After the defeat of the Boers at the battle of Pieter's Hill there were two
things left for them to do. They could fall back across a great plain which
stretched from Pieter's Hill to Bulwana Mountain, and there make their last
stand against Buller and the Ladysmith relief column, or they could abandon
the siege of Ladysmith and slip away after having held Buller at bay for
three months.
Bulwana Mountain is shaped like a brick and blocks the valley in which
Ladysmith lies. The railroad track slips around one end of the brick, and
the Dundee trail around the other. It was on this mountain that the Boers
had placed their famous gun, Long Tom, with which they began the bombardment
of Ladysmith, and with which up to the day before Ladysmith was relieved
they had thrown three thousand shells into that miserable town.
If
the Boers on retreating from Pieter's Hill had fortified this mountain with
the purpose of holding off Buller for a still longer time, they would have
been under a fire from General White's artillery in the town behind them and
from Buller's naval guns in front. Their position would not have been
unlike that of Humpty Dumpty on the wall, so they wisely adopted the only
alternative and slipped away. This was on Tuesday night, while the British
were hurrying up artillery to hold the hills they had taken that afternoon.
By
ten o'clock the following morning from the top of Pieter's Hill you could
still see the Boers moving off along the Dundee road. It was an easy matter
to follow them, for the dust hung above the trail in a yellow cloud, like
mist over a swamp. There were two opinions as to whether they were halting
at Bulwana or passing it, on their way to Laing's Neck. If they were going
only to Bulwana there was the probability of two weeks' more fighting before
they could be dislodged. If they had avoided Bulwana, the way to Ladysmith
was open.
Lord Dundonald, who is in command of a brigade of irregular cavalry, was
scouting to the left of Bulwana, far in advance of our forces. At sunset he
arrived, without having encountered the Boers, at the base of Bulwana. He
could either return and report the disappearance of the enemy or he could
make a dash for it and enter Ladysmith. His orders were "to go, look, see,"
and avoid an action, and the fact that none of his brigade was in the
triumphant procession which took place three days later has led many to
think that in entering the besieged town without orders he offended the
commanding general. In any event, it is a family row and of no interest to
the outsider. The main fact is that he did make a dash for it, and just at
sunset found himself with two hundred men only a mile from the "Doomed
City." His force was composed of Natal Carbiniers and Imperial Light
Horse. He halted them, and in order that honors might be even, formed them
in sections with the half sections made up from each of the two
organizations. All the officers were placed in front, and with a cheer they
started to race across the plain.
The wig-waggers on Convent Hill had already seen them, and the townspeople
and the garrison were rushing through the streets to meet them, cheering and
shouting, and some of them weeping. Others, so officers tell me, who were
in the different camps, looked down upon the figures galloping across the
plain in the twilight, and continued making tea.
Just as they had reached the centre of the town, General Sir George White
and his staff rode down from head-quarters and met the men whose coming
meant for him life and peace and success. They were advancing at a walk,
with the cheering people hanging to their stirrups, clutching at their hands
and hanging to the bridles of their horses.
General White's first greeting was characteristically unselfish and loyal,
and typical of the British officer. He gave no sign of his own in
calculable relief, nor did he give to Caesar the things which were
Caesar's. He did not cheer Dundonald, nor Buller, nor the column which had
rescued him and his garrison from present starvation and probable
imprisonment at Pretoria. He raised his helmet and cried, "We will give
three cheers for the Queen!" And then the general and the healthy, ragged,
and sunburned troopers from the outside world, the starved, fever-ridden
garrison, and the starved, fever-ridden civilians stood with hats off and
sang their national anthem.
The column outside had been fighting steadily for six weeks to get Dundonald
or any one of its force into Ladysmith; for fourteen days it had been living
in the open, fighting by night as well as by day, without halt or respite;
the garrison inside had been for four months holding the enemy at bay with
the point of the bayonet; it was famished for food, it was rotten with
fever, and yet when the relief came and all turned out well, the first
thought of every one was for the Queen!
