire waxes hotter, they easily find excuses to visit
friends, lingering, the while, in the congenial gloom of their host's dug-out.
So greatly
have ideas expanded upon this subject that at one of the hotels an underground
dining-room is in course of construction. This is at Riesle's, whose
proprietor, at last, has been induced to build his boardersmostly war
correspondentsa dug-out, since he had given places of shelter to the servants,
to his native boys, and to his family, seemingly thinking that since the
boarders kept the hotel going they could very easily shift for themselves. But
then that is always the creed of the publican. These
dug-outs are large excavations some ten by fourteen feet and seven feet deep,
upon which there is placed a layer of iron rails which are procured from the
railway yard; over these there is usually a layer of thick wooden sleepers,
which again are covered over with sheets of corrugated iron. The earth from the
hole is then piled up on this, and, after the dug-out has been inspected by the
Town Commandant it is considered safe for habitation; a few cases and chairs
equip it with certain accommodation, although there are a few into which
trestle beds have been placed. It is not very healthy passing days and nights
in these inverted earthworks, but it is eminently safe, and has been the sole
means afforded us for escaping the enemy's fire. Fortunately the Boers have
made no attempt to advance upon the town under cover of their guns, for if they
did so we should have to stand-to-arms and face the music of the flying
splinters. Every post has been supplied with one of these underground retreats,
and quite the larger proportion of the townspeople have constructed private
shelters for themselves.
Mafeking, January 31st, 1900.
In itself
the situation has not developed over much, but in relation to the siege there
are two tragedies to chronicle. The Boers are still investing us, in more or
less the same numbers, and with but little difference in the strength of their
artillery. Sometimes we miss an individual piece, judging from its absence that
it has been sent north to reinforce the Dutch who are endeavouring to
circumvent the movements of Colonel Plumer's column. However, these periodical
journeys of the five-pounder Krupp, the one-pounder Maxim, or the nine-pounder
quick-firing Creusot do not last for any great time, and, as a matter of fact,
Commandant Snyman has not permitted himself to be deprived of any one piece of
artillery for much longer than a week. The garrison here, jumping at
conclusions in the absence of any definite news, finds in these disappearances
some slight consolation, since we at once affirm that Colonel Plumer must have
arrived at some point in which the presence of the enemy's artillery is urgent
and necessary.
WAR CORRESPONDENTS AND THEIR BOMB-PROOF
SHELTERS.
The gun
which we would very gladly spare is the one hundred-pounder
Creusot, whose occasional removal from one emplacement to another is a source
of much anxiety to every one in the garrison. In the beginning of the siegea
date which is now very remote"Big Ben" hurled its shells into this
unfortunate town from an emplacement at Jackal Tree. In those days it was
almost four miles distant, and we took but little notice of a gun which flung
its projectiles from such a distant range. Those were the days in which we dug
holes by night, and speculated rather feebly during the day upon the resisting
power of the protection which we had thus thrown up. But the gun moved then to
the south-eastern heights, a matter of barely 4,000 yards from the town, and of
sufficient eminence to dominate every little corner. Those were the days in
which we dug a little deeper and went round trying to borrowfrom people who
would not lendany spare sacks, iron sleepers, or deals, so that our
bomb-proofs might be still further strengthened. However, as time passed, we
even got accustomed to the gun in its new position, and, much as ever, there
were many who felt inclined to promenade during lapses in the enemy's shell
fire. Now, however, this wretched gun has again been moved, and, according to
those who know the country, is within two miles of the towna little matter
under 3,000 yards.
In
accordance with the fresh position of the Creusot gun we have been compelled to
extend our eastern defences in order that we may, at least, direct an artillery
fire upon their advanced trenches. To the north-east and south-east we have put
forward our guns and to the south-east have increased a detachment of
sharpshooters, who, from a very early date in the siege, have occupied a
position in the river-bed. These men are only two hundred
yards from the sniping posts of the Boers, and through the cessation of
hostilities upon Sundays, they have grown to recognise one another. Sunday has
thus also brought to the snipers an opportunity of discovering what result their
mutual fire has achieved during the week, and, when from time to time a figure
is missing, either side recognise that to their marksmanship, at least, that
much credit is due. Among the Boers who occupied the posts in the brickfields
were many old men, one of whom, from his venerable mien, his bent and tottering
figure, his long white beard, and his grey hair, was called grandfather. He had
become so identified with these posts in the brickfields that upon Sundays our
men would shout out to him, some calling him Uncle Paul, others grandfather,
and when the old fellow heard these remarks he would turn and gaze at our
trench in the river-bed, wondering possibly, as he stroked his beard, brushed
his clusters of hair from his forehead, or wiped his brow, what manner of men
those snipers were. He has been known to wave his hat when in a mood more than
usually benign; then we would wave our hats and cheer, while he, once again
perplexed, would, taking his pipe from his pocket, slowly retrace his steps to
his trench. The old man was a remarkably good shot, and from his post has sent
many bullets through the loopholes in our sandbags. He would go in the early
morning to his fort and he would return at dusk, but in the going and coming
he, alone of the men who were opposing us, was given a safe passage. One day,
however, as the Red Cross flag came out from the fort, we, looking through our
glasses, saw them lift the body of grandfather into the ambulance. That night
there was a funeral, and upon the following day we learnt
that he had been their best marksman. For ourselves, we were genuinely sorry.
Yesterday
there occurred another of those acts of war which illustrate in such a very
striking fashion the silent tragedies which are enacted, and with which perforce
many unwilling people are connected, during the progress of a campaign. There
are, of course, many issues to the career of a soldier, and perhaps not the
least important of these is the arduous and very dangerous task of collecting
intelligence. In the ranks of society, men who are known to be spies are
regarded with silent contempt, and ostracised from the circle of their
acquaintances, so soon as their calling is ascertained; but the duties of a
military spy differ in almost every respect from the individual who becomes a
social reformer. In the field the military spy carries his life in his hand,
since his capture implies an almost immediate execution without any possibility
of reprieve. Last night such an occurrence took place at sundown, when, as the
sun sank to its setting, a native, who had been caught within our lines, and
who confessed to be an emissary of the Boers, was taken out and shot.
The spy was
a young man, and a native of the stadt, which is a portion of Mafeking, and one
who had accepted the work of carrying information to the enemy because he did
not sufficiently realise the punishment which would fall upon him, were he to
be captured. His instructions from the Boers had been remarkably explicit, and
the sphere of his activities embraced our entire position. He was to visit the
forts, counting the number of men, and taking special notice of those to which
guns had been attached. He was to report upon the strength of the garrison, the
condition of our horses, the supplies of foodstuffs, and he
was to stay within Mafeking for about ten days. He was captured a fortnight
ago, as he was creeping in, snatching cover from the bushes and rocks which
spread over the south-eastern face of the town. When he was caught, as though
momentarily realising the possibilities of his fate, he at first refused to say
who he was, whence he came, or what had been his purpose. However, among the
native patrol that had so successfully surprised him were some who knew him,
whereupon he stated that he was simply returning to the stadt. In the earlier
part of the siege almost every native who came across the lines gave this same
excuse, until the suspicion was forced upon us that the Baralongs were acting
in conjunction with the enemy. However, this was not proved to be the case, the
chief repudiating the suggestion and disclaiming any authority over those
natives who happened to be beyond the lines at the outbreak of the war.
Nevertheless, it had been impossible to prevent the Boers receiving information
through native sources, and for the future, there remained no alternative but
that which implied the immediate execution of captured spies. An increase in
the Cossack posts at night somewhat checked the mass of information which was
carried to the Boers across our lines, and in an earlier instance, when a
native came in from the Boer camp and said that the big gun had been taken away
that morning upon a waggon, he was given the benefit of forty-eight hours'
grace, with the understanding that, should the gun fire during that period, he
would be at once sentenced to death. For a day this man watched the emplacement
of the big gun, and twenty-four hours passed without Mafeking receiving any
shells from it. The day following was half over, and it was
about noon, when the Boers disproved the story which they had instructed their
spy to tell, and fired into the town. The man then confessed that his errand
had been inimical, and that he himself was hostile to our interests. At dusk
the sentence of the Summary Court of Jurisdiction was carried out, and that spy
was shot. But this other at no time seemed to understand the gravity of his
offence, and when we captured him he informed his captors and the Court that he
himself had meant no harm. However, he confessed, endeavouring to minimise his
offence by showing that at the moment of his capture he had gathered no
information, yet his pleas were futile, and he at last seemed to understand
that his doom was sealed. From then, as he returned to the prison to await the execution
of his sentence, he said nothing more.
Last night
the shooting party came for him, marching him to a secluded point upon the
south-eastern face, and there they halted him, a silent figure in a wilderness
of rock and scrub. Around him there was the scene of the veldt at eventide.
There was the gorgeous, flaming sunset, its ruddy gold turning the azure of the
sky to clouds of purple, pale orange, and a deeper blue. Here and there the
heavens were flecked with fleecy clouds, which gambolled gently before the
breeze. In the distance lay the green-clad veldt, simmering a russet brown
beneath the glories of the sunset. At our feet it sloped, breaking into rocky
sluits, banked up with bushes; over all there was the zephyr, tempering the
heat. It was a moment meant for rejoicing in the beauty of earth's loveliness
rather than for dimming it with the sadness of some crimson act. Presently we
arrived, and as we bent across the slope the blood-stream of passing sunlight
played around the shallow heap of earth, thrown out from this man's final
resting-place. It was visible, much as were the deeper shadows of the
excavation some seventy yards away, when, as though wishing to spare the
prisoner, his eyes were bandaged by the officers of the party. With that a
sudden silence fell upon us, and each seemed to feel that he were walking
within the shadows of the valley of death. The prisoner, supported on either
arm, stumbled in the partial blindness of the bandage, seeming, now that his
last hour was at hand, to be more careless, more light-hearted than any of the
party. Then we halted, and he was asked whether there were anything further
which he wished to say, and he was warned for the last time. He shook his head
somewhat defiantly, but his lips moved, and in his heart one could almost hear
the muttered curses. Then for a space he stood still, and a few yards distant,
in fact some ten paces, the firing party formed across his front. There were
six of them, with a corporal and the officer in command of the post, and there
was that other, who in a little was to pay the penalty of his crime. There was
a moment of intense silence as we waited for the sun to set, in which the
nerves seemed to be but little strings of wire, played upon by the emotions.
Unconsciously, each seemed to stiffen, as we waited for the word of the
officer, feeling that at every pulsation one would like to shriek "Enough,
enough!" As we stood the prisoner spoke, unconscious of the preparations,
and the officer approached him. He wanted, he said, to take a final glance at
the place that he had known since his childhood. His prayer was granted, and as
he faced about, the bandage across his eyes was, for a few brief
minutes, dropped upon his neck. In that final look he seemed to realise what he
was suffering. The stadt lay before him, the place of his childhood, the
central pivot round which his life had turned, bathed in a sunset which he had
often seen before, and which he would never see again. There were the cattle of
his people, there were the noises of the stadt, the children's voices, the
laughter of the women, and there was the smoke of his camp fires. It was all
his oncehe lived there and he was to die there, but to die in a manner which
was strange and horrible. Then he looked beyond the stadt and scanned the
enemy's lines. Tears welled in his eyes, and the force of his emotion shook his
shoulders. But again he was himself: the feeling had passed, and he drew
himself erect. Then once more the bandage was secured, and he faced about. The
sun was setting, and as the officer stepped back and gave his orders, a
fleeting shudder crossed the native's face. Bayonets were fixed, the men were
ready and the rifles were presented. One gripped one's palms. "Fire!"
said the officer. Six bullets struck himfour were in the brain.
CHAPTER XXV LIFE IN THE BRICKFIELDS
Mafeking, February 3rd, 1900.
The main
occupation of the garrison just now is to speculate upon the progress of the
work of trench-building, which is being rapidly pushed forward in the
brickfields upon the south-eastern face of the town. It is eminently a safe
occupation, since our activity in that quarter is absorbing the almost
undivided attentions of the enemy in the adjacent trenches, and therefore
giving to the town an enjoyable and protracted respite from rifle fire. This,
however, exists throughout the day only, since night is made hideous and
uncomfortable by the heavy fire which the enemy turn upon it, and which is
returned, with very pleasing promptitude, by the town forts and the occupants
of the trenches in the brickfields. The area of war, localised thus as it is in
the brickfields, is an interesting testimony to the progress of our arms here
in Mafeking. We began the siege by abandoning this position and with it the
very excellent sniping opportunities it gave to the Boers. The 8,000 men that
Commandant Cronje had with him in those early days, made it impossible for our
small garrison to hold, with any prospect of success,
positions so far outlying from the front of the town. It is, however, quite a
different thing to occupy those trenches to-day, since the veldt intervening in
the rear, has now been carefully protected, and we advance not at all until the
post which is in occupation at the moment, has been securely fortified and
connected with adjacent outposts by well-covered trenches. We are now, after
almost six months' siege, some 1,700 yards in advance of the town, and the
south-eastern outposts, as these brickfield forts are called, constitute our
most outlying positions around beleaguered Mafeking.
Very
gradually, and with infinite pains and labour, we have sapped from town until
the company of Cape Boys that is posted in the "Clayhole," under
Sergeant Currie, is within two hundred yards of the Boers' main trencha point
from which one may hear at times our enemy holding animated discussions upon
his failure to capture Mafeking. When war was first declared Commandant Cronje
threw strong detachments of sharpshooters into the brick kilns which we ourselves
now hold, and at this present moment, there is no position in those which we
have seized, that was not originally in possession of the Boers. Innumerable
traces exist of their temporary occupation, and where it has been possible we
have preserved these; so that the town itself may at some future date be able
to see the remains of the Boer investment. These little facts give to our work
here a greater significance, insomuch that it may be assumed that an enemy who
has been fortunate enough to secure for himself a strong position, is not so
foolish as to abandon it voluntarily. This, of course, is quite the case, and
many have been the occasions when the town has been able to watch affairs
between outposts
being briskly contested in these very trenches.
PLAN OF THE BRICKFIELDS.
Nothing is
quite so pleasant, so invigorating, nor quite so dangerous as life in these
brickfield posts. Inspector Marsh, Cape Police, in whom the command of the
south-eastern outposts has been invested, most kindly permitted me to join his
quarters. We are aroused in the morning as the day breaks by a volley from the
Boer trenches, and in all probability the derisive shout, "Good morning,
Mr. damned Englishman!" to which the Cape Boys usually return the salutation
of "Stinkpots!" which is the euphonious rendering of a Dutch word
calculated to give, more especially when coming from a nigger, the utmost
possible offence. The day may then be said to have begun, although, between
this and any further ceremonies, there is usually a mutual cessation of
hostilities, in order that each side may enjoy a cup of matutinal coffee. The
coffee is made in town and brought out, since orders are exceedingly strict
against the lighting of fires on outposts. Sometimes the day proves long, but
usually it is one of an exciting character, and one in which it behoves the men
to move with the utmost care. The enemy would seem to have filled their
advanced trench with a number of picked sharpshooters; for it is quite an
ordinary occurrence for them to fire, at five hundred yards range, through our
loopholes; nor are these chance shots, for there is one man who seems to put
the bullets precisely where he wishes, since, at least once during the day, he
will test the accuracy of his aim by emptying his entire chamber through one
porthole. Such sharpshooting compels one to move with a large amount of
precaution, since if so much as a finger be shown above the top of the sandbags
there is every likelihood of it being perforated by a
Mauser bullet. But if this be the manner of our existence, the Boers do not
take any risks either, and move between their portholes with the greatest
precaution, until this system of watching one another may be said to have
developed a class of work which consists principally of lying upon one's
stomach in readiness to fireif there should occur the slightest opportunity.
Sometimes,
if the day be quiet, we creep from trench to trench, even venturing to the
river; but upon the whole, however, there is not much of this visiting
accomplished, since the Boers have the habit of attempting to lull us into
security and then spoiling the delusion with a well-directed volley. Recently
the advanced trenches of the Boers were so heavily reinforced that we expected
an attack upon the brickfields; in fact, one night we were almost positive that
the enemy were about to make an attempt to wrest this position from us. They
did not do so, nor have they made any night attack, since the Dutchman does not
like to meet his enemy by night, unless he himself is ensconced safely behind
some sacks and his foe in the open. Upon such an occasion he will fire until
his ammunition is expended. However, we expected them, and although they made
no advance, they poured in at daybreak, at somewhat under four hundred yards
range, a most terrific fire. They turned upon us a 9-lb. Krupp, a 5-lb.
Creusot, a 3-lb. Maxim, and about five hundred rifles. It was an amazing
morning and a most interesting experience, while for some hours afterwards the
air seemed to ring with the droning notes of the Martinis and the sharp crackle
of the Mauser. Of course we fired back, since we never allowed the Dutchmen to
turn their guns upon us without treating the gun
emplacements and embrasures to several volleys. It is good sometimes to impress
upon the Boers the uselessness of their efforts. Out here in these brickfields
we appear to be upon the edge of a new world, with the limits of the old one
just below. Mafeking itself is only 1,700 yards distant, but the undulating
ground, the rocky ridges, the simmering heat, and the mirage give rise to the
impression that the town, of which the brickfields is the outpost, is many
miles away. We live a peaceful, almost serene existence, disturbed only by the
hum of passing bullets. There is no pettiness of spirit, no mutual bickerings,
no absurd jealousies; one does not hear anything of the clash between the civil
and military elements. That is all below us in the little town which sits upon
the rising slopes with that appearance of chaos and despair which now mark its
daily existence. Black care is not here, and thank heaven for it; for indeed a
luxury beyond comparison is the quiet and peaceful day.
Mafeking at
last is siege-wearyand, oh, so hungry! It seems months since any one had a
meal which satisfied the pangs that gnaw all day. We have been on starvation
rations for so many weeks that time has been forgotten, and now there seems the
prospect of no immediate help forthcoming! We are so sick of it, so tired of
the malaria, diphtheria, and typhoid that claim a list as great almost as that
caused by the enemy's shell and rifle fire! We ask, When will the end be? and
then we shrug our shoulders and begin to swear; for we have such sorrows in our
midst, such suffering women and such ailing children as would turn a saint to
blasphemies!
CAPE BOYS HURLING STONES AT THE BOERS AS THEY
ENDEAVOURED TO RUSH THE SAP.
Mafeking, February 7th, 1900.
At a moment
when the entire garrison, perhaps, excluding the military chiefs, was eagerly
anticipating some announcement which would determine the date of an immediate
relief, intelligence has come to hand, in a communication from Field-Marshal
Lord Roberts himself, informing the inhabitants of Mafeking that he expects
them to hold out until the middle of May. Since the beginning of the year the
town has lulled itself into a sense of security by endeavouring to believe that
at some early date the garrison would be relieved. But now, if it were possible
to find "a last straw" to break the spirits of the townsmen, it is
contained in the unfortunate telegram which Colonel Baden-Powell received from
Lord Roberts. To hold out until the middle of May, it can well be longer, is to
ask us to endure further privations, and to maintain an existence in a
condition which is already little removed from starvation, and at a moment when
the great majority of the civilian combatants, if not of all classes, are
"full up" of the siege. For the past month we have been living upon
horseflesh, although at first these unfortunate animals were
slaughtered only in the interests of the foodless natives, and whatever
gastronomic satisfaction may be culled by us now in eating what in more
ordinary circumstances has done duty as a horse, it is none the less a hardship
and a damned and disagreeable dish.
