London to Ladysmith via Pretoria eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 309 pages of information about London to Ladysmith via Pretoria.

London to Ladysmith via Pretoria eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 309 pages of information about London to Ladysmith via Pretoria.

I do not desire to invest this wise and prudent though discouraging move with more than its proper importance.  Anything is better than to leave small garrisons to be overwhelmed.  Until the Army Corps comes, the situation will continue to be unsatisfactory, and the ground to be recovered afterwards will increase in extent.  But with the arrival of powerful and well-equipped forces the tide of war will surely turn.

CHAPTER IV

IN NATAL

Estcourt:  November 6, 1899.

The reader may remember that we started post haste from Cape Town, and, having the good fortune to pass along the southern frontier from De Aar to Stormberg by the last train before the interruption of traffic, had every hope of reaching Ladysmith while its investment was incomplete.  I had looked forward to writing an account of our voyage from East London to Durban while on board the vessel; but the weather was so tempestuous, and the little steamer of scarcely 100 tons burthen so buffeted by the waves, that I lay prostrate in all the anguish of sea-sickness, and had no thought for anything else.  Moreover, we were delayed some twenty hours by contrary winds; nor was it until we had passed St. John’s that the gale, as if repenting, veered suddenly to the south-west and added as much to our speed as it had formerly delayed us.  With the change of the wind the violence of the waves to some degree abated, and, though unable to then record them on paper, I had an opportunity of gaining some impressions of the general aspect of the coasts of Pondoland and Natal.  These beautiful countries stretch down to the ocean in smooth slopes of the richest verdure, broken only at intervals by lofty bluffs crowned with forests.  The many rivulets to which the pasture owes its life and the land its richness glide to the shore through deep-set creeks and chines, or plunge over the cliffs in cascades which the strong winds scatter into clouds of spray.

These are regions of possibility, and as we drove along before our now friendly wind I could not but speculate on the future.  Here are wide tracts of fertile soil watered by abundant rains.  The temperate sun warms the life within the soil.  The cooling breeze refreshes the inhabitant.  The delicious climate stimulates the vigour of the European.  The highway of the sea awaits the produce of his labour.  All Nature smiles, and here at last is a land where white men may rule and prosper.  As yet only the indolent Kaffir enjoys its bounty, and, according to the antiquated philosophy of Liberalism, it is to such that it should for ever belong.  But while Englishmen choke and fester in crowded cities, while thousands of babies are born every month who are never to have a fair chance in life, there will be those who will dream another dream of a brave system of State-aided—­almost State-compelled—­emigration, a scheme of old age pensions that shall anticipate

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London to Ladysmith via Pretoria from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.