|


| |
Chapter 1 - IN EARLIER DAYS
When, before resorting to extreme measures to obtain what the Uitlanders
deemed to be their bare rights, the final appeal or declaration was made on
Boxing Day, 1895, in the form of the manifesto published by the Chairman of
the National Union, President Kruger, after an attentive consideration of
the document as translated to him, remarked grimly: 'Their rights. Yes,
they'll get them—over my dead body!' And volumes of explanation could not
better illustrate the Boer attitude and policy towards the English-speaking
immigrants.
'L'État c'est moi' is almost as true of the old Dopper President as it
was of its originator; for in matters of external policy and in matters
which concern the Boer as a party the President has his way as surely and as
completely as any anointed autocrat. To anyone who has studied the Boers and
their ways and policy—who has given more than passing consideration to the
incidents and negotiations of the present year{01}—it must be clear that
President Kruger does something more than represent the opinion of the
people and execute their policy: he moulds them in the form he wills. By the
force of his own strong convictions and prejudices, and of his indomitable
will, he has made the Boers a people whom he regards as the germ of the
Africander nation; a people chastened, selected, welded, and strong enough
to attract and assimilate all their kindred in South Africa, and then to
realize the dream of a Dutch Republic from the Zambesi to Capetown.
In the history of South Africa the figure of the grim
old President will loom large and striking—picturesque, as the figure of one
who by his character and will made and held his people; magnificent, as one
who in the face of the blackest fortune never wavered from his aim or
faltered in his effort; who, with a courage that seemed, and still seems,
fatuous, but which may well be called heroic, stood up against the might of
the greatest empire in the world. And, it may be, pathetic, too, as one
whose limitations were great, one whose training and associations—whose very
successes—had narrowed, and embittered and hardened him; as one who, when
the greatness of success was his to take and to hold, turned his back on the
supreme opportunity, and used his strength and qualities to fight against
the spirit of progress, and all that the enlightenment of the age pronounces
to be fitting and necessary to good government and a healthy State.
To an English nobleman, who, in the course of an interview, remarked, 'My
father was a Minister of England, and twice Viceroy of Ireland,' the old
Dutchman answered, 'And my father was a shepherd!' It was not pride rebuking
pride; it was the ever-present fact which would not have been worth
mentioning but for the suggestion of the antithesis. He too was a shepherd,
and is—a peasant. It may be that he knows what would be right and good for
his people, and it may be not; but it is sure that he realizes that to
educate would be to emancipate, to broaden their views would be to break
down the defences of their prejudices, to let in the new leaven would be to
spoil the old bread, to give unto all men the rights of men would be to
swamp for ever the party which is to him greater than the State. When one
thinks on the one-century history of the people, much is seen that accounts
for their extraordinary love of isolation, and their ingrained and
passionate aversion to control; much too that draws to them a world of
sympathy. And when one realizes the old Dopper President hemmed in once more
by the hurrying tide of civilization, from which his people have fled for
generations—trying to fight both fate and Nature—standing up to stem a tide
as resistless as the eternal sea—one sees the pathos of the picture. But
this is as another generation may see it.
To-day we are too close—so close that the meaner details, the
blots and flaws, are all most plainly visible; the
corruption, the insincerity, the injustice, the barbarity—all the unlovely
touches that will by-and-by be forgotten—sponged away by the gentle hand of
time, when only the picturesque will remain.
In order to understand the deep, ineradicable aversion to English rule
which is in the heart and the blood and the bones of every Boer, and of a
great many of their kindred who are themselves British subjects, one must
recall the conditions under which the Dutch came under British rule. When,
in 1814, the Cape was finally ceded to England, it had been twice acquired
and held by conquest. The colonists were practically all Dutch, or Huguenots
who had adopted Dutch as their language, and South Africa as their home. In
any case they were people who, by tradition, teaching and experience, must
have regarded the English as their enemies; people in whom there must have
been roused bitter resentment against being handed over with the land to
their traditional enemies. Were they serfs or subjects? has been asked on
their behalf. Had Holland the right, the power, over freemen born, to say to
them, 'You are our subjects, on our soil, and we have transferred the soil
and with it your allegiance to England, whose sovereignty you will not be
free to repudiate.' The Dutch colonist said 'No.' The English Government and
the laws of the day said 'Yes.'
Early in the century the Boers began to trek away from the sphere of
British rule. They were trekkers before that, indeed. Even in the days of
Van Riebeck (1650) they had trekked away from the crowded parts, and opened
up with the rifle and the plough new reaches of country; pioneering in a
rough but most effective way, driving back the savage races, and clearing
the way for civilization. There is, however, a great difference to be noted
between the early treks of the emigrants and the treks 'from British rule.'
In the former (with few exceptions) they went, knowing that their Government
would follow them, and even anxious to have its support and its
representatives; and the people who formed their migrating parties were
those who had no or insufficient land in the settled parts, those who were
starting life on their own account, or those whose families could not be
located and provided for in the cramped circumstances of
the more occupied parts. In the other case, rich and poor, old and young,
went off as in the days and in the fashion of Moses or Abraham. They went
without leave or help of the Government; secretly or openly they went, and
they asked nothing but to be left alone. They left their homes, their
people, the protection of an established Government and a rough
civilization, and went out into the unknown. And they had, as it appeared to
them, and as it will appear to many others, good reasons for taking so grave
a step. For, although the colonists of South Africa enjoyed better
government, and infinitely more liberty, under British rule, than they had
under the tyrannical régime of the Dutch East India Company twenty
years before (against which the Boers had twice risen in rebellion) there
were many things which were not as they should have been. A generation had
grown up which knew nothing of the arbitrary and oppressive rule of the old
Dutch Company. Simple folks have long memories, and all the world over
injuries make a deeper and more lasting impression than benefits; and the
older generation of Boers, which could recall a condition of things
contrasting unpleasantly with British rule, also remembered the executions
of Slagters Nek—a vindication of the law which, when all allowance has been
made for disturbed times, and the need of strong measures to stop rebellion
in a newly-acquired country, seems to us to-day to have been harsh,
unnecessary, and unwise in policy, and truly terrible in the manner of
fulfilment.
The Boers have produced from their own ranks no literary champion to
plead or defend their cause, and their earlier history is therefore little
known, and often misunderstood; but to their aid has come Mr. George McCall
Theal, the South African historian, whose years of laborious research have
rescued for South Africa much that would otherwise have been lost. In his
'History of the Boers' Mr. Theal records the causes of the great emigration,
and shows how the Boers stood up for fair treatment, and fought the cause,
not of Boers alone, but of all colonists. Boers and British were alike
harshly and ignorantly treated by high-handed Governors, and an ill-informed
and prejudiced Colonial Office, who made no distinction
on the grounds of nationality between the two; for we read that Englishmen
had been expelled the country, thrown in gaol, had their property
confiscated, and their newspapers suppressed for asserting their
independence, and for trifling breaches of harsh laws. The following extract
gives the best possible synopsis of the causes, and should whet an appetite
which can be gratified by the purchase of Mr. Theal's book:
Why, then, did these men abandon their homes, sacrifice
whatever property could not be carried away, and flee from English rule
as from the most hateful tyranny? The causes are stated in a great mass
of correspondence addressed by them to the Colonial Government, and now
preserved, with other colonial records, in declarations published by
some of them before leaving, in letters to their relatives and to
newspapers, and in hundreds of pages of printed matter, prepared by
friendly and hostile hands. The declaration of one of the ablest men
among them assigns the following as the motives of himself and the party
that went with him:
'GRAHAM'S TOWN,
'January 22, 1837
'1. We despair of saving the colony from those evils
which threaten it by the turbulent and dishonest conduct of vagrants who
are allowed to infest the country in every part; nor do we see any
prospect of peace or happiness for our children in a country thus
distracted by internal commotions.
'2. We complain of the severe losses which we have
been forced to sustain by the emancipation of our slaves, and the
vexatious laws which have been enacted respecting them.
'3. We complain of the continual system of plunder
which we have for years endured from the Kaffirs and other coloured
classes, and particularly by the last invasion of the colony, which has
desolated the frontier districts, and ruined most of the inhabitants.
'4. We complain of the unjustifiable odium which has
been cast upon us by interested and dishonest persons, under the name of
religion, whose testimony is believed in England, to the exclusion of
all evidence in our favour; and we can foresee, as the result of this
prejudice, nothing but the total ruin of the country.
'5. We are resolved, wherever we go, that we will
uphold the just principles of liberty; but, whilst we will take care
that no one is brought by us into a condition of slavery, we will
establish such regulations as may suppress crime, and preserve proper
relations between master and servant.
'6. We solemnly declare that we leave this colony with
a desire to enjoy a quieter life than we have hitherto had. We will not
molest any people, nor deprive them of the smallest property; but, if
attacked, we shall consider ourselves fully justified in defending our
persons and effects, to the utmost of our ability, against every enemy.
'7. We make known that when we shall have framed a
code of laws for our guidance, copies shall be forwarded to this colony
for general information; but we take the opportunity of stating that it
is our firm resolve to make
provision for the summary punishment, even with death, of all traitors,
without exception, who may be found amongst us.
'8. We purpose, in the course of our journey, and on
arrival at the country in which we shall permanently reside, to make
known to the native tribes our intentions, and our desire to live in
peace and friendly intercourse with them.
'9. We quit this colony under the full assurance that
the English Government has nothing more to require of us, and will allow
us to govern ourselves without its interference in future.
'10. We are now leaving the fruitful land of our
birth, in which we have suffered enormous losses and continual vexation,
and are about to enter a strange and dangerous territory; but we go with
a firm reliance on an all-seeing, just, and merciful God, whom we shall
always fear, and humbly endeavour to obey.
'In the name of all who leave the colony with me,
'P. RETIEF.'
But formal declarations such as the above are not in
all instances to be trusted. It is much safer to compare numerous
documents written at different times, by different persons, and under
different circumstances. For our subject this means of information is as
complete as can be desired. The correspondence of the emigrants with the
Cape Government was the work of many individuals, and extended over many
years. The letters are usually of great length, badly constructed, and
badly spelt—the productions, in short, of uneducated men; but so uniform
is the vein of thought running through them all, that there is not the
slightest difficulty in condensing them into a dozen pages. When
analyzed, the statements contained in them are found to consist of two
charges, one against the Imperial Government, the other against the
agents in South Africa of the London Missionary Society.
The Imperial Government was charged with exposing the
white inhabitants of the colony, without protection, to robbery and
murder by the blacks; with giving credence in every dispute to
statements made by interested persons in favour of savages, while
refusing to credit the testimony, no matter how reliable, of colonists
of European extraction; with liberating the slaves in an unjust manner;
and generally with such undue partiality for persons with black skins
and savage habits, as to make it preferable to seek a new home in the
wilderness than remain under the English flag.
The missionaries of the London Society were charged
with usurping authority that should properly belong to the civil
magistrate; with misrepresenting facts; and with advocating schemes
directly hostile to the progress of civilization, and to the observance
of order. And it was asserted that the influence of these missionaries
was all powerful at the Colonial Office in London, by which the colony,
without a voice in the management of its affairs, was then ruled
absolutely.
In support of the charges against the Imperial
Government, the emigrants dwelt largely upon the devastation of the
eastern districts by the Kaffirs' inroad of December, 1834, which was
certainly unprovoked by the colonists. Yet Lord Glenelg, who was then
Secretary of State for the Colonies, justified the Kaffirs, and not only
refused to punish them, but actually gave them a large slip of land,
including the dense jungles along the Fish River, that had long been
part of the colony; and made no other provision against the recurrence
of a destructive invasion than a series of treaties with a number of
barbarous chiefs, who had no regard for their engagements. This event is
the most prominent feature in
the correspondence of the emigrants; it is fairly recorded, and the
language used is in general much more moderate than that employed by the
English frontier colonists when relating the same circumstance.