It
may be credulous in them or old-fashioned; but it is certainly very
unselfish, and when you take their point of view it is certainly very fine.
After the Queen every one else had his share of the cheering, and General
White could not complain of the heartiness with which they greeted him, he
tried to make a speech in reply, but it was a brief one. He spoke of how
much they owed to General Buller and his column, and he congratulated his
own soldiers on the defence they had made.
"I
am very sorry, men," he said, "that I had to cut down your rations. I--I
promise you I won't do it again."
Then he stopped very suddenly and whirled his horse's head around and rode
away. Judging from the number of times they told me of this, the fact that
they had all but seen an English general give way to his feelings seemed to
have impressed the civilian mind of Ladysmith more than the entrance of the
relief force. The men having come in and demonstrated that the way was
open, rode forth again, and the relief of Ladysmith had taken place. But it
is not the people cheering in the dark streets, nor General White breaking
down in his speech of welcome, which gives the note to the way the men of
Ladysmith received their freedom. It is rather the fact that as the two
hundred battle-stained and earth-stained troopers galloped forward, racing
to be the first, and rising in their stirrups to cheer, the men in the
hospital camps said, "Well, they're come at last, have they?" and continued
fussing over their fourth of a ration of tea. That gives the real picture
of how Ladysmith came into her inheritance, and of how she received her
rescuers.
On
the morning after Dundonald had ridden in and out of Ladysmith, two other
correspondents and myself started to relieve it on our own account. We did
not know the way to Ladysmith, and we did not then know whether or not the
Boers still occupied Bulwana Mountain. But we argued that the chances of
the Boers having raised the siege were so good that it was worth risking
their not having done so, and being taken prisoner.
We
carried all the tobacco we could pack in our saddle-bags, and enough food
for one day. My chief regret was that my government, with true republican
simplicity, had given me a passport, type- written on a modest sheet of
notepaper and wofully lacking in impressive seals and coats of arms. I
fancied it would look to Boer eyes like one I might have forged for myself
in the writing-room of the hotel at Cape Town.
We
had ridden up Pieter's Hill and scrambled down on its other side before we
learned that the night before Dundonald had raised the siege. We learned
this from long trains of artillery and regiments of infantry which already
were moving forward over the great plain which lies between Pieter's and
Bulwana. We learned it also from the silence of conscientious, dutiful
correspondents, who came galloping back as we galloped forward, and who made
wide detours at sight of us, or who, when we hailed them, lashed their
ponies over the red rocks and pretended not to hear, each unselfishly
turning his back on Ladysmith in the hope that he might be the first to send
word that the "Doomed City" was relieved. This would enable one paper to
say that it had the news "on the street" five minutes earlier than its hated
rivals. We found that the rivalry of our respective papers bored us. We
condemned it as being childish and weak. London, New York, Chicago were
names, they were spots thousands of leagues away: Ladysmith was just across
that mountain. If our horses held out at the pace, we would be--after
Dundonald--the first men in. We imagined that we would see hysterical women
and starving men. They would wring our hands, and say, "God bless you," and
we would halt our steaming horses in the market-place, and distribute the
news of the outside world, and tobacco. There would be shattered houses,
roofless homes, deep pits in the roadways where the shells had burst and
buried themselves. We would see the entombed miner at the moment of his
deliverance, we would be among the first from the outer world to break the
spell of his silence; the first to receive the brunt of the imprisoned
people's gratitude and rejoicings.
Indeed, it was clearly our duty to the papers that employed us that we
should not send them news, but that we should be the first to enter
Ladysmith. We were surely the best judges of what was best to do. How like
them to try to dictate to us from London and New York, when we were on the
spot! It was absurd. We shouted this to each other as we raced in and out
of the long confused column, lashing viciously with our whips. We stumbled
around pieces of artillery, slid in between dripping water-carts, dodged the
horns of weary oxen, scattered companies of straggling Tommies, and ducked
under protruding tent-poles on the baggage-wagons, and at last came out
together again in advance of the dusty column.
