Cape Town: November 1, 1899.
The long-drawn voyage came to an end at last. On the afternoon of October
30 we sighted land, and looking westward I perceived what looked like a dark
wave of water breaking the smooth rim of the horizon. A short time developed
the wave into the rocks and slopes of Robben Island—a barren spot inhabited
by lepers, poisonous serpents, and dogs undergoing quarantine. Then with the
darkness we entered Table Bay, and, steaming slowly, reached the anchorage
at ten o'clock. Another hour of waiting followed until the tugboat obeyed
the signal; but at last she ran alongside, and there stepped on board a Man
Who Knew. Others with despatches pushed roughly through the crowd of
soldiers, officers, passengers, and war correspondents to the General's
cabin. We caught the Man Who Knew, however, and, setting him half way up the
ladder to the hurricane deck, required him forthwith to tell us of the war.
Doubtless you have been well informed of all, or at any rate of much, that
has passed. The man told his story quickly, with an odd quiver of excitement
in his voice, and the audience—perhaps we were 300—listened breathless. Then
for the first time we heard of Elandslaagte, of Glencoe, of Rietfontein, a
tale of stubborn, well-fought fights with honour for both sides, triumph for
neither. 'Tell us about the losses—who are killed and wounded?' we asked
this wonderful man. I think he was a passage agent or something like that.
So he told us—and among the group of officers gathered above him on the
hurricane deck I saw now one, now another, turn away, and hurry out of the
throng. A gentleman I had met on the voyage—Captain Weldonasked questions.
'Do you know any names of killed in the Leicesters?' The man reflected. He
could not be sure: he thought there was an officer named Weldon killed—oh,
yes! he remembered there were two Weldons—one killed, one wounded, but he
did not know which was in the Leicesters. 'Tell us about Mafeking,' said
someone else. Then we heard about Mafeking—the armoured trains, the
bombardment, the sorties, the dynamite wagons—all, in fact, that is yet
known of what may become an historic defence. 'And how many Boers are
killed?' cried a private soldier from the back. The man hesitated, but the
desire to please was strong within him. 'More than two thousand,' he said,
and a fierce shout of joy answered him. The crowd of brown uniforms under
the electric clusters broke up into loud-voiced groups; some hastened to
search for newspapers, some to repeat what they had heard to others; only a
few leaned against the bulwarks and looked long and silently towards the
land, where the lights of Cape Town, its streets, its quays, and its houses
gleamed from the night like diamonds on black velvet.
It is along casualty list of officers—of the best officers in the world.
The brave and accomplished General of Glencoe; Colonel Chisholme, who
brought the 9th Lancers out of action in Afghanistan; Sherston, who managed
the Indian Polo Association; Haldane, Sir William Lockhart's brilliant
aide-de-camp; Barnes, adjutant of the 4th Hussars, who played back of our
team and went with me to Cuba; Brooke, who had tempted fortune more often
than anyone else in the last four years—Chitral, Matabeleland, Samana, Tira,
Atbara, and Omdurman—and fifty others who are only names to me, but are dear
and precious to many, all lying under the stony soil or filling the
hospitals at Pietermaritzburg and Durban. Two thousand Boers killed! I wish
I could believe there were.
Next morning Sir Redvers Buller landed in state. Sir F. Forestier-Walker
and his staff came to meet him. The ship was decked out in bunting from end
to end. A guard of honour of the Duke of Edinburgh's Volunteers lined the
quay; a mounted escort attended the carriage; an enormous crowd gathered
outside the docks. At nine o'clock precisely the General stepped on to the
gangway. The crew and stokers of the 'Dunottar Castle' gave three hearty
cheers; the cinematograph buzzed loudly; forty cameras clicked; the guard
presented arms, and the harbour batteries thundered the salute. Then the
carriage drove briskly off into the town through streets bright with waving
flags and black with cheering people. So Sir Redvers Buller came back again
to South Africa, the land where his first military reputation was made,
where he won his Victoria Cross, the land which—let us pray—he will leave
having successfully discharged the heavy task confided to him by the
Imperial Government.
Now, what is the situation which confronts the General and the army? I
will adventure an explanation, though the picture of war moves very swiftly.
In their dealing with the military republics which had become so formidable
a power throughout the Cape, the Ministers who were responsible for the
security of our South African possessions were compelled to reckon with two
volumes of public opinion—British and colonial. The colonial opinion was at
its best (from our point of view) about three months ago. But the British
opinion was still unformed. The delays and diplomatic disputes which have
gradually roused the nation to a sense of its responsibilities and perils,
and which were absolutely necessary if we were to embark on the struggle
united, have had an opposite effect out here. The attempts to satisfy the
conscientious public by giving the republics every possible opportunity to
accept our terms and the delays in the despatch of troops which were an
expensive tribute to the argument 'Do not seek peace with a sword,' have
been misinterpreted in South Africa. The situation in the Cape Colony has
become much graver. We have always been told of the wonderful loyalty of the
Dutch. It is possible that had war broken out three months ago that loyalty
would have been demonstrated for all time. War after three months of
hesitation—for such it was considered—has proved too severe a test, and it
is no exaggeration to say that a considerable part of the Colony trembles on
the verge of rebellion. On such a state of public opinion the effect of any
important military reverse would be lamentable.