Next stands the removal of all restraint from the
coloured population of the colony, without the protection to the whites
of even a Vagrant Act. Several of the colonial divisions had been for
ten or twelve years overrun by fugitives from the Basuto and Betshuana
countries, who had been driven from their own homes by the troubles
already recorded. These people were usually termed Mantatees or
Makatees, from the supposition that they were all subjects of Ma
Ntatisi. Towards the eastern frontiers Kaffirs, and after the war
Fingos, wandered about practically wherever they chose. In the remainder
of the colony Hottentots, free blacks, and mixed breeds came and went as
they pleased. How is it possible, said the farmers, for us to cultivate
the ground, or breed cattle, with all these savages and semi-savages
constantly watching for opportunities to plunder us—with no police, and
no law under which suspicious characters can be arrested and made to
account for their manner of living?
Much is said of the reproofs of Sir Benjamin D'Urban
by the Secretary of State, and, after 1838, of the dismissal of that
Governor, (1) The emigrants asserted that he was the best Governor the
colony had had since it became subject to England; they dwelt upon his
benevolence, his ability, his strict justice, his impartiality to white
and black, his efforts to promote civilization; and then they
complained, in words more bitter than are to be found when they referred
to any other subject, that the good Governor had been reproved, and
finally deprived of his office, because he had told the plain truth,
regardless of the London Missionary Society; and had endeavoured to mete
out to black criminals the same justice that he would have meted out had
they been white. There is now no one in South Africa who does not agree
with the emigrants in this matter. Nearly half a century has passed away
since Sir Benjamin D'Urban was forced into retirement by Lord Glenelg;
and during that period the principal measures which he proposed have
been approved of and adopted, while the successors of those missionaries
who were his bitter opponents are at present among the strongest
advocates of his system of dealing with the natives.
Sir Benjamin D'Urban remained in South Africa, after
being deprived of office, until the reversal of his policy towards the
natives was admitted by most people even in England to have been a
mistake. He did not leave the Cape until April, 1846, just after the
commencement of the War of the Axe.
Concerning the liberation of the slaves, there is less
in this correspondence than one might reasonably expect to find. Many
scores of pages can be examined without any allusion whatever to it.
Nowhere is there a single word to be found in favour of slavery as an
institution; the view of the emigrants, with hardly an exception, being
fairly represented in the following sentence, taken from a letter of the
Volksraad at Natal to Sir George Napier: 'A long and sad experience has
sufficiently convinced us of the injury, loss, and dearness of slave
labour, so that neither slavery nor the slave trade will ever be
permitted among us.'
[The allusions to the emancipation of slaves, and to slavery as an
institution, will be considered by many to need some
modification or explanation. The Dutch even to-day speak of the emancipation
as the real cause of the great exodus; and the system of indenture, and the
treatment of natives generally by the Boers, cannot fairly be regarded as
warranting the view expressed by Mr. Theal in connection with this letter to
Sir George Napier.]
It is alleged, however, that the emancipation, as it was
carried out, was an act of confiscation. It is stated that most of the
slaves were brought to the colony in English ships, and sold by English
subjects; that when, in 1795, the colony was invited by English officers
of high rank to place itself under the protection of England, one of the
inducements held out was security in slave property; at the same time
those officers warning the colonists that if France obtained possession
she would liberate the slaves, as she had done in Martinique, thereby
ruining this colony as she had ruined that island; that the English
Government had recently and suddenly changed its policy, and required
them to conform to the change with equal alacrity, whereas they were
convinced that gradual emancipation, with securities against vagrancy,
was the only safe course. The emancipation had been sudden, and the
slaves had been placed upon a perfect political equality with their
former proprietors. The missionaries applauded this as a noble and
generous act of the Imperial Government, and they were told that by
everyone in England it was so regarded. But at whose expense was this
noble and generous act carried out? Agents of the Imperial Government
had appraised the slaves, generally at less than their market value.
Two-fifths of this appraisement, being the share apportioned to the Cape
out of the twenty million pounds sterling voted by the Imperial
Parliament, had then been offered to the proprietors as compensation, if
they chose to go to London for it, otherwise they could only dispose of
their claims at a heavy discount. Thus, in point of fact, only about
one-third of the appraised amount had been received. To all
slave-holders this had meant a great reduction of wealth, while to many
of those who were in debt it was equivalent to the utter deprivation of
all property.
As regards the missionaries, a crusade was organized by some of these
worthies, who had themselves married Kaffir women, and who spared no effort
and showed no scruple in blackening the name of colonist.
The views and interests of the colonists and of these men
were so different that concord was hardly possible. The missionaries
desired that the blacks should be collected together in villages: the
colonists were unwilling that they should be thus withdrawn from
service. 'Teach them the first step in civilization, to labour honestly
for their maintenance, and add to that oral instruction in the doctrines
of Christianity,' said the colonists. 'Why should they be debarred from
learning to read and write? And as there can only be schools if they are
brought together in villages, why should they not be collected
together?' replied the missionaries.
Then came another and a larger question. By whom should
the waste places of the land, the vast areas which were without other
occupants than a few roving Bushmen, be peopled? 'By the white man,'
said the colonists; 'it is to the advantage of the world in all time to
come that the higher race should expand and be dominant here; it would
be treason to humanity to prevent its growth where it can grow without
wrong to others, or to plant an inferior stock where the superior can
take root and flourish.' 'By Africans,' said the missionaries; 'this is
African soil; and if mission stations are established on its desolate
tracts, people will be drawn to them from the far interior, the
community will grow rapidly, those enlightened by Christianity here will
desire in their turn to enlighten their friends beyond, and thus the
Gospel teaching will spread until all Africa stretches out its hands to
God.' Coupled with such arguments, which were constantly used by
missionaries in the early part of this century, before their enthusiasm
was cooled by experience, were calculations that appealed strongly to
the commercial instincts of people in England. A dozen colonial farmers
required something like a hundred square miles of land for their cattle
runs; on this same ground, under missionary supervision, three or four
hundred families of blacks could exist; these blacks would shortly need
large quantities of manufactured goods; and thus it would be to the
interest of trade to encourage them rather than the colonists.
'Already,' said they, 'after only a few years' training, many blacks can
read as well or better than the ordinary colonists, and are exhibiting a
decided taste for civilization.'
There was thus a broad line of demarcation between the
colonists and such of the missionaries as held these views, and the
tendency on each side was to make it still broader. It was deepened into
positive antipathy towards those missionaries who, following Dr.
Vanderkemp's example, united themselves in marriage with black women,
and proclaimed themselves the champions of the black population against
the white. Everyone acquainted with South African natives knows how
ready they are to please their friends by bringing forward charges
against anyone whom those friends dislike. Unfortunately the
missionaries Vanderkemp and Read were deceived into believing a great
number of charges of cruelty made against various colonists, which a
little observation would have shown in most instances to be groundless;
and thereupon they lodged accusations before the High Court of Justice.
In 1811 between seventy and eighty such cases came before the Circuit
Court for trial. There was hardly a family on the frontier of which some
relative was not brought as a criminal before the judges to answer to a
charge of murder or violent assault. Several months were occupied in the
trials, and more than a thousand witnesses were examined, but in every
instance the most serious charges were proved to be without foundation.
Only a few convictions, and those of no very outrageous crimes, resulted
from these prosecutions, which kept the entire colony in a ferment until
long after the circuit was closed.
Thus far everyone will approve of the sentiments of
one party or the other according to his sympathy, but in what follows no
unprejudiced person who will take the trouble to study the matter
thoroughly can acquit the anti-colonial missionaries of something more
faulty than mere error of judgment. For years their writings teemed with
charges against the colonists similar to those they had brought before
the High Court of Justice. These writings were circulated widely in
Europe, where the voice of the colonists was never heard, and they
created impressions there which
no refutation made in South Africa could ever counteract. The acts, the
language, even the written petitions of the colonists, were so distorted
in accounts sent home, that these accounts cannot now be read by those
who have made themselves acquainted with the truth, without the
liveliest feelings of indignation being excited.
The colonists learned that in England they were
regarded as cruel barbarians because they refused to permit Hottentot
herds, swarming with vermin, to be seated in their front rooms at the
time of family prayer. They found themselves pictured as the harshest of
taskmasters, as unfeeling violators of native rights. And of late years
it had become plain to them that the views of their opponents were being
acted upon at the Colonial Office, while their complaints were wholly
disregarded.
Several causes of dissatisfaction, besides those above
mentioned, contributed to the impulse of emigration, but all in a very
slight degree. Judge Cloete, in his 'Five Lectures,' mentions the severe
punishment inflicted upon the frontier insurgents of 1815 as one of
them; and there is no doubt that it was so with some families, though no
trace of it can be found in the correspondence of the emigrants. The
substitution in 1827 of the English for the Dutch language in the
colonial courts of law was certainly generally felt as a grievance. The
alteration in 1813 of the system of land tenure, the redemption in 1825
of the paper currency at only thirty-six hundredths of its nominal
value, and the abolition in 1827 of the courts of landdrost and
heemraden, unquestionably caused much dissatisfaction, though all of
these measures are now admitted by everyone to have been beneficial. The
long delay in issuing titles to farms, the cost of which has been paid
to Government years before, is mentioned as a grievance in some of the
declarations.
Two parties—men, women, and children—numbering ninety-eight in all,
pioneered the great trek; of these twenty-six survived fever and fighting,
loss of provisions, waggons, and cattle, and a long weary tramp from
Zoutpansberg to Delagoa Bay, and were rescued and taken thence to Natal, and
two children were carried off by the natives. The survivors were three women
with their twelve children—seven orphan children and four youths. Not a
single grown man escaped.
During the winter of 1836 preparations for emigration
were being made over the eastern and midland districts. The Governor was
perfectly helpless in the matter. The Attorney-General, Mr. A. Oliphant,
was consulted by the Governor, and gave his opinion that 'it seemed next
to an impossibility to prevent persons passing out of the colony by laws
in force, or by any which could be framed.' On August 19 Sir Benjamin
D'Urban wrote to the Lieutenant-Governor, Sir Andries Stockenstrom, that
'he could see no means of stopping the emigration, except by persuasion,
and attention to the wants and necessities of the farmers.' In that
direction the Governor had done all that was in his power, but he could
not act in opposition to the instructions of the Secretary of State. Sir
Andries Stockenstrom himself, in replying to an address from the
inhabitants of Uitenhage,
stated that 'he was not aware of any law which prevented any of his
Majesty's subjects from leaving his dominions and settling in another
country; and such a law, if it did exist, would be tyrannical and
oppressive.'
The story of the trekkers is one of surpassing interest, and must enlist
for them the sympathy and unbounded admiration of all.
By the middle of the year 1837 there were over one thousand waggons
between the Caledon and Vaal rivers—truly a notable and alarming exodus; and
the Boers then began the work of carving out new countries for themselves.
Their history surpasses all fiction in its vicissitudes, successes, and
tragedies. They fought and worked and trekked, onward, always onward—never
returning—on beyond the furthermost outposts of civilization.
