The force which General Buller led into action was the finest which any
British general had handled since the battle of the Alma. Of infantry he
had four strong brigades: the 2nd (Hildyard's) consisting of the 2nd
Devons, the 2nd Queen's or West Surrey, the 2nd West Yorkshire, and the
2nd East Surrey; the 4th Brigade (Lyttelton's) comprising the 2nd
Cameronians, the 3rd Rifles, the 1st Durhams, and the 1st Rifle Brigade;
the 5th Brigade (Hart's) with the 1st Inniskilling Fusiliers, the 1st
Connaught Rangers, 2nd Dublin Fusiliers, and the Border Regiment, this
last taking the place of the 2nd Irish Rifles, who were with Gatacre.
There remained the 6th Brigade (Barton's), which included the 2nd Royal
Fusiliers, the 2nd Scots Fusiliers, the 1st Welsh Fusiliers, and the 2nd
Irish Fusiliers--in all about 16,000 infantry. The mounted men, who were
commanded by Lord Dundonald, included the 13th Hussars, the 1st Royals,
Bethune's Mounted Infantry, Thorneycroft's Mounted Infantry, three
squadrons of South African Horse, with a composite regiment formed from
the mounted infantry of the Rifles and of the Dublin Fusiliers with
squadrons of the Natal Carabineers and the Imperial Light Horse. These
irregular troops of horse might be criticised by martinets and pedants,
but they contained some of the finest fighting material in the army, some
urged on by personal hatred of the Boers and some by mere lust of
adventure. As an example of the latter one squadron of the South African
Horse was composed almost entirely of Texan muleteers, who, having come
over with their animals, had been drawn by their own gallant spirit into
the fighting line of their kinsmen.
Cavalry was General Buller's weakest arm, but his artillery was strong
both in its quality and its number of guns. There were five batteries (30
guns) of the Field Artillery, the 7th, 14th, 63rd, 64th, and 66th. Besides
these there were no fewer than sixteen naval guns from H.M.S.
'Terrible'--fourteen of which were 12-pounders, and the other two of the
4.7 type which had done such good service both at Ladysmith and with
Methuen. The whole force which moved out from Chieveley Camp numbered
about 21,000 men.
The work which was allotted to the army was simple in conception,
however terrible it might prove in execution. There were two points at
which the river might be crossed, one three miles off on the left, named
Bridle Drift, the other straight ahead at the Bridge of Colenso. The 5th
or Irish Brigade was to endeavour to cross at Bridle Drift, and then to
work down the river bank on the far side so as to support the 2nd or
English Brigade,--which was to cross at Colenso. The 4th Brigade was to
advance between these, so as to help either which should be in
difficulties. Meanwhile on the extreme right the mounted troops under
Dundonald were to cover the flank and to attack Hlangwane Hill, a
formidable position held strongly by the enemy upon the south bank of the
Tugela. The remaining Fusilier brigade of infantry was to support this
movement on the right. The guns were to cover the various attacks, and if
possible gain a position from which the trenches might be enfiladed. This,
simply stated, was the work which lay before the British army. In the
bright clear morning sunshine, under a cloudless blue sky, they advanced
with high hopes to the assault. Before them lay the long level plain, then
the curve of the river, and beyond, silent and serene, like some peaceful
dream landscape, stretched the lines and lines of gently curving hills. It
was just five o'clock in the morning when the naval guns began to bay, and
huge red dustclouds from the distant foothills showed where the lyddite
was bursting. No answer came back, nor was there any movement upon the
sunlit hills. It was almost brutal, this furious violence to so gentle and
unresponsive a countryside. In no place could the keenest eye detect a
sign of guns or men, and yet death lurked in every hollow and crouched by
every rock.
It is so difficult to make a modern battle intelligible when fought, as
this was, over a front of seven or eight miles, that it is best perhaps to
take the doings of each column in turn, beginning with the left flank,
where Hart's Irish Brigade had advanced to the assault of Bridle Drift.
