<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
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<p>JOHANNESBURG AND PRETORIA IN 1896</p>
</div>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'><i>"Little white mice of
chance,</i></span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'><i>Coats of wool and corduroy
pants,</i></span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'><i>Gold and wine, women and
sin,</i></span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'><i>I'll give to you, if you let
me in</i></span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'><i>To the glittering house of
chance."</i></span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 6.5em;'><i>American Dice
Incantation</i>.</span><br/>
<br/>
<p>At Johannesburg we were the guests of Mr. Abe Bailey at Clewer
Lodge. Our host, however, was unfortunately absent, "detained" in
the precincts of the gaol at Pretoria, although allowed out on
bail. In the same house he had entertained in 1891 my brother
Randolph<SPAN name='FNanchor_9_9' id="FNanchor_9_9"></SPAN><SPAN href='#Footnote_9_9'><sup>[9]</sup></SPAN> and his friend Captain G.
Williams, Royal Horse Guards, on their way to Mashonaland. One of
my first visitors was another fellow-traveller of theirs, Mr.
H.C. Perkins, the celebrated American mining expert. This
gentleman was a great friend of Randolph's, and he spoke most
touchingly of his great attachment to the latter, and of his
grief at his death. For five years Mr. and Mrs. Perkins had lived
in Johannesburg, where they both enjoyed universal respect, and
their approaching departure, to settle once more in America, was
deplored by all. Considered to be the highest mining expert of
the day, Mr. Perkins had seen the rise of the Rand since its
infancy, and he had been shrewd enough to keep out of the late
agitation and its disturbances. Under his guidance we saw the
sights of the towns: the far-famed Rand Club; the Market Square,
crammed, almost for the first time since the so-called
"revolution," with trek-waggons and their Boer drivers; the
much-talked-of "Gold-fields" offices, barred and barricaded,
which had been the headquarters of the Reform Committee; the
Standard Bank, where the smuggled arms had been kept; and finally
the Exchange and the street enclosed by iron chains, where the
stock markets were principally carried on. We were also shown the
interior of the Stock Exchange itself, though we were warned that
it was scarcely worth a visit at that time of depression. We
heard the "call of the shares," which operation only took twenty
minutes, against nearly two hours during the time of the recent
boom. Instead of the listless, bored-looking individuals below
us, who only assumed a little excitement when the revolving,
clock-like machine denoted any popular share, we were told that a
few months ago every available space had been crowded by excited
buyers and sellers—some without hats, others in their
shirt-sleeves, almost knocking one another over in their desire
to do business. Those must indeed have been palmy days, when the
money so lightly made was correspondingly lightly spent; when
champagne replaced the usual whisky-split at the Rand Club, and
on all sides was to be heard the old and well-known formula,
"Here's luck," as the successful speculator toasted an old friend
or a newcomer.</p>
<p>However, to return to Johannesburg as we found it, after the
1895 boom. Even then it seemed to me that for the first time in
South Africa I saw life. Cape Town, with its pathetic dullness
and palpable efforts to keep up a show of business; Kimberley,
with its deadly respectability—both paled in interest
beside their younger sister, so light-hearted, reckless, and
enterprising. Before long, in spite of gloomy reflections on the
evils of gold-seeking, I fell under the fascination of what was
then a wonderful town, especially wonderful from its youth. The
ever-moving crowds which thronged the streets, every man of which
appeared to be full of important business and in a desperate
hurry, reminded one of the City in London. Smart carriages with
well-dressed ladies drove rapidly past, the shops were cunningly
arranged with tempting wares, and all this bustle and traffic was
restored in little over a week. A fortnight previously a
revolution was impending and a siege was looming ahead. Business
had been at a complete standstill, the shops and houses barred
and barricaded, and many of the inhabitants were taking a hurried
departure; while bitterness, discord, and racial feeling were
rampant. Now, after a few days, that cosmopolitan and rapidly
changing population appeared to have buried their differences,
and the uninitiated would never have guessed the town had passed,
and was, indeed, still passing, through troublous times. Mr.