And so the story rolls on, gaining pathos, but losing no whit of interest
from its eternal sameness. They fought, and worked, and starved, and died
for their land of promise, where they might hope to be alone, like the
simple people of their one Book; where they might never know the hated
British rule; where they might never experience the forms and trammels, the
restlessness and changes, the worries, the necessities or benefits, of
progressing civilization. Their quarrel had been with the abuses and
blunders of one Government; but a narrow experience moved them to mistrust
all but their own pastoral patriarchal way, moulded on the records of the
Bible, and to regard the evidences of progress as warnings of coming
oppression and curtailment of liberty, and a departure from the simple and
ideal way. The abuses from which they suffered are no more; the methods
which were unjust have been abandoned; the ignorance of the ruler has been
dispelled; in place of despotism there is autonomy; justice rules where
ignorance and bias sat; liberty where there was interference; protection for
oppression; progress and civilization have increased as in no other epoch;
and the nation and Government from which they severed themselves have taken
their place in the very forefront of all. But the Boer sees with the eyes of
sixty years ago!
The ideal was impossible, the struggle hopeless, the end
certain. They trekked, and trekked and trekked again; but the flag of
England—emblem of all they hated—was close by; behind, beside, in front, or
over them; and the something which they could not fight—the ever-advancing
tide of civilization—lapped at their feet, and slowly, silently, and for
ever blotted out the line where they had written, 'Thus far and no further.'
The South African Republic had been in existence as an independent State
for twelve years when it reached that condition of insolvency which appeared
to invite, or at least justify, annexation, as the only alternative to
complete ruin and chaos. And there are very few, even among the most
uncompromising supporters of the Boers, who seriously attempt to show that
the Transvaal had any prospect of prolonging its existence as an independent
State for more than a few months when Sir Theophilus Shepstone annexed it in
1877. The following picture is from a book published by the late Alfred
Aylward, the Fenian, more anti-British than the Boer himself, who was
present at the time, and wrote his book in order to enlist sympathy for the
movement then (1878) organized to obtain a cancellation of the annexation.
The value of Aylward's testimony would not be fairly appreciated without
some explanation.
Sir Bartle Frere describes him (and quotes Scotland Yard authorities who
knew him well) as one of the party who murdered the policeman at Manchester,
and one of the worst and most active of the dynamiting Irishmen—a
professional agitator, who boasted of his purpose to promote the Transvaal
rebellion. Major Le Caron, too, stated on oath before the Parnell Commission
that money was sent by the Irish Rebel Societies, through Aylward, to stir
up the Transvaal rebellion. This is what Aylward says:
All South Africa was for the moment at rest, with the
exception of the district of Utrecht, where an old-standing grievance
with Cetewayo was the cause of some little alarm and excitement (i.e.,
Cetewayo's threatened invasion). Still, the Transvaal was disturbed
throughout its whole extent by the expectation of some pending change—a
change coming from the outside, which had been invited by an active,
discontented party, chiefly foreigners, dwellers in towns,
non-producers, place-hunters, deserters, refugees, land-speculators,
'development-men,' and pests of
Transvaal society generally, who openly preached resistance to the law,
refusal to pay taxes, and contempt of the natural and guaranteed owners
of the country in which they lived, in the distinctly expressed hope
that foreign intervention would fill the country with British gold, and
conduce to their own material prosperity. The Boers, spread over a
country larger than France, were stunned into stupor by the
demonstrative loudness of the party of discontent. In some districts
they (the Boers) were poor, and could not readily pay the taxes imposed
upon them by the wars and railway projects of the Government. Their
Volksraad was in Session, but its every action was paralyzed by the
gloom of impending dissolution.The Republic
owed £215,000, which it had no immediate means of paying. Its creditors
were clamorous; whilst the Executive, turn to which side it would, found
itself confronted by threats, reproaches, accusations of slavery and
cruelty based upon hearsay, and which, like the annexation that steadily
approached, could not be met, because neither of them had yet assumed
the evidenced consistency of actual fact. There was no public opinion to
support the Government or to save the Republic. The Boers lived far
apart from each other, whilst the annexationists and the party of
disorder dwelt, in compact communities, in towns and mining villages.
Into the midst of this confusion—into the capital of this bewildered
State—entered Sir Theophilus Shepstone and his staff. He had not come to
seize the country—he had come as 'an adviser, as a helper, and as a
friend'; but his advent was a blight—an incubus which rendered
additionally powerless the unfortunate President and his Council. The
coming of Sir Theophilus Shepstone was, to the minds of nearly all, but
too clearly the forerunner of change. In the face of this additional
whet to the anticipations of the party of disturbance, something that
has been described as anarchy prevailed. Everyone waited; all fell into
a state of expectation; no one attempted to save the State, or repel the
danger. At the same time, there was no anarchy in the proper sense of
the word. Justice sat on her seat; criminals were arrested and brought
to trial; actions at law were heard and determined; and in no one place,
save the goldfields, was authority, even for a moment, defied. There the
law vindicated itself without having used violence or shed one drop of
blood. Not one single public outrage, not one unpunished crime, marked
this period of suspense, which is described by partizan writers as a
time of chaos and anarchy.
Peace was granted to Secocoeni, and the quietness and
gloom of the country became even more profound.
Now, had a commission, royal or joint, been opened in
Pretoria to inquire into the truth of the allegations made against the
Government, history might perhaps be able to record that judgment,
followed by justice, had overtaken the Transvaal. No commission was
opened. There was a banquet and a ball. The suspense increased in
intensity. Understrappers, and agents of the discontented faction,
filled the country with rumours of impending annexation, and sometimes
of impending conquest. The Boers, the inhabitants of the country, asked
day after day what was the mission of the English Commissioner. They
visited him in hundreds; but he knew the wonderful advantage to be
gathered from the heightening of the mystery, and the intensifying of
the excitement. He listened to everyone; but he maintained a gloomy and
impassive silence, neither checking the aspirations of the
annexationists, nor dissipating the forebodings of the farmers.
News arrived that troops were marching towards, and
massing on, the border; rumours
spread that annexation was inevitable. Sir Theophilus sought not to
alleviate the anxieties of the Government, nor to quell the now rising
alarm amongst the people; he simply sat still and listened, watching the
writhings and stragglings of the doomed Volksraad, and awaiting a
favourable moment to end its existence.
At length someone determined to ask: 'Was it not
possible to avert this annexation which loomed before every mind,
brooding like a shadow upon the country?' He went to Sir Theophilus; he
asked his question; and at length the oracle spoke. Without moving a
muscle of his wonderfully impassive countenance, without even raising
his eyes to look at the interlocutor, Sir Theophilus calmly murmured:
'It is too late!—too late!' And so, without the authorization of the
home Government, without the consent of her Majesty's High Commissioner,
without the concurrence of the Volksraad, against the will of
thirty-nine-fortieths of the people, and in defiance of the protest of
their Executive, as Mr. Anthony Trollope puts it, Sir Theophilus said:
'Then and from thenceforth the Transvaal shall be British property!' So
he put up the Queen's flag.
Now, it is impossible to conceive anything more
admirable for its discretion, more wisely calculated as to the moment of
its occurrence, or more suavely and yet firmly done than this act. There
was not a blow struck, not a shot fired; and the first impulse of nearly
every person in the country, whether in principle opposed to annexation
or not, was to congratulate Sir Theophilus Shepstone on the skill, tact,
and good fortune with which he had put an end to the excessive anxiety,
the mental strain, the fears, hopes, and expectations by which the whole
country was paralyzed. Whether the annexation be now held to be right or
wrong, its execution, so far as regards the act itself, was an
unparalleled triumph of tact, modesty, and firmness.
It was not discovered at the moment, and it never
entered into any man's mind to consider, that it was the presence in
Pretoria of Sir Theophilus himself that had created the anxiety, and
caused the paralysis; and that it was his arts and presence that had
tightened and strung up into quivering intensity the mind of the
country. He had broken the spell; he had introduced certainty in place
of uncertainty; and he was congratulated, and very properly so, for the
manner in which he had brought to a conclusion his hazardous mission.
Sir Theophilus Shepstone's despatches record his negotiations with
President Burgers, and the arrangement which allowed him to make a formal
protest against the annexation, so as to satisfy his Irreconcilables, whilst
he in reality not only assented to the measure, but even assisted the
completion of it, and discussed the details with Shepstone, who in turn had
revised President Burgers' 'protest.'
On April 3, 1877, Shepstone had written to Frere:
Mr. Burgers, who had been all along, as far as his
conversation and professions to me went, in full accord with me, had
suddenly taken alarm; he made impossible proposals, all of which
involved infinite delay, and, of course, dangerous agitation. As far as
I am concerned, it is
impossible for me to retreat now, come what may. If I were to leave the
country, civil war would at once take place, as the natives would
consider it the sunshine in which they could make hay in the Transvaal;
the goldfields are in a state of rebellion against the Transvaal
Government, and they are kept from overt acts only by my warnings and
entreaties.
And eight days later he wrote to Mr. Robert Herbert enclosing his letter
under 'flying seal' to Frere:
There will be a protest against my act of annexation
issued by the Government, but they will at the same time call upon the
people to submit quietly, pending the issue; you need not be disquieted
by such action, because it is taken merely to save appearances, and the
members of the Government from the violence of a faction that seems for
years to have held Pretoria in terror when any act of the Government
displeased it.You will better understand this
when I tell you privately that the President has from the first fully
acquiesced in the necessity for the change, and that most of the members
of the Government have expressed themselves anxious for it; but none of
them have had the courage openly to express their opinions, so I have
had to act apparently against them; and this I have felt bound to do,
knowing the state and danger of the country, and that three-fourths of
the people will be thankful for the change when once it is made.
Yesterday morning Mr. Burgers came to me to arrange
how the matter should be done. I read to him the draft of my
Proclamation, and he proposed the alteration of two words only, to which
I agreed. He brought to me a number of conditions which he wished me to
insert, which I have accepted, and have embodied in my Proclamation. He
told me that he could not help issuing a protest, to keep the noisy
portion of the people quiet—and you will see grounds for this precaution
when I tell you that there are only half a dozen native constables to
represent the power of the State in Pretoria, and a considerable number
of the Boers in the neighbourhood are of the lowest and most ignorant
class. Mr. Burgers read me, too, the draft of his protest, and asked me
if I saw any objection to it, or thought it too strong. I said that it
appeared to me to pledge the people to resist by-and-by; to which he
replied that it was to tide over the difficulty of the moment, seeing
that my support, the troops, were a fortnight's march distant, and that
by the time the answer to the protest came, all desire of opposition
would have died out. I therefore did not persuade him from his protest.
You will see, when the proclamation reaches you, that
I have taken high ground. Nothing but annexation will or can save the
State, and nothing else can save South Africa from the direst
consequences. All the thinking and intelligent people know this, and
will be thankful to be delivered from the thraldom of petty factions, by
which they are perpetually kept in a state of excitement and unrest,
because the Government, and everything connected with it, is a thorough
sham.
This arrangement with President Burgers was a most improper compromise on
both sides. Moreover, Shepstone received the protests of
the Executive Council and of the Volksraad before he issued his
proclamation. He had plenty of evidence to show that even if his action was
approved by the majority, the Boers were sufficiently divided to demand some
delay. He knew that the members of the Government and of the Raad would not
face the responsibility of relinquishing the State's independence, although
he received private assurances and entreaties encouraging him to act. He had
representations and deputations from the Boers themselves, sufficient in
weight and number to warrant his belief that a large proportion of the
people desired annexation. He should not have allowed the 'hedging' that was
practised at his expense. The Boer leaders were 'between the devil and the
deep sea.' There can be no doubt whatever that they dearly loved and prized
their independence, and would have fought even then for it had they been in
a position to preserve and profit by it; but they were not. They dared
neither ask for relief at the price of annexation, nor reject the proffered
relief at the price of continuing the hopeless struggle. So they
compromised. They took the relief, they accepted pay of the new Government,
and entered a protest, so as to put themselves right with the records and
stand well with untamed ones of the party.