Under an unanswered and therefore an unaimed fire from the heavy guns
the Irish infantry moved forward upon the points which they had been
ordered to attack. The Dublins led, then the Connaughts, the
Inniskillings, and the Borderers. Incredible as it may appear after the
recent experiences of Magersfontein and of Stormberg, the men in the two
rear regiments appear to have been advanced in quarter column, and not to
have deployed until after the enemy's fire had opened. Had shrapnel struck
this close formation, as it was within an ace of doing, the loss of life
must have been as severe as it was unnecessary.
On approaching the Drift--the position or even the existence of which
does not seem to have been very clearly defined--it was found that the
troops had to advance into a loop formed by the river, so that they were
exposed to a very heavy cross-fire upon their right flank, while they were
rained on by shrapnel from in front. No sign of the enemy could be seen,
though the men were dropping fast. It is a weird and soul-shaking
experience to advance over a sunlit and apparently a lonely countryside,
with no slightest movement upon its broad face, while the path which you
take is marked behind you by sobbing, gasping, writhing men, who can only
guess by the position of their wounds whence the shots came which struck
them down. All round, like the hissing of fat in the pan, is the
monotonous crackle and rattle of the Mausers; but the air is full of it,
and no one can define exactly whence it comes. Far away on some hill upon
the skyline there hangs the least gauzy veil of thin smoke to indicate
whence the six men who have just all fallen together, as if it were some
grim drill, met their death. Into such a hell-storm as this it was that
the soldiers have again and again advanced in the course of this war, but
it may be questioned whether they will not prove to be among the last of
mortals to be asked to endure such an ordeal. Other methods of attack must
be found or attacks must be abandoned, for smokeless powder, quick-firing
guns, and modern rifles make it all odds on the defence!
The gallant Irishmen pushed on, flushed with battle and careless for
their losses, the four regiments clubbed into one, with all military
organisation rapidly disappearing, and nothing left but their gallant
spirit and their furious desire to come to hand-grips with the enemy.
Rolling on in a broad wave of shouting angry men, they never winced from
the fire until they had swept up to the bank of the river. Northern
Inniskilling and Southern man of Connaught, orange and green, Protestant
and Catholic, Celt and Saxon, their only rivalry now was who could shed
his blood most freely for the common cause. How hateful seem those
provincial politics and narrow sectarian creeds which can hold such men
apart!
The bank of the river had been gained, but where was the ford? The
water swept broad and unruffled in front of them, with no indication of
shallows. A few dashing fellows sprang in, but their cartridges and rifles
dragged them to the bottom. One or two may even have struggled through to
the further side, but on this there is a conflict of evidence. It may be,
though it seems incredible, that the river had been partly dammed to
deepen the Drift, or, as is more probable, that in the rapid advance and
attack the position of the Drift was lost. However this may be, the troops
could find no ford, and they lay down, as had been done in so many
previous actions, unwilling to retreat and unable to advance, with the
same merciless pelting from front and flank. In every fold and behind
every anthill the Irishmen lay thick and waited for better times. There
are many instances of their cheery and uncomplaining humour. Colonel
Brooke, of the Connaughts, fell at the head of his men. Private
Livingstone helped to carry him into safety, and then, his task done, he
confessed to having 'a bit of a rap meself,' and sank fainting with a
bullet through his throat. Another sat with a bullet through both legs.
'Bring me a tin whistle and I'll blow ye any tune ye like,' he cried,
mindful of the Dargai piper. Another with his arm hanging by a tendon
puffed morosely at his short black pipe. Every now and then, in face of
the impossible, the fiery Celtic valour flamed furiously upwards. 'Fix
bayonets, men, and let us make a name for ourselves,' cried a colour
sergeant, and he never spoke again. For five hours, under the tropical
sun, the grimy parched men held on to the ground they had occupied.
British shells pitched short and fell among them. A regiment in support
fired at them, not knowing that any of the line were so far advanced. Shot
at from the front, the flank, and the rear, the 5th Brigade held grimly
on.