The effect
of the announcement has been to increase the gloom and depression which for
some weeks has been noticeable among those civilians whose businesses have been
ruined; who are separated from and unable to communicate with their families,
and who themselves have been impressed into the defence of the town. During
this state of war they are unable to earn anything, and it is quite beyond
their power to pay even the most perfunctory attention to their businesses; but
now with this statement buzzing in the brain like an angry bee, can they not be
excused if they cry out, "Enough, enough," and feel depressed and
sick of the whole siege? Within a few weeks we shall be entering the sixth
month of the siege, and already the severity of our daily life is beginning to
tell, and indeed has already told upon many. But now that we have come so far
through the wood, when we have fought by day and by night, when we have been
sick with fever and pressed by hunger, when we have been harassed by bad news,
and the conviction, through the absence of any cheering information, that all
was not well with us down below, it would be a monstrous misfortune if we
cannot survive the pangs of hunger and the torments of starvation until the
long-promised relief arrives in the middle of May. If we do succeed, those who
come through alive will have a tale to tell, in which there will be much which
will remain buried, since there are experiences which, when they have been
lived through, it is impossible to talk about.
If we were only just ourselves, merely the defenders of a town against
an enemy, we could endure our privations, our short rations, and our condemned
water with even greater fortitude. The men live hard lives in Africa, and their
constitutions are strong, their nerves firm. But they hate, as all men hate, in
all parts of the world, that their womenfolk should suffer, and here is the
misery of our situation, more especially that these gentle creatures should
suffer before their own eyes, when they themselves can do nothing for them.
Aye, indeed, there's the rub. A hard life is always hardest upon women, and,
unlike the Australasian colonies, and Canada, or the Western States of America,
and all places where women who lead colonial life have no black labour to rely
upon, the women in Africa are curiously incapable, delegating a multitudinous
variety of domestic duties to the natives they employ. Their sphere of daily
activity, so far as it is in relation to their household, is reduced to a
minimum, while consciously or through the absence of some active pursuit by
which they could occupy their mind and exercise their bodies, their view of
life is petty and impressed with prejudices and absurd jealousies. Moreover,
they are abnormally lazy; indeed, to one who has lived in Australasia, America,
Africa, India, and elsewhere, and has experience of life in those colonies, the
lassitude and indolence of the South African woman is one of the most striking
aspects of the daily life in Africa. In Natal this weariness is called the
"Natal sickness," and in Mafeking at the present juncture it is
responsible for a great deal of the discontent, the unwillingness to make the
best of an exceedingly trying situation.
Without the
feminine element in Mafeking, the civil and military
authorities would be in better accord, but with a pack of women and children in
an insanitary laager, caring nothing for the exigencies of the situation,
firmly believing that they are oppressed by design and deliberately maltreated,
and, rising up in their wrath, smiting the Colonel, the Chief Staff Officer,
indeed, the entire Headquarters' Staff, or any military and official unit that
comes unfortunately into contact with them, the worry and annoyance caused to
the garrison at large by their presence here at this juncture is eminently
worse than the most fearsome thing it is possible to conceive. Of course, one
sympathises in all sincerity with these unfortunate non-combatants, for they
live amid conditions which produce and promote typhoid, malaria, and
diphtheriadiseases that have been peculiarly virulent, and from which many
women and children have died.
Apart from
the fatalities from shell and rifle fire, there is the list of those who have
died from the hardships which they have had to experience. Strong men have
dropped off from typhoid, women and children contracting the same disease, or
one which by its nature is similarly fatal, have been unable to bear up. The
smiling and happy children that one knew in the early days are no longer such;
they are thin, emaciated, bloodless, and live amid conditions which have
already wrought sad havoc among their companions. The mortality among the women
and children must form part of the general conditions of the siege, but it is
peculiarly disheartening to the townsmen as they stand to their posts and their
trenches to be compelled to ponder and to reflect sadly that the fell diseases
which have killed the wives and children of so many might, at any moment, attack those members of their own family who are
confined in the pestilential trenches of the laager. The unfortunate condition
of these poor people here, as well as in Kimberley, has brought the suggestion
to my mind that it should not be too late for either the Commander-in-Chief, or
some one identified with his authority, to make overtures to the Boers, so that
we, and even the garrison in Kimberley, might be permitted to send, in the one
case our women and children to Bulawayo, and in the other case, to Capetown. It
could surely be arranged, and if it were possible it would ensure a little
greater happiness, a little greater comfort, falling to the lot of these poor
people, who are unable to take, through lack of adequate remedies, the simplest
precautions against the dangers which assail their own health and the lives of
their children. But if our friends the Boers think that because of these
straits we are disheartened they make a very grievous mistake. We propose to
endure and we intend to carry the siege on until the end. Nothing so
exemplifies the true tone of the garrison and the spirit of the men as this
determination in which we one and all share and for which we mutually agree to
co-operate.
Despite the
heavy burden of domestic trouble which presses down upon the townspeople, there
has been a remarkable absence of any open friction between the civilian element
and military at present gathered in Mafeking. The military authorities should
be the first to recognise this and to appreciate the ready acquiescence and
assistance which they have received from the inhabitants of the town. That at
least they do acknowledge the importance of duties fulfilled, and the spirit
with which they have been carried out, should be a
conclusion against which it would be absurd to tilt. Nothing can underestimate
the consideration which the townspeople, under conditions adverse to their
interests, and for which the military authorities are entirely responsible,
have shown for the vigours of martial law and the present military domination.
Compensation would be so materially insufficient that it cannot be said that
any one individual has stayed here for the purpose of receiving such emoluments
as would be to him some kind of a profit. The economy of Governmental
compensation is never known to be satisfactoryGovernment in its impersonal
attributes being universally recognised as a most niggardly paymaster. They
therefore, those who have stayed, apart from the delusions under which they suffered,
can be said to have remained because they wished, as colonists, to prove their
loyalty; and yet, when one looks back upon the siege and considers carefully
the manner in which they have been imposed upon by their own Government, it is
very questionable if ever so great a test was applied to the spirit of mind and
body which constitutes allegiance to a sovereign. Fortunately the town cannot
say that it has performed more than its share of the defence work. Indeed, for
the most part the services of the townsmen have been restricted, so far as was
possible, to a connection with forts which have been constructed upon the
boundaries of the town, and have not been thrust forward in preference to the
men of the Protectorate Regiment, who, following the profession of arms, can
properly be expected to bear the brunt of the fighting. It was thought at one
time that the strange assortment of human nature which had collected in or was
drawn to Mafeking might be difficult of management; but mixed
as is the population here at present, the doubtful element, which is one that
sympathising with the enemy might create dissatisfaction among others, has been
singularly subdued. There are many instances here in Mafeking of men who have
taken up arms in defence of the town in which their business and their domestic
ties are centred, and who, to do this, have had to fight against their own
blood relatives. We have had therefore, in a sense, many men who, while
apparently loyal and engaged in manning the trenches, were yet under constant
supervision, lest they should give way to their feelings and too openly
proclaim their sympathies with the Boer cause; but there have been few
desertions, and affairs in general between Englishman and Dutchman, between the
civilian and military, have passed off with greater harmony than was altogether
anticipated. Mistrust between Englishmen of pronounced Imperial sympathies and
colonials suspected of Dutch leanings has been the cause of a certain amount of
jealousy, which tended to make the defence of Mafeking a work of, by no means,
a pleasant nature. However much this feeling of difference, creating and
causing in itself an acute tension between the pro-Imperial and the colonial,
has given rise to, or has been the sole cause of, any ill-feeling which may
have marked the relations between the civil and military, it has at no time
assumed proportions grave enough to foster the opinion that its prevalence
might endanger in time the commonweal of the inhabitants and threaten with
strife the daily intercourse of the various units in the garrison.
CHAPTER XXVII THE FIRST ATTACK UPON THE BRICKFIELDS
Mafeking, February 14th, 1900.
In the
history of the siege of Mafeking there should stand forth an event as
remarkable to posterity, if, perhaps, not quite so historical, as the famous
ball which was given by the Duchess of Richmond on the eve of Waterloo. It may
be, indeed, a trite comparison, since its only relationship is contained in the
fact that the officers were called away to the field of battle; but, with so
much uncertainty in European circles upon the conditions of the garrison, this
fact and its issues tend to show the spirit with which the town is sustaining
its precarious existence. Although we have some 3,000 Boers around us, with
twelve different varieties of artillery, and despite the steady increase in
fatalities from shot and shell which marks each day, we can yet stimulate our
flagging spirits to a pitch in which a ball is accepted and welcomed as an
essential to the conditions of the siege. A mere detail, yet one of
sufficiently striking importance and showing how very sombre and how serious is
the daily situation, will perhaps be found in the postponement of this ball
from Saturday night until the succeeding eveninga proceeding which was
rendered necessary by the death of a popular townsman from
a 100-pound shell in the course of the previous morning. Recent Sundays have
revealed a tendency, upon the part of the enemy, to ignore that generous and
courteous concession to a beleaguered garrison which General Cronje granted, by
professing his willingness to observe the Sabbath, insomuch that the Boers have
maintained rifle fire until 5 in the morning, commencing again at any moment
after 9 o'clock at night. This Sunday was no exception, and we had the usual
matutinal volleys.
Towards 8
o'clock in the evening the streets near the Masonic Hall presented an animated,
even a gay, picture. Officers in uniform and ladies in charming toilettes were
making their way to the scene of the festivity, each with a careless happiness
which made it impossible to believe that within a thousand yards of the town
were the enemy's lines. Immense cheering greeted the strains of "Rule
Britannia," played by the band of the Bechuanaland Rifles, and then the
dance commenced. The town danced upon the edge of a volcano, as it were; and
while it danced the outposts watched with strained eye for any sign of movement
in the enemy's lines. As dusk closed in the outposts had reported to the colonel
commanding that the advanced trenches of the enemy had been reinforced with
some three hundred Boers, and that their galloping Maxim had been drawn by four
men to a point adjacent to our outlying posts in the brickfields, while what
appeared to be the nine-pounder Krupp had been put into an emplacement upon the
south-eastern front. This news Colonel Baden-Powell did not permit to become
known, since he very properly wished to allow the garrison to enjoy its dance
if occasion offered; and accordingly the dance began. It
was early when the enemy sent their preliminary volley whistling over the town;
in an instant the animation of the streets which had preceded the dance was
apparent once more, as around the doors of the Masonic Hall a number of people
collected from out of the ball-room. Officers raced to their posts as orderlies
galloped through the streets sounding a general alarm. We were to be attacked,
and a man can serve his guns, can ply his rifle, can stand to his post in
evening pumps and dress trousers as efficiently and as thoroughly as he can
were he clothed in the coarser habiliments of the trenches. For a few minutes
no one quite knew what would happen, and greater mystification prevailed as the
noise of firing came from every quarter of our front. Urgent orders were
issued, to be obeyed as rapidly; Maxims were brought up at a gallop, the
reserve squadron was held in readiness, coming up to Headquarters at the
double. The guns were loaded and trained, and within a few minutes of the general
alarm, the ball-room was deserted and every man was at his post.
It was a
fine night, and the moon was full. Here and there, silhouetted against the
skyline, those who were watching could see the reinforcements marching to the
advanced trenches. There had been little time to think of anything, to collect
anything, the men who were sent forward simply snatching their rifles and
ammunition reserves. For a brief moment there was exceeding confusion in the
forts that had been ordered to furnish reinforcements for any particular
trench; but this duty was performed so quickly, and the town was in such
readiness to repel attack, that our mobilisation would have reflected credit
upon the smartest Imperial force. Presently there came a lull in the firing,
and the ambulance waggon made its way to a sheltered point,
prepared to move forward should it become necessary. I watched for a few
minutes the scene in the Market Square, paying particular attention to Colonel
Baden-Powell and his staff officers, who had congregated beyond the stoep of
the Headquarters office. Now and again Lord Edward Cecil, the Chief Staff
Officer, would detach himself from the group to send an instruction by one of
the many orderlies who, with their horses, were in waiting. It was a cheering
spectacle, the prompt and methodical manner in which our final arrangements
were perfected. Then the staff group broke up, and the C.S.O. explained the
possibilities of the situation. The enemy contemplated an attack upon our
south-eastern front, concentrating their advance upon our positions in the
brickfields. If such, indeed, were the case, we could promise ourselves a smart
little fight, and one, moreover, at point-blank range. We had so fortified our
trenches in this particular quarter that, happily, there was no prospect of any
disaster similar to that which befell our arms at Game Tree. Towards midnight
heavy firing broke out upon the western outposts, caused, as was afterwards
proved, by the success of our native cattle raiders, who, managing to elude the
vigilance of the Boer scouts, had driven some few head of cattle through their
lines into our own camp. The sound of this firing drew the Chief Staff Officer
to the telephone in the Headquarters bomb-proof, whereupon I made my way to the
point against which we had assumed that the attack would be directed.
It was to an
old post in a somewhat new shape, then, that I made my way, a journey which
amply compensated for any lack of excitement in the events of the last few
days. Fitful volleys from the Boers made it impossible to
walk across the section of the veldt intervening between the rear of these
advanced posts and the town, while at present, these posts form a little
colony, connected as they are now among themselves, but cut off altogether from
communication with the town until the pall of night comes to shield the
movements of those compelled to make their way between the town and the
brickfields. Soon, those who are posted there hope to see a trench constructed,
affording passage at any moment with the base; but until this happens it is a
pleasant scramble, a little dangerous, and somewhat trying. The ground is rough
and stony, sloping slightly, in open spaces, to within a few yards of the Boer
lines. It is commanded in many points, and upon this particular night it seemed
to suit the purpose of the enemy to play upon it with their rifles at irregular
intervals. To reach the river-bed was easy, to scramble up the river-bed with
one's figure thrown out against the skyline is better appreciated in
imagination; to put it into practice is to walk without looking where one is
going, since one is continually sweeping the enemy's positions to catch the
flash of the enemy's rifles. When the flash is caught, if the bullet has not
hit one first, it is wiser to throw dignity to the wind and oneself upon the
ground. In this position, prone and very muddy, even a little bruised, I found
myself, until the fierce but whispered challenge of a sentry told me that my
temporary destination had been reached. At this fort there was little to betray
the excitement which consumed its gallant defenders, beyond the fact that the
entire post was standing to arms. With a laugh and a jest we parted; and cut
across what would have been the line of fire had a fight been raging at that
moment. There was a low, elongated wedge a few yards
distant upon the left, against which the moon threw black shadows. It was the
Boer position, and as they had been firing frequently, warning to proceed
cautiously was not altogether disobeyed. Inspector Marsh's post was then very
shortly gained, and with this officer I passed the night.
It was 2
a.m. when Inspector Marsh turned out to make his last round before the men in
his command stood to arms at daybreak. Whatever else was not evident, it was
now certain that there would be no attack until the break of day, and so, upon
returning to our post, we lay upon the stony ground and slept. It seemed that
Time had scarcely scored an hour when we woke up, and, taking our rifles with us,
buckling on our revolvers, stood to the loopholes. Day broke solemnly and with
much beauty, night fading into grey-purple and soft, eerie shadows. Trees
looked as sentinels, and there was no sound about us. Indeed, the spectacle of
a large number of men expecting each minute the opening volley of an attack,
was thrilling, and in that cold air their martial effect was a sufficient and
satisfying tonic against the river mists. We had been standing some few minutes
when from up the stream came the croaking of the bullfrog, so loud and emphatic
that the older veldtsmen knew it at once to be a signal. This had scarcely been
passed round when from that black line upon the sky there broke a withering
sheet of flame; it was a magnificent volley, and swept across our
intrenchments. We held our fire, crouching still lower and peering still more
anxiously through the sandbags. Dawn was rapidly advancing, and as the light
became clearer the enemy heralded its advance with a merry flight of
three-pounder Maxims. They burst among us, hitting nobody,
and falling principally upon the trench occupied by Sergeant Currie and his
Cape Boys. Then we fired, or rather our most advanced trench opened, and in
that moment the engagement began. However, beginning brilliantly as it did,
under the snapping of the Mausers, the droning hiss of Martinis, and a roaring
deluge of shells, it was short-lived. Sergeant Currie and his men bore the
brunt of the rifle fire, replying shot to shot, undaunted and unchecked. The
reverberating echoes of the firearms, of the exploding shells, to the
accompaniment of the insulting taunts of the Cape Boys were somewhat deafening.
When the advanced trenches of the enemy started, volleys came also from the
ridge of the acclivity leading from the river-bed to the emplacement of the
nine-pounder Krupp. Between them again, there were smaller trenches joining in
the rifle practice, which, while it lasted, was so hot that it was not possible
to creep through the connecting trenches, or, indeed, to move in any manner
whatever. Within three hours the enemy threw some thirty nine-pounder Krupp,
some twenty-five five-pound incendiary shells, an overwhelming mass of
three-pound Maxims, and a few rounds from the cavalry Maxim. Bullets
innumerable had whizzed across us, to be answered by rifle fire as brisk again,
and so rapidly returned that few of the defenders had even time to think.
But we
wondered, as the day grew brighter and two hours' firing had passed, what would
be the end, considering ourselves fortunate that the enemy made no attempt to
rush any one of the brickfields in his command. Occasionally, as we fired,
Inspector Brown, in charge of the river-bed work, exchanged signals with
Inspector Marsh, the post commander, through a megaphone,
much to the discomfiture of the Boers, who, as the stentorian commands rang out
in any lull of firing, were sadly perplexed. These signals had, of course, been
arranged beforehand, the men knowing that they were the merest pretext and one
by which it was hoped to confuse the Boers. Upon the part of the enemy it must
have been rather alarming to hear between some temporary stoppage in the firing
a voice in thunderous tones crying out, "Men of the advanced trench, fix
bayonets," an order which would be invariably followed by hearty cheering
from the Cape Police and insults of an exceedingly personal character from the
Cape Boys. However, everything draws to an end, and the Boers, abandoning their
intention of turning us out of the brickfields, ceased fire, giving to
ourselves an opportunity to prepare breakfast. We ate it where we had
previously been firing, the men passing the tins of bully and the bread rations
from one to another. Then just where we had been fighting, with the scent of
the burst shells and the smoke of the rifles hanging in the air, thin spiral
columns of smoke arose in the rear of the few brick-kilns, and coffee was
presently brought to us. Until mid-morning we maintained our posts, but with
the luncheon hour we took it easy, although preserving a watchful attitude
towards the Boers. Thus passed the day with little further firing, and some
sleeping, terminating in a merry dinnerunder siege conditionswith Inspector
Marsh and Inspector Brown, in the dug-out of their town post.
CHAPTER XXVIII THE SECOND ATTACK UPON THE BRICKFIELDS
Mafeking, February 28th, 1900.