The Act of Annexation is so generally condemned by the friends and
sympathizers of the Boers, and is so persistently quoted by them as the
cause of the Boer War, that it is only right to show clearly what the
opinion was at that time; and if it be deemed that overmuch space is given
to this matter, the answer is, that it is quoted now as the crime which gave
rise to the present hatred and mistrust of England, and it is all-important
that the truth should be clear.
This is what Mr. J.F. Celliers, the patriotic editor of the Boer
newspaper, De Volksstem, wrote in reviewing the work of the special
session of the Volksraad, convened to deal with the questions of Lord
Carnarvon's Federation Bill, and the rescuing of the country from ruin and
chaos:—'During the session we have repeatedly had occasion to comment on the
doings of the Raad. These comments have not been favourable, and we regret
to say that we have found in the closing scenes of our Legislature no reason
to alter our opinions.' Then follows a scathing account
of the 'work done,' in which occur such references as:—'With the exception
of a couple of members, no one had the sense or manliness to go into the
question of confederation'; and 'The most surprising feature of the whole
affair was this—that most of the speakers seemed not to have the faintest
conception of the desperate condition in which the country stood....' And
again, under date of March 28: 'About three months ago we said we would
prefer confederation under the British flag if the state of anarchy then
threatening were to continue. We know that a good and stable Government is
better than anarchy any day.'
It is noteworthy that the writer of the above is the same Mr. Celliers
who, two years later, was put in gaol by Colonel Lanyon on a charge of
sedition, because he attacked the Administration for its failure to keep the
promises made at the time of annexation.
Three thousand out of eight thousand voters actually signed petitions in
favour of annexation. In the Raad, President Burgers openly reproached
members for proclaiming in public, and for improper reasons, views
diametrically opposed to those privately expressed on the confederation and
annexation questions; and refused to consult with three out of four members
appointed as a deputation to confer with him on these subjects, because they
had not paid their taxes, and had so helped by example, not less than by the
actual offence, to cause the ruin of the country and the loss of
independence. And on March 3 President Burgers read an address to the Raad,
in which the following words occur:
'I would rather be a policeman under a strong Government
than the President of such a State. It is you—you members of the Raad
and the Boers—who have lost the country, who have sold your independence
for a soupe (a drink). You have ill-treated the natives, you have
shot them down, you have sold them into slavery, and now you have to pay
the penalty.'
'We should delude ourselves by entertaining the hope
that matters would mend by-and-by. It would only be self-deceit. I tell
you openly, matters are as bad as they ever can be; they cannot be
worse. These are bitter truths, and people may perhaps turn their backs
on me; but then I shall have the consolation of having done my duty.'
'It is said here this or that man
must be released from taxes, because the Kaffirs have driven them off
their farms, and occupy the latter. By this you proclaim to the world
that the strongest man is master here, that the right of the strongest
obtains here.' [Mr. Mare: 'This is not true.'] 'Then it is not true what
the honourable member, Mr. Breytenbach, has told us about the state of
the Lydenburg district; then it is not true either what another member
has said about the farms in Zoutpansberg, which are occupied by Kaffirs.
Neither is it true, then, what I saw with my own eyes at Lydenburg,
where the burghers had been driven off their farms by the Kaffirs, and
where Johannes was ploughing and sowing on the land of a burgher. These
are facts, and they show that the strongest man is the master here. The
fourth point which we have to take into account affects our relations
with our English neighbours. It is asked, What have they got to do with
our position? I tell you, as much as we have to do with that of our
Kaffir neighbours. As little as we can allow barbarities among the
Kaffirs on our borders, as little can they allow that in a state on
their borders anarchy and rebellion should prevail.'
'Do you know what has recently happened in Turkey?
Because no civilized government was carried on there, the Great Powers
interfered and said, "Thus far, and no further." And if this is done to
an empire, will a little republic be excused when it misbehaves?
'Complain to other Powers, and seek justice there?
Yes, thank God! justice is still to be found, even for the most
insignificant; but it is precisely the justice which will convict us. If
we want justice, we must be in a position to ask it with unsullied
hands.'
'Whence has arisen that urgency to make an appeal for
interference elsewhere? Has that appeal been made only by enemies of the
State? Oh no, gentlemen; it has arisen from real grievances. Our people
have degenerated from their former position; they have become
demoralised; they are not what they ought to be.'
'To-day a bill for £1,100 was laid before me for
signature; but I would sooner have cut off my right hand than sign that
paper, for I have not the slightest ground to expect that when that bill
becomes due there will be a penny to pay it with.'
The President added, and his statements remained uncontradicted:
The principal thing which had brought them to their
present position was that to which they would not give attention. It was
not this or that thing which impeded their way, but they themselves
stopped the way; and if they asked him what prevented the people from
remaining independent, he
answered that the Republic was itself the obstruction, owing to the
inherent incapacity and weakness of the people. But whence this
weakness? Was it because they were deformed? because they were worse
than other people? because they were too few and too insignificant to
occupy the country? Those arguments did not weigh with him. They were
not true; he did not consider them of any importance. The people were as
good as any other people, but they were completely demoralized; they had
lost faith in God, reliance upon themselves, or trust in each other.
Hence he believed they were inherently weak.
He did not believe that a new constitution would save
them; for as little as the old constitution had brought them to ruin, so
little would a new constitution bring them salvation.
The Great Powers, with all their greatness, all their
thousands of soldiers, would fall as quickly as this State had fallen,
and even more quickly, if their citizens were to do what the citizens of
this State had done; if the citizens of England had behaved towards the
Crown as the burghers of this State had behaved to their Government,
England would never have stood as long as she had, not even as long as
this State had stood. This State owed obligations to other countries;
they knew that the fire which had nearly consumed this State would, if
felt by them, very soon consume them also.
In several of the cities of Holland there were people
who had subscribed for only one debenture, because they thought men of
their own blood were living in South Africa. What was the consequence?
The interest up to July last had been paid; in January of this year
£2,250 was due for interest, and there was not a penny to meet it.
To take up arms and fight was nonsense; to draw the
sword would be to draw the sword against God, for it was God's judgment
that the State was in the condition it was to-day; and it was their duty
to inquire whether they should immerse in blood the thousands of
innocent inhabitants of this country, and if so, what for? For an
idea—for something they had in their heads, but not in their hearts; for
an independence which was not prized. Let them make the best of the
situation, and get the best terms they possibly could; let them agree to
join their hands to those of their brethren in the south, and then from
the Cape to the Zambesi there would be one great people. Yes, there was
something grand in that—grander even than their idea of a
Republic—something which ministered to their national feeling. And would
this be so miserable? Yes; this would be miserable for those who would
not be under the law, for the rebel and revolutionist, but welfare and
prosperity for the men of law and order.
They must not underrate their real and many
difficulties. He could point to the south-western border, the Zulu, the
goldfields, and other
questions, and show them that it was their duty to come to an
arrangement with the British Government, and to do so in a bold and
manly manner. An hon. member on Saturday last had spoken with a fervent
patriotism; but he had failed to appreciate the reference, because it
amounted to this—that they must shut their eyes to everything, so as to
keep their independence.
President Burgers, who left the Transvaal broken-hearted, more by the
cruel and mean intriguing and dissensions among, and disloyalty of, his own
people, which made the annexation possible, than by the Act itself, when
dying left a statement of the case. It is too long to reproduce in its
entirety. He shows how the English faction worked for annexation, and how
the Dopper party, headed by Kruger, allied themselves with the former in
intrigue against the Government, thwarting all effort at reform and
organization, and encouraging the refusal to pay taxes. He states plainly
that this course was pursued by Kruger in order to oust him from power, and
secure the Presidency for himself. He shows how he opposed 'that other
element which had formerly worked in secret, viz., British interference,
which got a strong support from the Boers themselves, and one of their chief
leaders, P. Kruger, who had betrayed me, after promising me his and his
party's support.' He gives the final scene as follows:
The Volksraad had gone away, having done nothing but
harm. The members of the Executive had gone home, as if all were safe,
and I sat with a half-new Cabinet and part of an old one, half
discharged. Yet I made one attempt more, and drafted a letter to
Shepstone, intimating that I would oppose the annexation by force of
arms, etc.; and showed this to two members of the Executive. The
response to my appeal, however, was so weak (one of them being in league
with the English) that I had to abandon the project, and try to prepare
for the worst. When, therefore, Shepstone's announcement came—that he
could wait no longer, that he had given us time enough to reform, and
that he must issue his proclamation—I could do no more than advise a
protest, and an appeal to foreign powers. This having been agreed to by
my Government, I met Shepstone in presence of the Executive, and what
could be saved for the country, such as its language, its legislature,
the position of its officials, etc., was arranged. Before issuing his
proclamation, Shepstone desired to see copies of both mine and the
Government protest. This I promised, on condition he showed me his
proclamation before publication: to which he agreed. To one clause I
greatly objected, and protested—namely, the threat of confiscation of
property for disobeying the proclamation. I pointed out that this was
barbarous, and would be
punishing a man's innocent family for his actions. The clause was
omitted. This is the origin of the lie that I helped Shepstone in
drawing up this proclamation. In justice to Shepstone, I must say that I
would not consider an officer of my Government to have acted faithfully
if he had not done what Shepstone did; and if the act was wrong (which
undoubtedly it was), not he, but his Government, is to blame for it.
Messrs. Kruger and Jorissen left within a month to protest in England
against the annexation.
Sir T. Shepstone wrote (May 9): 'Mr. Paul Kruger and his colleague, Dr.
Jorissen, D.D., the Commission to Europe, leave to-day. I do not think that
either of them wishes the Act of Annexation to be cancelled; Dr. Jorissen
certainly does not.' And Mr. J.D. Barry, Recorder of Kimberley, wrote to
Frere (May 15): 'The delegates, Paul Kruger and Dr. Jorissen, left Pretoria
on the 8th, and even they do not seem to have much faith in their mission.
Dr. Jorissen thinks that the reversal of Sir Theophilus's Act would not only
be impossible, but a great injury to the country.'
It is not necessary to seek hostile testimony to establish the fact that
the Boers as a whole acquiesced in the annexation; the foregoing quotation
from Aylward's book supplies all that is needed—unintentionally, perhaps.
The Zulu menace, which Aylward so lightly dismisses, was a very serious
matter; the danger a very real one. It has frequently been asserted by the
Boers and their friends that the Zulu trouble was fomented by a section of
the Natal people, and that Sir Theophilus Shepstone himself, if he did not
openly encourage the Zulu King in his threats and encroachments on the
Transvaal, at any rate refrained from using his unique influence and power
with the Zulus in the direction of peace, and that he made a none too
scrupulous use of the Zulu question when he forced the annexation of the
Transvaal. It is stated that, in the first place, there was no real danger,
and in the next place, if there were, such was Sir Theophilus's power with
the Zulus that he could have averted it; and in support of the first point,
and in demolition of Sir T. Shepstone's pro-annexation arguments, the
following extract from the latter's despatches is quoted by Aylward and
others:
EXTRACT FROM
DESPATCH, DATED UTRECHT, TRANSVAAL, JANUARY 29, 1878.
Sir T. Shepstone to Sir H. Bulwer.
Par. 12. 'Although this question has existed for many
years, and the settlement of it has been long postponed, yet on no
former occasion has it assumed so serious an aspect, or included so wide
an area of territory; never before has there existed any bar to the
farmers occupying their farms after an absence more or less temporary,
caused by a temporary and local scare. Practically, the line of occupied
farms has not been heretofore affected by the dispute about the beaconed
boundary, but now the prohibition to these has become absolute by Zulu
claims and action. Ruin is staring the farmers in the face, and their
position is, for the time, worse under Her Majesty's Government than
ever it was under the Republic.'