But fortunately their orders to retire were at hand, and it is certain
that had they not reached them the regiments would have been uselessly
destroyed where they lay. It seems to have been Buller himself, who showed
extraordinary and ubiquitous personal energy during the day, that ordered
them to fall back. As they retreated there was an entire absence of haste
and panic, but officers and men were hopelessly jumbled up, and General
Hart--whose judgment may occasionally be questioned, but whose cool
courage was beyond praise--had hard work to reform the splendid brigade
which six hours before had tramped out of Chieveley Camp. Between five and
six hundred of them had fallen--a loss which approximates to that of the
Highland Brigade at Magersfontein. The Dublins and the Connaughts were the
heaviest sufferers.
So much for the mishap of the 5th Brigade. It is superfluous to point
out that the same old omissions were responsible for the same old results.
Why were the men in quarter column when advancing against an unseen foe?
Why had no scouts gone forward to be certain of the position of the ford?
Where were the clouds of skirmishers which should precede such an advance?
The recent examples in the field and the teachings of the text-books were
equally set at naught, as they had been, and were to be, so often in this
campaign. There may be a science of war in the lecture-rooms at Camberley,
but very little of it found its way to the veld. The slogging valour of
the private, the careless dash of the regimental officer--these were our
military assets--but seldom the care and foresight of our commanders. It
is a thankless task to make such comments, but the one great lesson of the
war has been that the army is too vital a thing to fall into the hands of
a caste, and that it is a national duty for every man to speak fearlessly
and freely what he believes to be the truth.
Passing from the misadventure of the 5th Brigade we come as we move
from left to right upon the 4th, or Lyttelton's Brigade, which was
instructed not to attack itself but to support the attack on either side
of it. With the help of the naval guns it did what it could to extricate
and cover the retreat of the Irishmen, but it could play no very important
part in the action, and its losses were insignificant. On its right in
turn Hildyard's English Brigade had developed its attack upon Colenso and
the bridge. The regiments under Hildyard's lead were the 2nd West Surrey,
the 2nd Devons (whose first battalion was doing so well with the Ladysmith
force), the East Surreys, and the West Yorkshires. The enemy had evidently
anticipated the main attack on this position, and not only were the
trenches upon the other side exceptionally strong, but their artillery
converged upon the bridge, at least a dozen heavy pieces, besides a number
of quick-firers, bearing upon it. The Devons and the Queens, in open order
(an extended line of khaki dots, blending so admirably with the plain that
they were hardly visible when they halted), led the attack, being
supported by the East Surrey and the West Yorkshires. Advancing under a
very heavy fire the brigade experienced much the same ordeal as their
comrades of Hart's brigade, which was mitigated by the fact that from the
first they preserved their open order in columns of half-companies
extended to six paces, and that the river in front of them did not permit
that right flank fire which was so fatal to the Irishmen. With a loss of
some two hundred men the leading regiments succeeded in reaching Colenso,
and the West Surrey, advancing by rushes of fifty yards at a time, had
established itself in the station, but a catastrophe had occurred at an
earlier hour to the artillery which was supporting it which rendered all
further advance impossible. For the reason of this we must follow the
fortunes of the next unit upon their right.
This consisted of the important body of artillery who had been told off
to support the main attack. It comprised two field batteries, the 14th and
the 66th, under the command of Colonel Long, and six naval guns (two of
4.7, and four 12-pounders) under Lieutenant Ogilvy of the 'Terrible.' Long
has the record of being a most zealous and dashing officer, whose handling
of the Egyptian artillery at the battle of the Atbara had much to do with
the success of the action. Unfortunately, these barbarian campaigns, in
which liberties may be taken with impunity, leave an evil tradition, as
the French have found with their Algerians. Our own close formations, our
adherence to volley firing, and in this instance the use of our artillery
all seem to be legacies of our savage wars. Be the cause what it may, at
an early stage of the action Long's guns whirled forwards, outstripped the
infantry brigades upon their flanks, left the slow-moving naval guns with
their ox-teams behind them, and unlimbered within a thousand yards of the
enemy's trenches. From this position he opened fire upon Fort Wylie, which
was the centre of that portion of the Boer position which faced him.
