<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII</SPAN><br/> <span class="smaller">MAFEKING (1899-1900)</span></h2>
<p class="summary">Snyman begins to fire—A flag of truce—Midnight sortie—The dynamite
trolley—Kaffirs careless—A cattle raid—Eloff nearly takes
Mafeking—Is taken himself instead—The relief dribble in—At
2 a.m. come cannon with Mahon and Plumer.</p>
<p>On the 7th of October, 1899, Colonel Baden-Powell issued
a notice to the people of Mafeking, in which he told them
that “forces of armed Boers are now massed upon the
Natal and Bechuanaland borders. Their orders are not
to cross the border until the British fire a shot. As this
is not likely to occur, at least for some time, no immediate
danger is to be apprehended.... It is possible they
might attempt to shell the town, and although every
endeavour will be made to provide shelter for the women
and children, yet arrangements could be made to move
them to a place of safety if they desire to go away from
Mafeking....”</p>
<p>Mafeking is situated upon a rise about 300 yards north of
the Matopo River. The railway, which runs north to Buluwayo,
is to the west of the town, and crosses the river by
an iron bridge. To the west of the railway is the native
stadt, which consists of Kaffir huts, being called in
Kaffir language “The Place Among the Rocks.”</p>
<p>The centre of the town is the market-square, from which
bungalows built of mud-bricks, with roofs of corrugated
iron, extend regularly into the veldt. The streets were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</SPAN></span>
barricaded, and the houses protected by sand-bags. An
armour-plated train, fitted with quick-firing guns,
patrolled the railway at times. The population during the
siege included 1,500 whites and 8,000 natives. The town
was garrisoned by the Cape Police and by the Protectorate
Regiment, under Colonel Hore, by the Town Guard, and
volunteers.</p>
<p>Great was the excitement of the inhabitants as the day
of bombardment drew near. They had been very busy
constructing earthworks and gun-emplacements, piling
up tiers of sand-bags and banks of earth to face them;
some had dug deep pits to sit in, but at first such makeshifts
were derided by the inexperienced.</p>
<p>It had been notified that a red flag would fly from headquarters
if an attack were threatening, together with an
alarm bell rung in the centre of the town. Mines had
been placed outside the town, and a telephone attached.</p>
<p>Commandant Snyman had prophesied that when he did
begin to bombard Mafeking English heads would roll on
the veldt like marbles. Mafeking had no artillery to speak
of, so no wonder that many hearts felt uneasy tremors
as the fatal Monday drew near. Yet curiosity ofttimes
overcame fear, and many coigns of vantage were chosen
by those who wished to climb up and see the gory sport.
The bombardment began at 9.15 a.m., and the first shell
sank in a sand-heap, and forgot to explode. The second
and third fell short, but not very short. Then came shell
after shell, falling into street or backyard, and exploding
with a bang. Numbers rushed to find out what damage
had been done. Then grins stole across surprised faces:
the area of damage was about 3 square feet. Three
shells fell into the hospital, luckily doing no harm to anyone.
After some hours of terrible, thundering cannon-fire,
it suddenly ceased. The garrison counted up their
casualties. Three buildings had been struck—the hos<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</SPAN></span>pital,
the monastery, and Riesle’s Hotel; one life had been
taken—it was a pullet that had never yet laid an egg!</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG id="img_13" src="images/i_327.jpg" width-obs="600" height-obs="399" alt="" /> <div class="caption"> <p class="header">The Boers, taken by surprise, were unsteady and panic-struck</p>
<p>An incident during the siege of Mafeking, when the British had sapped their way to within eighty yards of the Boer position.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>Shortly after this bill of butchery had been presented
the Boer General sent an emissary to Colonel Baden-Powell.</p>
<p>“Commandant Snyman presents his compliments, and
desires to know if, to save further bloodshed, the English
would now surrender.”</p>
<p>Baden-Powell is a great actor; he never smiled as he
replied:</p>
<p>“Tell the Commandant, with my compliments, that we
have not yet begun.”</p>
<p>But a few days later the Boers were seen to be very
active on the veldt about three miles from the town, and
the rumour spread that they had sent to Pretoria for siege
guns. The townsfolk stood in groups and discussed the
new peril.</p>
<p>About noon next day the red flag flew from head-quarters.