"Besides, we don't know where the press-censor is, do we?" No, of course we
had no idea where the press-censor was, and unless he said that Ladysmith
was relieved, the fact that twenty-five thousand other soldiers said so
counted for idle gossip. Our papers could not expect us to go riding over
mountains the day Ladysmith was relieved, hunting for a press-censor. "That
press-censor," gasped Hartland, "never--is--where he--ought to be." The
words were bumped out of him as he was shot up and down in the saddle. That
was it. It was the press-censor's fault. Our consciences were clear now.
If our papers worried themselves or us because they did not receive the
great news until every one else knew of it, it was all because of that
press- censor. We smiled again and spurred the horses forward. We abused
the press-censor roundly--we were extremely indignant with him. It was so
like him to lose himself the day Ladysmith was relieved. "Confound him," we
muttered, and grinned guiltily. We felt as we used to feel when we were
playing truant from school.
We
were nearing Pieter's Station now, and were half-way to Ladysmith. But the
van of the army was still about us. Was it possible that it stretched
already into the beleaguered city? Were we, after all, to be cheated of the
first and freshest impressions? The tall lancers turned at the sound of the
horses' hoofs and stared, infantry officers on foot smiled up at us sadly,
they were dirty and dusty and sweating, they carried rifles and cross belts
like the Tommies; and they knew that we outsiders who were not under orders
would see the chosen city before them. Some of them shouted to us, but we
only nodded and galloped on. We wanted to get rid of them all, but they
were interminable. When we thought we had shaken them off, and that we were
at last in advance, we would come upon a group of them resting on the same
ground their shells had torn up during the battle the day before.
We
passed Boer laagers marked by empty cans and broken saddles and black, cold
campfires. At Pieter's Station the blood was still fresh on the grass where
two hours before some of the South African Light Horse had been wounded.
The Boers were still on Bulwana then? Perhaps, after all, we had better
turn back and try to find that press-censor. But we rode on and saw
Pieter's Station, as we passed it, as an absurd relic of by- gone days when
bridges were intact and trains ran on schedule time. One door seen over the
shoulder as we galloped past read, "Station Master's Office--Private," and
in contempt of that stern injunction, which would make even the first-class
passenger hesitate, one of our shells had knocked away the half of the door
and made its privacy a mockery. We had only to follow the track now and we
would arrive in time--unless the Boers were still on Bulwana. We had shaken
off the army, and we were two miles in front of it, when six men came
galloping toward us in an unfamiliar uniform. They passed us far to the
right, regardless of the trail, and galloping through the high grass. We
pulled up when we saw them, for they had green facings to their gray
uniforms, and no one with Buller's column wore green facings.
We
gave a yell in chorus. "Are you from Ladysmith?" we shouted. The men,
before they answered, wheeled and cheered, and came toward us laughing
jubilant. "We're the first men out," cried the officer and we rode in among
them, shaking hands and offering our good wishes. "We're glad to see you,"
we said. "We're glad to see YOU," they said. It was not an original
greeting, but it seemed sufficient to all of us. "Are the Boers on
Bulwana?" we asked. "No, they've trekked up Dundee way. You can go right
in."
We
parted at the word and started to go right in. We found the culverts along
the railroad cut away and the bridges down, and that galloping ponies over
the roadbed of a railroad is a difficult feat at the best, even when the
road is in working order.
Some men, cleanly dressed and rather pale-looking, met us and said:
"Good-morning." "Are you from Ladysmith?" we called. "No, we're from the
neutral camp," they answered. We were the first men from outside they had
seen in four months, and that was the extent of their interest or
information. They had put on their best clothes, and were walking along the
track to Colenso to catch a train south to Durban or to Maritzburg, to any
place out of the neutral camp. They might have been somnambulists for all
they saw of us, or of the Boer trenches and the battle-field before them.