Had Sir T. Shepstone's power been as great as represented, it is fair to
suppose that it would have been exerted, and would have prevailed in support
of his own administration; but it seems clear that he could do nothing; and
as to the reality of the danger, nothing could better establish that than
the unpleasant admissions in the foregoing extract and the initial disasters
in the Zulu War a year later. The Boers' protective power was not lessened
by the annexation—quite otherwise. It was supplemented by British money,
arms, and soldiers, and the prestige of the British flag, and yet things
happened as above described. What would they have been under the old
conditions?
The day before he issued the proclamation Sir T. Shepstone sent a
messenger to Cetewayo, telling him that the Transvaal would be under British
sovereignty, and warning him against aggression in that direction. Cetewayo
replied: 'I thank my father Somtseu (Shepstone) for his message. I am glad
that he has sent it, because the Dutch have tired me out, and I intended to
fight with them once, only once, and to drive them over the Vaal. Kabana,
you see my impis are gathered. It was to fight the Dutch I called them
together. Now I will send them back to their houses.' (C. 1883, p. 19.)
Colonel A.W. Durnford; R.E., in a memorandum of July 5, 1877, wrote:
About this time (April 10) Cetewayo had massed his forces
in three corps on the borders, and would undoubtedly have swept the
Transvaal, at least up to the
Vaal River, if not to Pretoria itself, had the country not been taken
over by the English. In my opinion, he would have cleared the country to
Pretoria.
'I am convinced,' wrote Sir A. Cunynghame, June 12, from Pretoria, 'that
had this country not been annexed, it would have been ravaged by the native
tribes. Forty square miles of country had been overrun by natives, and every
house burned, just before the annexation.' And he wrote again, July 6:
'Every day convinces me that unless this country had been annexed it would
have been a prey to plunder and rapine from the natives on its border,
joined by Secocoeni, Mapok, and other tribes in the Transvaal. Feeling the
influence of the British Government, they are now tranquil.'
So much for the reality of the danger. As to the causes of it and the
alleged responsibility of Natal, Sir Bartle Frere, in a letter to General
Ponsonby, made the following remarks:
The fact is, that while the Boer Republic was a rival and
semi-hostile power, it was a Natal weakness rather to pet the Zulus as
one might a tame wolf, who only devoured one's neighbour's sheep. We
always remonstrated, but rather feebly; and now that both flocks belong
to us, we are rather embarrassed in stopping the wolf's ravages.
Sir B. Frere realized fully the dangers, and gave his testimony as to
Boer opinion. On December 15, 1877, he wrote, concerning his policy towards
the Zulus:
My great anxiety is, of course, to avoid collision, and I
am satisfied that the only chance I have of keeping clear of it is to
show that I do not fear it. The Boers are, of course, in a state of
great apprehension, and I have ordered those of the two frontier
districts of Utrecht and Wakkerstroom to hold themselves in readiness,
should I find it necessary to call upon them for active service.
Sir T. Shepstone also wrote, concerning the reality of the danger, under
date December 25:
The Boers are still flying, and I think by this time
there must be a belt of more than a hundred miles long and thirty broad,
in which, with three insignificant exceptions, there is nothing but
absolute desolation. This will give your Excellency some idea of the
mischief which Cetewayo's conduct has caused.
And again (April 30, 1878):
I find that Secocoeni acts as a kind of lieutenant to
Cetewayo. He received directions from the Zulu King, and these
directions are by Secocoeni issued to the various Basuto tribes in the
Transvaal.
Sir T. Shepstone rushed the annexation. He plucked the fruit that would
have fallen. He himself has said that he might have waited until the Zulus
actually made their threatened murderous raid. That might have been
Macchiavelian statecraft, but it would not have been humanity; and there was
nothing in the attitude of the Boer leaders at the time of the annexation
which foreshadowed the fierce and determined opposition which afterwards
developed. The fact seems to be that the people of the Transvaal were either
in favour of the annexation, or were overpowered and dazed by the
hopelessness of the Republic's outlook; and they passively assented to the
action of Sir Theophilus Shepstone and his twenty-five policemen. The Boers
were quite unable to pay the taxes necessary to self-government and the
prosecution of the Kaffir wars. The Treasury was empty—save for the
much-quoted 12s. 6d. The Government £1 bluebacks were selling at 1s. Civil
servants' salaries were months in arrear. The President himself—the
excitable, unstable, visionary, but truly enlightened and patriotic
Burgers—had not only drawn no salary, but had expended his private fortune,
and incurred a very heavy liability, in the prosecution of the unsuccessful
Secocoeni war. No amount of ex post facto evidence as to the supposed
feelings and opinions of the Boers can alter a single one of the very
serious facts which, taken together, seemed to Sir Theophilus to justify the
annexation. But it all comes down to this: If the passive acquiescence in
the annexation coincided strangely with the Republic's failure to defeat its
enemies and pay its debts, it is no whit less odd that Lord Carnarvon's
anxiety for the Republic's safety synchronized with his attempt to
confederate South Africa.
The real mistakes of the British Government began after the
annexation. The failure to fulfil promises; the deviation from old ways of
government; the appointment of unsuitable officials, who did not understand
the people or their language; the neglect to convene the Volksraad or to
hold fresh elections, as definitely promised; the
establishment of personal rule by military men, who treated the Boers with
harshness and contempt, and would make no allowance for their simple,
old-fashioned ways, their deep-seated prejudices, and, if you like, their
stupid opposition to modern ideas: these things and others caused great
dissatisfaction, and gave ample material for the nucleus of irreconcilables
to work with.
During the occupation period Mr. Kruger took office under the British
Government, as also did Dr. Jorissen and Chief Justice (then Judge) Kotzé,
and indeed all the officials who had protested against the annexation,
except Mr. Piet Joubert, who declined to do so, and who, if actions be the
test and not words, was the only honest protestant. Mr. Kruger retained his
office for some time after he had concerned himself in the Repeal agitation,
but finally resigned his post on being refused an increased remuneration,
for which he had repeatedly applied. There can be but little doubt that had
this inducement been forthcoming, he would have remained a loyal British
subject.
The effect of the annexation was to start the wells of plenty
bubbling—with British gold. The country's debts were paid. Secocoeni and
Cetewayo would be dealt with, and the responsibility for all things was on
other and broader shoulders. With the revival of trade, and the removal of
responsibilities and burdens, came time to think and to talk. The wave of
the magician's wand looked so very simple that the price began to seem
heavy. The eaten bread was forgotten. The dangers and difficulties that were
past were of small account now that they were past; and so the men
who had remained passive, and recorded formal protests when they should have
resisted, and taken steps to show that they were in earnest, began their
Repeal agitation. All the benefits which the Boers hoped from the annexation
had now been reaped. Their pressing needs were relieved. Their debts had
been paid; their trade and credit restored; their enemies were being dealt
with. Repeal would rob them of none of these; they would, in fact, eat their
cake and still have it. The Zulu question had been taken up, and could not
now be left by the Imperial Government to settle itself. The debts
discharged for them and the outlays incurred might, it is true, be charged
to them. They could not be repaid, of course, for the
same reason that you cannot get blood from stone; and the amount would,
therefore, be a National Debt, which was exactly what they had been trying
for years to incur, and the condition of their credit had made it impossible
to do.
The causes of discontent before given were serious, but the failure to
fulfil promises was not deliberate. Circumstances combined to prevent Sir
Bartle Frere from visiting the Transvaal, as intended and promised. Native
wars (Gaika and Galeka), disagreements between the Colonial and Imperial
authorities, the obstructions and eventual dismissal of the Molteno-Merriman
Ministry—the first under Responsible Government—Natal and Diamond-fields
affairs, and, above all, the Zulu War, all combined to prevent Sir Bartle
Frere from fulfilling his obligations to settle Transvaal matters.
In the meantime two deputations had been sent to England, representing
the Boers' case against annexation. The active party among the Boers,
i.e., the Voortrekker party, the most anti-British and Republican,
though small in itself, had now succeeded in completely dominating the rest
of the Boers, and galvanizing them into something like national life and
cohesion again—a result achieved partly by earnest persuasion, but largely
also by a kind of terrorism.
Sir Bartle Frere, who managed at last to visit the Transvaal, in April,
1879, had evidence of this on his journey up, and in a despatch to Sir M.
Hicks Beach from Standerton on the 6th of that month he wrote:
I was particularly impressed by the replies of a very
fine specimen of a Boer of the old school. He had been six weeks in an
English prison, daily expecting execution as a rebel, and had been
wounded by all the enemies against whom his countrymen had
fought—English, Zulus, Basutos, Griquas, and Bushmen.
'But,' he said, 'that was in the days of my youth and
inexperience. Had I known then what I know now, I would never have
fought against the English, and I will never fight them again. Old as I
am, I would now gladly turn out against the Zulus, and take fifty
friends of my own, who would follow me anywhere; but I dare not leave my
home till assured it will not be destroyed and my property carried off
in my absence, by the men who call me "rebel" because I will not join
them against the Government. My wife, brought up like a civilized woman
in the Cape Colony, has had five times in her life to run from the house
and sleep in the veld when attacked by Zulus and Basutos. One of our
twelve sons was assegaied in sight of our house, within the last ten
years, by a marauding party;
and in my absence from the house, when it was surrounded by Basutos, my
wife had to fly in the night by herself, leading one child and carrying
another on her back. She walked nearly fifty miles through the Lion
Veld, seeing three lions on the way, before she reached a place of
safety. It is not likely that we should forget such things, nor wish
them to recur; but how can I leave her on my farm and go to Zululand,
when the malcontent leaders threaten me that if I go they will burn my
house and drive off all my stock? Assure me that we are not to be
deserted by the English Government, and left to the mercy of these
malcontent adventurers, and I and my people will gladly turn out to
assist Colonel Wood.'
I find that this idea that the English Government
will give up the Transvaal, as it formerly did the Orange Free State,
has been industriously propagated, and has taken a great hold on the
minds of the well-disposed Boers, and is, I believe, one main cause of
reluctance to support the Government actively.
They argue that what has been done before may be
done again, and they have no feeling of assurance that if they stand by
the English Government to-day they will not be left to bear the brunt of
the malcontents' vengeance when a Republic is established.
And again on the 9th, from Heidelberg:
The idea that we should somehow be compelled or
induced to abandon the country had taken great hold on the minds of some
of the more intelligent men that I met. It has
been seduously written up by a portion of the South African press,
English as well as Dutch. I marked its effect particularly on men who
said they had come from the old Colony since the annexation, but would
never have done so had they believed that English rule would be
withdrawn, and the country left to its former state of anarchy....
But there is great practical difficulty in conveying
to the mass of the people any idea of the real power of Government.
It is not possible to pen a more severe and pregnant comment on the
after-policy of England than that suggested by the italicized lines, written
as they were by England's Plenipotentiary—an idea reported to headquarters,
not as a feeler, but as a suggestion so absurd that it called for no
expression of opinion. But he lived to find that it was not too absurd to be
realized; and perhaps, after all, it was written as a warning, and the wise
and cool-headed old statesman in his inmost soul had a premonition of what
eventually occurred.
Sir Bartle Frere met the Boers in their camp, and discussed with them
their grievances. He informed them that he had no power to revoke the
annexation, nor would he recommend it, as, in his judgment, such a course
would be a reversion to chaos and ruin. The Boers pressed steadily for
nothing less than repeal. Sir Bartle Frere reported the
historical meeting at Erasmus Farm to Sir M. Hicks Beach:
April 14, 1879.
