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.

Looking backward over the events of the last two months, it is impossible not to admire the Boer strategy.  From the beginning they have aimed at two main objects:  to exclude the war from their own territories, and to confine it to rocky and broken regions suited to their tactics.  Up to the present time they have been entirely successful.  Though the line of advance northwards through the Free State lay through flat open country, and they could spare few men to guard it, no British force has assailed this weak point.  The ‘farmers’ have selected their own ground and compelled the generals to fight them on it.  No part of the earth’s surface is better adapted to Boer tactics than Northern Natal, yet observe how we have been gradually but steadily drawn into it, until the mountains have swallowed up the greater part of the whole Army Corps.  By degrees we have learned the power of our adversary.  Before the war began men said:  ’Let them come into Natal and attack us if they dare.  They would go back quicker than they would come.’  So the Boers came and fierce fighting took place, but it was the British who retired.  Then it was said:  ’Never mind.  The forces were not concentrated.  Now that all the Natal Field Force is massed at Ladysmith, there will be no mistake.’  But still, in spite of Elandslaagte, concerning which the President remarked:  ’The foolhardy shall be punished,’ the Dutch advance continued.  The concentrated Ladysmith force, twenty squadrons, six batteries, and eleven battalions, sallied out to meet them.  The Staff said:  ’By to-morrow night there will not be a Boer within twenty miles of Ladysmith.’  But by the evening of October 30 the whole of Sir George White’s command had been flung back into the town with three hundred men killed and wounded, and nearly a thousand prisoners.  Then every one said:  ’But now we have touched bottom.  The Ladysmith position is the ne plus ultra.  So far they have gone; but no further!’ Then it appeared that the Boers were reaching out round the flanks.  What was their design?  To blockade Ladysmith?  Ridiculous and impossible!  However, send a battalion to Colenso to keep the communications open, and make assurance doubly sure.  So the Dublin Fusiliers were railed southwards, and entrenched themselves at Colenso.  Two days later the Boers cut the railway south of Ladysmith at Pieters, shelled the small garrison out of Colenso, shut and locked the gate on the Ladysmith force, and established themselves in the almost impregnable positions north of the Tugela.  Still there was no realisation of the meaning of the investment.  It would last a week, they said, and all the clever correspondents laughed at the veteran Bennet Burleigh for his hurry to get south before the door was shut.  Only a week of isolation!  Two months have passed.  But all the time we have said:  ’Never mind; wait till our army comes.  We will soon put a stop to the siege—­for it soon became more than a blockade—­of Ladysmith.’

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