But we found them of greatest interest, especially their clean clothes. Our
column had not seen clean linen in six weeks, and the sight of these
civilians in white duck and straw hats, and carrying walking-sticks, coming
toward us over the railroad ties, made one think it was Sunday at home and
these were excursionists to the suburbs.
We
had been riding through a roofless tunnel, with the mountain and the great
dam on one side, and the high wall of the railway cutting on the other, but
now just ahead of us lay the open country, and the exit of the tunnel
barricaded by twisted rails and heaped-up ties and bags of earth. Bulwana
was behind us. For eight miles it had shut out the sight of our goal, but
now, directly in front of us, was spread a great city of dirty tents and
grass huts and Red Cross flags--the neutral camp--and beyond that, four
miles away, shimmering and twinkling sleepily in the sun, the white walls
and zinc roofs of Ladysmith.
We
gave a gasp of recognition and galloped into and through the neutral camp.
Natives of India in great turbans, Indian women in gay shawls and
nose-rings, and black Kaffirs in discarded khaki looked up at us dully from
the earth floors of their huts, and when we shouted "Which way?" and "Where
is the bridge?" only stared, or pointed vaguely, still staring.
After all, we thought, they are poor creatures, incapable of emotion.
Perhaps they do not know how glad we are that they have been rescued. They
do not understand that we want to shake hands with everybody and offer our
congratulations. Wait until we meet our own people, we said, they will
understand! It was such a pleasant prospect that we whipped the unhappy
ponies into greater bursts of speed, not because they needed it, but because
we were too excited and impatient to sit motionless.
In
our haste we lost our way among innumerable little trees; we disagreed as to
which one of the many cross-trails led home to the bridge. We slipped out
of our stirrups to drag the ponies over one steep place, and to haul them up
another, and at last the right road lay before us, and a hundred yards ahead
a short iron bridge and a Gordon Highlander waited to welcome us, to receive
our first greetings and an assorted collection of cigarettes. Hartland was
riding a thoroughbred polo pony and passed the gallant defender of Ladysmith
without a kind look or word, but Blackwood and I galloped up more
decorously, smiling at him with good-will. The soldier, who had not seen a
friend from the outside world in four months, leaped in front of us and
presented a heavy gun and a burnished bayonet.
"Halt, there," he cried. "Where's your pass?" Of course it showed
excellent discipline--we admired it immensely. We even overlooked the fact
that he should think Boer spies would enter the town by way of the main
bridge and at a gallop. We liked his vigilance, we admired his discipline,
but in spite of that his reception chilled us. We had brought several
things with us that we thought they might possibly want in Ladysmith, but we
had entirely forgotten to bring a pass. Indeed I do not believe one of the
twenty-five thousand men who had been fighting for six weeks to relieve
Ladysmith had supplied himself with one. The night before, when the
Ladysmith sentries had tried to halt Dundonald's troopers in the same way,
and demanded a pass from them, there was not one in the squadron.
We
crossed the bridge soberly and entered Ladysmith at a walk. Even the ponies
looked disconcerted and crestfallen. After the high grass and the mountains
of red rock, where there was not even a tent to remind one of a roof-tree,
the stone cottages and shop-windows and chapels and well-ordered hedges of
the main street of Ladysmith made it seem a wealthy and attractive suburb.
When we entered, a Sabbath- like calm hung upon the town; officers in the
smartest khaki and glistening Stowassers observed us askance, little girls
in white pinafores passed us with eyes cast down, a man on a bicycle looked
up, and then, in terror lest we might speak to him, glued his eyes to the
wheel and "scorched" rapidly. We trotted forward and halted at each street
crossing, looking to the right and left in the hope that some one might nod
to us. From the opposite end of the town General Buller and his staff came
toward us slowly--the house-tops did not seem to sway--it was not "roses,
roses all the way." The German army marching into Paris received as hearty
a welcome. "Why didn't you people cheer General Buller when he came in?" we
asked later. "Oh, was that General Buller?" they inquired. "We didn't
recognize him." "But you knew he was a general officer, you knew he was the
first of the relieving column?" "Ye-es, but we didn't know who he was."