Presently a great cloud of smoke rose on the
skyline; then came a rush of air, a roar as of some great
bird flying, a terrific concussion, and then flying fragments
of steel buried themselves in distant buildings, creating
a sense of terror throughout the town.</p>
<p>“Mafeking is doomed!” was the general cry that afternoon;
those alone who had dug themselves deep pits were
fairly comfortable in their minds. The second shot of
the big Creusot gun wrecked the rear of the Mafeking
Hotel, and the force of the explosion hurled the war
correspondent of the <i>Chronicle</i> upon a pile of wood.
Next day more than 200 shells were thrown into Mafeking,
which was saved by its mud walls; where bricks
would have been shattered and shaken, these walls only
threw out a cloud of dust.</p>
<p>As the Boers began to construct trenches round the city,
Captain Fitzclarence was ordered to make a midnight<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</SPAN></span>
sortie. Shortly after eleven o’clock the little party started
on their perilous expedition; they crept on over the
veldt in extended order, noiseless as possible, nearer
and nearer to the Boer entrenchments. Those who
watched them felt the weirdness of the scene—the deep
silence, the mysterious noises of the veldt, the shadows
caused by the bush. Now they were within a few yards;
as they fixed bayonets they rushed forward with a cheer.
Then figures showed in the Boer position; shots rang out,
horses neighed and stampeded in fright. The Boers,
taken by surprise, were unsteady and panic-struck; not
many in the first trenches resisted long and stubbornly.
Captain Fitzclarence, a splendid swordsman, laid four
Boers who faced him on the ground; his men pursued with
the bayonet.</p>
<p>Botha said next day that they thought a thousand men
had been hurled against them, and the Boers in the other
trenches fired as fast as they could at anything they could
see or not see, many of the bullets going as far as the town.</p>
<p>This useless firing went on for a long time. When the
attacking party arrived at the town again, they found
they had lost only six men, eleven wounded, and two
taken prisoners. Next day the Boers fired no gun until
evening, and had plenty to do in collecting their wounded.</p>
<p>Several such night attacks were made in order to check
the Boers’ advance. After six weeks of siege, Colonel
Baden-Powell said in a published order: “Provisions are
not yet scarce, danger is purely incidental, and everything
in the garden is lovely.” He was always trying to cheer
up his little garrison with humorous speeches and funny
doings, with concerts and dances and theatrical entertainments.
It was the knowledge of what he had done
to keep up the spirits of his men and the spirits of Englishmen
at home which caused such a frenzy of delight when
Mafeking was finally relieved. What seemed a madness<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</SPAN></span>
of joy was a sure instinct in the nation. It is true that
Mafeking, through the foresight of Julius Weil, the contractor,
possessed immense stocks of food; but as to its
defences, dummy camps and dummy earthworks built to
affright the Boers would not have availed unless the
loyalty and bravery of the colonists had been equal to
the severest strain. There was a wild desire to spike “Big
Ben,” but the Creusot was hedged round by barbed wire,
guarded by mines, and flanked by Nordenfeldt guns. It
seemed wearisome work, week after week, to find the
Boers standing away four or five miles, while from their
places of safety they launched their shells. Sometimes
in the night Baden-Powell would go forth alone, and creep
or stand and examine and ferret out the plans of the
enemy. Often, as he returned, he would startle some
dozing sentry, even as the great Napoleon, who once
found a sentry asleep, and shouldered his musket until
the fellow awoke with a start. “I will not tell, but don’t
do it again!”</p>
<p>Seven weary weeks have passed, and Mafeking still
endures the straits of a siege and the terrors of a bombardment.