But his two unhappy batteries were destined not to turn the tide of
battle, as he had hoped, but rather to furnish the classic example of the
helplessness of artillery against modern rifle fire. Not even Mercer's
famous description of the effect of a flank fire upon his troop of horse
artillery at Waterloo could do justice to the blizzard of lead which broke
over the two doomed batteries. The teams fell in heaps, some dead, some
mutilated, and mutilating others in their frantic struggles. One driver,
crazed with horror, sprang on a leader, cut the traces and tore madly off
the field. But a perfect discipline reigned among the vast majority of the
gunners, and the words of command and the laying and working of the guns
were all as methodical as at Okehampton. Not only was there a most deadly
rifle fire, partly from the lines in front and partly from the village of
Colenso upon their left flank, but the Boer automatic quick-firers found
the range to a nicety, and the little shells were crackling and banging
continually over the batteries. Already every gun had its litter of dead
around it, but each was still fringed by its own group of furious officers
and sweating desperate gunners. Poor Long was down, with a bullet through
his arm and another through his liver. 'Abandon be damned! We don't
abandon guns!' was his last cry as they dragged him into the shelter of a
little donga hard by. Captain Goldie dropped dead. So did Lieutenant
Schreiber. Colonel Hunt fell, shot in two places. Officers and men were
falling fast. The guns could not be worked, and yet they could not be
removed, for every effort to bring up teams from the shelter where the
limbers lay ended in the death of the horses. The survivors took refuge
from the murderous fire in that small hollow to which Long had been
carried, a hundred yards or so from the line of bullet-splashed cannon.
One gun on the right was still served by four men who refused to leave it.
They seemed to bear charmed lives, these four, as they strained and
wrestled with their beloved 15-pounder, amid the spurting sand and the
blue wreaths of the bursting shells. Then one gasped and fell against the
trail, and his comrade sank beside the wheel with his chin upon his
breast. The third threw up his hands and pitched forward upon his face;
while the survivor, a grim powder-stained figure, stood at attention
looking death in the eyes until he too was struck down. A useless
sacrifice, you may say; but while the men who saw them die can tell such a
story round the camp fire the example of such deaths as these does more
than clang of bugle or roll of drum to stir the warrior spirit of our
race.
For two hours the little knot of heart-sick humiliated officers and men
lay in the precarious shelter of the donga and looked out at the
bullet-swept plain and the line of silent guns. Many of them were wounded.
Their chief lay among them, still calling out in his delirium for his
guns. They had been joined by the gallant Baptie, a brave surgeon, who
rode across to the donga amid a murderous fire, and did what he could for
the injured men. Now and then a rush was made into the open, sometimes in
the hope of firing another round, sometimes to bring a wounded comrade in
from the pitiless pelt of the bullets. How fearful was that lead-storm may
be gathered from the fact that one gunner was found with sixty-four wounds
in his body. Several men dropped in these sorties, and the disheartened
survivors settled down once more in the donga.
The hope to which they clung was that their guns were not really lost,
but that the arrival of infantry would enable them to work them once more.
Infantry did at last arrive, but in such small numbers that it made the
situation more difficult instead of easing it. Colonel Bullock had brought
up two companies of the Devons to join the two companies (A and B) of
Scots Fusiliers who had been the original escort of the guns, but such a
handful could not turn the tide. They also took refuge in the donga, and
waited for better times.