I
decided that the bare fact of the relief of Ladysmith was all I would be
able to wire to my neglected paper, and with remorses started to find the
Ladysmith censor. Two officers, with whom I ventured to break the hush that
hung upon the town by asking my way, said they were going in the direction
of the censor. We rode for some distance in guarded silence. Finally, one
of them, with an inward struggle, brought himself to ask, "Are you from the
outside?"
I
was forced to admit that I was. I felt that I had taken an unwarrantable
liberty in intruding on a besieged garrison. I wanted to say that I had
lost my way and had ridden into the town by mistake, and that I begged to be
allowed to withdraw with apologies. The other officer woke up suddenly and
handed me a printed list of the prices which had been paid during the siege
for food and tobacco. He seemed to offer it as being in some way an official
apology for his starved appearance. The price of cigars struck me as
especially pathetic, and I commented on it. The first officer gazed
mournfully at the blazing sunshine before him. "I have not smoked a cigar
in two months," he said. My surging sympathy, and my terror at again
offending the haughty garrison, combated so fiercely that it was only with a
great effort that I produced a handful. "Will you have these?" The other
officer started in his saddle so violently that I thought his horse had
stumbled, but he also kept his eyes straight in front. "Thank you, I will
take one if I may--just one," said the first officer. "Are you sure I am
not robbing you?" They each took one, but they refused to put the rest of
the cigars in their pockets. As the printed list stated that a dozen matches
sold for $1.75, I handed them a box of matches. Then a beautiful thing
happened. They lit the cigars and at the first taste of the smoke--and they
were not good cigars--an almost human expression of peace and good-will and
utter abandonment to joy spread over their yellow skins and cracked lips and
fever-lit eyes. The first man dropped his reins and put his hands on his
hips and threw back his head and shoulders and closed his eyelids. I felt
that I had intruded at a moment which should have been left sacred. {5}
Another boy officer in stainless khaki and beautifully turned out, polished
and burnished and varnished, but with the same yellow skin and sharpened
cheek-bones and protruding teeth, a skeleton on horse- back, rode slowly
toward us down the hill. As he reached us he glanced up and then swayed in
his saddle, gazing at my companions fearfully. "Good God," he cried. His
brother officers seemed to understand, but made no answer, except to jerk
their heads toward me. They were too occupied to speak. I handed the
skeleton a cigar, and he took it in great embarrassment, laughing and
stammering and blushing. Then I began to understand; I began to appreciate
the heroic self-sacrifice of the first two, who, when they had been given
the chance, had refused to fill their pockets. I knew then that it was an
effort worthy of the V. C.
The censor was at his post, and a few minutes later a signal officer on
Convent Hill heliographed my cable to Bulwana, where, six hours after the
Boers had abandoned it, Buller's own helios had begun to dance, and they
speeded the cable on its long journey to the newspaper office on the Thames
Embankment.
When one descended to the streets again--there are only two streets which
run the full length of the town--and looked for signs of the siege, one
found them not in the shattered houses, of which there seemed surprisingly
few, but in the starved and fever-shaken look of the people.
The cloak of indifference which every Englishman wears, and his instinctive
dislike to make much of his feelings, and, in this case, his pluck, at first
concealed from us how terribly those who had been inside of Ladysmith had
suffered, and how near to the breaking point they were. Their faces were
the real index to what they had passed through.