The Boers have summoned to their aid the
finest guns from their arsenal in Pretoria to breach and
pound the earthworks; they pour shot and shell into the
little town: but everybody is living below ground now.</p>
<p>But they have bethought them of a new engine of terror
and death. All was dark outside, the good folk in Mafeking
were going to bed in peace, when a deafening roar
shook the town to its foundation of rock; a lurid glow of
blood-red fire lit up square and street and veldt, while
pattering down on roofs of corrugated iron dropped a
hailstorm of sand and stones, and twigs broken from
many trees. The frightened folk ran out to see what had
happened, and they saw a huge column of fire and smoke
rising from the ground to the north of Mafeking. After<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</SPAN></span>
the great roar of explosion came a weird silence and then
the rattle of falling fragments on roof after roof; and
then the cry of terror, the shriek of those who had been
aroused from sleep to face the great trumpet-call of the
Day of Judgment: for this they imagined that awful
phenomenon to portend.</p>
<p>It was not until the morning that they knew what had
caused the alarm. About half a mile up the line the
ground was rent and torn; the rails were bent and scattered
and flung about as by an earthquake.</p>
<p>On inquiry, they found that the Boers had filled a trolley
with dynamite, and were to impel it forwards towards
Mafeking. They lit the time-fuse, and proceeded to push
the trolley up a slight incline. A few yards further, and
it would reach the down incline, and would run merrily
into town without need of further aid from muscle of man.</p>
<p>But they gave over pushing a little too soon; the trolley
began to run back, and it was so dark they did not realize
it until it had gathered way; then they called to one
another, and some pushed, but others remembered the
time-fuse, and stood aloof with their mouths open.</p>
<p>Very soon the time-fuse met the charge, and the dynamite
hastened to work all the evil it could, regardless of
friend or foe.</p>
<p>Piet Cronje was in command of the Boers now; he was
vexed by this unlucky accident, but threatened to send
to Pretoria for dynamite guns, just to make this absurd
veldt-city jump and squeal. Cronje was willing to ride up
and storm Mafeking, but the idle braggarts who formed
the greater part of his army dared not face the steel;
yet there was more than one lady in the trenches able
and ready to use her rifle. The natives had suffered
more from shell-fire than the whites. It is not easy to
impress the Kaffir mind with the peril of a bursting shell;
though the Kaffir may have helped to build bomb-proof<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</SPAN></span>
shelters for Europeans, yet for himself and his family he
thinks a dug-out pit too costly, and will lie about under a
tarpaulin or behind a wooden box, until the inevitable
explosion some day sends him and his family into the air
in fragments.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG id="img_14" src="images/i_333.jpg" width-obs="439" height-obs="600" alt="" /> <div class="caption"> <p class="header">An Amazon at Mafeking</p>
<p>Mrs. Davies, the lady sharpshooter, in the British trenches.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>One such victim was heard to murmur feebly as they put
him on the stretcher, “Boss, boss, me hurt very.” They
bear pain very stoically, and turn their brown pathetic
eyes on those who come to help them, much as a faithful
hound will look in his master’s face for sympathy when
in the agony of death. There were so many shells that
missed human life that the people grew careless and
ventured out too often.</p>
<p>Late in November a local wheelwright thought he would
extract the charge from a Boer shell which had not exploded.
The good man used a steel drill. For a time all
went well, and his two companions bent over to watch
the operation; then came a hideous row, a smell, a
smoke, and the wheelwright, with both his comrades, was
hurled into space.</p>
<p>The Boers had not spared the hospital or the convent.
The poor Sisters had had a fearful time; the children’s
dormitory was in ruins, and their home riddled with holes.
Still the brave Sisters stuck to their post, comforted the
dying, nursed the sick, and set an example of holy heroism.
Here is an extract from a letter describing a scene with the
Kaffirs:</p>
<p>“It is amusing to take a walk into the stadt, the place
of rocks, and watch the humours of the Kaffirs, some
8,000 in number. Now and then they hold a meeting,
when their attire is a funny mixture of savagery and semi-civilization.
You come upon a man wearing a fine pair
of check trousers, and nothing else, but mighty proud of
his check; another will wear nothing but a coat, with the
sleeves tied round his neck; some wear hats adorned with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</SPAN></span>
an ostrich feather, and a small loin-cloth. My black
friend was such a swell among them that he wore one of
my waistcoats, a loin-cloth, and a pair of tennis shoes.
He wore the waistcoat in order to disport a silver chain,
to which was attached an old watch that refused to go.