They were evidently much disappointed.... Our meeting
separated with no more definite decision than that they must report to
the 'people,' and be guided by their decision as to what was to be done.
If I may judge from the gentlemen composing the
deputation, and others of their class, whom I have had the honour of
meeting since coming to the Transvaal, the leaders are, with few
exceptions, men who deserve respect and regard for many valuable and
amiable qualities as citizens and subjects....
Of the results of our meeting it is impossible at
present to say more than that it must have cleared away misconceptions
on all sides If they have learnt anything as to the finality of the act
of annexation—that I have no power to undo it, and do not believe that
it will ever be undone, in the only sense in which they will ask it—I
have, on the other hand, been shown the stubbornness of a determination
to be content with nothing else, for which I was not prepared by the
general testimony of officials who had been longer in the country, and
who professed to believe that the opposition of the Boers was mere
bluster, and that they had not the courage of their professed
opinions.... I feel assured that the majority of the Committee felt very
deeply what they believed to be a great national wrong.... But my
conviction is that the real malcontents are far from being a majority of
the whole white population, or even of their own class of Boer farmers.
I have no doubt whatever that if the Executive were in
a position to assert the supremacy of the law, to put an effectual stop
to the reign of terrorism which exists at present, the discontented
minority would cease to agitate, and would soon cease to feel grievances
which a very brief discussion shows to be in the main sentimental; not
the less keenly felt on that account, but not likely to survive the
prosperity and good government, with a fair measure of self-government
in its train, which are within their reach under British rule.
And, again, he wrote to Lady Frere:
PRETORIA, April 20, 1879.
My last letter had not been gone many hours by the
mail express when Lanyon ran into my room, to tell me that the Boer camp
was actually broken up and the Boers dispersing.
I need not tell you how thankful I was. The one thing
I dreaded was civil war and bloodshed, and had a single malcontent been
shot, I should have considered it a greater misfortune than the death of
a dozen Piet Retiefs, or Uys, dying like heroes in the field of battle
for their country and brethren. So you may imagine how thankful I felt
to the Giver of all good, who has guided and protected us through life.
I am to see a deputation from the Boers' Committee
again to-morrow, and then I hope we shall have done with meetings and
grievances—for the present a phrase which they carefully put into all
references to their breaking up, and which they evidently mean.
It was clear to me that it was not the annexation, so
much as the neglect to fulfil the promises
and the expectations held out by Shepstone when he took
over the Government, that has stirred up the great mass of the Boers,
and given a handle to agitators.{02}
There it is in a single sentence! It was not the annexation which caused
the war; for nine men in every ten admitted that it was welcomed and
justified by considerations of general South African policy, or else simply
inevitable. No! It was the failure to fulfil the conditions of annexation!
In 'A Narrative of the Boer War,' Mr. Thomas Fortescue Carter has given
with admirable skill and impartiality a full account of the causes which led
to the outbreak. His history is, indeed, so determinedly just as to have met
with considerable disapproval in quarters where feelings are hot on either
side, and where plain truths are not palatable. Mr. Carter resided in the
country for years before the annexation, and went through the war as
correspondent of a well-known London daily, and this is his opinion:
Anyone who knows the acquaintance Sir T. Shepstone had
with the Boers of the Transvaal, years prior to the annexation, cannot
doubt that, regarded as a friend and almost as one of themselves, no one
better than he could have been selected for the task of ascertaining the
desires of the people; and no one who knows Sir T. Shepstone will
believe that he did not take sufficient evidence to prove to any man
that the Boers were anxious to be extricated from the dilemma they were
in, and really willing at that time that their country should be
annexed. Men who during the late war were our foes were at the time of
the annexation clamouring for it, welcoming Sir Theophilus Shepstone as
the deliverer and saviour of the country. I mention Swart Dirk Uys, an
eminent Boer, who fought against the English in 1880-81, as one amongst
the hundreds and thousands who went out to meet Sir Theophilus Shepstone
with palm branches in their hands.The natural
aversion of the people to English rule was overcome for the moment by
their greater aversion to being wiped off the face of the Transvaal by
the blacks; that was a contingency staring them in the face, and yet not
even that imminent common danger availed to secure unity amongst them,
or would rouse men individually to take upon their shoulders the
responsibility which rests upon every member of a State.
The Boer Volksraad, after promising to appeal to their
constituents on the subject of the new constitution proposed, almost
immediately passed a measure, which was familiarly styled by the people
the 'Hou jou smoel law.' The literal translation of this term is 'Hold
your jaw.' In brief, it was an
Act which made it high treason for any man to discuss the question of
either confederation or annexation.
I come to the conclusion, then, that the cause of the
annexation was England's historical greed of territory, especially rich
territory; and that, however unworthy the motive on the part of the
visiting power, the Boers did not at that time receive the visitor with
other feelings than those of satisfaction, and practically surrendered
their country voluntarily and gladly to the ruler of a greater power,
under the impression that Sir Theophilus Shepstone would be permitted to
carry out, and that he therefore would carry out, the promises he made
them. As the programme was open before them, they had everything to gain
and nothing to lose, except the loss entailed by nominal government by
the British. No man, whether Boer or Britisher, who was living in the
Transvaal, or knew the feelings of the Boers at the time of annexation,
would in 1877 have given any other account of the feeling of the nation;
and if I have formed too low an opinion of the motives of English
statesmen at that time, and am not justified in attributing the
annexation to greed instead of to the purer and nobler desire to protect
England's colonies, or even the Transvaal itself, from the inroads of
savages, then my excuse must be that the failure of England to send out
at that time a force equal to the task of restraining those savages and
maintaining peace, has helped materially to lead me to the unwarrantable
conclusion.{03}
And so came the war. The history of it is written that all may read; and
it is not necessary here to refer at length to the details of it. The
utterly unjust treatment of Bezuidenhout at Potchefstroom was the immediate
cause of the outbreak. The armed interference of the Potchefstroom burghers
with the Imperial officials followed on December 16, to be in turn succeeded
by the battle of Bronkhorst Spruit on the 20th.
The following account of the affair is taken from Mr. Carter's book:
All went well on this day till about 2.30 p.m., when the
following was about the order of march: One mounted infantryman in
advance of the main body next the band; of F company, forty men; of A
company, forty men; then followed the quarter-guard, thirteen men; and
provost-escort and prisoners, twenty-three men. The remainder of the
force was posted along the string of waggons, with the exception of the
rear-guard of about twenty men, which were some distance behind. Colonel
Anstruther, Captains Nairne and Elliott, Lieutenant Hume, and Adjutant
Harrison were riding just in front of the band, when suddenly Boers
appeared all round. The locality that the regiment had reached at the
time was one where stood several farms, and the trees surrounding these
homesteads afforded cover under which a hostile force could
assemble without being perceived from
a distance. On the right was a ravine with wood in it, and amongst that
the Boers were lying in ambush. How unexpected was the appearance of a
force of Boers to the English may be judged from the fact that the band
of the regiment was playing at the time. Colonel Anstruther, immediately
he caught sight of the enemy on the crest of a slight rise to the front,
called a halt, and the order was passed to the rear for the waggons to
close up. Before this could be done a messenger from the enemy, carrying
a white flag, came forward and handed the Colonel a note signed by Piet
Joubert, and countersigned by other Boer leaders, desiring him to halt
where he was until a reply had been received from Sir Owen Lanyon to the
ultimatum the Boers had addressed to him. The message also contained the
warning that if the soldiers advanced beyond a small stream in front of
them, it would be taken as a declaration of war. Colonel Anstruther,
with Conductor Egerton, had ridden out in front of the advanced guard to
meet this flag of truce; after he had read the message, the bearer of it
informed him verbally that two minutes were allowed for his decision.
Colonel Anstruther verbally replied that he should march on to Pretoria,
and, to use his own words, as published in his despatch written just
before he died, the Boer messenger 'said that he would take my message
to the Commandant-General; and I asked him to let me know the result, to
which he nodded assent. Almost immediately, however, the enemy's line
advanced.'Whilst this short parley was going
on, every effort was being made in the rear to get the waggons up, but
without much good result, because when the Boers opened fire the
rear-guard would be at least half a mile behind the head of the column.
Even those who were guarding the waggons had not time to join the main
body. When Colonel Anstruther saw the Boers advancing, he gave the order
to his men to extend in skirmishing order, but before they could open
out to more than loose files they were met with a murderous volley, and
at the same time Boers on the right and left flank and in the rear, who
had previously measured and marked off the distances, picked off every
man within sight. Our men returned the fire as best they could, but in
less than ten minutes 120 were either killed or wounded, besides a large
proportion of the oxen in the waggons shot. The officers who exposed
themselves were picked off almost immediately by the Boer marksmen.
Captain Nairne, Lieutenant M'Sweeney, Lieutenant and Adjutant Harrison,
Lieutenant Hume, Deputy-Assistant Commissary-General Barter, Conductor
Egerton, Surgeon Ward, were all wounded, besides Colonel Anstruther
himself, who was shot in two or three places.
It was useless to contend against such odds, and the
'cease fire' was sounded, and handkerchiefs waved to denote submission.
During this unequal struggle, Mrs. Smith, the widow of the bandmaster of
the regiment, who, with the wife of Sergeant-Major Fox and some
children, were riding in one of the foremost waggons, came fearlessly up
to where the wounded lay, and, tearing strips from her clothing, helped
the surgeon to bandage the wounds. The sergeant-major's wife was
severely wounded, as was also Fox himself. There was no lack of heroism
during those awful ten minutes, whilst men were being shot down like
dogs. Lieutenant Harrison was shot through the head while cheering on
his men; Lieutenant Hume was equally conspicuous for his coolness. An
orderly-room clerk named Maistre and the Sergeant-Master-Tailor Pears
quietly concealed the regimental colours in a waggon-box when they saw
the danger of them falling into the hands of the enemy; and their work
was not in vain, as Conductor Egerton
managed subsequently to wrap them round his body under
his tunic, and having obtained permission after the fight was over to
walk to Pretoria for medical assistance, he carried them safely to the
capital, as well as the disastrous news of the engagement. Forty-two
miles traversed by a wounded man on foot in eleven hours is in itself a
feat worth mentioning, and one the value of which can only be really
estimated by those who know what South African roads are in the rainy
seasons.
As soon as our force surrendered, Franz Joubert, who
had been in command of the Boers, and who, it is said, fired the first
shot, with the exclamation, 'What is the use of waiting?' came forward
with some of his men, and on finding poor Colonel Anstruther severely
wounded expressed sorrow.
Whether the affair of Bronkhorst Spruit can be called
an act of treachery on the part of the Boers is rather a nice question.
Colonel Anstruther's words—the words of a dying man—rather go to prove
that he was unfairly treated, though he does not say so directly. He was
given to understand by the messenger who came with the flag of truce
that another communication would be made to him as soon as his reply to
the request to halt had been reported to the Boer Commandant. The only
reply given him was 'a murderous volley.' The Boers cannot lay claim to
much bravery or superiority (except in numbers) over our soldiers in
this fight. Theirs was a deliberately-planned ambush to entrap men who
had no idea that they were marching in an enemy's country. Bronkhorst
Spruit engagement is the one during the whole of the war which does not
redound to the credit of the Dutch, even if it does not reflect great
discredit upon them. If a reasonable time had been allowed Colonel
Anstruther to give his reply, the 94th could not then say, as they do
say and will say, that they were treacherously surprised. 'Two minutes'
looks, under the circumstances, very much like an idle pretence of fair
dealing to cover an intentional act of cowardice which subsequent
conduct could hardly palliate. The Boers say that they had not more men
than were marching with the 94th on that occasion; that statement is
worth very little, considering the evidence of our officers, and, above
all, the harsh evidence of the facts that the 94th was from
advance-guard to rear-guard practically surrounded and outnumbered in
every direction.