Any one who had seen our men at Montauk Point or in the fever camp at
Siboney needed no hospital list to tell him of the pitiful condition of the
garrison. The skin on their faces was yellow, and drawn sharply over the
brow and cheekbones; their teeth protruded, and they shambled along like old
men, their voices ranging from a feeble pipe to a deep whisper. In this
pitiable condition they had been forced to keep night-watch on the
hill-crests, in the rain, to lie in the trenches, and to work on
fortifications and bomb-proofs. And they were expected to do all of these
things on what strength they could get from horse-meat, biscuits of the
toughness and composition of those that are fed to dogs, and on "mealies,"
which is what we call corn.
That first day in Ladysmith gave us a faint experience as to what the siege
meant. The correspondents had disposed of all their tobacco, and within an
hour saw starvation staring them in the face, and raced through the town to
rob fellow-correspondents who had just arrived. The new-comers in their turn
had soon distributed all they owned, and came tearing back to beg one of
their own cigarettes. We tried to buy grass for our ponies, and were met
with pitying contempt; we tried to buy food for ourselves, and were met with
open scorn. I went to the only hotel which was open in the place, and
offered large sums for a cup of tea.
"Put up your money," said the Scotchman in charge, sharply. "What's the
good of your money? Can your horse eat money? Can you eat money? Very
well, then, put it away."
The great dramatic moment after the raising of the siege was the entrance
into Ladysmith of the relieving column. It was a magnificent, manly, and
moving spectacle. You must imagine the dry, burning heat, the fine, yellow
dust, the white glare of the sunshine, and in the heat and glare and dust
the great interminable column of men in ragged khaki crowding down the main
street, twenty-two thousand strong, cheering and shouting, with the sweat
running off their red faces and cutting little rivulets in the dust that
caked their cheeks. Some of them were so glad that, though in the heaviest
marching order, they leaped up and down and stepped out of line to dance to
the music of the bagpipes. For hours they crowded past, laughing, joking,
and cheering, or staring ahead of them, with lips wide apart, panting in the
heat and choking with the dust, but always ready to turn again and wave
their helmets at Sir George White.
It
was a pitiful contrast which the two forces presented. The men of the
garrison were in clean khaki, pipe-clayed and brushed and polished, but
their tunics hung on them as loosely as the flag around its pole, the skin
on their cheek-bones was as tight and as yellow as the belly of a drum,
their teeth protruded through parched, cracked lips, and hunger, fever, and
suffering stared from out their eyes. They were so ill and so feeble that
the mere exercise of standing was too severe for their endurance, and many
of them collapsed, falling back to the sidewalk, rising to salute only the
first troop of each succeeding regiment. This done, they would again sink
back and each would sit leaning his head against his musket, or with his
forehead resting heavily on his folded arms. In comparison the relieving
column looked like giants as they came in with a swinging swagger, their
uniforms blackened with mud and sweat and bloodstains, their faces
brilliantly crimsoned and blistered and tanned by the dust and sun. They
made a picture of strength and health and aggressiveness. Perhaps the
contrast was strongest when the battalion of the Devons that had been on
foreign service passed the "reserve" battalion which had come from England.
The men of the two battalions had parted five years before in India, and
they met again in Ladysmith, with the men of one battalion lining the
streets, sick, hungry, and yellow, and the others, who had been fighting six
weeks to reach it, marching toward them, robust, red-faced, and cheering
mightily. As they met they gave a shout of recognition, and the men broke
ranks and ran forward, calling each other by name, embracing, shaking hands,
and punching each other in the back and shoulders. It was a sight that very
few men watched unmoved. Indeed, the whole three hours was one of the most
brutal assaults upon the feelings that it has been my lot to endure. One
felt he had been entirely lifted out of the politics of the war, and the
question of the wrongs of the Boers disappeared before a simple propostiton
of brave men saluting brave men.
Early in the campaign, when his officers had blundered, General White had
dared to write: "I alone am to blame." But in this triumphal procession
twenty-two thousand gentlemen in khaki wiped that line off the slate, and
wrote, "Well done, sir," in its place, as they passed before him through the
town he had defended and saved.