From Aldershot to Pretoria eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 196 pages of information about From Aldershot to Pretoria.

From Aldershot to Pretoria eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 196 pages of information about From Aldershot to Pretoria.

    ’Where duty calls, or danger,
      Be never wanting there.’

=The Chaplains at Work.=

And now came the chaplains’ work!  It is not in the firing line that war seems the most dreadful.  It is when the wounded are gathered from the field, and the results of the battle are seen in all their ghastliness.  And in this case the wounded could not be tended where they were.  It was onward, ever onward, with our men.  Only two hospitals, instead of at least ten—­the number the doctors thought necessary—­had been sent to the front, and the wounded must be got back to base hospitals as quickly as possible.

Back they came, a ghastly procession, in heavy, lumbersome ox-waggons, with no cover from the sun or rain.  Oh! the terrible jolting; oh! the screams of agony.  ‘Better kill us right out,’ cried the men, ’than make us endure any more!’

It is not for us to say that all this was unnecessary.  It is for others to judge.  You cannot conduct war in picnic fashion.  The country ought to know its horrors and get its fill of them.  But we will not attempt the description.  Already others have done that.  Suffice it to say that the baggage camp, in which were the chaplains and some of the doctors, seemed an oasis in the desert to these agonized travellers.

The day for parade services had gone by, and all days were now the same; but there was other work the chaplains could do, and this they attempted to the best of their ability.

[Illustration:  BRINGING BACK THE WOUNDED.]

The Rev. E.P.  Lowry wrote:—­

’Yesterday a long convoy arrived bearing over 700 sick and wounded men.  They were brought, for the most part, over the rough roads in open waggons (captured from the Boers) from the fatal front, where days before they had been stricken more or less severely.  They still had a long journey before them, and it so happened that they set out from here in the midst of a thunderstorm; but as I passed from one waggon to another I found them bearing their miseries as only brave men could.  About 300 of them belonged to the unfortunate Highland Brigade.  One of these had been shot through the wrist of his left hand at Magersfontein, and he was now returning shot through the wrist of his right hand.  The next, said he, with gruesome playfulness, will be through the head.  Corporal Evans, of the Gloucesters—­one of two brothers whose name is much honoured at Aldershot—­I found in the midst of this huge convoy stricken with dysentery.  The Cornwalls seemed to have suffered almost as heavily in proportion as the Highlanders, and it was to me no small privilege to be permitted to speak a word of Christian solace and good cheer to men from my own county.

=The Wounded Canadians.=

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From Aldershot to Pretoria from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.