With Botha in the Field eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 59 pages of information about With Botha in the Field.

With Botha in the Field eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 59 pages of information about With Botha in the Field.

We left the Galway Castle on the 11th, disembarking into lighters, to be towed up the coast to the occupied German port of Swakopmund.  Down to the tender, on to the lighter, kits and equipment, and farewell to the quietened steamer.  For a while we stood away from her, and rose and fell under no way on the still grey waters.  Then we saw a tender from the Armadale Castle steaming towards us.  She came up on our starboard quarter and made fast.  A figure well known to us all crossed the gangway and climbed to the boat-deck of our steam tender.  We had not seen the Commander-in-Chief in personal command since the past bitter days of the Rebellion.  A great cheer hit the morning silence and echoed over the bay to each transport at anchor.  With a smile of genuine pleasure, General Botha brought his hand to the salute.  And away we went, the tender steaming full speed ahead, blunt-nosed barges surging in her wake, for Swakopmund.

Swakopmund was the first Headquarters of the Northern Force, Union Expeditionary Army; we made two sojourns at this German port.  First we were there for a period of some five weeks, from February 11 till March 18, whilst awaiting the first advance into the Namib Desert; then we were there for a further month, from the 27th of March till the 25th of April, whilst awaiting the general advance to Windhuk and Karibib.

[Illustration:  Awaiting the Advance.  The Commander-in-Chief at tea with the Red Cross Sisters]

[Illustration:  Awaiting the Advance.  Garrison Sports at Swakopmund.  Start for 100 yards race]

[Illustration:  Awaiting the Advance.  Garrison Sports.  Winner]

It is difficult to write about Swakopmund.  As a town it is the most extraordinary place I have seen.  I use the superlative deliberately.  But I do not wish to live there.  It is purely artificial, and artificial to a ghastly degree too.  There is not a spot of vegetation.  There is not a genuine tree to be seen.  The water has a detestable, unsatisfying blurred taste, to which the adjective “brackish” is applied.  It is probable that a town occupied by enemy troops does not look at its best; but the fact that it was under such conditions when I first knew Swakopmund makes no important difference.  The place in its essentials must always be the same.  If ever there was a work of bluff Swakopmund is that thing.  One fancies the German commercial expert, a Government official, or, maybe, a representative of the ubiquitous Woermann, Brock & Co., looking along this ferocious and awful coast for a spot to found a town that should appear on the maps and be esteemed a seaport.  The Swakop River?  Very well.  Was there water there?  But certainly so; water obviously of the worst quality—­yet water.  Besides, were there not always refrigerators and condensing machinery?  Upon which Swakopmund was forced into existence—­planked down there bit by bit in the face of circumstance.  Walk a trifle over

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With Botha in the Field from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.