In many ways
this month has been the most eventful of any during the siege. Other months of
the siege have secured for themselves a certain notoriety, because they have
been identified with some particular engagement; but this month of February has
seen our labour in the brickfields brought to a successful consummation, and,
at a moment when the garrison was congratulating itself upon the triumphant
issue of such an adventurous and adventitious undertaking, we have been brought
face to face with the contingency that even yet it may not be possible to
continue to occupy so advanced a post. If I return to the subject of the
brickfields after such a short interval, it is because there, more than
anywhere else in Mafeking, the clash of arms is predominant. These many days we
have followed out our scheme, endeavouring to circumvent the enemy by pushing
forward a line of entrenched posts until they should embrace an area which
would enable us to outflank their main lines and enfilade their advanced
trenches. There was a moment when this was actually completed, a moment in which we who were in the advanced forts, knew that if we
could but hold the position we held the invaders in such a fashion that they
would be compelled to abandon their posts. But there was the shadow of
uncertainty, since we were rather reckoning upon the hitherto recognised fact,
that the Boers belonged to that class of fighting peoples who never purposely
attack if they could secure their ends by entrenchments and delay. For one day
we rather gloried in the work, until towards dusk we realised with a swift and
fearful astonishment that the Boers were intending to sap us. We have supposed
it to be by accident rather than by design that a man, in the uniform of some
German regiment, appeared of a sudden to arise out of the ground at a point
some thirty yards distant from what we had considered to be the end of the Boer
trench. His presence explained much, since the night before we had been
perplexed at hearing the sound of picking and shovelling a little in advance of
our position. At that time we had concluded that the noises emanated from the
natives, who were deepening and strengthening the advanced trench of the Boers;
but with this figure suddenly appearing, we realised that there was quite a
different story to be told, one which implied that our previous opinion of the
enemy was in error, and that they intended to make us fight for our position or
to turn us out. The situation was rapidly becoming as interesting as any which
has developed from the siege. Sap and counter-sap were separated perhaps by
eighty yards, and so gallantly and vigorously did the enemy work that we could
see them approaching yard by yard. It was impossible for us in the time at our
disposal to do very much to stop them; we could simply keep a look-out and drench their trenches with volleys upon the slightest
provocation. It was useless to fire upon the natives working in the sap, since
it was only possible to see the points of their picks as they were swung aloft,
catching for a moment the radiance of the sun. Still they came on, and one
night we knew that before dawn they would be into us. That night no one slept
in the advanced trenches, and Inspector Marsh, who has very generously
permitted me to stop with him for the past month in his quarters in the
brickfields, visited the posts hourly. Between two and three we slept, and for
a short space there was a perfect calm in our lines. At half-past four we stood
to arms, to hear that the enemy had made contact with our trench. As we found
this out, news was brought that the big Creusot gun had taken up its position
upon the south-eastern heights, and so commanded our entire area. The inevitable
had arrived and perhaps for a brief moment we were all a little subdued. As the
sun rose Inspector Marsh, commanding the south-eastern outposts, under
directions from Headquarters, warned every man to take such cover as was
obtainable.
The
situation would have given satisfaction had there been any prospect of an equal
contest, since man to man we were not unmatched, but it would be impossible for
the occupants of these advanced posts to attempt conclusions with an enemy who
could bring to their assistance a high-velocity Krupp and a 100 lb. Creusot.
There was immediate excitement, and Inspector Marsh telephoned the news to
Headquarters. For the moment that was all which could be doneinform
Headquarters. Then, with our rifles in our hands, with an extra supply of
ammunition by our sides, we waited the inevitable, and we
waited until night; but upon that night nothing happened. As dusk drew down,
and as the calm of night was broken only by the rumbling echoes and tremors of
the work in the enemy's sap, we threw out a working party of some two hundred
natives, starving and ill-conditioned, but the best that we could procure,
intending to make the effort to check once and for all the advance of the
Boers. We worked all night, and dawn was breaking as we drew off, but we had
passed them. In a single night we had carried our sap some thirty yards beyond
theirs, and at such an angle that we enfiladed their sap, while only eighty
yards divided the pair. The Boer line of advance was deeper than ours by some
five feet, but all that day white man and Cape Boy strove to deepen our new
trench, and by night it was perhaps a foot deeper than it had been. It was
dangerous work; it was exciting. The crackle of bullets was never absent; they
struck all round one, and there were a few fatalities. That night we worked
again, and so did they. Indeed, each side volleyed heavily all night to protect
their working parties. We were not extending our trench; it was already a
hundred yards sheer into the open, but in the morning when we looked, the Boer
trench was barely thirty yards away from ours. That day we did nothing but
await the inevitable again. We slept, since it was certain that on the morrow a
fight would come. Once more there was nothing for it but to wait in such
readiness as we could be in, for anything that the enemy might attempt. They
began at dusk by throwing dynamite bombs into our sapsome burst, some fell
blind; but this work was futile, since they had not yet reached sufficiently
near to effect any damage. When they did obtain such
access, we also had a little pile of bombs. Tooth for toothwe were not going
to give up without fighting. Then the end came suddenly, for Headquarters
telephoned that the big gun had taken up its original position, which was
barely two thousand yards distant on our left flank. With this message we began
to comprehend what the next day would bring forth.
The affair
between the outposts began about a quarter to five in the morning. The first
100 lb. shell fell between our trenches and those of the enemy: it seemed that
they had wished to secure the range. They had secured it. The three holes which
form our advanced position contain no cover whatsoever, since there is none to
put up, and whatever earth had been thrown up was commanded by the enemy's fort
upon the south-eastern heights. Each hole contained a shelter from the sun, a
corrugated iron arrangement, supported by props, with a sprinkling of earth on
top. The shooting was magnificent, and it will be difficult to find, when the
various comparisons be drawn, marksmanship more precise or more accurate. Each
was wrecked in turn: a shell to a shelter. When this work had been
accomplished, the big gun directed its attention to the brick-kilns, in which
we had posted our sharpshooters. In a little time the three were heaps of
ruins. Between the intervals of shelling the Boers fired volleys from the three
points: from the fort on the south-eastern heights, from the fort in the
river-bed, and from their main trench. The company of Cape Boys in the advanced
hole could not be expected to relish the triple fire, which was in turn
endorsed by shells from the big gun. The holes are not very large, nor very
wide, nor high: they are natural depressions in the soil,
in which water had collected and caused a further subsidence. When the enemy
volleyed from the advanced trench, they had to crouch under the lee of a bank
that was facing the direction of the fort on the south-eastern heights; when
they wished to avoid shell and rifle fire from this fort, they had to run the
risk of finding shelter in the direct line of fire from the main trench. If
they endeavoured to move to the second hole, they had to do so under fire from
all three points. It was rather an unpleasant state of things for the Cape
Boys, who, moreover, could find no point from which to return the fire of the
enemy. In an hour some twelve shells had been thrown into the first hole, and
there were five fatalities. Whenever we endeavoured to occupy the sap the big gun
shelled it, until it was no longer possible to maintain a post in a position so
exposed. We fell back to the second hole, and the enemy began to shell other
points in the brickfields. They sent two to Currie's post in the river-bed;
they scattered them plentifully about the first, second, and third
fortsentrenched posts by which it is hoped to keep back the Boers, should they
successfully carry the Cape Boy holes. The situation was becoming serious, and
we had been compelled to abandon the sap and evacuate the first hole. At the
moment it was a question of whether the Boers were coming on, and as we waited
in the expectation of seeing them advance down our own sap into our original
position, the shelling ceased, for the Boers had gone to breakfast. That was
our supreme opportunity, and although they must have seen us from the
south-eastern heights, we employed ourselves in saving from the wreck what was
possible. All the shelters had been pounded into débris: rifles and
bayonets lay about broken and twisted, here and there were
remains of camp utensils, and blood-stained clothing. It was a scene of ruin,
and as we crept into it upon our hands and knees the confusion of the place
struck one sadly. Sergeant-Major Taylor had been hurt by the second shell, and
has since died, while another of the wounded has also succumbed. While the
firing lasted the position was untenable, and we fell back from the sap into
the most advanced of the holes. Here the situation rapidly became impossible,
for the character of the outwork prevented any one from taking cover. But
despite the galling fire, the Cape Boys behaved with admirable courage and
endurance, and it was only when three men in the advanced hole had been
seriously wounded, that they fell back behind the bank of the second pit. In a
little, when the gun had effectually driven us from the advanced hole, the
enemy began to shell the forts in the rear. At that moment there were two
things to be done: one was to bank up the mouth of the sap, since the enemy had
already reached it and were firing down it, the other was to throw up a rampart
across the mouth of the second hole. Under a heavy fire Corporal Rosenfeld, of
the Bechuanaland Volunteers, and myself undertook and accomplished the one,
while at night the work upon the rampart was begun. By morning it was finished,
but in the night the enemy had occupied our sap. The length of the first hole
then alone divided us. Within the next few hours, however, the position of
affairs changed as rapidly again. At a moment when the enemy were least
prepared a strong party rushed the hole and sap, expelling the Boers by
vigorous use of bayonets and dynamite bombs. Since then the Boers have left our
advanced works severely alone.
Mafeking, March 3rd, 1900.
It has
become altogether impossible to gauge with any degree of accuracy, the
situation in relation to the fortunes of the Imperial arms, or as it might be
found in the camp of the enemy without Mafeking. We do not lack here men who,
from a previous knowledge of the Boers, consider themselves capable of
estimating the purpose and designs of Commandant Snyman; but what seems to be
precise and even an admirable forecast one week, is proved, by events in the
succeeding week, to be irrelevant and unreliable. It has been our habit, when
for any length of time the enemy has rested, to attribute their comparative
cessation from hostilities to news of ill-omen, and in our fatuous presciency
we have approximately given the date upon which the siege will be raised. But
in light of the never-varying contradiction in sense which befalls our
optimistical assurance, we must perforce, recognise the falsity of our
deductions and cease from worrying. Recently, indeed during the past week, we
expected the Boers to celebrate Amajuba Day, and to this end, the garrison was
held in a condition of complete readiness, so as to be able
to at once repel the anticipated attack. The anniversary of this disastrous
fight passed off, however, without incident, and as it happened that runners
arrived from the North upon the same day, conveying to us the unconfirmed
intelligence that a force under the ever-victorious General French had relieved
Kimberley, the wise-acres here, both civil and military, were of opinion that
the investing force, that has now surrounded us for six months, could not
stomach such unfortunate information, and were as a consequence timorous of any
renewed aggression. But now again our theories are erroneous, and the siege
progresses to-day merrily and as pugnaciously as ever. With the tidings of
Kimberley's good-luck, we looked to see the big Creusot gun removed across the
border in its return to Pretoria, but alas! it still confronts us and still
flings its daily complement of shells into the town. Indeed, without this piece
of ordnance, life would become so strikingly original that the townspeople
would break down under the strain. The uncertainty as to what direction it will
take, as to the number of tolls which have been rung out from the alarm bell,
as to whose house has been wrecked, or what family put into mourning, has
buoyed up the townspeople to a pitch from which, when the cause is removed,
there will be a pretty general collapse. With the advent of the news about the
South, the Northern runners confirmed the fact of the presence of Colonel
Plumer's force being near at hand. But this has been the irony of our situation
since the siege began. There has ever been, it would seem, some worthy general
or colonel within a little trifle of two hundred miles from us, bringing
Mafeking relief, or if not for us, for the starving natives. This has always
been so pleasant to reflect upon, just this little detail
of two hundred miles. Colonel Plumer, we hear, is laying down
"immense" stocks of food-supplies at Kanya, so that the natives here,
who are already so reduced that they are dying from sheer inanition, having
successfully accomplished the journey, which is one of ninety miles, may feed
to their hearts' contentprovided that they are able to pay for the rations
which are so generously distributed to them. Whatever motives of philanthropy
direct the policy of the executive in this question of distributing food
allowances to natives, it cannot be said that the Government or its administrators,
err in their administration upon the side of liberality. Even here in Mafeking
we have set a price upon the bowl of souphorseflesh and mealie-meal
mixedwhich is served out to the natives from the soup-kitchen, finding excuses
for such parsimony in the contention that, by charging the starving natives
threepence per bowl of soup, when it is exceedingly doubtful if they have that
amount of money in their possession, we can successfully induce them to remove
to Kanya, and there live in a state of happy flatulency off the stocks which
Colonel Plumer has been ordered to prepare against their reception. Of course,
at a moment like this, it is injudicious to cavil at the procedure of the
Imperial Government, but there can be no doubt that the drastic principles of
economy which Colonel Baden-Powell has been practising in these later days are
opposed to and altogether at variance with the dignity of the liberalism which
we profess and are at such little pains to execute, and which enter so much
into the pacific settlement of native questions in South Africa. The presence
of a large alien native population gathered in Mafeking at the present juncture has been our own fault, since the authorities, in
whom the management and control of the natives of this district is invested,
advised the military authorities here to allow some two thousand native
refugees from the Transvaal to take up their abode upon the eve of war in the
Mafeking stadt, and it is through the tax which this surplus population put upon
the commissariat that this particular question has required such delicate
adjustment. With supplies which are rapidly diminishing, we are compelled to
force nightly a moderate number to attempt the journey to Kanya, and if they
have been signally unsuccessful in their essay to pass through the Boer lines,
it is in part because the enemy, having promised them a free passage,
maliciously fires upon them as they reach the advanced trenches. For the most
part, therefore, we are no better off than we were, since those natives who
escaped invariably return to Mafeking.
With the
good news which we have received, a slightly better tone of feeling would seem
to be about the community. We are simple people for the present, living as we
do under the rigours of Martial Law, but we have such genuine faith in the
supremacy of our flag, that now that we have heard of the general movement of
troops, we are infinitely happier and inclined to forget for the moment the
trials and difficulties of our position. There was a time when the townspeople
were so disgusted with the conduct of the war, with the disgraceful and
nefarious practices of the Colonial Government, with the abominable lethargy of
the Imperial authorities, that five men out of every six had resolved to abandon
a country where such misrule was possible, and to remove to some one other of
our colonies, where life, upon a broader and happier basis,
was the order. But with the inauguration of brighter things, such as the relief
of Kimberley portends, this tone has disappeared, while there seems to be an
almost unanimous desire to wait the arrival of the next intelligence. It is
perhaps not altogether incorrect to say that the feeling of disgust, by which
so many people were at one time swayed, existed chiefly among those who were
connected to and related with families of Dutch origin, and who at some period
discarded their Dutch allegiance, casting in their lot with the British. These
people yet retained a certain sympathy with the Transvaal, and were as concerned
as any Boer about the issues of the campaign. Upon the outbreak of war, many of
these people took up their residence in border towns, and by these means
Mafeking received a sprinkling of people who were, by protestation, Britishers,
and by instinct, Dutch. These men were accepted, since as a rule they were
known to be genuine in their avowal; but when they brought their families into
Mafeking, their womenfolk, being wholly Dutch, were as a rule regarded in quite
a different light. It must be remembered that inter-marriage is practised in
the Transvaal to an extraordinary degree, and that the relationship of any one
family with others can by this means permeate the entire country to such an
extent that, while the woman might be the wife of an African Imperialist, she
might be able to claim kinship with men who held high positions in the
Republican service. These ladies, therefore, were quite open to the suspicion
of wishing to convey to their relations in the Transvaal authentic information
regarding Mafeking. As our condition has been precarious, and as important
information was surreptitiously carried to the enemy, it
was perhaps natural that we should take steps to confine these ladies within
their laager, and to place a guard upon itprecautions which were neither
valued nor appreciated by them, and from which they suffered no hardships other
than those which might be expected to accrue from the enjoyment of the somewhat
restricted liberty, with which they, together with the entire garrison, must
perforce rest content.
Mafeking, March 15th, 1900.
Colonel
Baden-Powell has recently issued an order to all ranks in his command
requesting the names of those who are willing to enlist in the special corps
which are to be raised for purposes of patrolling the country when the war is
terminated. If this be a sign of the times, a token by which we may read the
lines of the policy by which Africa will be governed during the next few years,
it is satisfactory at least to understand that we do not propose to take the
risk of successful risings in the months to come in different Dutch centres.
This war has shown us the folly of courting "compromise and Exeter
Hall" in dealing with dissatisfied areas of the Empire. We have policed
Burma, we patrol Ireland (but in a different sense), and in India we have
incorporated and turned into admirable efficiency many of the hill tribes, but
we cannot translate the native-born Republican nor convert the rebel Dutch
without the almost certain contingency arising of their proving traitorous.
There are many who know the Boer, and, knowing him and appreciating his strange
strategy, his curiously warped mind, his natural aptitude
for breaking his bond, would not trust him in any transaction where integrity
of character and probity were the essential complement. There has been much
opinion among colonials that the Imperial Government might, anxious to be as
conciliatory as possible, enrol the Dutch for constabulary duties, giving, indeed,
to the younger generation the preference, and thus enabling them to possess an
employment definite, if not altogether lucrative. But in this we should be
perpetrating against the loyal colonists of Cape Colony a grave injustice, for
until the present generation of Dutch has passed away, taking with it the
memories of the war, it will be unsafe, it will be unwise, to employ in any
administrative capacity whatsoever, those men who, themselves nursing a rancour
against Great Britain, will omit no opportunity to foster the traditional
hatred of their forefathers. We have in France, and in the French animosity
against Germany, a case which is identical, proving, as it does, how the
prejudices of a people can be nurtured and kept evergreen through the sheer
force of malignant sentiment; and there can be little doubt that time, and time
only, is capable of removing from the minds of the Republican Dutch that
feeling of detestation and contempt which has maintained them in their attitude
of hostility towards us for so many decades. To them, for many years to come,
the British will be a nation of iconoclasts; we may banish them, we may wipe
out all traces of their misrule, and so obliterate the signs of their existence
that historians may find it difficult to believe that they once lived. We may
do all these things, but it will be impossible to govern their instincts by Act
of Parliament, to curb their impulses by the rulings of the High Commissioner. It would therefore be thrice foolish to employ
them in their own country and among their own people, and such action would
imply that we intended to ignore uses to which the younger colonists can be so
conveniently put. In South Africa, as in Australasia and in Canada, there is a
large army of young men who loaf their hours away in the idleness of an
agricultural life rather than seek some trade in the offices of the big cities.
They achieve little that is profitable upon their farms, clinging tenaciously
to such a livelihood, since it possesses finer natural elements in its intimacy
with the life of the veldt than any form of metropolitan activity could give to
them. There are, of course, many men who have been driven to the towns through
the failure of their holdings, but in this present state of war these especially,
and all those others, have answered eagerly to the call for volunteers, and in
proving themselves worthy, have rendered excellent services to the State. The
great majority of these men would willingly take service in the forces to which
the order of the colonel commanding makes reference, and by this we have at
hand an army extraordinarily adapted to colonial purposes, and needing only to
be called out. Moreover, at a time when the Empire has seen how its various
units have hastened to the aid of the Mother-country, would it not be well to
create in each colony a permanent militia from the men who have so unanimously
come forward; a force which would be to the colonies what the Imperial army is
to India, and which would supersede the local defence forces in Australasia,
approaching in its conception a fixed soldiery rather than one to which is
given a certain number of exercises in the year? There would be no lack of
numbers in any of the colonies, and in Africa we could make
use of the Zulu, the Matabele, and the Cape Boys. We have long rested in
fancied security, and not until China falls a prey to Russia and India passes
from us, need we fear that Australasia can be taken from us by the combined
fleets of the Powers of Europe; nevertheless, since we must reorganise our
army, it would be no mean policy to place, once and for all, upon their true
foundation the defences of our colonies.
To those who
know the life of the mounted police in Burma, of the constabulary in the West
Indies, and of the police in Canada, the duties of the corps that are raised
for South Africa will be at once comprehended. They would both police and
administer the areas of the Transvaal and the Orange Free State, and it may be
that they will be affiliated with the British South Africa Police corps that
are already enrolled. The life is enjoyable, there is much sport, and for a few
years to come there is sure to be trouble, at odd intervals, among the Dutch.