But it was a very valuable ornament to Setsedi, and won
him great influence in the kraal. Yet when my friend
Setsedi wanted to know the time of day, if he was alone,
he just glanced at the shadow of a tree; or if in company,
he lugged out his non-ticker, and made believe to consult
it in conjunction with the sun. The sun might be wrong—that
was the impression he wished to create—and it was
perhaps more prudent to correct solar time by this relic
of Ludgate Circus. Thus Setsedi, like other prominent
politicians, did not disdain to play upon the credulity of
his compatriots.</p>
<p>“Sometimes on a Sunday afternoon, when the Boers
were keeping the Sabbath and no shells were flying
around, the children of the veldt would begin a dance.
They formed into groups of forty or fifty, and began with
hand-clapping, jumping, and stamping of bare feet. The
old crones came capering round, grinning and shrieking
delight in high voices apt to crack for age. From stamping
the young girls passed on to swaying bodies, every
limb vibrating with rising emotion, as they flung out
sinewy arms with languorous movement; then more wild
grew the dance, more loud the cries of the dancers, as they
threw themselves into striking postures, glided, shifted,
retreated, laughed, or cried.</p>
<p>“I had been watching them for some time when Setsedi
came up to me and said:</p>
<p>“‘Baas, I go now to mark some cows for to-night;
will you come?’</p>
<p>“‘What! has the big white chief given you leave to
make a raid?’ I asked.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“‘Yes, Marenna—yes; we are to go out to-night, and
bring in a herd from beyond the brickfields yonder—if
we can.’</p>
<p>“‘And you go now, this afternoon, to mark them down,
and spy out the ground?’</p>
<p>“He smiled, showing a set of splendid teeth, pulled out
his watch, hit it back and front with his knuckles till it
rattled to the very centre of the works, spat carefully,
and replied with some pride:</p>
<p>“‘We brought in twenty oxen last week; the chief
very pleased with us, and gave us a nice share, Marenna.’</p>
<p>“Setsedi addressed me thus when he was pleased with
himself and the universe: Marenna means sir.</p>
<p>“‘Well, Setsedi,’ said I, ‘if I can get leave, I would
like to go out with you to-night. May I bring my boy,
Malasata?’</p>
<p>“The idea of my asking his permission gave Setsedi
such a lift up in his own opinion of himself that he actually
reflected with his chin in the air before he finally gave
his royal assent to my proposition.</p>
<p>“Time and place were settled, and I went back to the
club for a wash. These black chaps, if they don’t help
us much in fighting, have proved themselves very useful
in providing us now and then with rich, juicy beef from
the Boer herds that stray about the veldt. When I went
home and told Malasata he was to accompany me to-night
on a cattle-raiding foray, like a true Kaffir, he concealed
his delight, and only said, ‘Ā-hă, Ā-hă, Unkos!’ but he
could not prevent his great brown eyes from sparkling
with pleasure. When it was pitch-dark we started—about
a score of us—and crept along silently past the
outposts, word having been passed that the raiders were
to go and come with a Kaffir password or countersign.</p>
<p>“Most of the Kaffirs were stark naked, the better to
evade the grasp of any Boer who might clutch at them.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</SPAN></span>
A sergeant had been told off to accompany them; he and
I were the only white men out that night. After an
hour’s careful climbing and crawling, stopping to listen
and feel the wind, the better to gauge our direction,
Setsedi came close to my ear and whispered:</p>
<p>“‘We can smell them, Baas; plenty good smell. You
and sergeant stay here; sit down, wait a bit; boots too
much hullabaloo; too loud talkee!’</p>
<p>“It was disappointing, but we quite saw the need of this
caution, and we neither of us saw the necessity of walking
barefoot upon a stony veldt; so we sat down in the black
silence, and waited. Yet it was not so silent as it seemed:
we could hear the bull-frogs croaking a mile away in the
river-bed, and sometimes a distant tinkle of a cow-bell
came to us on the soft breeze, or a meercat rustled in