In the meanwhile the attention of Generals Buller and Clery had been
called to the desperate position of the guns, and they had made their way
to that further nullah in the rear where the remaining limber horses and
drivers were. This was some distance behind that other donga in which
Long, Bullock, and their Devons and gunners were crouching. 'Will any of
you volunteer to save the guns?' cried Buller. Corporal Nurse, Gunner
Young, and a few others responded. The desperate venture was led by three
aides-de-camp of the Generals, Congreve, Schofield, and Roberts, the only
son of the famous soldier. Two gun teams were taken down; the horses
galloping frantically through an infernal fire, and each team succeeded in
getting back with a gun. But the loss was fearful. Roberts was mortally
wounded. Congreve has left an account which shows what a modern rifle fire
at a thousand yards is like. 'My first bullet went through my left sleeve
and made the joint of my elbow bleed, next a clod of earth caught me smack
on the right arm, then my horse got one, then my right leg one, then my
horse another, and that settled us.' The gallant fellow managed to crawl
to the group of castaways in the donga. Roberts insisted on being left
where he fell, for fear he should hamper the others.
In the meanwhile Captain Reed, of the 7th Battery, had arrived with two
spare teams of horses, and another determined effort was made under his
leadership to save some of the guns. But the fire was too murderous.
Two-thirds of his horses and half his men, including himself, were struck
down, and General Buller commanded that all further attempts to reach the
abandoned batteries should be given up. Both he and General Clery had been
slightly wounded, and there were many operations over the whole field of
action to engage their attention. But making every allowance for the
pressure of many duties and for the confusion and turmoil of a great
action, it does seem one of the most inexplicable incidents in British
military history that the guns should ever have been permitted to fall
into the hands of the enemy. It is evident that if our gunners could not
live under the fire of the enemy it would be equally impossible for the
enemy to remove the guns under a fire from a couple of battalions of our
infantry. There were many regiments which had hardly been engaged, and
which could have been advanced for such a purpose. The men of the Mounted
Infantry actually volunteered for this work, and none could have been more
capable of carrying it out. There was plenty of time also, for the guns
were abandoned about eleven and the Boers did not venture to seize them
until four. Not only could the guns have been saved, but they might, one
would think, have been transformed into an excellent bait for a trap to
tempt the Boers out of their trenches. It must have been with fear and
trembling that Cherry Emmett and his men first approached them, for how
could they believe that such incredible good fortune had come to them?
However, the fact, humiliating and inexplicable, is that the guns were so
left, that the whole force was withdrawn, and that not only the ten
cannon, but also the handful of Devons, with their Colonel, and the
Fusiliers were taken prisoners in the donga which had sheltered them all
day.
We have now, working from left to right, considered the operations of
Hart's Brigade at Bridle Drift, of Lyttelton's Brigade in support, of
Hildyard's which attacked Colenso, and of the luckless batteries which
were to have helped him. There remain two bodies of troops upon the right,
the further consisting of Dundonald's mounted men who were to attack
Hlangwane Hill, a fortified Boer position upon the south of the river,
while Barton's Brigade was to support it and to connect this attack with
the central operations.
Dundonald's force was entirely too weak for such an operation as the
capture of the formidable entrenched hill, and it is probable that the
movement was meant rather as a reconnaissance than as an assault. He had
not more than a thousand men in all, mostly irregulars, and the position
which faced him was precipitous and entrenched, with barbed-wire
entanglements and automatic guns. But the gallant colonials were out on
their first action, and their fiery courage pushed the attack home.
Leaving their horses, they advanced a mile and a half on foot before they
came within easy range of the hidden riflemen, and learned the lesson
which had been taught to their comrades all along the line, that given
approximately equal numbers the attack in the open has no possible chance
against the concealed defence, and that the more bravely it is pushed the
more heavy is the repulse. The irregulars carried themselves like old
soldiers, they did all that mortal man could do, and they retired coolly
and slowly with the loss of 130 of the brave troopers. The 7th Field
Battery did all that was possible to support the advance and cover the
retirement. In no single place, on this day of disaster, did one least
gleam of success come to warm the hearts and reward the exertions of our
much-enduring men.