The preparedness of the Boers and the precision of their fire may be
gathered from the testimony of Dr. Crow, of Pretoria, who attended the
wounded, and vouched for an average of five wounds per man. Dr. Crow also
wrote:
But as disastrous as the late war in the Transvaal had
been to British prestige, thank God those at Bronkhorst Spruit did their
duty and died like men, a noble example to any army. If any stain has
been cast on the British flag in the Transvaal, the gallant 94th did all
that was possible by their deeds at Bronkhorst Spruit to obliterate it.
The news of this affair was received with horror, and the feelings roused
by the details of it have never been allayed. Race-hatred
may have its origin in a hundred little incidents, but in the Transvaal
there were two which undoubtedly, whether justly or otherwise, gave a
character to the Boers that has embittered feeling against them more than
any which had occurred in generations previous. The second affair followed
very closely on the Bronkhorst Spruit engagement—i.e., the infamous
murder of Captain Elliott, the only surviving unwounded officer from
Bronkhorst Spruit. Captains Elliott and Lambert were taken prisoners, and
were offered the choice of two alternatives—either to remain prisoners of
war during the hostilities in the Transvaal, or to be released on parole
d'honneur on condition that they should leave the Transvaal at once,
cross into the Free State under escort, and not bear arms against the
Republican Government during the war. The second alternative was chosen.
They received an escort and free pass from Commandant-General Piet Joubert.
The following is extracted from Captain Lambert's Report to Sir George
Colley on January 5:
We started about 1 p.m. from the Boer camp, passing
through the town of Heidelberg. After going about six to eight miles, I
noticed we were not going the right road, and mentioned the fact to the
escort, who said it was all right. Having been 'look-out' officer in the
Transvaal, I knew the district well. I was certain we were going wrong,
but we had to obey orders. At nightfall we found ourselves nowhere near
the river drift, and were ordered to outspan for the night, and next
morning the escort told us they would look for the drift. Inspanning at
daybreak, we again started, but after driving about for some hours
across country, I told the escort we would stop where we were while they
went to search for the drift. Shortly after they returned and said they
had found it, and we must come, which we did, eventually arriving at the
junction of two rivers (Vaal and Klip), where we found the Vaal
impassable, but a small punt, capable of holding only two passengers at
most, by which they said we must cross. I pointed out that it was
impossible to get my carriage or horses over by it, and that it was not
the punt the General said we were to cross. The escort replied it was
Pretorius's punt that the General told them to take us, and we must
cross; that we must leave the carriage behind and swim the horses, which
we refused to do, as we then should have had no means of getting on. I
asked them to show me their written instructions, which they did
(written in Dutch), and I pointed out that the name of Pretorius was not
in it. I then told them they must either take us back to the Boer camp
again or on to the proper drift. We turned back, and after going a few
miles the escort disappeared. Not knowing where we were, I proposed to
Captain Elliott we should go to the banks of the Vaal, and follow the
river till we came to the proper punt.
After travelling all Monday, Tuesday, and up till
Wednesday about 1 p.m., when we found ourselves four hours, or
twenty-five miles, from Spencer's punt, we were suddenly stopped by two
armed Boers, who handed us an official letter, which was opened, and
found to be from the Secretary to the Republican Government, stating
that the members were surprised that, as officers and gentlemen, we had
broken our parole d'honneur, and refused to leave the Transvaal;
that if we did not do so immediately by the nearest drift, which the
bearers would show us, we must return as prisoners of war; that as
through our ignorance of the language of the country there might be some
misunderstanding, they were loth to think we had willingly broken our
promise. We explained that we should reply to the letter, and request
them to take it to their Government, and were prepared to go with them
at once. They took us back to a farmhouse, where we were told to wait
until they fetched their commandant, who arrived about 6 p.m., and
repeated to us the same that was contained in our letter of that day. We
told him we were ready to explain matters, and requested him to take our
answer back to camp. He then ordered us to start at once for the drift.
I asked him, as it was then getting dark, if we could start early next
morning, but he refused. So we started, he having said we should cross
at Spencer's, being closest. As we left the farmhouse, I pointed out to
him that we were going in the wrong direction; but he said, 'Never mind;
come on across a drift close at hand.' When we got opposite it, he kept
straight on; I called to him, and said that this was where we were to
cross. His reply was, 'Come on!' I then said to Captain Elliott, 'They
intend taking us back to Pretoria,' distant some forty miles. Suddenly
the escort (which had all at once increased from two to eight men, which
Captain Elliott pointed out to me; and I replied, 'I suppose they are
determined we shall not escape, which they need not be afraid of, as we
are too keen to get over the border') wheeled sharp down to the river,
stopped, and, pointing to the banks, said, 'There is the drift—cross!' I
drove my horses into the river, when they immediately fell; lifted them,
and drove on about five or six yards, when we fell into a hole. Got them
out with difficulty, and advanced another yard, when we got stuck
against a rock. The current was now so strong and drift deep, my cart
was turned over on to its side, and water rushed over the seat. I called
out to the commandant on the bank that we were stuck and to send
assistance, or might we return, to which he replied, 'If you do, we will
shoot you.' I then tried, but failed, to get the horses to move. Turning
to Captain Elliott, who was sitting beside me, I said, 'We must swim for
it'; and asked could he swim, to which he replied, 'Yes.' I said, 'If
you can't, I will stick to you, for I can.' While we were holding this
conversation, a volley from the bank, ten or fifteen yards off, was
fired into us, the bullets passing through the tent of my cart, one of
which must have mortally wounded poor Elliott, who only uttered the
single word 'Oh!' and fell headlong into the river from the carriage. I
immediately sprang in after him, but was swept down the river under the
current some yards. On gaining the surface of the water, I could see
nothing of Elliott, but I called out his name twice, but received no
reply. Immediately another volley was fired at me, making the water hiss
around where the bullets struck. I now struck out for the opposite bank,
which I reached with difficulty in about ten minutes; but as it was
deep, black mud, on landing I stuck fast, but eventually reached the top
of the bank, and ran for about two hundred yards under a heavy fire the
whole while.
The Boers then invaded Natal and took up a position on
Laing's Nek, four miles inside the Natal border, from which, on January 28,
Sir George Colley endeavoured to oust them with a mounted force of 70 men
and some 500 men of the 58th Regiment. The position is one difficult enough
to climb unencumbered by military accoutrements, but the disposition of the
little mounted force covered the approach. By some unexplained mistake,
however, half of the mounted infantry charged and carried the Boer position
before the 58th had climbed the hill, but were too weak to hold it and
retired, leaving the 58th uncovered in a terrible ascent. But few of the
exhausted men reached the top of the hill, and those, led by Colonel Deane,
only to be shot down. Of the mounted men, 17 were killed and wounded; of the
58th, 73 were killed and 100 wounded. The result was absolute defeat of the
British forces. The number of Boers engaged is not known, but the force
behind the Nek consisted of several thousands, and no doubt a fair
proportion engaged in the fight.
On February 8 General Colley made a demonstration in force on the Ingogo
Heights. The force consisted of under 300 men, with 4 guns and 38 mounted
men. On the Boer side there were about 1,000 men, and the fight lasted from
morning until after dark. It was a drawn fight, in which both parties left
the battlefield at night. There cannot be any doubt, however, that the
balance of advantage was with the Boers, since the loss on the British side
was very severe: 76 men were killed and 69 wounded.
On February 27 came Majuba, when Sir George Colley designed to retrieve
his fortunes and strike an effective blow without the aid of his
second-in-command, Sir Evelyn Wood, whom he had sent to hurry up
reinforcements. The scaling of the mountain at night was a fine performance.
The neglect to take the rocket apparatus or mountain guns, or to fortify the
position in any way, or even to acquaint the members of the force with the
nature of the position which they had taken up in the dark, and the failure
to use the bayonets, were the principal causes of disaster. The Boers
attacked in force a position which should have been absolutely impregnable,
held as it was by a force of 554 soldiers. The Boer force is not known, but
probably consisted of upwards of 1,000 men, since
Christian Joubert after the fight offered to take a portion of the men,
numbering, as he said, some 500, to attack a small British laager on one of
the spurs of the mountain. The splendid feat of taking the hill-top,
however, was accomplished by a small storming party of less than 200 men,
the balance of the Boer forces covering the approach of their comrades by an
accurate and incessant long-range fire. The result, as is known, was
terrible disaster: 92 killed and 134 wounded, and a number taken prisoners,
represented the British loss, whilst the Boers lost 1 killed and 5 wounded.
No attempt had been made to occupy positions below the crown of the hill
which commanded the approaches, and the Boers were able to creep up under
good cover from place to place by the exercise of their admirable tactics.
It is impossible to detract from the performance of the Boers, and a glance
at the position leaves one more astonished than ever that a successful
attack could ever have been made upon it. The Boers displayed on this day
the finest fighting qualities. The generalship of their fighting Commandant,
Nikolas Smit, was of the highest order. The cleverness of the attack, and
the personal bravery and audacity of the storming party are beyond praise.
By the time Sir Evelyn Wood had ranged his forces for an effective and
extended attack on the Boers, and by the time Sir Frederick Roberts with the
command of about 10,000 men had reached South Africa, the administration of
Mr. Gladstone had awakened to the fact that the war was an unjust—not to say
costly—one. An armistice was arranged and peace made without another blow.
The terms of the settlement proposed by the Liberal Government fitly
illustrate the generosity of their motives. They proposed doing 'simple
justice' to the Boers, but at the same time retaining the districts of
Lydenburg, Middelburg, Wakkerstroom, and Utrecht, not to mention handing
back Zoutpansberg to the original native occupants. So anxious were the Boer
leaders to effect a peaceful settlement, so fearful were they of the actions
of their followers, that when they arranged the long armistice they did not
announce to their party the intentions of the British Government regarding
the above districts. General Joubert did not communicate
to his army the terms of peace, but simply stated that a Royal Commission
was to settle everything. A month later, when some inkling of the terms
reached the Boers, a solemn protest and warning was issued, and when the
Royal Commission actually sat, the British representatives were informed
that any such curtailment of the territories would be followed by a
resumption of hostilities. Needless to say the proposals were abandoned and
the Boers got their way. So ended the war.
Ingogo has been called a drawn battle. Bronkhorst Spruit was—such as it
was. At Laing's Nek and Majuba the Boers beat us, as Mr. Carter fairly puts
it, 'when they were on the top of the hill and we were at the bottom, and
when we were on the top of the hill and they were at the bottom.' The
narrative of these events is about as humiliating a one as an Englishman can
read. Here and there it is redeemed by the heroic conduct of individuals in
the midst of general disaster. In the smaller affairs, such as the
particularly gallant defences of Standerton, Potchefstroom, and Rustenberg,
where little garrisons held their own with conspicuous ability and courage,
there is something to cheer the disheartened reader. The defence of
Potchefstroom by Colonel Winslow should be read in full for several reasons.