Nor is the military position such as to exclude anxiety. The swift flame
of war ran in a few days around the whole circle of the republican
frontiers. Far away to the north there was a skirmish at Tuli. On the west
Khama's territories are threatened with invasion. Mafeking is surrounded,
isolated, and manfully defending itself against continual attack. Vryburg
has been treacherously surrendered by its rebel inhabitants to the enemy.
Kimberley offers a serene front to a hesitating attack, and even retaliates
with armoured trains and other enterprises. The southern frontier is armed,
and menaced, and the expectation of collision is strong. But it is on the
eastern side that the Boers have concentrated their greatest energies. They
have gone Nap on Natal. The configuration of the country favours an invader.
The reader has scarcely to look at the map, with which he is already
familiar, to realise how strategically powerful the Boer position was and
is. The long tongue of plain running up into the mountains could be entered
from both sides. The communications of the advanced garrisons would be
assailed: their retreat imperilled. The Boers seemed bound to clear northern
Natal of the troops. If, on the other hand, they were, or should now be,
suddenly driven back on their own country, they have only to retire up the
tongue of plain, with their exposed front narrowing every mile between the
mountains, and await their pursuers on the almost inexpugnable position of
Laing's Nek. Appreciating all this, their leaders have wisely resolved to
put forth their main strength against the force in Natal, and by crushing it
to rouse their sympathisers within the Cape Colony. Should they succeed
either on this front or on any other to a serious extent, though the
disaffection would not take a very violent form, for all the bravoes have
already joined the enemy, the general insecurity would demand the employment
of an army corps in addition to that already on the seas.
A democratic Government cannot go to war unless the country is behind it,
and until it has general support must not place itself in a position whence,
without fighting, there is no retreat. The difficulty of rallying public
opinion in the face of the efforts of Mr. Morley, Mr. Courtney, Sir William
Harcourt, and others have caused a most dangerous delay in the despatch of
reinforcements. War has been aggravated by the Peace Party; and thus these
humanitarian gentlemen are personally—for they occupy no official
position—responsible for the great loss of life. They will find their
several consolations: Mr. Morley will rejoice that he has faithfully pursued
Mr. Gladstone's policy in South Africa; Mr. Courtney that he has been
consistent at all costs; Sir William Harcourt that he has hampered the
Government. But for those who lose their sons and brothers in a quarrel thus
unnecessarily extended, there will only remain vain regrets, and to the
eyewitness only a bitter anger.
For the last three months the Imperial Government has been in the
unpleasant position of watching its adversaries grow continually stronger
without being able to make adequate counter-preparations.
But when once this initial disability has been stated, it must also be
admitted that the course of the military operations has been—apart from
their success or failure—very lucky. The Boers had the advantage of drawing
first blood, and the destruction of the armoured train near Mafeking was
magnified by them, as by the sensational Press in Great Britain, into a
serious disaster. A very bad effect was produced in the undecided
districts—it is perhaps wiser not to specify them at this moment. But a few
days later another armoured train ran out from Kimberley, and its Maxim guns
killed five Boers without any loss to the troops. The magnifying process was
also applied to this incident with equal though opposite results. Then came
the news of the battle of Glencoe. The first accounts, which were very
properly controlled—for we are at war with the pen as well as the sword—told
only of the bravery of the troops, of the storming of the Boer position, and
of the capture of prisoners. That the troops had suffered the heavier loss,
that the Boers had retired to further positions in rear of the first,
drawing their artillery with them, and that General Yule had retreated by
forced marches to Ladysmith after the victory—for tactical victory it
undoubtedly was—leaked into Cape Colony very gradually; nor was it until a
week later that it was known that the wounded had been left behind, and that
the camp with all stores and baggage, except ammunition, had fallen into the
enemy's hands. Before that happened the news of Elandslaagte had arrived,
and this brilliant action, which reflects no less credit on Generals French
and Hamilton who fought it than on Sir George White who ordered it, dazzled
all eyes, so that the sequel to Glencoe was unnoticed, or at any rate
produced little effect on public opinion.
The Natal Field Force is now concentrated at Ladysmith, and confronts in
daily opposition the bulk of the Boer Army. Though the numbers of the enemy
are superior and their courage claims the respect of their professional
antagonists, it is difficult to believe that any serious reverse can take
place in that quarter, and meanwhile many thousand soldiers are on the seas.
But the fact is now abundantly plain to those who are acquainted with the
local conditions and with the Boer character, that a fierce, certainly
bloody, possibly prolonged struggle lies before the army of South Africa.
The telegrams, however, which we receive from Great Britain of the national
feeling, of the bye-election, of Lord Rosebery's speech, are full of
encouragement and confidence. 'At last,' says the British colonist, as he
shoulders his rifle and marches out to fight, no less bravely than any
soldier (witness the casualty lists), for the ties which bind South Africa
to the Empire—'at last they have made up their minds at home.'