Of Barton's Brigade there is nothing to be recorded, for they appear
neither to have supported the attack upon Hlangwane Hill on the one side
nor to have helped to cover the ill-fated guns on the other. Barton was
applied to for help by Dundonald, but refused to detach any of his troops.
If General Buller's real idea was a reconnaissance in force in order to
determine the position and strength of the Boer lines, then of course his
brigadiers must have felt a reluctance to entangle their brigades in a
battle which was really the result of a misunderstanding. On the other
hand, if, as the orders of the day seem to show, a serious engagement was
always intended, it is strange that two brigades out of four should have
played so insignificant a part. To Barton's Brigade was given the
responsibility of seeing that no right flank attack was carried out by the
Boers, and this held it back until it was clear that no such attack was
contemplated. After that one would have thought that, had the situation
been appreciated, at least two battalions might have been spared to cover
the abandoned guns with their rifle fire. Two companies of the Scots
Fusiliers did share the fortunes of the guns. Two others, and one of the
Irish Fusiliers, acted in support, but the brigade as a whole, together
with the 1st Royals and the 13th Hussars, might as well have been at
Aldershot for any bearing which their work had upon the fortunes of the
day.
And so the first attempt at the relief of Ladysmith came to an end. At
twelve o'clock all the troops upon the ground were retreating for the
camp. There was nothing in the shape of rout or panic, and the withdrawal
was as orderly as the advance; but the fact remained that we had just 1200
men in killed, wounded, and missing, and had gained absolutely nothing. We
had not even the satisfaction of knowing that we had inflicted as well as
endured punishment, for the enemy remained throughout the day so cleverly
concealed that it is doubtful whether more than a hundred casualties
occurred in their ranks. Once more it was shown how weak an arm is
artillery against an enemy who lies in shelter.
Our wounded fortunately bore a high proportion to our killed, as they
always will do when it is rifle fire rather than shell fire which is
effective. Roughly we had 150 killed and about 720 wounded. A more
humiliating item is the 250 or so who were missing. These men were the
gunners, the Devons, and the Scots Fusiliers, who were taken in the donga
together with small bodies from the Connaughts, the Dublins, and other
regiments who, having found some shelter, were unable to leave it, and
clung on until the retirement of their regiments left them in a hopeless
position. Some of these small knots of men were allowed to retire in the
evening by the Boers, who seemed by no means anxious to increase the
number of their prisoners. Colonel Thackeray, of the Inniskilling
Fusiliers, found himself with a handful of his men surrounded by the
enemy, but owing to their good humour and his own tact he succeeded in
withdrawing them in safety. The losses fell chiefly on Hart's Brigade,
Hildyard's Brigade, and the colonial irregulars, who bore off the honours
of the fight.
In his official report General Buller states that were it not for the
action of Colonel Long and the subsequent disaster to the artillery he
thought that the battle might have been a successful one. This is a hard
saying, and throws perhaps too much responsibility upon the gallant but
unfortunate gunner. There have been occasions in the war when greater dash
upon the part of our artillery might have changed the fate of the day, and
it is bad policy to be too severe upon the man who has taken a risk and
failed. The whole operation, with its advance over the open against a
concealed enemy with a river in his front, was so absolutely desperate
that Long may have seen that only desperate measures could save the
situation. To bring guns into action in front of the infantry without
having clearly defined the position of the opposing infantry must always
remain one of the most hazardous ventures of war. 'It would certainly be
mere folly,' says Prince Kraft, 'to advance artillery to within 600 or 800
yards of a position held by infantry unless the latter were under the fire
of infantry from an even shorter range.' This 'mere folly' is exactly what
Colonel Long did, but it must be remembered in extenuation that he shared
with others the idea that the Boers were up on the hills, and had no
inkling that their front trenches were down at the river. With the
imperfect means at his disposal he did such scouting as he could, and if
his fiery and impetuous spirit led him into a position which cost him so
dearly it is certainly more easy for the critic to extenuate his fault
than that subsequent one which allowed the abandoned guns to fall into the
hands of the enemy. Nor is there any evidence that the loss of these guns
did seriously affect the fate of the action, for at those other parts of
the field where the infantry had the full and unceasing support of the
artillery the result was not more favourable than at the centre.
