In the Shadow of Death eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 231 pages of information about In the Shadow of Death.

In the Shadow of Death eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 231 pages of information about In the Shadow of Death.

    What realm so fair, so richly fraught with treasures ever new;
    Where Nature hath her wonder wrought, and freely spread to view! 
    Ho!  Burghers old, be up and sing, God save the Volk and land,
    Then, Burghers young, your anthem ring, o’er veldt, o’er hill, o’er strand. 
    And, Burghers all, stand ye or fall
    For hearths and homes at country’s call.

    With wisdom, Lord, our rulers guide, and these Thy people bless,
    May we with nations all abide in peace and righteousness. 
    To Thee, whose mighty arm did shield Thy Volk in bygone days—­
    To Thee alone we humbly yield all glory, honour, praise. 
    God guard our land, our own dear land,
    Our children’s home, their Fatherland.

A third distinctive mark in the Boer character, regarded from a military point of view, is his fearlessness, so strikingly displayed in several battles.  That the Boers proved themselves brave during the war goes without saying.

Those who prophesied a speedy termination of the war in favour of the British thought that lyddite-shells and dum-dum bullets, when applied to the Boer, would at once scatter them far and wide, and so intimidate them that they would kneel and sue for mercy and peace.  To their great disappointment they found the Boers stubbornly and gallantly resisting the most determined onslaught of the British forces, repelling them as often with disastrous results.

We admired, in friend or foe, no other quality more than bravery—­bravery as distinguished from recklessness.  We had respect for brave foes, and when the fortunes of war entrusted such as prisoners-of-war to our care, we always treated them with the courtesy gallant men deserve.

We often admired the valour displayed by our opponents.  On certain occasions the British forces performed the most daring and heroic feats of which mortal men are capable.  We saw officers and soldiers rushing and marching, as it were, into the very jaws of death.  Though exposed to a storm of bullets, which consumed them like a withering fire, they would press on, often dropping down as wheat before the scythe.  Such determination and bravery called forth the admiration of our men.  There is, however, a difference between valour as displayed by the British and valour as displayed by the Boers.  Without wishing to rob the British officer and soldier of their martial honours, which they may well deserve, having earned them at so great a cost, yet, in comparing Boer and Briton, we must bear in mind that the Boer had had no military training whatsoever, and was never subjected to military discipline.  He hardly knew the importance and necessity of obeying orders promptly and implicitly.  When he attacked or charged the enemy’s stronghold or positions he did so, as a rule, of his own accord, not under any compulsion, but spontaneously and voluntarily.  The British soldier, on the other hand, had all the

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In the Shadow of Death from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.