It is, perhaps, doubtful whether the man from home will be quite adapted to
such work, since, in a very high degree, a knowledge of the Dutch language will
be indispensable, and much valuable time will be lost in acquiring some
smattering of this tongue and in teaching the recruits to ride, to shoot, and
to drill. But life in the mounted constabulary has also possessed so great a
fascination for the average Englishman that, should the Government decide to
make eligible the men from home, any paucity among the colonial applicants can
be at once remedied. Care, however, should be taken that the colonial men who
came forward on behalf of the colony in its hour of peril, should be given the
first refusal, and a greater financial consideration should be meted out than, with the exception of the Canadian police, has hitherto been
customary. The economy of Africa is high priced, and it will be eminently
difficult for men to live upon their pay should they have to forfeit any large
proportion of it for extras, the cost of which might well be borne by the
Government itself. There has been a great outcry about the higher rates of pay
which are drawn by the colonial corps now serving at the front as compared with
the wretchedly inadequate wages of the regulars, and it is a great pity that
we, who can be so foolishly magnanimous, cannot disavow the petty economies of
the service at a moment like the present. Five shillings a day is small enough
when men have to provide their entire equipment, but to argue that because the
War Office is supplying the kit the rate should be reduced, since the main
source of expenditure be removed, is to incline towards a policy of expenditure
which is penny wise and pound foolish. We read recently, and with infinite
zest, that the artillery by which Mafeking is defended includes a battery of field
guns and four heavy pieces. This, of course, is a grotesque exaggeration. We
have no heavy ordnance, and our field pieces are obsolete muzzle-loading
monstrosities. Had the War Office paid attention to its work, and supplied this
advanced outpost of the Empire with efficient artillery, instead of rushing up
to Mafeking an improvised field battery, it would be possible to ignore the
attempt to curtail the pay of the colonial forces, since, if Africa had been
prepared for war, it is improbable that Great Britain would have been
compelled, in order to crush the combined forces of the Republics, to summon to
her aid men from her colonial dependencies. But we did not do this, and if we
be now reaping the fruits of an impotent administration, we
should be sufficiently generous to accept the responsibility for the
expenditure, and to desist from an endeavour to bolster up accounts by imposing
upon the colonial contingents the effects of an economy which aims at sparing a
few thousand pounds by saving some portion of their pay. Moreover, if it be
true that the colonial contingents which have been enrolled since war began,
are receiving ten shillings a day, why should not that rate be accepted as the
standard of pay for all colonial forces under arms? In relation to Mafeking,
where the question of compensation has become acute, such addition to the pay
of the defenders of the town as would increase their rate to ten shillings
would be a felicitous manner of recognising the gallant work which the garrison
has performed, and provide at the same time, a practical exposition of official
appreciation for the units of the defence.
If this be
the one question of moment, in reference to the other problemthe pastoral and
agricultural future of the countrythere is little doubt that Africamore
especially these western districts, where agricultural and pastoral pursuits
are widely followedwill require the assistance of the capitalist before the
mere emigrant from England can make much headway. In a sense Mafeking is the
central market for farm produce for areas which stretch far into the Transvaal,
and which, lacking the propinquity of a local market, are compelled to send
their products across the border. Many of these districts have proved to
possess valuable mining qualities, so that it is possible we shall see in a few
years the development of towns which, owing their existence to the mines, will
attract the trade which now finds its bent in the Mafeking market. But the hope
here is of railway communication with Johannesburg and
Pretoria, and the consequent opening out and settlement of the Bechuanaland
Protectorate, and it is in this respect the capitalist will be the Alpha and
Omega of the countryside; for the youngster who goes to Australasia with five hundred
pounds and leases a property will be unable to obtain a hearing up here until
the economy of daily life has been reduced to a less expensive order. There is
a golden future here, but much gold will have to be poured into the lap of
Mother Nature before any very satisfactory results are gained. The cost of
transit is prohibitive, and there is a scarcity of water, which will make wells
a necessity. There is much cheap labour, but the present mode of existence of
the farming class is one which favours a bare sufficiency, and for the
remainder a state of placid idleness.
The
insufficient development of South Africa in respect to its agricultural and
pastoral resources is largely due to the unprogressiveness of the Boer or South
African farmer. He personifies useless idleness, and contents himself with
raising a herd of a few hundred head of cattle; he seldom plants a tree; seldom
digs a well; seldom makes a road; and has an unmitigated contempt for
agriculture and agriculturists. His ploughs, harrows, and utensils of husbandry
are clumsy, ill-formed, and, where they exist at all, are hopelessly
antiquated. He cannot be prevailed upon to make any alteration whatsoever in
the system of his agriculture. His ancestors were farmers, and he himself does
not conceive it to be his duty to alter methods which were already obsolete
when he was a child. The English farmer, with good training, active
disposition, and accurate knowledge of how and where to
institute radical reforms, possessing capital, might find both home and fortune
in these areas. It is a good cattle country, and with a careful reorganisation
in the management of the cattle-farms across the bordera reorganisation which
should extend throughout all agrestic or nomadic communities in the Transvaalit
should receive material assistance from the farms of the western border of the
Transvaal that are already stocked. The Dutch farmer, living the life of the
patriarch of old, leaves everything to nature, and does not, as a rule, combine
the varieties of farming which his property would sustain. He remains a
stock-breeder, or a grower of cereals: the combination of the two is usually
too complex. It will be therefore a good thing should a different basis of
management be inculcated, and when this be accomplished, greater facilities for
stocking their farms will be held out to the intending colonists who may favour
the country, but for the time the new-comers should check their eagerness,
since, above all things, capital will be necessary to their salvation.
CHAPTER XXXI "A HISTORY OF THE BARALONGS"
Mafeking, March 22nd, 1900.
Beyond a few
successful cattle-raiding forays on the part of the Baralongs, we have done
nothing these past days but maintain courageously the glories of our splendid
isolation. In a way we have been compelled to depend to no small extent upon
the prowess of the local tribe. The Baralongs have done well by us, and have
served us faithfully, and with no complaint. They have fought for us; they have
preyed upon the enemy's cattle, so that the white garrison might have something
better than horseflesh for their diet; they have manned the western defences of
the stadt, and they have suffered severe privations with extraordinary
fortitude. There have been moments in the earlier stages of the war when they
might well have considered the advisability of supporting a power that could
not from the outset hinder their own arch-enemy, and one against whom they have
been pre-eminently successful in other years, from invading the territories of
the Empire. But whatever may have been the workings of the native mind, however
they may have dallied with the treacherous overtures of the Boers, they have
individually, and as a tribe, unanimously risen to the
occasion, and given to the Great White Queen their absolute support. In the
history of these people there is not much in the consideration which we have
shown them to justify their allegiance, and if we have secured their loyalty at
so critical a moment, let us hope that it may, in some way, epitomise the
actions for the future, of the tribes that are allied with them, and, when the
moment comes for compensation, let us at least remember the debt of honour
which we owe them.
The
Baralongs are, of course, identified with the Bantu peoples of Africa, but they
come from a stock that is industrial as opposed to the military element of this
race. The distribution of the military and industrial Bantu is significant, but
in this latter we will consider one of the peaceable tribes. The military Bantu
is found in possession of the most fertile regions, and it may be well to
remember that they occupied the Southern extremity of Africa, contemporaneously
with Europeans. They are now found between the Drakensberg Mountains and the
Indian Ocean, fruitful areas about the Zoutpansberg and Kaffraria. It would
seem that they held these grounds by right of might, and their district is in
somewhat striking contrast to the regions in which the industrial Bantu are at
home. These latter cling to the mountains, as in Basutoland, and are scattered
over the high plateau which forms so great a part of the Free State and the
Transvaal, or in the confines of the Kalahari Desert and those deserts and
karoos which lie to the south of the Orange River. The desert has ever been
their ultimate retreat, and as their more warlike kinsmen seized and held the
finer qualities of the country, the arid and, so to speak,
waste areas of Africa fell to the heritage of the industrial Bantu. Descendants
from the same family, there is naturally an analogy between their tribal
organisations which is yet curiously dissimilar. They are both armed with the
same weapon, but the assegai of the military Bantu is short-handled and broad
bladed; while the assegai of the industrial Bantu is long and sharp, light in
the blade, and intended mainly for purposes of the chase. Among the former the
chief is a despot, against whose word there is no appeal; his town is designed
with a view to defence; the chief's hut and the cattle-pens of the tribe are
placed in the centre, and around these the remaining huts are built in
concentric circles. The power of the chief among the industrial Bantu is
limited; first by the council of lesser chiefs, secondly by the general
assemblage of the freemen of the tribe. His town is intended to serve the
requirements of a peaceful people, while outside the ground is cultivated in a
rough and unscientific manner; they are even acquainted with the art of
smelting ore and working in iron. The pursuit of the military Bantu is directed
to the successful cultivation of a bare sufficiency of corn and cattle, and he
pays little attention to anything which is beyond his immediate requirements.
The Kaffirs, the Zulus, and the Matabele Zulus are among the warlike tribes of
this dark-skinned race; but the chief seats of the industrial tribe are
Bechuanaland and Basutoland, and it is with the peaceful Bechuanas, with whom
are identified the Baralongs, that we propose to deal.
Historically,
Bechuanaland will remain ever interesting to Englishmen as being the scene of
the labours of Robert Moffat, David Livingstone, and John Mackenzie: three
famous missionaries, who in their time did so much for the
interests of our country in what was then the Dark Continent. The immense area
lying to the north of Cape Colony possessed in itself one great political
feature which made its possession of paramount importance. It was the natural
trade route between that colony and Central Africa at a moment when Imperialism
was a soulless conception, and when our ideas of the Empire in Africa shrank at
the possibility of northern expansion. During all those years possession of
Bechuanaland was the golden key to a future which, had we but realised it then,
would have given us some right to claim the distinction of being a race of
discoverers. We were, however, very diffident about accepting and recognising
any greater responsibilities in relation to any enlargement of the areas of our
African domains, and if a vindictive spirit had not encouraged the Boers to
plunder and destroy the settlement in which missionary Livingstone abode, and
thus driven him to pastures of a fresh kind, we might never have possessed the
gate through which the stream of prosperity has flowed, until it reached to the
limits of Central Africa. If the Boers had resolved to oust this intrepid
Englishman, they failed lamentably, insomuch as they did but drive him to
explore the interior, and to open up a magnificent reach of country to his
fellow Englishmen. Bechuanaland lay at his feet when he first started forth,
but to-day the point of exploration is many hundred miles in advance.
Bechuanaland has flourished, and would have prospered more, had we but
appreciated the doctrine of those Victorian statesmen who, recognising the wondrous
wealth which lay in this new country, but fearing that the moment had not come for such gigantic undertakings, were regretfully compelled to
delegate to posterity the duty of some day acquiring these very areas. Great
Britain does not go very far back into the history of the native tribes of
Bechuanaland. We are the later agents of a new civilisation, but we have yet to
undo many wrongs to the lawful possessors of this proud heritage, to adjust
many intricate questions, and to grapple, without fear and hesitation, with the
problems which confront usproblems upon which it is surely not too much to say
the effectual solidarity and stability of this great African Empire depends.
Tradition
tells us that the Baralong branch of the Bantu came from the north under the
leadership of Chief Morolong, and that the tribe settled, after a protracted
exodus from the north, on the Molopo River under a chief who was fourth in
descent from their first leader, Morolong. The combination of the military and industrial
Bantu had been already broken by the character of the tribe itself. Before they
had been settled very long, Matabele Zulus under Moselekatse attacked Mabua,
and there was once again a complete division of tribe. They scattered in three
directions. Thaba N'chu was selected by the leader of that party as their
eventual resting-place. Two other sections, led by Taoane, the father of
Montsioa, and Machabi, found their way into the country which lay between the
Orange River and the Vaal. There they remained, leading a quiet and
comparatively harmless existence until the Boers, under Hendrik Potgieter,
entered into alliance with the Baralongs to attack Moselekatse. When the old
lion of the north had been driven beyond the Limpopo, Taoane returned with his
followers to the south bank of the Marico. By virtue of
this conquest Potgieter issued a proclamation, claiming for himself and the
Transvaal Government the country which had previously been overrun by the Zulu
chief. Under this proclamation the Boers claimed to exercise sovereign powers
over the Bechuana tribes, but upon the protest of the British Government this
was withdrawn, Taoane and Montsioa, who had by this time succeeded his father,
refusing to recognise the implied sovereignty of the Boers. By the intervention
of the Imperial Government on behalf of the native chiefs of a territory which
was practically unknown, it became the eventual channel through which we pushed
a benign salvation, and an indifferent protection upon the natives of Bechuanaland
until that time when we were enabled to assimilate the country. The attempt of
the Transvaal Government to seize the areas of Bechuanaland was the rift in the
silver lining of the clouds of Transvaal prosperity. The question became,
between the two Governments, one of great moment, and its existence, since the
Republic declined to ratify the award of the Keate Arbitration, was a bone of
contention which was never altogether buried. The attitude of this Republic,
the indirect assistance which the Transvaal offered to Moshette and Massou for
the perpetuation of civil strife among the Bechuana chiefs, undoubtedly
hastened the annexation by Great Britain in 1877 of the Transvaal territory.
When this happened, despite the fact that the border was immediately delimited,
Bechuanaland passed through a period of the greatest anarchy. The chiefs were
warring amongst themselves, and although the two parties claimed the protection
of either the Transvaal or the Imperial Government, the country was not definitely
pacified till the despatch of the Warren Expedition, an
expedient which by its success made Bechuanaland an integral portion of our
African Empire. Montsioa, the Baralong chief, was fighting with his brother
Moshette; Mankorane, the Batlapin chief, was engaged in struggle with David
Massou, who was head of the Korannas. Of these four chiefs Montsioa and
Mankorane sought the protection of the Imperial Government, while Moshette and
Massou acknowledged the sovereignty of the Transvaal. European volunteers or
freebooters who would be rewarded for their services by grants of land,
assisted each of the four chiefs. At this juncture the Imperial Government
changed its policy of administration in relation to the natives of
Bechuanaland, and the result was that the High Commissioner of the Cape became
supreme chief of the natives outside the Republic and the territories of
foreign powers. In pursuance of the new policy Mr. Mackenzie arrived in
Bechuanaland as British Resident, for the purpose of giving effect to the newly
proclaimed Protectorate which had been established over the country outside the
south-western boundary of the Transvaal by the consent of the delegates from
the Republic, who had visited London to obtain certain modifications of the
Convention of Pretoria. An extraordinary state of things awaited the arrival of
Mackenzie, for the volunteers in the service of the Bechuana chiefs, Moshette
and Massou, had established two independent communities, the
"republics" of Land Goshen and Stellaland. The freebooters of
Stellaland offered no resistance to the authority of the British Resident, but
the burghers of Land Goshen celebrated the arrival of the Resident by a series
of outrages and the contemptuous rejection of the demands made to them by these new officials. With the successful resistance of the
filibusters from Rooigrond, the capital of Land Goshen, President Kruger issued
a proclamation in the interests of humanity, by which he brought under the
protecting wing of this South African State, the contending chiefs and their
European advisers; thus the anomaly existed of a power endeavouring to assert
its authority over rebels in a country in which we ourselves had assumed
control. The mediation of the Transvaal Government was brought about, partly by
the situation of Rooigrond, partly by the unjustifiable arrogance and
assumption of the Transvaal President. The town had been so placed that it lay
across the line of the new south-western boundary; the divisions lying partly
in the Transvaal, partly in the Protectorate, and since it had become apparent
that the Imperial or Colonial Government were unable to remedy the evils which
arose from the depredations of marauders of Rooigrond, their leaders justified
their actions by claiming that their town was the property of the Transvaal,
and that they themselves were acting for that state, under the orders of
General Joubert, and endeavouring to suppress conditions of anarchy in a
country which, from the state of its existence, would appear to possess no
controlling influences. If the outcome of this diplomatic feat were the
proclamation of the Transvaal, it also aroused Great Britain to the true
condition of affairs. The Transvaal had gone too far, and, in response to hints
from the Imperial Government as to the feeling of the colony, resolutions were
passed stating that public opinion in Cape Colony considered the intervention
of her Majesty's Government for the maintenance of the trade route to the interior, and the preservation of native tribes to whom
promise of Imperial protection had already been given, was an act dictated by
the claims of humanity and by the necessities of policy. It was thus brought
home to the Government that the Cape Colonists considered that it would be
fatal to British supremacy in South Africa if we failed to maintain our rights
which we derived from the Convention of London, and to fulfil our obligations
towards the native tribes of the new Protectorate. After this assurance of
moral support the Imperial Government despatched Sir Charles Warren, in order
that he might remove the filibusters from Bechuanaland, pacify the country, and
restore the natives their land, taking measures, in the meantime, to prevent a
recurrence of the depredations and atrocities which had been enacted recently
there. When the forces were finally withdrawn Bechuanaland was created a Crown
Colony, and at a subsequent date, it was incorporated into the Cape Colony.
Since this time we have continued to perform the duties of a central authority
in respect to the native tribes beyond the borders of the South African
Republic, the expenses of administration being paid from the proceeds of the
hut tax which is levied upon natives, together with the revenue derived from
trading licenses, and paid for by European traders. In the settlement of
Bechuanaland we reached a critical point in the history of England's
administration in South Africa. We have been compelled to accept the
responsibilities of such a central power as we have become, and we can no
longer disregard the adjustment of those problems which so burdened that
office. Now that our Imperial interests are so strong and our holdings in the
country so great, let us no longer continue to oppose the
means which will lead to that eventual federation of the Colonies and States of
South Africa, the union which, once secured, will do so much to rectify the
mistakes that we have made in our African policy.
CHAPTER XXXII 'TIS WEARY WAITING
Mafeking, March 31st, 1900.
We have
lived for so many months now under the conditions which govern a town during
siege that we almost accept existing circumstances as normal. We have ceased to
wonder at the shortness of our rations, content to recognise that we might
grumble from sunrise to sunset and gain nothing by it. We are no longer
surprised at the enemy; they seem to take the siege as a joke, but it is a
comedy which has a tragic lining. We have astounding spirit; there is no
question of the gravity of our situation; there is no doubt that if we were to
relax our vigilance for a moment, if we were to withdraw an outpost, diminish
the establishment of some trench, the Boers would be in upon us before the
garrison had realised that any such alteration in the defences had taken place.
Nevertheless, there is really an admirable exhibition of almost uncomplaining
acquiescence in the hardships which have fallen to our daily lot. Here and
there there is grumbling, but the man who grumbles to-day rejoices tomorrow,
since no siege can be endured with fortitude and determination if one dwells
unduly long upon the difficulties and trials which beset
us. Lately we had an exhibition, and many people in the garrison have consumed
the past three weeks in a feverish and untiring activity to complete their
exhibits. Ladies accomplished something rather fine in lacework, the men turned
their attention to constructing models of the town's defences, and one and all
entered into this little break in the monotony of the siege with the cheering
intention of getting as much out of the event as was possible. Prizes varying
from £5 to a sovereign were offered, and indirectly, each endeavoured to foster
the spirit of the town. It had a beneficial effect, this artificial method of
killing time, and it realised some £50 for the hospital. There have been other
things besides the exhibition to stimulate the spirits of the garrison. Native
runners brought us the news of the fall of Bloemfontein, a feature in the
campaign which adds fresh laurels to the reputation of Lord Roberts. His
continued successes have been an elixir vitæ, and, indeed, so freely
have we imbibed of this new medicine, that there have been many who have found
themselves possessed of a fresh strength. There is, however, one thing which
does not give any satisfaction whatsoever to the little band of men who have
held this outpost of the Empire during so many weary months, and this is
embodied in the absence of any very definite signs of a speedy relief. Lord
Roberts has told us to hold out until the middle of May, but it is a weary
wait, and we could well see the van of the column crossing the rise. Within the
past few days the town has been swept by rumours about the propinquity of the
southern column; we have understood Colonel Plumer has been within fifty miles
of Mafeking for some weeks. The rumours anent the southern relief place this column at any point within two hundred miles of
Mafeking; some days it has reached Taungs, upon others it has not left
Kimberley, again it is a week's march north of Vryburg, and in the meantime we
receive telegrams from London congratulating us upon our successful and happy
release. Where do these rumours come from? How comes it that London should be
in ignorance of our condition?