Perkins, however, was pessimistic, and told us appearances were
misleading. He rightly foresaw many lean years for those
interested in the immediate future of the Rand, though even he,
perhaps, hardly realized how lean those would become. Since those
days much water has flown under the bridge, and the trade of the
town, not to speak of the mining industry, has gone from bad to
worse. Recently Federation, the dream of many a statesman
connected with South Africa, has opened a new vista of political
peace and prosperity to its chastened citizens. Many of these, in
affluent circumstances in 1896, have since gone under
financially; but some of the original inhabitants still remain to
show in the future that they have learned wisdom from their past
troubles, brought on principally by their mad haste to get rich
too quickly.</p>
<p>During our stay at Johannesburg we made an expedition to
Pretoria in order to see our host and other friends, who were
still on bail there, awaiting their trial, and also to visit the
seat of the Boer Government. By these remarkable State railways
the short journey of thirty-two miles occupied three hours. We
passed one very large Boer laager, or military camp, on the line,
which looked imposing enough in the bright sunlight, with its
shining array of white-tarpaulin-covered waggons; companies of
mounted burghers, armed to the teeth, and sitting their ragged
but well-bred ponies as if glued to the saddle, were to be seen
galloping to and fro. Although the teeth of the enemy had been
drawn for the present, the Boers were evidently determined to
keep up a martial display. As Pretoria was approached the country
became very pretty: low hills and many trees, including lovely
weeping-willows, appeared on the landscape, and away towards the
horizon was situated many a snug little farm; running streams
caught the rays of the sun, and really rich herbage supplied the
pasture for herds of fat cattle. The town itself did not prove
specially interesting. An imposing space called Church Square was
pointed out to us with great pride by the Dutch gentleman who
kindly did cicerone. There we saw the little primitive "dopper"
church where the President always worshipped, overshadowed and
dwarfed by the magnificent Houses of Parliament, built since the
Transvaal acquired riches, and by the no less grand Government
Offices. As we were standing before the latter, after the fashion
of tourists, our guide suddenly became very excited, and told us
we were really in good luck, for the President was just about to
leave his office on his return home for his midday meal. In a few
minutes the old gentleman emerged, guarded by four armed
burghers, and passed rapidly into his carriage. We took a good
look at this remarkable personage. Stout in figure, with a
venerable white beard, in a somewhat worn frock-coat and a rusty
old black silk hat, President Kruger did not look the stern
dictator of his little kingdom which in truth he was. Our Dutch
friend told us Oom Paul was in the habit of commencing work at 5
a.m., and that he transacted business, either at his house or in
the Government Offices, with short intermissions, until 5 p.m.
Simply worshipped by his burghers, he was on a small scale, and
in his ignorant fashion, a man of iron like Bismarck, notably in
his strong will and in the way in which he imposed the same on
his countrymen. The extent of his personal influence could be
gauged when one considered that his mere orders had restrained
his undisciplined soldier-burghers, who, irritated by being
called away from their peaceful existences, maddened by the loss
of some of their number who fell in the fighting, and elated by
their easy victory, were thirsting to shoot down the leaders of
the Raid, as they stood, in the market-square at Krugersdorp. The
state of the Boer Government at that time added to the
President's difficulties. He was hampered by the
narrowest—minded Volksraad (Parliament) imaginable, who
resented tooth and nail even the most necessary concessions to
the Uitlanders; he was surrounded by corrupt officials, most of
whom were said to be implicated in the late rebellion; he was the
head of a community which was known to be split up into several
sections, owing to acute religious disputes; and yet he
contrived, at seventy-one years of age, to outwit the 60,000
Uitlanders at Johannesburg, and to present his rotten republic as
a model of all that was excellent and high-minded to the world at
large. At the same time he compelled his burghers to forget their
own differences, as they hurled defiance at the common foe. It
seems to be a truism that it requires a Boer to rule a Boer; and
in some ways the mantle of President Kruger would appear to have
descended in our days upon General Louis Botha. According to all
accounts, his will is now law to the ignorant back Veldt Boers,
although his guiding principles savour more of the big stick than
of the spoon-feeding system. Undoubtedly loyal to England, he
bids fair in the future to help found a nation, based upon the
union of British and Boer, inheriting their traditions,
cultivating their ideals, and pursuing their common ends.</p>
<p>But this Utopia seemed far away in 1896, and it was, alas!