So much for Colenso. A more unsatisfactory and in some ways
inexplicable action is not to be found in the range of British military
history. And the fuller the light which has been poured upon it, the more
extraordinary does the battle appear. There are a preface and a sequel to
the action which have put a severe strain upon the charity which the
British public has always shown that it is prepared to extend to a
defeated General. The preface is that General Buller sent word to General
White that he proposed to attack upon the 17th, while the actual attack
was delivered upon the 15th, so that the garrison was not prepared to make
that demonstration which might have prevented the besiegers from sending
important reinforcements to Botha, had he needed them. The sequel is more
serious. Losing all heart at his defeat, General Buller, although he had
been officially informed that White had provisions for seventy days, sent
a heliogram advising the surrender of the garrison. White's first reply,
which deserves to live with the anecdote of Nelson's telescope at his
blind eye, was to the effect that he believed the enemy had been tampering
with Buller's messages. To this Buller despatched an amended message,
which with Sir George White's reply, is here appended:
Message of December 16th, as altered by that of December 17th, 1899.
'I tried Colenso yesterday, but failed; the enemy is too strong for my
force except with siege operations, and these will take one full month to
prepare. Can you last so long?
'How many days can you hold out? I suggest you firing away as much
ammunition as you can, and making best terms you can. I can remain here if
you have alternative suggestion, but unaided I cannot break in. I find my
infantry cannot fight more than ten miles from camp, and then only if
water can be got, and it is scarce here. Whatever happens, recollect to
burn your cipher, decipher, and code books, and all deciphered messages.'
From Sir G. White to Sir R. Buller. December 16th, 1899.
'Yours of today received and understood. My suggestion is that you take
up strongest available position that will enable you to keep touch of the
enemy and harass him constantly with artillery fire, and in other ways as
much as possible. I can make food last for much longer than a month, and
will not think of making terms till I am forced to. You may have hit enemy
harder than you think. All our native spies report that your artillery
fire made considerable impression on enemy. Have your losses been very
heavy? If you lose touch of enemy, it will immensely increase his
opportunities of crushing me, and have worst effect elsewhere. While you
are in touch with him and in communication with me, he has both of our
forces to reckon with. Make every effort to get reinforcements as early as
possible, including India, and enlist every man in both colonies who will
serve and can ride. Things may look brighter. The loss of 12,000 men here
would be a heavy blow to England. We must not yet think of it. I fear I
could not cut my way to you. Enteric fever is increasing alarmingly here.
There are now 180 cases, all within last month. Answer fully. I am keeping
everything secret for the present till I know your plans.'
Much allowance is to be made for a man who is staggering under the
mental shock of defeat and the physical exertions which Buller had
endured. That the Government made such allowance is clear from the fact
that he was not instantly recalled. And yet the cold facts are that we
have a British General, at the head of 25,000 men, recommending another
General, at the head of 12,000 men only twelve miles off, to lay down his
arms to an army which was certainly very inferior in numbers to the total
British force; and this because he had once been defeated, although he
knew that there was still time for the whole resources of the Empire to be
poured into Natal in order to prevent so shocking a disaster. Such is a
plain statement of the advice which Buller gave and which White rejected.
For the instant the fate not only of South Africa but even, as I believe,
of the Empire hung upon the decision of the old soldier in Ladysmith, who
had to resist the proposals of his own General as sternly as the attacks
of the enemy. He who sorely needed help and encouragement became, as his
message shows, the helper and the encourager. It was a tremendous test,
and Sir George White came through it with a staunchness and a loyalty
which saved us not only from overwhelming present disaster, but from a
hideous memory which must have haunted British military annals for
centuries to come.