We, who have
followed with so much interest the fortunes of the campaign, sharing in the
success of others with all sincerity and feeling reverses like personal
insults, are disinclined to deny the existence of a relief column; but perhaps
it is not altogether understood that, while we have food lasting till the
middle of May, it is not impossible to feel famished upon our present rations
at the end of March. Of food in the abstract there is an abundance, but the
condition and quality of the ration is such that it cannot be reduced any further
without immediately affecting the health of the garrison and proving a very
serious obstacle to the successful execution of any work which may be detailed
to the command. Experiments have been tried for the purpose of discovering
whether it were possible to exist, and to work, upon an allowance of 8 oz. of
meat and 4 oz. of bread, and, while it was proved that the garrison might exist
upon such short commons, it would be very injudicious to issue this allowance,
since it caused a serious deterioration in the stamina of the men; it has,
therefore, been condemned. The bread is impossible, and, although every effort
be made to improve it, it still resembles a penwiper more than a portion of
bread. It is made from the common oats which one gives to horses. These oats
are crushed, but, sift them as you please, treat them by every process
which the ingenuity of the entire garrison can devise, they positively bristle
all over with sharp-pointed pieces of the husks. Recently we have been promised
Boer meal, but it would appear, according to Captain Ryan, that the Boer meal
is to be held in reserve as long as possible. For the moment we rather hanker
after that reserve, and we do not take much of the composite forage which is
served us as bread. However, if we are eating the rations of horses, the
unfortunate people of Kimberley ate the horses, and so, it would seem, our lot
might be much worse. Horses have not become our daily ration yet, although they
form the basis of a curious soup which is made and served out to the natives.
The smell of that soup turns many weary pedestrians from their usual paths,
although the spectacle of the starving natives swarming round the soup-kitchen
is one of the sights of the siege.
But,
doubtless, those people who send us ridiculous messages of congratulation may
think that this is, after all, but the mere detail of the siegethe side issue
which should be expected, and which should in any case be endured with a fine
toleration. That is all right; we do not mind the bread, we do not mind the
aroma of the soup-kitchen, but we do object to preposterous messages of
congratulation telling us "the siege is over," at the very moment
when the enemy is shelling us simultaneously from five different points. The
other day they endeavoured to concentrate their fire upon the centre of the
town, and, if they did not do this altogether, they most certainly fired into
Mafeking a weight of metal that has exceeded every other day's. We had from
sunrise until dusk 79 Creusot shells, 100 lb. each; 35 steel-capped,
armour-piercing, delay-action, high-velocity Krupp, 15 lb.
each; 29 9-pounder Krupp; 57 3-pounder Maxims; and such a merry flight of
5-pounders that these shells have become a drug in the market, and to such an
extent that we would very gladly exchange between here and London, a few such
stormy petrels as a polite and cordial memento of the day of our deliverance.
It is true that in part we are relieved, since we have chosen to take the
initiative into our own hands and expelled the enemy from a position on the
south-eastern facing of the town which they have occupied since the beginning
of hostilities. This has given us immense relief, since it has practically
placed the town beyond the effective range of the Mauser rifle and the Boer
sharpshooters.
The trench
was exceedingly well made, divided by traverses, protected with a rear bank and
a strong head cover. It was a mercy that we did not attempt to storm it, and
its remarkable strength and composite construction goes some way to explain the
difficulty which we have experienced in making much impression, either by shell
fire or storming party, upon the Boer entrenchments. We did this in a single
night, having led up to such a climax by devoting our attentions to this
particular quarter. We bombarded them by day, we sniped them by night, and
sapped them in the intervals. For a brief moment the enemy checked us, but it
was only for a moment, and our fire was so warm and so persistent that they
relinquished their attempt to prevent our advance, leaving, however, in their
trench at the moment of evacuation a little trifle, possibly forgotten in their
scramble to the rear, of 250 lbs. of nitro-glycerine. The mine was at once
located, the wires were cut, the trench was occupied, and in the
morning when day dawned, instead of there being the roar of a great explosion,
there was simply the ruddy blaze of our artillery fire from the gun
emplacements which they had constructed and which we had converted to our own
use. But we have taken care of that little mine, and possession of the trench
leaves us masters of the situation. This, however, is the only relief that has
come to Mafeking.
The Boer
possesses a natural aptitude for digging ditches and throwing up earthworks,
since his instinct tells him what not to do, much as this same intuition
teaches him how to secure the natural fortifications of a kopje, and has made
him, as the war has proved, a foeman worthy of our steel. We have despised the
Boer; we have contumaciously called him a barbarian; but, nevertheless, these
nomads of the South African veldt have given the mighty majesty of England a
lesson which will take her many years to forget. Boer tactics are unique, but
one has to witness them to believe in their feasibility. Their horses are so
trained that when the reins are thrown over their necks they remain immovable.
Their fighting is based on this fact, combined with the dictates of
common-sense and their empirical, yet successful manner of encountering us in
the Gladstonian War. Each commando of one hundred men is their unit; these are
concentrated in scattered groups in rear of their outpost lines, and upon
coming in contact with the enemy they endeavour to encircle their adversary,
cantering in eccentric circles until they are able to dismount in a fold of
ground near some coign of vantage. They are extraordinarily adept at making the
best of their cover, and they are most patient, waiting hours for a shot, prone
upon the ground, under a scorching sun. It would seem that they have maintained their time-honoured system,
applying to the present campaign tactics possessing great mobility, rapid
powers of concentration on vulnerable points, and as rapid retreats therefrom
if seriously threatened. This power of rapid movement incidental to all being
mounted gives them great advantage, increasing their powers of offence and
defence, and representing the crux of their theories of war. The Boer carries
on his horse one hundred rounds of ammunition, and rations of sun-dried beef
sufficient for four days. The horses feed upon the veldt. In four days the Boer
can cover two hundred miles, and it is this ability to move from point to point
with extraordinary despatch, that makes the Boer force a body of mounted
infantrymen possessing great strategical value. It has been impossible not to
admire the tactics which the Boers have pursued in investing Mafeking, and
where they have detached a force for any special purpose the execution of their
work has been accomplished with laudable celerity. They dismantle and re-set,
at an emplacement some miles away, their big Creusot guna process which seldom
occupies them longer than between dusk and dawn; sometimes we see them moving
their guns northwards, and hear from natives that they arrived at a point some
thirty miles from Mafeking by daybreak. It may be that in respect to the
mobility of their forces we have much to learn, and let us at least profit by
the lessons which are thus afforded us.
CHAPTER XXXIII TWO HUNDRED DAYS OF SIEGE
Mafeking, April 15th, 1900.
There is now
happily no longer any doubt of the truth of the native reports of important
successes having befallen our arms in the vicinity of Kimberley. We hear with
infinite rejoicing that Kimberley has pulled through, and is no longer invested
by the enemy, and almost so soon as these tidings reached us, natives brought
in the unconfirmed news of the capture of Cronje. This has since been
officially published, and the garrison here is beginning to feel at last that
their turn is about to come! We have waited long for this moment, passing many
black hours in the interval, but even now it seems that the power of England
may be successfully defied by these federated South African Republicans. Yet we
hope and, in the changing of the fortunes which we anticipate, we express and
share in the felicitous congratulations which the Empire is offering to Lord
Roberts. The shrewdness and tactical genius of this gallant veteran has been a
source from which the entire garrison has drawn an inspiring hope which
encouraged one and all to resist to the uttermost the attacks of the Boers.
We have already been besieged six months, and although the internal
situation does not appreciably differ from that which existed on the first day
of the siege, the signs of the times betoken the gravity of our condition.
During recent days there have been two separate indications of the straits to
which the siege has reduced us. Colonel Plumer endeavoured to pass into
Mafeking a mob of cattle; the Almighty sent a flight of locusts in such numbers
that for many miles the veldt was brown beneath the thousands which alighted
upon it. Now the locust is an article of diet, though it has not yet attained
the dignity of the position enjoyed by the nimble prawn. At present the locust
is compared only to a tasteless prawn, but it may be that when the siege of
Mafeking be raised and the world knows that no small portion of the garrison
were reduced to locusts without wild honey, this somewhat unconvincing appetiser
may be relegated to the office of a hors d'uvre. Dame Fashion is
responsible for so much that she might well introduce to the social world such
a toothsome delicacy. To catch your locust is almost as difficult as to eat it,
but it may be done by turning out at night and throwing a blanket over any
patch whose numbers suggest the possibility of a profitable return. This, of
course, is not the native mode: the native, being as nimble as the locust, goes
for them on the rush, and sweeps them into heaps before they have quite
recovered from the shock of the surprise. By this method you certainly secure
your locust, by the other you generally catch a cold, for the process of
catching an individual locust is somewhat laborious. However, it may be done,
more especially where there is the tedium of a siege to while away. Having
caught your locust, you then immerse him in boiling water,
a treatment which at once subdues him. You then proceed to sun-dry him and
pluck away his wings and head. The locust is then ready for the table, when,
after eating him, you discover that he has all the aroma and subtlety of chewed
string. For all the world one might as well munch string, but since the
possibilities of imparting to him an especial flavour be so numerous and so
eminently calculated to test the qualities of the chef, he should again
be commended to the notice of society in so much that it is possible to create
an altogether original locust. There is, of course, another way of eating
locusts, and that is to eat them alive. This practice, however, is not held in
any very great esteem, since the native who cannot afford to wait to cook his
locust is déclasse, even if he be starving. Personally, I rather like
locusts if they be fried, more especially if they be curried, for just now the
great thing is to eat, and, having digested what has been laid before you,
discreetly to ignore any question which might verify the truth of your
suspicions: therefore in eating curried locusts, you thank Heaven for the
curry, and pass on quickly to the next course. To eat just now upon this basis
is to enjoy consolation, which, in relation to our food, is our sole form of
enjoyment, since when you know that you are eating horse and you imagine that
you are eating beef, your imagination is necessarily so strong and so
triumphant that the toughness of the horse becomes the tenderness of beef.
Moreover, everything is only a question of comparison, and as a consequence the
toughness of horse-beef and the tenderness of ox-beef necessitates merely an
exchange of terms which imply similar standards of perfection.
The
pleasures of the table, however, are as nothing compared to
the delights of the bombardment by which the Boers assail the town almost
daily. We have had more time these days to recognise the precise value of the
enemy's shell fire and its wide area of demolitionmore time because the Boers
have withdrawn "Big Ben," and we no longer fear to walk freely in the
streets, nor are we kept constantly upon the alert listening to the clanging of
the alarm. The guns remaining do not appear to be able to reach the town from
their distant emplacements. They are an array of minor ordnance, uninteresting
to us, since their attentions would seem to be directed upon the outposts and
the outlying forts. "Big Ben," however, was no respecter of places,
but gaily hurled defiance at us from a variety of points, maintaining with
wonderful regularity an almost daily bombardment.
We who are
anxious for his welfare, now spend many dreary hours upon the housetops, for,
if we show appreciation of his presence by taking refuge in the cellars, we
ascend to the highest points of our houses in order to make sure that he is
gone. The sense of gratitude which inspires us to do these things is
unrestricted, and were it not that there were smaller guns around us, we might
have waved a parting salutation from a more adjacent point; but under the
circumstances we are content, and although we feel sorry that he has left us,
we shall more infinitely deplore his presence when he returns. It is almost
pleasant in Mafeking just now, and if it were not for the scarcity of food, the
coldness of the weather, the never-ending rains, the fever which exists (and of
which we are all frightened), the entire absence of wood with which to make
fires, and the appalling monotony of the days, the dreariness of the situation
and the dulness of the people, we might be happy, possibly
inclined to exchange our lot for that of anyone else who was not in Mafeking;
but as it is, we are really rather anxious to get out and to see the siege
raised. Our nerves are altogether raw, our tempers soured, our digestions
failing. We were young men six months ago, impressed with the importance of our
situation, invigorated with a determination to stick it out; but we have aged
considerably since then, and we would willingly send the siege to the devil if
we, by way of exchange, were permitted to indulge in the comparative comfort of
another form of purgatory. It has become quite the accepted fashion to draw a
simile between Mafeking and hell, and to give the early Christian fathers full
credit for their powers; they were nevertheless quite incapable of imagining a
punishment so deliberate as the mental and physical torture of a siege. To use
a colonial colloquialism, "we went in blind," but one experience is
sufficient to guarantee that every member of the garrison just now would put a
thousand miles between him and the next beleaguered town. In the situation
itself there is nothing to write about, it so constantly repeats itself until
the absolute monotony of the days settles down upon the nerves, depressing
one's spirit like a wet blanket. The Boers still fire at us, and we still sit
tight, nursing our hopes by a sublime confidence in the relief column. If we be
sceptical at times, we endeavour not to take our scepticism too seriously, and
we talk airily about the date by which the van will have arrived here. But in
reality there are but few people who believe in the practical existence of any relief
column.
CHAPTER XXXIV THE EPICUREAN'S DELIGHT
Mafeking, April 30th, 1900.
We have duly
celebrated the two hundredth day of the siege, and if one examines closely into
the condition of a town which has withstood the attacks of the enemy during two
hundred days, it is to find a spirit that is strong and self-reliant among the
garrison and to realise the sadness of the picture which presents the aspect of
a town slowly passing into ruin. The ravages of the siege have in no way been
so prominent as has been the case during the last few weeks. Mafeking of yore
was somewhat stately, although it was merely a colonial up-country centre,
possessing nothing which was grandiose or even elegant. But its calm and
unruffled dignity sprang from clusters of stately trees around which it had
sprung up, and from which in these days of tempest and adversity it snatches
something of their independence, something of their indifference to the press
of battle. But now it is almost a treeless town, and it is difficult to go
anywhere without meeting the signs by which one may read the stress and
privation which a siege imposes upon a beleaguered village. Mafeking was never
a tiny town; it rambles too far over the veldt to be
considered even compact, but these natural features are now greatly aggravated
by the ruin which has fallen upon the outlying areas of the town, causing even
the most central streets to be disorderly in appearance. From a very early date
in the siege we have been accustomed to the spectacle of ungainly structures
stretching across those thoroughfares which were exposed to the enemy's fire.
These traverses were among the earliest preparations of the war, but now, in
addition to these, at frequent intervals in the streets one comes across shelter-pits
which have been excavated in the various thoroughfares. These protections
against the enemy's shell and rifle fire were not perhaps any lasting
imposition upon the elegance of the place, but as the siege developed its
effects became more formidable and were more calculated to leave traces of a
permanent character. To-day, perhaps, we are achieving to the end of this
enforced vandalism, since we have already utilised the garden fences and
demolished for the value of the wood which they may contain any houses which
may have been damaged by shell fire. Indeed, just now, we are buying up the
deserted huts of Kaffirs who have either been killed or who have made their way
with safety through the lines. These huts comprise no small quantity of wood,
so we are pulling them to pieces on account of the props which support the reed
roofing. But before we ventured into the stadt for our wood, the trees in town
were trimmed of their branches, or, as in many cases, chopped down altogether,
and as a consequence the outward and visible sign of the results of the siege
is an infinite sense of desolation. There is now no longer the gentle rustle of
the trees as the night winds sigh through them; no longer do the
birds scramble amid the branches, screaming merrily. There is no bird life now,
for we have been unable to consider sentiment in the ordering of our daily
life. The best timber in the town enjoys no greater immunity, since young and
old trees each serve their purpose. Where there was once order, there is now
confusion. Streets blockaded at one end are also furrowed by the many shells
which have come into the town; the walls of the houses have been riddled with
bullets, or wide, ragged holes gape where the projectiles of "Big
Ben" pounded their way through. Telegraph poles and lamp posts are bent
and twisted, some lying completely broken upon the roadside. The roads and
paths are covered with weeds, and everywhere the neglect of the seven months'
siege is in evidence. It is a depressing spectacle, and it is well just now to
close one's eyes to everythingto the famine which is stalking in our midst, to
the fever which is raging round the outposts, to the ill-conditioned horses and
cattle, to the weary, patient women, to the children who, unfortunately fortunate,
have survived so much distress, and yet if one looks a little forward it is
difficult to see that the remedy will be forthcoming. It has required the
labour of years to rear the trees, and in many cases the houses that were
wrecked and upon whose sites lie piles of rubble, represented the successful
conception of a life's handiwork which, destroyed in the passing of a moment,
can never be altogether replaced. There are many men and some few women who
have lost everything they possessed, and even if they receive an adequate
compensation will still feel the absence, in their new abodes, of those subtle
sentiments which made the fruition of their efforts so dear and treasured to
them. It is impossible not to feel this when one
perambulates through the town; every spot recalls something to the mind of some
one, an indelible association, emanating from the siege and which time cannot
obliterate. Men remember where they stood when some particular house was
shattered, others recall their proximity to a bursting shell, whose explosion
tore up the roadway. It is these things which will never be effaced, since they
are the impressions which have struck deep down upon the mind, leaving an
afterglow. But as a rule we keep our cares, feeling that so many people have so
much else to worry them, recognising also that upon one and each of us the
siege hangs sorely. There can be no doubt that it has left its mark, not only
upon the town, but upon the garrison. The men are just a little gaunt, just a
little unkempt; the women are haggard and careworn, for it is difficult to keep
up one's spirit when from day to day there comes no news, only that curious,
ironical instinct, that perhaps it may be that we are not to be relieved at
all. The garrison is famished, that is, in reality, the kernel of our
situation. Our energies are exhausted because our vital processes are
insufficiently nurtured. We are all listless; we all feel that the siege has
been a strain of the most severe description, and we are holding ourselves in
for the final rally, anxious to support the position, determined to hold the
town and occupy till the end our posts. Yet there is a false note through it
all, and in those moments when one finds oneself alone one realises how
artificial is the gaiety which we profess, feeling, by intuition, that one's
own emotions are alike those of one's neighbour. However, each one of us
endeavours to make an effort to maintain in public some appearance of interest
in the daily conditions of the siege. It is difficult part to play, because, as
I have said, there is so much that is unsatisfactory in our position. The signs
of the times are read by little things, and if one goes for a walk round the
outposts it is as well not to mention in the town the presence of the fever
flags which float over certain areas near which it is not permitted to go.
There are three such places; one is remote from our lines, well out into the
veldt, where, isolated and apart, living in a world of their own making for the
time being, is a family fighting against the ravages of diphtheria; between
them and the stadt there is the smallpox reserve, where the yellow jack droops
from the trees beneath whose shade the tents of the patients have been pitched.
Still nearer into town at the hospital the flag of mercy protects a building in
which there is much malaria, some typhoid, and a few cases of enteric fever.
This is the gamut of our sickness, and it is in these quarters that we, who are
hale and hearty, look with anxious eyes. There are many there who will pay
their lives as tributes to the siege, for, as in Ladysmith, so are we reduced
to horseflesh, being fortunate enough to possess, however, a small store of
medical comforts. The sick cannot be given very much, but we are very solicitous
for their welfare, and only lately the garrison as a body, surrendered the
ration of sugar to the needs of those who were ailing. Our rations are sadly
diminished; three-quarters of a pound of minced horse-meat occasionally
interchanged with mule and donkey flesh; four ounces of horse forage, a
microscopical quantity of tea and coffee, pepper and salt, comprises the daily
issue. Few of us have extras, but there are many who indulge in experiments
with certain toilet adjuncts of an edible nature. Scented oatmeal, violet
powder, poudre de ris, and starch, have all been tested,
and it would seem that starch is the more adaptable. Recently I was allowed to
taste a starch blancmange, with glycerine syrup; it was excellent, and
infinitely better than scented oatmeal porridge. We also fry our meat in
cocoa-nut oil, in dubbin, and in salad oilif we can "find" any.