The siege of Standerton witnessed several acts of valour, but, above all,
that of Hall the volunteer, who single handed deliberately engaged a force
of over 300 Boers, drawing their fire on himself in order to warn his
comrades of the danger of being cut off and to give them a chance of
escape—a noble act in which the gallant fellow achieved his object but lost
his life. It was in Rustenberg where Captain Auchinleck, with about seventy
men armed only with rifles, held his laager against hundreds of the enemy,
fighting day and night for weeks; and eventually drove off the Boers who
were trenching towards his position by charging at night with from nine to
fourteen of his men and clearing the enemy out of the trenches with the
bayonet. This performance he repeated three times, himself badly wounded on
each occasion. The impression created on the enemy by these tactics was such
that they overcame their desire to get at close quarters with him, and left
him severely alone.
It is not necessary to refer in great detail to the
settlement In effect it was that the Boers gained nearly all that they
required, but not until the haggling and threatening had robbed concessions
of all appearance of grace and justice. The natives were referred to in the
conventional spirit. The unfortunate loyalists were left to take care of
themselves. The men who had entered the Transvaal, and invested their
capital and expended their energies there upon the most positive and sacred
assurances of the British Government that the Queen's authority would never
be withdrawn,—assurances given in public by the Conservative Government and
confirmed by Mr. Gladstone's Government, assurances published by Sir Bartle
Frere and Sir Garnet Wolseley, who said that 'as long as the sun would shine
the British flag would fly over the Transvaal,'—were heartlessly abandoned,
their protests were unheeded, the compensation allotted to them, namely,
£1,400,000, was amended by the elimination of the million, their
representations to Mr. Gladstone's Government were finally left
unanswered—unless it be that the sneering reference made by that right
honourable gentleman in the House of Commons to 'interested contractors and
landjobbers' may be considered an adequate answer to a protest as moderate,
as able, as truthful, and as necessary as Mr. Gladstone's remark was the
reverse. In very truth, the position in which the British Premier had placed
himself through his intemperate speeches in the Midlothian campaign, and his
subsequent 'explaining away,' was an extremely unpleasant one. In Opposition
Mr. Gladstone had denounced the annexation and demanded a repeal. On
accession to power he adopted the policy of his predecessors, and affirmed
that the annexation could never be revoked. On June 8, 1880, he had written
to this effect to Messrs. Kruger and Joubert, the Transvaal deputation.
Later on, in answer to an appeal that he should allay the apprehensions of
the loyalists, who feared the results of the Boer agitation, he referred
them to this very letter as a final expression of opinion, and authorized
the publication of this message. When, however, peace had been concluded,
and the loyalists, amazed and heartbroken at their threatened desertion,
reminded him of his pledges and implored him to respect
them, he answered them in a letter which is surely without parallel in the
record of self-respecting Governments. The wriggling, the equivocation, the
distortion of phrases, the shameless 'explaining away,' are of a character
that would again justify the remark of Lord Salisbury (then Lord Robert
Cecil) in another matter many years before, that they were 'tactics worthy
of a pettifogging attorney,' and even the subsequent apology—to the
attorney. But what answer could be made to a protest which reminded the
right honourable gentlemen of the following deliberate and official
expression of his Government's policy?—
In your letter to me (wrote Mr. White for the loyalists)
you claim that the language of your letter does not justify the
description given. With the greatest respect I submit that it does, and
I will quote the words on which I and also my colleagues base the
opinion that it does unequivocally pledge the Government to the
non-relinquishment of the Transvaal.The actual
words of your letter are:
'Looking at all the circumstances, both of the
Transvaal and the rest of South Africa, and to the necessity of
preventing a renewal of the disorders, which might lead to disastrous
consequences, not only to the Transvaal, but to the whole of South
Africa, our judgment is that the Queen cannot be advised to
relinquish the Transvaal; but, consistently with the maintenance of
that sovereignty, we desire that the white inhabitants of the Transvaal
should, without prejudice to the rest of the population, enjoy the
fullest liberty to manage their local affairs.'
But your letter of the 8th of June not only contained
this final and absolute announcement of the policy of England, but it
gave the reasons for arriving at it in words which so aptly express the
case of the loyalists that I quote them in extenso. They are as
follows:
'It is undoubtedly matter for much regret that it
should, since the annexation, have appeared that so large a number of
the population of Dutch origin in the Transvaal are opposed to the
annexation of that territory, but it is impossible now to consider
that question as if it were presented for the first time. We have to
do with a state of things which has existed for a considerable period,
during which obligations have been contracted, especially, though
not exclusively, towards the native population, which cannot be set
aside.'
In your speech in the House of Commons, on the debate
on Mr. Peter Rylands' motion condemning the annexation of the country
and the enforcement of British supremacy in it, which was defeated by a
majority of ninety-six, on the 21st of January in the current year, you
used words of similar import. You are reported in the Times of
the 22nd of January as saying:
'To disapprove the annexation of a country is one
thing; to abandon that annexation is another. Whatever we do, we must
not blind ourselves to the legitimate consequences of facts. By the
annexation of the Transvaal we
contracted new obligations.... I must look at the obligations entailed
by the annexation, and if in my opinion, and in the opinion of many on
this side of the House, wrong was done by the annexation itself, that
would not warrant us in doing fresh, distinct, and separate wrong by a
disregard of the obligation which that annexation entailed. These
obligations have been referred to in this debate, and have been
mentioned in the compass of a single sentence. First, there was the
obligation entailed towards the English and other settlers in the
Transvaal, perhaps including a minority, though a very small minority,
of the Dutch Boers themselves; secondly, there was the obligation to the
native races; and thirdly, there was the obligation we entailed upon
ourselves in respect of the responsibility which was already incumbent
upon us, and which we, by the annexation, largely extended, for the
future peace and tranquillity of South Africa.'
Nor was this all. The loyalists proceeded to remind him that Lord
Kimberley, his Secretary of State for the Colonies, had telegraphed in May,
1880, 'Under no circumstances can the Queen's authority in the Transvaal be
relinquished,' and had confirmed the telegram in a despatch following; and
that his lordship had also stated in the House of Lords on May 24 that '...
after a careful consideration of the position, we have come to the
conclusion that we could not relinquish the Transvaal. Nothing could be more
unfortunate than uncertainty in respect to such a matter.' (Hansard, cclii.,
p. 208.)
The effects of the settlement, and the exposures in connection with it,
and the attitude of the Imperial Government were most deplorable. No credit
was given by the Boers to a Government which was clearly moved by the
meanest considerations. No feeling but contempt, disgust, and even hatred,
could be entertained by the loyalists for the Government which had so
shamelessly deserted them. The settlement has left its indelible mark upon
the sentiment of South Africa. The war, it will generally be admitted, was a
most unfortunate occurrence. Only one thing could have been more
unfortunate, and that was such a settlement as actually was effected—a
settlement which satisfied no one, which outraged all, which threw South
Africa into a state of boiling discontent. In some quarters the defeats of
Majuba and Laing's Nek rankled deeply; yet they were fair fights, and Time
can be trusted to allay the feelings of those who are worsted in a fair
fight; but there were other matters which roused a spirit
in the English-speaking people of South Africa that had never been known
before.
The former records of the Boers, favourable and unfavourable, are
consistent with the records established in the War of Independence. None
dare belittle the spirit which moved them to take up arms against the
greatest Power in the world. Their ignorance may have been great, but not so
great as to blind them to the fact that they were undertaking an unequal
contest. It is not possible to say, with due regard to their records, that
they are not a courageous people. Individual bravery, of the kind which
takes no heed of personal risk, reckless heroic dash, they have not, nor do
they pretend to have. Their system is entirely otherwise. They do not seek
fighting for fighting's sake. They do not like exposing themselves to risk
and danger. Their caution and their care for personal safety are such that,
judged by the standard of other people's conduct in similar positions, they
are frequently considered to be wanting in personal courage. It seems a hard
thing to say of a people who have produced men like the first Bezuidenhout,
who fought and died single-handed against the British troops; men like Piet
Retief, as gallant a man as ever walked; men like Piet Uys, an example to
all men for all time, and only one of many generations in one family of
equally gallant Dutchmen; but it would truly seem that such examples do not
occur with such frequency among the Boers as among nations with whom they
have been compared. Where they have been able to choose their own positions,
or where they have been stimulated by previous successes, they have done all
that could possibly be asked of them; but their particular military system
does not conduce to success under circumstances where men are suddenly and
unexpectedly called upon to exhibit the virtues of discipline, to make what
to the individual may appear a useless sacrifice of life, or, in cold blood
and in the face of previous defeat, to attempt to retrieve a lost position.
The Boer military power has been called the biggest unpricked bubble in
the world. Whether this be so or not—whether the early conflicts between the
British troops and the Boers in the Cape Colony and Natal justify the view
that the Boers cannot take a beating and come up again—is
a matter for those to decide who will give their impartial attention to the
records.
Whilst conspicuous personal daring among the Boers may not be proverbial,
it must be remembered to their everlasting credit that they, as did the
Southerners in the American Civil War, robbed the cradle and the grave to
defend their country. Boys who were mere children bore rifles very nearly as
long as themselves; old men, who had surely earned by a life of hardship and
exposure an immunity from such calls, jumped on their horses and rode
without hesitation and without provision to fight for their independence.
There were, however, unfortunately, matters connected with the war which
gave birth to a bitter and aching desire for revenge. Bronkhorst Spruit and
the murder of Captain Elliott were among the earliest. Another was the
shooting of Dr. Barbour (who was killed instantly) and Mr. Walter Dyas
(wounded) by their escort under circumstances similar to those of the
Elliott murder, with the exception that in this case the prisoners had been
released on foot and in daylight, and were then shot down.
But there were others too. There was the murder of Green in Lydenburg,
who was called to the Boer camp, where he went unarmed and in good faith,
only to have his brains blown out by the Boer with whom he was conversing;
there was the public flogging of another Englishman by the notorious Abel
Erasmus because he was an Englishman and had British sympathies; and there
were the various white flag incidents. At Ingogo the Boers raised the white
flag, and when in response to this General Colley ordered the hoisting of a
similar flag to indicate that it was seen, a perfect hail of lead was poured
on the position where the General stood; and it was obvious that the
hoisting of the flag was merely a ruse to ascertain where the General and
his staff were. There was the ambulance affair on Majuba, when the Boers
came upon an unarmed party bearing the wounded with the red cross flying
over them, and after asking who they were and getting a reply, fired a
volley into the group, killing Surgeon-Major Cornish.
There was the siege of Potchefstroom, during which the Boer force under
Commandant Cronjé were guilty of actions contrary to the usages of civilized
warfare. They are matters of history, and can easily be verified. Reference
is made to them elsewhere in this volume in connection with Commandant
Cronjé's action on another occasion.
And so the war left the country, as wars will, divided into two parties,
with feelings towards each other that are deplorable enough in themselves,
and not easily allayed. The curtain was rung down, and the scene was lost to
the view of the world, but the play went on all the same behind the curtain.
And this is what the new Government said to the world on August 8, 1881,
when they took over the administration of the country:
To all inhabitants, without exception, we promise the
protection of the law, and all the privileges attendant thereon.
To inhabitants who are not burghers, and do not wish to
become such, we notify that they have the right to report themselves to
the Resident as British subjects, according to Article 28 of the now
settled Convention. But be it known to all, that all ordinary rights of
property, trade, and usages will still be accorded to everyone, burgher
or not.
We repeat solemnly that our motto is, 'Unity and
reconciliation.'
Footnotes for Chapter I
{01} Written in 1896.
{02} Several of the letters and despatches given
in this volume are quoted from Mr. Martineau's excellent 'Life of Sir Bartle
Frere,' a portion of which book was lately published in cheaper form, under
the title of 'The Transvaal Trouble and How it Arose.'
{03} It is only fair to state that at that
time the Home Government believed the prestige of the Imperial authority
to be sufficient for all purposes.
|