the grass after a partridge. In about half an hour we
heard something; was it a reed-buck? Then came the
falling of a stone, the crackling of a stick as it broke under
their tread; then we rose and walked towards our black
friends.</p>
<p>“Three or four Kaffirs were shepherding each ox,
‘getting a move’ on him by persuasion or fist-law. Sometimes
one ox would be restive and ‘moo’ to his mates,
or gallop wildly hither and thither; but always the persistent,
ubiquitous Kaffir kept in touch with his beast,
talking to him softly like a man and a brother, and guiding
him the way he should go. And all this time the Boers
were snoring not 300 yards off, sentry and all, very
probably. But it would not do to count upon their
negligence; any indiscreet noise might awake a trenchful
of Mauser-armed men, and bring upon us a volley of death.</p>
<p>“When we had got the cattle well out of earshot of
the Boer lines, the Kaffirs urged on the oxen by running
up and pinching them, but without uttering a sound. As
we drew near to the native stadt, a great number of natives<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</SPAN></span>
who had been lying concealed in the veldt rose up to
help their friends drive the raided cattle into the enclosure,
and the sergeant went to head-quarters with
the report of twenty-four head of cattle safely housed.”</p>
<p>The besieged had persevered in their “dug-outs” until
May, 1900, being weary and sometimes sick, faint with
poor food, and hopes blighted. They had been asked by
Lord Roberts to endure a little longer; Kimberley had
been relieved, and their turn would come soon.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, President Kruger’s nephew, Commandant
Eloff, had come into the Boer camp with men who had
once served as troopers at Mafeking, and who knew much
about the fortifications. Eloff made a skilful attack upon
the town on the 12th of May, and was successful in capturing
a fort, Colonel Hore, and twenty-three men. This attack
had been urgent, because news had reached the Boers that
the British relief column had reached Vryburg on the 10th
of May, and Vryburg is only ninety-six miles south of Mafeking.
During the fight Mr. J. A. Hamilton, not knowing
that the fort had been taken, thought that he would ride
across to see Colonel Hore. It was a short ride from
where he was—only a few hundred yards. The bullets
whistled near his head, and he scampered across the open
to reach cover. It was a bad light, and smoke was
drifting about, but he saw men standing about the head-quarters
or sitting on the stoep facing the town. As he
rode his horse was struck, and swerved violently; some
one seized his bridle and shouted “Surrender!” They
were Boers, and amongst them were Germans, Italians,
and Frenchmen. Many speaking at once, they ordered him
to hold up his hands, give up his revolver, get off his horse.</p>
<p>“We had better all take cover, I think,” said Hamilton,
as English bullets were falling rather near them.</p>
<p>Then they took him within the walls. But he had not
yet obeyed any of their orders.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Will you hold your hands up?” said one Boer, thrusting
a rifle into his ribs with a grin.</p>
<p>“With pleasure, under the circumstances,” he replied,
trying to smile.</p>
<p>“Will you kindly hand over that revolver?” said
another.</p>
<p>“What! and hold my hands up at the same time?”</p>
<p>They were dull; they did not see the joke, but shouted,
“Get off!”</p>
<p>Some one unstrapped the girths, and Mr. Hamilton
rolled to the ground. It was only then that he saw his
horse had been shot in the shoulder, and he asked them
to put the poor beast out of his pain.</p>
<p>“No, no! Your men will do that soon enough,” said
they.</p>
<p>The poor animal stood quietly looking at him, as he
says, with a sad, pathetic, inquiring look in his eyes, as if
he were asking, “What can you do for me? I assure you
my shoulder gives me awful pain.”</p>
<p>Hamilton was taken inside the fort and made prisoner.
When, later in the day, he came out, he found his poor
horse lying with his throat cut and seven bullet-wounds
in his body.</p>
<p>There were thirty-three prisoners crowded in a small,
ill-ventilated store-room, and they grew very hungry.