Indeed, there is quite a boom in grease-stuffs for culinary purposes. Aside
from starch, violet face powder gives very fair results, but when used as an
ingredient for brawn, it is a hopeless failure. It will be seen, therefore,
that we are somewhat puzzled to know how to satisfy our appetites, and we
attempt infinite devices in order to supplement our daily food supply;
occasionally we shoot small birds and less frequently we catch fish, but the
size of both birds and fish is such that a day's bag is seldom sufficient for a
meal. If the Europeans be exerting themselves to discover new processes by
which to cook inedible compounds, the natives also are at their wits' end, and
have resource to a variety of dishes which under more favourable circumstances
they would not touch. Pet dogs that are sleek, family cats that are fat, are
stolen nightly from the hotels and empty houses, but they are invariably traced
to native marauders, who, inspired by hunger, prowl around by night seeking
what they may devour. These details give a somewhat gloomy aspect to our
situation, and if the truth be told our plight is quite sufficiently serious,
but it must not be imagined that by reason of these things we are
faint-hearted; we are not so. If we can pull through, and we are proposing to
make every effort, we shall be content, and we are content, even at the present
crisis, to think that it is not altogether impossible that very earnest efforts
are being made to expedite our relief, and so alleviate our distress. Our constitutions, perhaps, are somewhat impaired by the
scarcity of food, by dysentery and by fever, but we are well enough if the
pinch should come and the Boers again make a serious attack upon the town. We
will beat them off; possibly we may laugh at their efforts. It is only at odd
moments that we become depressed, when the intelligence does not seem
satisfactory, when our personal worries press too closely upon us. In those
moments we may perhaps take an unduly gloomy view of the situation, but it is
not so quick set that it cannot be dissipated by the receipt of some good news,
by a cablegram from the Queen, or a message from Lord Roberts. It is these
things after which we hanker, and it is these things by which we keep up our
hearts. That there should be any possibility of a weak spirit manifesting
itself at this late hour need not be considered seriously for a moment, since
above all else, the garrison and townspeople of Mafeking have devoted
themselves to the work of holding this important outpost to the Empire until
such moment as the relief may come. In the beginning we withstood six thousand
men, just now there are not two thousand men around us, and if they have more
guns now than they had, we have also strengthened our weak places and thrown
out a chain of outposts through which it should be impossible for an enemy to
penetrate. Thus we have made ourselves secure against everything but the menace
of starvation, and if there be anxiety upon our behalf in the centres of the
civilised world, the message which we send touches not upon the question of
relief, but asks that it should be remembered that, even if our spirits endure,
our foodstuffs will not last for ever. That is the gist of our prayer, and we
trust that it may receive some hearing.
Mafeking, May 13th, 1900.
From time to
time intelligence has reached us from native sources that the Boers were still
anxious to make a final attempt to capture the town. We have had this story
repeated to us so frequently that there were many in our midst who had
altogether ceased to pay any attention to it; but that there was some sincerity
in the desire to attack us has now been proved to be true, and it would seem
that the obstacle which existed, and which prevented an earlier realisation of
the enemy's plans, was the absence of any leader sufficiently capable and
enterprising to attempt the execution of so hazardous a venture. However, when
General Cronje delegated full command to General Snyman, President Kruger sent
from Pretoria his youthful but gallant nephew, Commandant Eloff, who had not
only frequently expressed his desire to capture the town, but brought with him
from Pretoria men whose special knowledge of our fortifications had been gained
when serving as troopers in the Protectorate Regiment. It was these men who
were destined to conceive and carry to a successful conclusion the work of
projecting a body of the Boers within our interior lines.
Weeks have elapsed since Commandant Eloff arrived from Pretoria, but he has
bided his time, studying carefully our system of defence, our outlying
earthworks, and collecting all scraps of information which would convey to him
a more intimate knowledge of our position. For a time his plans matured, but,
as he conned them well over, he began to make his preparations, recognising
that, if he allowed many more days to pass, the relief column from the south
would be an additional and important factor in his scheme of operations. Upon
May 10th the relief column had reached Vryburg, and Vryburg is only ninety-six
miles from Mafeking. Upon May 12th this southern column had advanced to
Setlagoli, a point only forty-five miles distant from the town, and the receipt
of this intelligence, which was brought to Commandant Eloff by his scouts,
revealed to him the urgency and absolute necessity of carrying out his attack
upon the town. It was a well-considered scheme, whose eventual success was only
nullified by the lack of cohesion and estranged relations which existed between
General Snyman and Commandant Eloff. It was a glorious day for Mafeking; it was
a day of honourable misfortune for the Boers. Mafeking fell heavily upon Eloff,
recapturing the fort which the Boers had surprised and taken in the early
morning, and thereby effecting the release of the thirty-two prisoners whom the
Boers had caught, and causing known casualties among the Boers of killed,
wounded, and taken prisoners, 139.
KILLING HORSES FOR THE NATIVES AND ENTIRE
GARRISON.
Commandant
Eloff had designed to pierce our western lines under cover of a well-organised
feint upon the eastern front of the town. Upon the morning of May 12th and a
little before 4 a.m., the bells sounded a general alarm and
the bugles summoned a general assembly of available arms to all posts. As in
the early days of the siege, I ran from my hotel to Musson's Fort, where, upon
similar occasions, I have served as a volunteer. There was no sign of
disturbance in the west, but very heavy firing was breaking over the town from
the main position of the enemy in the east. Gradually this fire was extended
until the flanking positions of the Boers north-east and south-east were also
engaged. As we stood to our arms in the fort, it seemed that they were
directing an attack upon the brickfields, when, just as it appeared to be the
usual innocuous fusilade, streaks of fire were seen leaping to the sky towards
the west; there was a lurid glow across the native stadt and dense clouds of
smoke were drifting and piling heavily towards the north. There was instant
commotion in the fort, everybody exclaiming at once that the stadt was ablaze.
At that moment we did not realise that the conflagration which we saw was the
deliberate work of the enemy, although there were many who, catching sight of
the blaze, concluded that the attack upon our eastern front was the blind to a
movement of much greater importance upon the west. Thoroughly aroused and anxious
to learn the reasons of the fire, I returned to the hotel. By this time rifle
fire had slackened upon the east of the town, but bullets were coming over from
the west, the town being under this cross-fire. There were few people about the
town, and, save for an occasional group of frightened women, one saw no one. My
horse was already saddled, and, riding to the front of the town, I at once
recognised that the Boers were in the stadt. Huts were burning in all
directions, the separate fires blending into a sheet of flame; dense smoke overhung everything. There was the crackle of the
burning huts, and showers of golden sparks tossed themselves into the air. It
was still dark and the hour was about five; a lemon-coloured dawn, sheathed in
the golden glory of the fire and obscured by the grey-black waves of smoke, was
slowly breaking, following closely upon the heels of a flame-coloured night. It
was the hour when confusion reigns supreme, when it is impossible to tell tree
from man, an outcrop of stone from a recumbent beast. It was the very hour in
which to attack, but the Boers secured an additional advantage from the dense
and heavy smoke which filled the atmosphere, making the gloom more impenetrable
than ever and screening effectually the rapidity of their progress. Heavy
firing was proceeding from the direction of the stadt, and there was a confused
babel of voices. Natives were running in all directions, and against the flames
groups of figures were noticeable in silhouette.
There seemed
little doubt that the situation at this moment was grave in the extreme. The
Boers in the stadt, dividing rapidly, had advanced upon the British South
Africa Police Fort, in which from the beginning of the siege the regimental
headquarters of the Protectorate Regiment have been installed. At this moment
Colonel Hore and the officers and men attached to the regimental headquarters
staff, including four belonging to the British South Africa Police, numbered
some twenty-three. Preparing to resist the invasion, Colonel Hore had already
manned the earthwork, which from the days of the Warren expedition has been
designated as a fort. The distance between the stadt and the fort is about four
hundred yards, and around the regimental headquarters lie
scattered numerous outbuildings. It is an impossible place to hold with a small
number of men, while the outbuildings are so situated as to afford very
excellent cover to any troops which may be advancing with the intention of
surrounding the main buildings; and it was this manuvre which Commandant Eloff
was endeavouring to carry to a successful issue. Scattering quickly, and under
the cover of the different houses, he advanced within a very short distance of
the fort. In the dim light, obscured by smoke, and in part concealed by the
native refugees, it was impossible to tell whether these men were the van of a
Boer force or our own outposts in process of retirement upon Colonel Hore.
Under the guidance of Trooper Hayes, a deserter from the Protectorate Regiment,
seven hundred Boers had rushed the interior lines of the outposts, making their
way along the bed of the Molopo and through Hidden Hollow into the stadt. The
movement had been noticed by the outposts, who, unable to do anything against
such overwhelming odds, had given the alarm and fallen back upon either flank,
delivering a flanking fire when the Boers were discovered. Arriving in the
stadt, Commandant Eloff had ignited the huts in various directions, in this
manner giving to the main body of the Boers their signal to advance. Before the
rush of Commandant Eloff's men the Baralongs separated, reforming behind the
enemy, in order to co-operate with our advanced outposts in repelling the
progress of the main body. From the moment that this was accomplished the Boers
outside our lines and those who were within the stadt were cut off from one
another; but, leaving half his force in the stadt, Commandant Eloff, with whom
were Captain Von Weiss and Captain de Fremont, prepared to
assault the fort, and, advancing rapidly upon it, had surrounded it with but
little difficulty. When the little band of men saw the Boers emerging from
stadt, fire was at once opened upon them, but, as they claimed to be friends,
and as it was understood that they were our own outposts, the fire from the
fort ceased until the enemy were within sixty yards of its front face, being at
the same time, unknown to the inmates of the fort, in occupation of the
buildings upon either flank and in the rear.
This, then,
was the situation which had come to pass within three hundred yards of the
railway and about seven hundred yards from the town. In the town itself the
Town Guard, the Bechuanaland Rifles, and the entire strength of the Railway
Division had been ordered at once to man the railway line. The men from the
Hospital Redan and the establishment from Early's Corner Fort were detailed to
the line in addition to the Bechuanaland Volunteers, while the Railway
Division, screening their movements behind the corrugated iron fencing which
encloses the railway yards, and perforating rifle holes in the sheeting of the
fence, were given charge of the railway yards. Lieutenant Feltham and his troop
of C Squadron supported Major Panzera and the artillery at the railway bridge,
while, under orders from Colonel Baden-Powell, Lieutenant Montcrieff advanced a
section of the Town Guard to occupy a house a little removed from the new line
of defences which had been already taken up. The town itself, agog with
excitement, had been reinforced by the Cape Police from the brickfields and the
British South Africa Police from the kopje, and with these forces opposing
them, the Boers at the fort found their further advance cut
off, while, unless General Snyman forced the passage of the outposts and
brought up his artillery, the entire body would be hemmed in.
In the
meantime Commandant Eloff demanded the unconditional surrender of the
twenty-three men who were established at the fort, an order which, had Colonel
Hore refused, implied that every man with him would be shot. Then, in that
moment, it was known that the cheering which had been heard in Hidden Hollow a
few moments before was the triumphant chortle of the Boers as they stepped
within the inmost lines of our defences. Around the fort there was silencethere
was a terrible silence; there was a man who was weighing in his hand and in his
heart the lives of twenty-two others, who was considering in a fleeting moment
of time the flight of an honourable career which had brought to him a string of
six medals, and who saw in one of two steps instant death for his little band
and irrevocable and almost irretrievable ruin in the other. The pause was
indeed death-like; there was the hallowed uncertainty of a future existence,
but there was the moral certainty that no living future would fall to the lot
of any of the twenty-three men upon whose ears the cry had fallen of surrender.
The position was hopeless. With the Boers behind them, with the Boers flanking
them, with the Boers in front of them, with three hundred of the enemy within a
circumference of seventy yards, what more could an honourable man and a gallant
officer do than accept the responsibility of his situation and save the lives
of his men by complying unconditionally with the demand of the enemy? Thus did
Colonel Hore surrender. It was impossible to withdraw to the town.
Such a movement would have meant retirement over seven hundred yards of open,
level ground without a particle of cover and with a force of three hundred of
the enemy immediately in the rear; moreover the situation imperatively demanded
this action in consequence of events over which he had no control. It was,
perhaps, a moment as pathetic and great as any in his career. The surrender was
effected at 5.25 a.m., and was not without incident, for with the garrison
holding up their hands, their arms laid down, with five Boers within a few
yards of the Colonel with their rifles at his breast, there was one man who
went to his death. "I'll see you damned, you God forgotten" said
Trooper Maltuschek, and he went to his Maker the next moment. The news of such
a catastrophe did not tend to relieve the gravity of the situation. With the
Boers in the fort and in occupation of the stadt, it was necessary so to
arrange our operations that any junction between the stadt and the fort would
be impossible; at the same time we were compelled to prevent those Boers who
were in the stadt from cutting their way through to the main body of the enemy.
The situation was indeed complex, and throughout the remainder of the day the
skirmishing in the stadt and the repulse of the feints of the enemy's main
body, delivered in different directions against the outposts, were altogether
apart from the siege, which we were conducting within our own investment. From
the town very heavy rifle fire was directed upon the fort, which the Boers in
that quarter returned with spirit and determination. But the position in the
stadt had become acute, since, behind our outposts and our inner chain of
forts, which are situated upon its exterior border, were a rollicking, roving band of four
hundred Boers, who, for the time being, were indulging in pillage and
destruction wherever it was possible.
THE BRITISH SOUTH AFRICA POLICE FORT, COLONEL
HORE'S HEADQUARTERS. Gradually,
however, the situation changed. The rifle fire from the town had forced the
Boers back from the limits of the stadt adjacent to the fort, enabling Inspector
Murray and a troop of the Cape Police and Lieutenant Feltham with his troop of
C Squadron to fight their way to this same border, affording to the town a
definite and established barrier against any possible communication between the
enemy in the fort and the Boers in the stadt. Skirmishing thenceforward
progressed over the entire area of the stadt. Major Godley, with Captain Marsh
and Captain Fitzclarence, and B and D Squadrons, effectively supported by the
Baralongs, chevied and rounded up the Boers from point to point, until, shortly
after noon, they took up a strong position in a mule kraal and upon the facings
of some neighbouring kopjes. To dislodge these men was the work to which Major
Godley now directed his attention, and, manuvring carefully and with
discretion, he surrounded the position upon three sides and emplaced a
seven-pounder under Lieutenant Daniel, of the British South Africa Police,
within two hundred yards of the kopje. The enemy were now compelled to fight or
to surrender, and, refusing the request to surrender, they fought pluckily, and
with such stubbornness that they kept Major Godley's men some time at bay. But,
gradually drawing his circle closer, he poured in a few terrific volleys and
charged the position at the point of the bayonet. There was a rapid volley from
the Boers, but it was of no avail, and, as the glistening steel was poised for
a moment over the walls of the kraal, a flutter of white
from the interior betokened that at least this body of the enemy had surrendered.
Major Godley then proceeded to shell the kopjes, but the Boers at this point
were not proposing to increase by their numbers those of the twenty-five who
had laid down their arms in the mule kraal. They scattered and broke into the
stadt, fighting from hut to hut, from rock to rock, from snug hollows to the
broken points of the many rugged mounds which characterise the configuration of
the stadt. These skirmishes continued, and Major Godley contrived to drive the
scattered Boers in the direction of Captain Lord Charles Bentinck, who, so
conducting his operations, managed to hem the enemy in between the fire of
Major Godley and that of his own men. It would have been impossible for the
Boers to escape; but dusk was falling, our men were weak and hungry, and we
already had a number of prisoners, and, after a sharp rally between the three
squadrons, Major Godley instructed Captain Lord Charles Bentinck to withdraw C
Squadron and assist in driving out the enemy.
These, then,
were the events which were occurring in the stadt, and, if Major Godley had
been successful in circumventing the Boer plan and checking any very definite
occupation of the stadt, the outposts had also successfully repulsed the
indifferent and weak-hearted attempts which General Synman had made to assist
his colleague. There had been a definite plan of attack, and, although a
portion of it was successful, its main features had failed because their
execution had been left to a man who, faint-hearted and cowardly, was
altogether unworthy of the command with which he had been entrusted. Upon
General Synman must fall the responsibility of Commandant
Eloff's capture, inasmuch as he failed to support his share of the operations.
The Boer movement upon the town was carried out with remarkable precision and
extraordinary dash, but, despite their splendid gallantry and enterprise in
penetrating so far within our lines, the fatality which would seem to attend
their attacks upon Mafeking rendered their present efforts again unprofitable,
causing their assault to recoil upon their own heads. It had been the intention
of the Boers to make the fort the key of a position from which they were
proposing to shell the town with the guns which would have been brought up by
the main body. But General Snyman did not fulfil his obligations to Commandant
Eloff, and, as a consequence, when the siege of the fort had been effected the
little which they could accomplish had been concluded, and they found
themselves compelled to defend their newly-won position from the galling fire
and spirited attacks of the townsmen. Their position, only seven hundred yards
from the town, would have proved untenable much earlier in the day, had not the
Boers secured the officers and staff of the regimental headquarters as their
prisoners. We should have shelled them and in all probability caused tremendous
carnage; as it was, however, killed and wounded upon either side were not
numerous, although there is some ground to believe that the Boers were
successful in carrying off a large proportion of their wounded. Upon the
following morning, when the returns for the previous day were made up, it was
found that 110 had been taken prisoners, ten had been killed, and nineteen had
been wounded. Our own casualties were four killed and seven wounded, while
there were five natives who had received slight wounds. These
are the figures, correct, so far as we can ascertain, of this very remarkable
daya day which is almost without parallel in the history of war, inasmuch as
the garrison, who in themselves had sustained a seven months' siege, were yet
able once more to turn the tables upon their enemy, who, although penetrating
into the heart of the invested town, failed to carry the position.
During the
morning of the fight, after accompanying Lieutenant Montcrieff to Major
Hepworth's house, where he was engaged in installing a section of the Town
Guard, I thought that I would attach myself to Colonel Hore, since his
headquarters appeared to be a central position in the engagement. It was only a
short ridea few hundred yards. The bullets whistled over from the stadt, and I
scampered rapidly across in order to gain what I thought was protection from
this fire. The light was not clear, and the smoke was still drifting across the
line of vision. Men were standing about the regimental headquarters, some were
scurrying, many were sitting upon the stoep facing the town. It did not seem to
me possible that these could be Boers; but, as I galloped on, my horse was
struck, and, swerving violently, I found myself pulled up short by a peremptory
demand to surrender. They were Boers, or rather they were the enemy, for there
were Germans, Italians, and Frenchmen, and a few Republicans.
They ordered
me to hold my hands up, they ordered me to give up my revolver and to get off
my horse; they asked me a dozen questions at the same time, speaking in Dutch,
French, and English. As I sat upon my horse we conducted quite an animated
conversation, but the bullets were coming from our men in
town rather rapidly, and it seemed to strike the Boers that they had best take
cover, advice which I pressed home upon them with much irony. In the meantime I
had not dismounted, nor had I given up my revolver, nor were my arms thrust
upwards in the air. "Will you hold your damned hands up?" said one,
playfully thrusting a rifle into my ribs. "With pleasure, under the
circumstances," I replied with alacrity. "Will you hand over that
revolver?" said another. "What, and hold my hands up at the same
time?" asked I, quibbling to gain a little time in which to think.
"Get off your horse," said another, when, as they unstrapped my belt,
I rolled to the ground. It was only then that I knew my horse had been shot in
the shoulder, and as they dragged me to the shelter of the building, I asked
them to shoot him. They refused. "Your men will do that soon enough,"
said they, and it seemed to me that this was the unkindest cut of all. The poor
animal stood there looking at me. When I saw him again his throat had been cut,
and there were seven bullet wounds in his body.
The fort had
surrendered. Colonel Hore, Captain H. C. Singleton, Veterinary-Lieutenant
Dunlop-Smith, with fifteen non-commissioned officers and men of the
Protectorate Regiment, Captain Williams and three men of the British South
Africa Police, and five native servants were prisoners in the hands of the
enemy. Around them were numbers of the enemy talking rapidly in French, German,
Italian, and Dutch, while there were also many who spoke English. They were all
well armed, carrying some 250 rounds of ammunition with eight days' rations in
their haversacks. Some were eating breakfast, many were
drinking from bottles which they had looted from the regimental mess;
occasionally the group around us was swelled by the numbers of those who,
hitherto engaged in looting the quarters of the officers, were now mostly
anxious to preserve their skins from the fire from the town and to enjoy an
inspection of their plunder. In the short time which the enemy had been in possession
of the fort many of them had ransacked the premises, breaking open boxes,
cutting open bags, and generally appropriating all the effects which they
found. It seemed to me at this moment that the men engaged in this work were
Boers, as distinct from the foreign element in their force, and I thought that
I caught a current of conversation which was passing in French between two of
our captors, and which denounced the unnecessary and almost wanton destruction
which was in progress.
From the
remarks which were passing round us it seemed that the majority were discussing
the precise treatment which should be dealt out to the prisoners. At this
moment Trooper Hayes, deserter, swaggered towards the circle; he sported
Colonel Hore's sword, and a gold chain and watch dangled from his belt. Hearing
the subject of the conversation, he at once suggested that we should either be
made to stand upon the verandah, a mark to the fire of our own men, or be given
the opportunity of taking up arms and joining in the defence of the fort.
"You cannot do that, I'm a war correspondent," said I in English to a
Boer who was speaking fluent English to a friend. "You be damned!"
said he, pleasantly enough, "we'll put you upon the roof." But at
that moment Commandant Eloff approached and ordered our removal to a building
in the centre of the fort, which hitherto had been used as
the storeroom for the regimental mess. Into this they crowded us, together with
three others who, visiting the fort in ignorance of the turn of affairs, had
likewise been taken prisoners. We were thus thirty-two, and were confined for
the day in a space which was not only short and narrow, but ill-ventilated,
dirty, littered with rubbish, and already smelling horribly. Firing from town
had now begun in earnest, and the bullets whistled and cracked and spat all
round the fort. They struck upon the stones and spattered the roof with
splinters of rock and lead, while we could detect from these signs how ably
directed and how fierce was the rifle fire which was delivered from the town.
When they had safely secured us in the storehouse the space in front of the
building was at once occupied by some sixty-seven men, who crouched up against
the walls of the house or lay within the lee of the exterior wall of the fort.
From time to time these men moved to points whence the fire was hottest,
seeming to take their share of the work in pleasing earnestness and with much
keenness. Occasionally those who were without and around the door handed in
fragments of dried meat and broken biscuits, but the quantity was not great,
and there were many of us who had nothing to eat all day, while few Boers or
prisoners had anything to drink. Early in the morning bullets from the town had
perforated the water tanks, and as a consequence there was no water to drink,
nor was there anything with which to alleviate the sufferings of the wounded.
As the day wore on many casualties occurred among the Boers in the fort, and
the absence of efficient medical aid among his men prompted Commandant Eloff to
appeal to us for assistance, whereupon Veterinary-Lieutenant Dunlop-Smith,
Farrier-Corporal Nichols and Forbes, the regimental canteen-keeper, offered and
rendered valuable services to the wounded Boers, running the gauntlet of our
own fire in the cause of a common humanity. Early in the fight the Boers took
over the Children's Hospital, which was located some two hundred yards away
from the fort, and in which those devoted nurses, Mrs. Buchan and her sister,
Miss Crawfurd, remained the entire day, attending indiscriminately to the sick
children, to the wounded Boers who were brought there, and bringing upon two
occasions tea to the prisoners. During the progress of the fight we constantly
caught glimpses of the Red Cross flag escorting one or other of these gallant
ladies to points where wounded Boers were lying. Throughout the fight the Boers
respected the conventions, repeatedly expressing their appreciation and their
gratitude for the services of these ladies. For this courtesy Commandant Eloff
was largely responsible, and indeed if there was any abuse of the Red Cross
flag the blame of such disrespect cannot be charged against the enemy, since
our side, I understand, issued orders that the men of the firing line were not
to take notice of any white flags which the Boers displayed. The enemy
respected its conventions, treated the prisoners humanely, and behaved
throughout a situation almost maddening from the strain which it must have
imposed upon them with conspicuous gallantry, coolness, and consideration.
In our
prison the situation was more than uncomfortable, and when towards evening they
locked the door the atmosphere became fetid, and was seriously aggravated by
the condition of a man who was suffering acutely from the agonies of dysentery. In a recess, piled up, were the stores of the
regimental mess, comprising principally cases of liquorswhisky, Beaunne,
pommade, and lime-juice. In a big open crate were tinned provisions of an
indefinite characterfruits, peas, and parsnips, and other canned luxuries.
These were at once looted by the troopers, who in this respect and the
indifferent manner in which they received the orders of their officers, did not
set a particularly praiseworthy example. Within the storehouse, however, the
prisoners mingled irrespective of rank, and mutually sympathetic in the face of
common misfortune. At first every man seemed to be smoking, but gradually the
atmosphere became so bad that it was absolutely necessary to desist, and all
pipes, cigars, and cigarettes were ordered to be put out. Commandant Eloff
returned constantly to the prisoners, chatting brightly with them and
sympathising upon the fortunes of war. He sat within the door upon a case of
Burgundy, his legs dangling, his accoutrements jingling, and the rowels of his
spurs echoing the tick-tacking of the Mauser rifles. Herein and within our
presence the drama of the situation was slowly passing; orderlies came and
went, but the Commandant, still tapping with his spurs, continued to issue his
instructions and his orders. He seemed to possess the complete mastery of the
situation; his buoyant face was impressed with the confidence of youth,
reflecting the happiness he felt in so much that his ambition seemed to be
about to be realised. But as the situation became more critical, beneath the
brightness of his manner he seemed to be feeling the gravity of his position.
At times he lost control of himself and complained querulously in Dutch about
the non-appearance of his reinforcements; at other moments
he regaled the prisoners with scraps of information relating to the situation,
and by this means we learnt that Limestone Fort had fallen, and that the trench
beneath the railway bridge had surrendered. This news was, of course, not particularly
pleasing, and it somewhat added to our dejection when we learnt that, when
night arrived, we were to be marched to the south-western laager and thence to
be conveyed to Pretoria. I never wished less to see a place than I did the
Transvaal capital at this moment. Since Commandant Eloff made himself so
agreeable I was moved to chat with him. We discussed the situation in China and
the feeling which America was showing for the Boers. To this latter he did not
attach much importance, shrugging his shoulders as he said, "Americans and
the English" The pause was eloquent, and I changed the conversation,
requesting his courteous permission, should the fortunes of the day go with
him, to communicate with the Times. He expressed surprise at my being a
correspondent, and said that he thought the correspondents had more sense than
to get themselves captured. Then he laughed and asked my name. I told him, upon
which he replied, "I have heard of you, but I have not read any of your
stuff; you have been writing unpleasant things about the Boers." I retired
crestfallen to the darkest corner I could find and reflected upon the character
of the punishment which General Snyman would mete out to a man who had been so
iniquitous as to write "unpleasantly about the Boers." Night was
coming on rapidly now, and we were rather glad, since it removed from us the
horror of being with the enemy and watching while they fired upon our own men.
It seems to me that the strain which emanates from such a
sight is more awful than anything in the world.
As dusk
settled down we prisoners, crowding in a small room, could hear echoes of
desperate fighting outside. Bullets penetrated the wall, perforated the
roofing, crashed through the windows, splintered the door. Ever and anon the
fire would die away, breaking out again spasmodically within a few minutes.
Through the grating of the windows we could see the enemy keeping an alert
look-out; we could see them scurrying and scrambling to defend the points
against which the firing was heaviest; we saw the limping figures of the
wounded; we heard voices cursing us, threatening the prisoners, and urging
Commandant Eloff to handcuff and march us out across the line of fire while the
Boers used us as a screen to escape; while upon one occasion the door opened
suddenly and three wounded Boers precipitated themselves violently into the
room. The inside of the building was pitch dark by now, and lighted only by the
fitful flashing of the rifles, which made almost a glow within. Straining eagerly
at the windows, we caught glimpses of a number of Boers scrambling over the
exterior walls of the fort, in order, we afterwards learnt, to make good their
retreat. This movement to the rear surprised us and was followed by a terrible
outburst of firing, caused by the order of Commandant Eloff to shoot down the
fugitives. Then time dragged heavily, and we were hungry and tired and faint
when there seemed signs of a rally among the Boers. After an interval of
extraordinarily heavy firing, in which the noise from the snap of bullets and
the reports of the rifles were deafening, there was a sudden silence.
Commandant Eloff rushed to the door, and, summoning Colonel
Hore, stated that if he could induce the town to cease fire the Boers would
surrender. It was an altogether unexpected dénouement, and in that
moment there was not one amongst us who did not think that each in his turn was
about to be summoned to an instant execution. We feared a ruse, and whispered
to Colonel Hore, as he advanced to meet the commandant, to be careful. Our
momentary hesitation caused Commandant Eloff to surrender himself as a hostage
until the cessation of fire could be arranged. The Boers, like ourselves, were
unable to grasp the situation, and seeing their commandant in our midst, made
an attempt to rescue him, which only helped to increase the confusion of the
moment. Commandant Eloff called out, "Surrender, surrender," and
endeavoured strenuously to pacify his men. We, upon our part, shouted to the
town to cease fire; this was at once done, whereupon sixty-seven Boers laid
down their arms, handing them to the prisoners, who piled them up within the
storehouse. Those of us who were not engaged in this work seized rifles and
bandoliers from the heap and manned the defences of the fort until the
prisoners could be delivered into proper custody. The Boers were then marched
off and were found accommodation in the Masonic Hall and in the gaol. As I
retraced my steps to the town and was passing the stables of the British South Africa
Police Fort, the groaning of a wounded man caught my ear. I ran to him to find
that lying within the shelter of the stables, with a wound through his thigh,
was the man to whom I had surrendered myself in the morning. We smiled as he
handed over to me his rifle and bandolier. My revolver he had lost, but lying
beside him, stiff and dead, with a bullet wound through his
forehead, was, by one of those extraordinary coincidences which do happen, the
man who had shot my horse. And thus this day of melodrama passed; dramatic in
its beginning, dramatic in its conclusion, with enough bloodshed, firing, and
animation to satisfy the cravings of the most dispassionate seeker after
excitement. Commandant Eloff, Captain von Wiessmann, Captain Bremont, dined at
Headquarters. The town came to greet the prisoners, drink was unearthed, and
everybody seemed to be congratulating somebody upon their mutual good fortune.
We who had been prisoners and were now free rejoiced in the liberty which was
restored to us, yet it was difficult to restrain oneself from feeling
compassionately upon the great misfortunes which had attended the extraordinary
dash and gallantry of the men who were now our prisoners. They had done their
best. They proved to us that they were indeed capable and that we should have
kept a sharper look-out, while it was indeed deplorable to think that it was
the treachery of their own general, in abandoning them to their fate, that had
been mainly instrumental in procuring them their present predicament.
CHAPTER XXXVI RELIEVED AT LAST
Wednesday Night, 7.30 P.M. The relief
of Mafeking is now an accomplished fact, and the first Imperial troops to enter
our lines were eight of the Imperial Light Horse, under the command of Major
Karri Davis. They had ridden in advance of the main body in an effort to pierce
our lines while General Mahon, who had already formed a junction with Colonel
Plumer, was engaging the main body of the enemy along the watershed of the
Molopo, some seven miles north-west of the town.
We had known
since Sunday that an Imperial force was approaching Mafeking from the south,
and during Monday immense activity was displayed in the Boer laagers, while
towards the south-west a thick fringe of dust was drifting slowly under the
commotion of a column of Boers who were retiring rapidly before the approach of
the Southern force. During Tuesday we thought we heard the distant booming of
the guns, and we could see the Boers preparing to take up positions along the
north-western ridges of the Molopo River. At an early hour
on Tuesday morning news reached us that the respective commands of General
Mahon and Colonel Plumer had joined at Saane's Town, a few miles up the valley
of the river. From the moment that the town received this news the memory of
the past seven months was dissipated in the first flash of the glad tidings.
Speculation was rife as to the precise hour of the arrival of the relief, but
the day passed without much prospect of the siege being raised before
nightfall. However, this morning the most positive information had arrived
during the night, and it seemed that within the next forty-eight hours the
combined forces would be here. The morning passed uneventfully. No one seemed
quite to know how to spend the few remaining hours which were all that remained
of the siege. About noon it became known in town that the forces would not
enter Mafeking without having a smart brush with the enemy. We had observed
small, detached forces of Boers making from north and south of the town for the
ridges about the western areas of the Molopo. Artillery accompanied these men,
whose numbers had been drawn from the various Boer positions around Mafeking. A
large contingent had moved from the eastern laager and similar bodies had been
called out from the south-western and northern camps. It was an anxious time
for us in Mafeking, and, although there was no doubt about the final result, we
still felt that the fate of the relief column hung in the balance. About half-past
two General Mahon's guns opened upon the enemy, the smoke of the bursting
shells being plainly discernible away towards the north-west. There was a
constant booming of artillery, and the smoke of heavy rifle fire just above the
horizon. As the news swept through the town there were many
who gathered upon coigns of vantage to witness the action. It was impossible to
see details, and indeed it was about half-past four before we even caught sight
of the moving masses of men. It seemed then that the Boers were falling back;
the artillery had ceased to play, and we were under the impression that they
were engaged in taking up fresh positions. About five o'clock a large force of
Boers was noticed moving rapidly along the ridge to the east, while a smaller
body of three hundred men, detaching themselves from the main column, were
riding rapidly towards the west.
In the
meantime Colonel Baden-Powell, Colonel Hore, Colonel Walford, of the British
South Africa Police, and Captain Wilson, A.D.C. to the Colonel commanding, had
taken up their position upon the roof of the railway sheds, where during the
last few days a special outlook had been prepared. The scene in the railway
yards was animated and dramatic, and in order to be close at hand I secured permission
to sit upon the ladder which led to the outlook. In the town people were taking
events quite calmly. The final in the siege billiard tournament was taking
place at the club, and in many other respects it seemed difficult to realise
that our deliverance was at hand. Between the railway yards and the outposts
there were men shooting small birds, while in the yards around us natives were
engaged in skinning and cutting the carcase of a horse which, shot overnight,
had been handed over to the soup-kitchens. For perhaps an hour everything was
calm and peaceful, but ever and anon the bubble of voices reached me from the
roof as orders were transmitted over the telephone to Headquarters. Of a sudden Captain Wilson scrambled down the ladder, calling an
order to Lieutenant Feltham to saddle up the horses and mount. While this work
was in progress orders were issued to Captain Cowan, of the Bechuanaland
Rifles, to march his men at once to the barracks of the Protectorate Regiment,
while in a cloud of dust and with a cheering rattle Major Panzera galloped by
with the guns. "I think we can catch them," said Colonel
Baden-Powell, and a minute afterwards he had mounted his horse and was off. I
found that he was referring to the detached party of three hundred Boers who
were making their way from the scene of the fight in a south-westerly
direction. I mounted and followed, and the small force which had thus been
rapidly collected moved quickly towards our extreme position in the north-west
of the town. It was just possible that we should catch them between the fire of
General Mahon's guns and our own, and there was every necessity for speed. In a
short time we were out at the "Standard and Diggers' News Fort,"
where, while our horses were given a short rest, the guns were unlimbered. That
particular body of Boers who had been our objective seemed to be unconscious of
the movement which had taken place in our own lines. As they emerged from the
valley we opened fire and turned their head. For a moment they did not seem to
realise their situation, when they rapidly wheeled about and put themselves out
of range by a hurried retreat towards the main body. Dusk was now falling, and
it was impossible to see any longer, and as a consequence the guns were ordered
to retire to town and the men to return. It was half-past six when we reached
town, and General Mahon's artillery had not been heard to fire for quite an hour. We went to dine, cheered by the comforting and
consoling thought that by noonday upon the morrow the siege would be raised.
However, about seven o'clock, in the bright moonlight, and totally unexpected,
eight mounted men suddenly appeared in the Market Square. In a short space of
time the news flashed round the town, and a concourse of people gathered to
cheer vociferously about the precincts of the Headquarters Office. As round
after round of cheers broke out it became known that these mysterious horsemen
had galloped in under Major Karri Davis with a despatch from General Mahon. In
a trice they were surrounded, besieged with questions, clapped upon the back,
shaken by the hand, and generally welcomed. These plucky troopers seemed as
surprised as ourselves and as glad. Major Karri Davis called for cheers for the
garrison, while the crowd took up with tremendous fervour the National Anthem
and "Rule Britannia." It was an exciting moment and a picturesque
scene, bathed in the soft moonlight and irradiated by the glow of countless
stars; but the men were hungry, and Major Lord Edward Cecil, the chief staff
officer, busied himself in making arrangements for the care of these eight
Imperial Light Horse, who, not content with relieving Ladysmith, had insisted
upon being accorded the privilege of making the first entry into Mafeking.
That night
the town retired early, but about two in the morning a subdued roar came from
the direction of the north-western outposts, and in a very little time word was
passed round that the troops were making their entrance into Mafeking. Just as
the relief column had proceeded from Vryburg without any flourish of trumpets,
so was their entry into Mafeking unexpected and
unostentatious. But the town had aroused itself and was soon flocking across
the veldt to the ground where the combined columns had already begun to form
their camp. It was not a large force; its full muster was below two thousand
men; but amid the soft and eerie shadows of the starry, moonlit night there
seemed no end to the lines of horses, mules, and bullocks, to the camp fires,
to the groups of men, to the number and variety of the waggons. In a corner, as
it were, were the guns, a composite battery of the Royal Horse Artillery, eight
pieces of the Canadian Artillery, and a number of Maxims. It was these which we
had heard booming to us the first distant echoes of relief, and we were of
course proud of them. Then and there we examined them, felt them over, pondered
upon them, and then and there we thanked our God that we had in our own hands
at last some really serviceable artillery. But there were other sights to be
seen, early as was the hour, tired as were the troopers. There were the men of
the Kimberley Light Horse and their comrades of the Imperial Light Horse to be
inspected, to be patted upon the back, to be admired, and to be congratulated.
There was scarcely any one who could not claim a friend among the mere handful
of men who had marched from Vryburg to our relief, but if by chance there were
such a one he quickly placed himself en amitié with the first group of
troopers with whom he came in contact. Alas! such was our plight that we could
not give them anything to drink, but we most willingly had prepared cauldrons
of steaming soup and boiling coffee. A cup of coffee is not much to offer, but
the goodwill was taken with the spirit, and there was no one who did not seem
glad to receive even so small a thing. It was not possible
to stay long in the camp. The men were weary, and, moreover, there was much to
be done before, with their martial cloaks around them, they were able to snatch
a few hours' repose; and so the town returned to its bed, drunk with
enthusiasm, in an abortive effort to calm its excited brain with sleep. But,
good heavens! was such a thing possible? It was now four, and although it was
somewhat early, in the morning we began to call upon one another, passing the
hours between dawn and sunrise in hilarious uproar. About seven the camp was
all a-bustle. There were rumours that the men were to move out and attack the
Boers, who were still in position upon the east side of the town. Presently, as
we moved about the streets down by the western outposts, clouds of dust were
tossing themselves in the air. The guns were comingour guns, if you pleaseand
thereupon a pandemonium was raised. Every one seemed to be screaming, and as
the Royal Horse swept through town we streamed after them, feebly endeavouring
to keep pace with them, so as to be able to witness the effects of their power.