As dusk settled down they began to hear echoes of desperate
fighting outside. Bullets came through the wall
and roofing, splintering window and door; through the
grating of the windows they could see limping figures
scurry and scramble; they heard voices cursing them and
urging Eloff to handcuff and march the prisoners across
the line of fire as a screen for them in their retreat. Then
the firing died down, and the Boers seemed to have rallied;
then came a fresh outburst of heavy firing, and then a
sudden silence. Eloff rushed to the door.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Where is Colonel Hore?”</p>
<p>“Here!”</p>
<p>“Sir, if you can induce the town to cease fire, we will
surrender.”</p>
<p>It was quite unexpected, this turn of events. No one
spoke. Then Eloff said:</p>
<p>“I give myself up as a hostage. Get them to cease fire.”</p>
<p>The prisoners went out, waved handkerchiefs, shouted,
“Surrender! Cease fire, boys.”</p>
<p>When this was done sixty-seven Boers laid down their
rifles, and the prisoners stacked them up in their late
prison.</p>
<p>Commandant Eloff was now a prisoner instead of
being master of Mafeking; his partial success he owed
to his own dash and gallantry, his failure to the half-hearted
support of General Snyman. He dined at head-quarters,
and a bottle of champagne was opened to
console him and distinguish this day of surprises.</p>
<p>On the 16th of May there was great excitement in the
town; the great activity in the Boer laagers, the clouds
of dust rising in the south, all showed that something
new and strange was coming. News had come of General
Mahon having joined Colonel Plumer a few miles up
the river. “When will they come?” everybody was
asking. About half-past two General Mahon’s guns were
heard, and the smoke of the bursting shells could be seen
in the north-west.</p>
<p>In the town people were taking things very calmly.
Had they not enjoyed this siege now for seven months,
when it had been expected to last three weeks at the
most? They were playing off the final match in the
billiard tournament at the club. Then came a hubbub,
and Major Pansera galloped by with the guns to get a
parting shot at the retiring Boers.</p>
<p>Then fell the dusk, and the guns came back. Every<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</SPAN></span>body
went to dinner very elated and happy. “By noon
to-morrow we shall be relieved,” they said.</p>
<p>It was now about seven o’clock; the moon was shining
brightly in the square.</p>
<p>“Hello! what’s this? Who are you, then?”</p>
<p>There were eight mounted men sitting on horseback
outside the head-quarters office.</p>
<p>“Who are you, and what do you want?” asked a man
in the crowd.</p>
<p>“We are under Major Karie Davis with a despatch
from General Mahon.”</p>
<p>“Oh!”</p>
<p>“Yes, we’ve come to relieve you fellows; but you
don’t seem to care much whether you are relieved or
not.”</p>
<p>Then the news travelled round the town; a great
crowd gathered, and round after round of cheers broke
out. The troopers were surrounded by enthusiastic citizens,
cross-questioned, congratulated, slapped on the
back, shaken by the hand, and offered—coffee!</p>
<p>Major Davis came out and called for cheers for the
garrison; then all fell to hallooing of such anthems as
“Rule Britannia” and “God save the Queen.”</p>
<p>Then the troopers of the Imperial Light Horse were
taken in to supper.</p>
<p>About two in the morning the troops entered Mafeking—not
quite 2,000 men; but when the townsfolk, hearing
the noise, ran out into the starry, moonlit night, they
saw such a host of horses, mules, and bullocks, such a
line of waggons and camp-followers, and such a beautiful
battery of bright Royal Horse and Canadian Artillery and
Maxims that life seemed worth living at last. Those who
did not laugh quietly went home and cried for joy. They
had earned their day of delight.</p>
<p>Mafeking had endured 1,498 shells from the 100-pound<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</SPAN></span>
Creusot; besides this, they had had to dodge 21,000 odd
shells of smaller calibre. Men who saw Ladysmith said
that the ruin at Mafeking was far greater.</p>
<p>Lord Roberts had, with his wonted generosity, sent a
mob of prime bullocks and a convoy of other luxuries.
So when the Queen’s birthday came, as it soon did, the
town made merry and were very thankful.</p>
<p>England was thankful too, for although it was only a
little town on the veldt, every eye at home had been upon
the brave defenders who, out of so little material, had
produced so grand a defence.</p>
<p>It is not too much to say that Colonel Baden-Powell
and his gallant company had not only kept the flag
flying; they had done far more: they had kept up the
spirits of a nation beginning to be humiliated by defeat
after defeat, when most of the nations of Europe were
jeering at her, and wishing for her downfall. But God
gave us victory in the end.</p>
<p class="summary">In part from J. A. Hamilton’s “Siege of Mafeking,” by kind permission
of Messrs. Methuen and Co.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</SPAN></span></p>
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