The Market Square at this time presented a picture of military life which has
never been equalled by any of the scenes that have been enacted there in its
earlier days. Men in uniform were hurrying from point to point, troops from the
various squadrons were coming in, squadron-leaders, majors and colonels were
falling over one another. These were the beginnings of the fight, and much as
the relief had fought its way into Mafeking so were they now going to secure
definite freedom for the townspeople by driving out the Boers. As the guns came
into the Square willing hands tore down and pushed aside the line of carts and fencing of corrugated iron which for these seven months
had served duty as a traverse. Then the guns of the Horse Artillery swept on,
taking up positions upon the veldt in front of the town, in readiness to begin
the bombardment of the Boer position, while, in simultaneous co-operation with
this movement, the Canadian Artillery were sent out with orders to shell Game
Tree. However, the fight did not last long. In a very short time the Game Tree
fort was deserted, the Boers from there hurriedly joining their main body. But
the presence of the guns had terrorised the Boers, and they fled precipitately,
leaving their camp, their guns, their stores behind them. We shelled for an
hour with the composite battery of the Royal Horse, comprising four
12-½-pounders and two pom-poms. Then we advanced in skirmishing order,
extending our line rapidly until we had outflanked their position. Then we
charged, and the day was ours. The enemy had vanished, and we were in
possession of their camp, while so undignified had their retreat been that they
did not even wait to remove their hospital. Upon General Snyman's house there
was still floating the Republican flag, while the Red Cross hung drowsily in
the air above the hospital. There were thirty wounded in the hospital, and
these, for the time being, were placed under a guard, but otherwise left
undisturbed; in this manner did the siege come to an abrupt conclusion.
CHAPTER XXXVII THE END
Mafeking, May 26th, 1900.
The
imprimatur has now been given to the siege, and that chapter of the war which
bears reference to the investment of Mafeking must now be considered as closed.
The end of the drama is with us; the curtain has dropped, and the people of the
play are scatteringsome are dead, some have been wounded, lying nigh to death
in the Victoria Hospital, some have passed through this seven months' ordeal
suffering neither monetary loss nor physical hurt, but bearing with them, in
their minds, the almost indelible impress of an interesting but terrible
experience. And so the play is ended, and the great historical drama in which
we have enacted our part is soon to present fresh scenes, and with the
transformation, let us hope some stirring incident and a picturesque scenario.
To the end, of course, there is the story, but it is simple of fact, it is
plain of feature, it deals only with what one may consider as the final
obsequies of the siege, and in a brief space we will consider them.
The siege is
now officially returned as having been raised by General Mahon's force at
half-past ten upon the morning of May 17th. It has been
quiet since then. The garrison has mainly rested, taking itself idly and
participating in the few last deft touches with which Colonel Baden-Powell has
adorned the siege. These issues to the relief have been sad, have been
pleasing, but mournful or gay they have served their purpose, fitting in most
accurately with the long chain of circumstances which has enclosed the siege.
There was the time when the garrison attended just beyond the precincts of the
cemetery, where the rank and file of the forces which have been beleaguered,
stood to attention as they paid their last honour to the dead, to all of those
who died so nobly, to those who had been the victims of disease, and who, one
and all, had paid the penalty of our success. It was a mournful retrospect
which was thus forced upon our notice as the names of our dead were passed
slowly in review; but as the mournful cadences dropped from the lips of the
preacher we braced ourselves to think that such an end, as we had gathered to
conclude, was but the inevitable. As the Colonel stood before usthe man who
reaped the glory of the siegewe wondered whether beneath the calmness of his
demeanour there lurked any feeling of regret, any half-cherished desire to
express aloud to those who stood around him the potency of his sorrows. To him
it was but the simple ceremony, and one, moreover, to be got through quickly,
and indeed there was but little in the service. Occasionally the breeze, which
sighed so tremulously through the hedge of trees that fringe the graveyard,
wafted to us snatches of prayer. And that was all, so far as we were
concernedthe mere fragments of a passing communion, ending as abruptly as it
began, seeming all to concentrate in that one moment when at command three rounds of blank cartridge were fired across the graves.
That was the full weight of our honours to the dead, since afterwardsfor it
does not do to dwell too much upon these thingsthe Colonel commanding reviewed
the remnants of his force, unbending insomuch that he addressed to each unit, a
few words of appreciation and of thanks. And then where we had assembled, there
did the Town Guard and other corps of the garrison receive their dismissal,
since now that the siege was raised they might return to their businesses, to
their homes, and to their families to spend a cheering hour or two in an
endeavour to compute some estimate of the ruin which has fallen upon their
fortunes.
Now that the
siege is over, it is not without interest to know to what extent the garrison
has suffered. We have had 1,498 shells from the 100-pounder Creusot, but in
addition to this the enemy has fired into Mafeking some 21,000 odd shells of a
smaller character. These have ranged from the 14-½-pounder high-velocity,
armour-piercing, delay-action shell, down to the high-velocity one-pound Maxim,
embracing in the series a variety of nine-pound shellscommon, segment,
shrapnel, and incendiaryseveral hundred seven-pound shells, and a multitude of
five-pounders. This has been the weight of the enemy's artillery fire which has
played upon the town since October 12th, and which has supported commandos of
Boers which were reckoned as 8,000 men in October, and whose numbers are believed
never to have fallen below 3,000 rifles. Throughout the siege there have been
some eight guns around us, including the big Creusot piece, but at times there
have been eleven, and at rare intervals our spies reported that the strength of
the enemy's artillery was fourteen guns. And we have stood
this with a certain cheerfulness and with a pretty spirit of determination:
moreover, we have returned their fire, claiming to have disabled three guns and
killing and wounding several hundred men. Our own casualties from shot and
shell and sickness until the end of April were 476. In October there were 77;
November, 49; December, 101; in January, 47; February, 68; March, 67; and
April, 67. The admissions into the base hospital during this period were 685,
while 496 were discharged. Among those who were admitted to the hospital there
were 106 deaths. During a similar period and through identical causes, 180
natives were admitted to this hospital, 115 were discharged, 56 died, but
irrespective of these figures 398 deaths were registered from amongst the
natives. That their mortality was great, the monthly returns from the native
population will show. In October 12 natives died; in November, 13; December,
46; January, 64; February, 44; March, 84; April, 135. These figures relate to
those patients only who were passed through the base hospital, but the monthly
returns bear upon the available strength of the garrison, and are in themselves
an index to the conditions of the siege. The town itself has suffered to a
great extent, although the amount of damage which the enemy's shell fire has
created is insignificant when compared to what would have been the result had
the main elements in its construction been bricks and mortar. The tin shanties
and the mud walls have given to Mafeking a remarkable salvation, making it
possible for the little town to compare, when the weight of metal brought
against it is considered, even favourably with Ladysmith. Among the men forming
the relief column there are many who were with Sir George White, and from these one
gathers that the damage which Mafeking has sustained is infinitely greater than
the injuries which Ladysmith can show.
THE AUTHOR'S DOG "MAFEKING," WOUNDED
THREE TIMES DURING THE SIEGE.
And so the
siege is ended; but if this were taken in its more literal sense it would imply
that there has been an immediate change for the better in our condition. But
such is not the case. We have been relieved of the presence of the Boers, a
matter which did not greatly trouble us, but there has been no alteration in
our scale of dieta matter which does greatly trouble us; we are still issued
four ounces of rusty bread and a pound of scraggy meat, and there is still an
absence of table delicacies. We have no sugar, we have no milk, we have neither
eggs nor fowls. In point of fact we have nothing, and indeed there has been no
change. Yet we understood that Field-Marshal Lord Roberts in his kindly and
generous way had sent us a mob of prime bullocks, and a convoy of something
other than hospital luxuries. This is told to us upon the authority of Major
Weil, who controls the commissariat, and if it be true, it is still most
certainly the case that the commissariat officer who has controlled the food
supplies of the garrison during the siege is still, relatively speaking, doling
out his sugar by the thimbleful, and ladling his flour with a spoon. However,
there is to come a time some day when Captain Ryan will be far away, and the
hours of meal times will be graced with such luxuries as we have not seen for
seven months. It is only recently that the issue of horse meat was stopped, but
there is a very general belief that if the horses are not being slaughtered for
human consumption, their carcases still play an important part in the soup with
which the garrison is served. Of course, the days of starch
puddings and other table delicacies which were manufactured from toilet
necessaries are over, while we believe that an effort is to be made to improve,
but not increase, the bread allowance and to put fresh meat on the public
sales. But these are the boons of the future; since we are relieved that is
held to be sufficient for the present. However, our thoughts do not dwell much
upon our food, we rejoice so much over our liberty that we can spare but little
time for grumbling, and indeed feel but little inclination. The town is bright
again, and people throng the streets as though a load had been lifted from off
the backs of every one. The shops are open, the post office has resumed its
work, and now once more accepts telegrams and letters. During the siege there
has been but little opportunity to send to the outer world any message of a
private character that contained more than a few words. Letters were almost out
of the question, and were expensive luxuries even to war correspondents, who
were compelled to employ special runners at high prices to carry their
despatches to the nearest office. Lately, and when the investment of the enemy
was not so close, the intelligence department did manage to pass through the
lines small parcels of mail matter. The occasions have been infrequent, and
there were so many people who were anxious to write that it became necessary to
restrict the general public to a certain limit of space. It does not seem that
many letters got through, since now that we have had time to overhaul the
laagers of the enemy we have found much correspondence in their waggons. We
have also found a number of telegrams, and these provide interesting reading
and bear importantly upon the situation. Moreover, it would seem that our
estimate of the Boer forces in the field is much
exaggerated, for President Kruger complains bitterly to Commandant-General
Botha of the paucity of numbers at the command of the State President. The
Commandant-General had but fifteen hundred men with him in Natal, while General
Snyman mentions the numbers of the various commandos which he has summoned to
his assistance, and by which he hopes to secure an additional eight hundred
men. But from the telegrams it would seem that, for the most part, the Boers
are timorous and tired of fighting. The Field Cornet of Christiana asks what he
is to do with twenty men, and states that the Johannesburg Police are bolting.
"What, then, am I to do with my men?" At this moment the British
troops were within one hour's ride of Christiana. General Snyman has many
interesting comments upon the situation on the Molopo, and if President Kruger
believed one half of the intelligence that General Snyman telegraphed to him,
his knowledge of the situation must have been obscure. From the despatches
which passed between this worthy General and the State President, mention is
made quite frequently of the desperate assaults upon our lines which General
Snyman organised and in some cases personally carried out, and which upon many
occasions resulted in the capture of one of our outlying positions. If this be
true such positions as were captured must indeed have been outlying, in fact so
far beyond the perimeter of our defences as to altogether have escaped the
notice of the garrison. But it does not seem that President Kruger believed
everything that General Snyman communicated to him. In one message Oom Paul
requests immediate information upon the whereabouts of Colonel Plumer. There is
a certain pathos in the question of the aged President
asking General Snyman, "Where is Plumer? You must know," and one
gathers that the old man saw somewhat further into the future than the majority
of his councillors, since he gives it as his opinion that Mafeking will be
relieved. But prophets have never been respected in their own country. General
Snyman does not seem to have found favour in Pretoria; perhaps the character of
the man was too well known, since the State Secretary, Mr. Reitz, is ordered by
the State President to inquire as to whether the failure of General Snyman's
reinforcements to support Commandant Eloff in his attack upon the town on May
12th was due to drunkenness or to cowardice. "If it be drunkenness, let us
say so," advises Mr. Reitz, "since it would be better that the truth
be known than that it should be believed that General Snyman was a
coward." Does this sentence contain the secret history of the failure of
Commandant Eloff? If it be so one can afford to be generous and to sympathise
with President Kruger, even to feel a certain pity for Commandant Eloff.
The
Commandant, since he surrendered to us, has taken life very philosophically. He
is confined in the gaol, and with him are Captain de Fremont and some
half-dozen others. The majority of the prisoners are lodged in the Dutch Church
and in the Masonic Hall. Their time hangs heavily upon their hands, but when
the tedium of their imprisonment becomes too great they indite long letters to
their friends, using much paper, in villainous denunciations of the English, in
complaining bitterly of their food, and in villifying Snyman.
Commandant
Eloff smokes and reads and talks. Sometimes he becomes abstracted, and again
upon Sundays he is dejected. As I had the pleasure of meeting
him in the British South Africa Police Fort upon May 12th, the occasion upon
which he captured me, I called upon him in the gaol. He was pacing the
courtyard, but he stopped and smiled when he saw me, and as I saluted him he held
out his hand. "My prisoner," said he, amiably. "The fortunes of
war," said I, and he waved a hand in the air as he accepted a cigarette.
His costume was free and comfortable. He wore a brown jersey, a pair of riding
breeches, and slippers. The jersey fitted him, and he seemed to take some pains
in showing the physical development of his shoulders. His arms also were
strong, and with every move of his body his muscles quivered. He was lithe,
supple and active, and as he stood there with the whitewashed walls of the gaol
behind him, with his companions around him, and a guard upon each of the four
walls which enclosed the courtyard, an air of romance clung to him and he might
have been for the moment some creation of Anthony Hope, casting in his mind for
some entrancing but desperate situation. He puffed my cigarette vigorously and
began a conversation. "You know," said he, "I don't like
horseflesh." "I am sorry," said I, "but you should have
taken Mafeking before." "We shall have it yet," said a man at
the table, whereupon the Commandant shrugged his shoulders and threw the end of
his cigarette somewhat petulantly from him. "If," said I.
"Ah," said the Commandant, and there was a pause in which we all
laughed. He looked at me for a moment as though he thought. "It is
possible," said he, and he punctuated his words with little nods. As he
finished Captain de Fremont joined us. "My God," said he; "you
English." Eloff laughed. "Do not let us make this Fashoda," said
he. "Yes, it is possible," he began again,
"and I think we should have captured your town, but Snyman" he
paused and spat. "I wish to God you would make Snyman a prisoner,"
said he. The conversation had become interesting, and I passed my cigarette
case around again. It returned to me empty, but Commandant Eloff had begun to
smoke a pipe. "Are not you Dutchmen tired of the war?" said I;
"the end, after all, is inevitable." Captain de Fremont spoke again.
He twisted his cigarette between his fingers and remarked with an air of incisive
inanity, "Life and death are inevitable." "And the
English," said Commandant Eloff, whereupon I laughed. The Commandant once
more took up the thread of the conversation. "We attacked you because it
seemed to me that you had relaxed your vigilance. How could we otherwise have
pierced your lines?" His view was rightat least I thought so. "We
expected you," said I. The Commandant shook his head and looked at me
somewhat quizzingly. After all it was a palpable lie. "No," said he;
"you should at least allow us that amount of energy. You did not expect
us, and had Snyman pressed home the attack upon your eastern front and
supported me with the guns and reinforcements, I think that Mafeking must have
fallen." He paused for a moment, and said, slowly, "I am certain that
we should not be prisoners." "It was bad luck," said I, "we
would rather have you with us than against us, but this time you will remain
with us." He glanced at the four walls, upon each of which there was
sitting a guard. "I notice," said he, "that I am well protected."
The Frenchman shrugged his shoulders, as I suggested he would rather be
outside. "Give me a chance," said he, and he snapped his fingers.
"What, don't you know," said I, "what has
occurred this morning?" In a flash his mind reverted to the firing upon
the previous day. "Tell me, what was that firing last night?"
"Mafeking has been relieved," said I. The Commandant said nothing,
and once more there was a pause; but before we spoke again the sergeant of the
guard clanged upon the door with his musket. "Time is up," called he,
and the door opened. For a moment the Commandant could see through the open
space of the doorway, beyond and above the heads of the five guards who were
waiting outside, the glimpse of blue sky, a line of trees, a stretch of veldt.
"Is there anything I can do for you?" said I, before I went. He waved
his hand. "Nothing," said he, "except fresh meat." I stayed
for a moment and pointed outside. "Fresh meat and fresh air are both
outside." I thought I caught a sigh: it seemed to lurk for a moment amid
the harsh and grating noises of the bolts as they were thrust forward in their
sockets.
From the
prison I strolled to my hotel. The day was fine, the cold of the morning had
given place to a warm and brilliant sunshine. It was the Queen's birthday, and
our little world seemed at peace. For the moment we were forgetting the strife
and tribulations of the past seven months, and in our anxiety to do honour to
her Majesty there was much commotion in the town. Flags were flying and bunting
was fluttering from the verandahs of the houses. Here and there, passing in a
cloud of dust, were the troops marching to the parade. There was to be a review
and there was also a general muster of arms. In the centre of the Market Square
were the guns which we had captured from the enemy. In a corner, but surrounded
by an admiring crowd, were the two pieces which we had
improvised during the siege. There was "B.-P.," there was also
"The Wolf," and acting as guard to these guns, were two men who, the
day before had reached Mafeking from Pretoria, having eluded the vigilance of
their sentries and walked one hundred and eighty miles in a gallant and
successful attempt to gain liberty and freedom. The men were almost as
interesting as the guns. But time was speedy and the war correspondents were
anxious to attend the parade. The review was a study in contrast, the contrast
between a birthday parade and that review at the cemetery where the souls of
the dead were passed in inspection and for whom prayers were offered. The
parade stretched from end to end of the ground immediately in front of the
British South Africa Police Fort, taking place upon the very spot where the
town had so valiantly contested the attack which Commandant Eloff had
organised. Behind the lines of the men were the white buildings of the
Protectorate Barracks, while from the flag-mast, which stands aloft in the
centre of the fort, there floated the Union Jack. The scene was indeed a study
in contrast. We were at peace now with the elements of war within our midst. We
were fighting then, a grim and determined struggle waging all round us, and in
a way this birthday parade was the issue of that day's fighting, since had the
end been otherwise, it might have been Commandant Eloff who passed in review order
upon the birthday of our Queen Empress. We formed up, detachments from the
different corps and the artillery upon the right of the line. It was only the
siege artillery, and nothing very much at that. The pom-poms and the guns of
the Royal Horse Artillery were guarding the front of the town, and could not be
spared.
And so we waited, when of a sudden there came a cheer from the rear and
we realised that General Mahon was approaching. There was no band, there were
no horses, the entire parade were dismounted. The Colonel inspected, the men
dressed, and the Colonel returned to the saluting base. He seemed conscious of
the crowd, and stood as though he realised that the parade which he was now
holding meant to him so much more than the mere abstract honour to the Queen.
It signified the end of his labours, epitomising his successes, touching with
ironical glory the honours which the near future must surely bring to him, and
as he stood he seemed quite nervous. It was one of the few occasions upon which
I have ever known him to be moved. The men who had come to his relief were
passing by him, and ever and anon one heard the commands of the officers
calling to their squadrons as they gained the shadow of the saluting base,
"Shoulder arms; eyes left." Then Colonel Baden-Powell would raise his
hand, taking and returning the salutes as they were made. In the distance there
was a haze of dust through which a gaudy sunlight was flickering, and in the
distance and, beside us, there was the heavy music of the armed tread, as
squadron after squadron marched by. The air was filled with sound and
sentiment, but yet the crowd that stood behind was quiet and quite subdued. It
was no wonder that they were impressed, that they recognised in the rumble of
the distant feet and in the flowing masses of men the hour of their
deliverance. Their troubles were indeed past, their siege was over, and the
moment was approaching when those who had been in their midst during so many
months would be again upon the move, advancing this time
against the enemy upon Pretoria. But the hour was not one in which to say
farewell. It was an hour which lived for itself, an hour that bore to each of
us some knowledge of our liberty, and a secret appreciation of the duties which
our Empire asked of us. We were all contented, happy in the knowledge that the
siege was over, but imbued with even a greater happiness since, upon this day,
her Majesty was sharing with us the joys of our good news. And presently the
ceremony concluded, and for the remainder of the day we attended sports and
organised a concert; while that night there was a dinner and a pyrotechnic
display in Market Square. We dined and drank the Queen, and drinking this,
streamed to the air where the rockets were already rushing to the ewigkeit with the roar of the racing tide. And then beneath the steely beauty of the
moonlight and the soft radiance of countless stars we sang "God Save the
Queen" and wandered home, chanting as we went the strains of "Rule
Britannia." Thus in a cloud of loyal enthusiasm were brought about the
closing scenes of the Siege of Mafeking.
PLAN OF MAFEKING.
THE END
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