destined that many lives should be laid down, and much treasure
expended, before its advent. For the moment lamentations were
rife in Johannesburg, and at many a dinner-party unprofitable
discussions raged as to what would have happened had Dr. Jameson
entered the city. On this point no one could agree. Some people
said the town could have been starved out in a few days, and the
water-supply cut off immediately; others asserted that the Boers
were in reality overawed by Dr. Jameson's name and prestige, and
would have been glad to make terms. The practical spirits opined
that the only thing which would have saved the inhabitants in any
case was the tame ending which actually came about—namely,
the High Commissioner's intervention coupled with President
Kruger's moderation and wisdom in allowing England to punish her
own irregular soldiers. The more one heard of the whole affair,
the more it seemed to resemble a scene out of a comic opera. The
only people at Johannesburg who had derived any advantage from
the confusion were several hitherto unknown military commanders,
who had proudly acquired the title of Colonel, and had promptly
named a body of horse after themselves. During the days before
the final fiasco these leaders used to make short detours round
the town in full regimentals, and finally fill up the time by
being photographed in groups. Mercifully, as it turned out, they
were not ready for active service when Dr. Jameson was reported
at Krugersdorp.</p>
<p>We made an excursion to the so-called battle-field before
leaving for the South. We started in a covered waggonette with no
springs to speak of, drawn by six mules, and a pair of horses as
leaders. Two Kaffirs acted as charioteers, and kept up an
incessant jabber in Dutch. The one who held the reins looked
good-natured enough, but the other, whose duty it was to wield
the enormously long whip, had a most diabolical cast of
countenance, in which cruelty and doggedness were both clearly
depicted. We found his face a true indication of his character
before the end of the day. Bumping gaily along, we soon left the
well-built houses behind, and after passing the Malay quarter of
the town, remarkable by reason of the quaint houses these blacks
make out of paraffin tins, flattened out and nailed together with
wonderful neatness, we emerged on the open veldt. Of course the
road was of the roughest description, and sometimes we had to
hold on with all our might to avoid the concussion of our heads
with the wooden roof. In spite of this, as soon as the Kaffirs
saw an open space before them, the huge whip was cracked, and
away went our team at full gallop, seemingly quite out of
control, the driver leaning back in his seat with a contented
grin, while his colleague manipulated the unwieldy whip. The
tract ran parallel to the Rand for some distance, and we got a
splendid view of Johannesburg and the row of chimney-shafts that
so clearly define the reef.</p>
<p>On passing Langlaate village, we were stopped by a party of
Boers, who had off-saddled by the side of the road. As they were
fully armed and their appearance was not prepossessing, we
expected to be ordered to alight while our conveyance was being
searched. However, our fears were unfounded, and they were most
polite. The driver muttered something in Dutch, whereupon the
leader came to the door, and said in broken English: "Peeck
neeck—I see all right." I am sorry to say one of the
gentlemen of our party muttered "Brute" in an audible whisper;
but, then, he had undergone a short, but a very unpleasant term
of imprisonment, with no sort of excuse, at the instance of a
Boer <i>Veldtcornet</i>, so no wonder he had vowed eternal
vengeance. Luckily, this officer did not hear, or else did not
understand, the ejaculation, so after a civil interchange of
good-days we drove on.</p>
<p>After about three hours we reached a shallow ford over a wide
stream, and our driver informed us that this was our destination.
Leaving the carriage, we walked up to some rocks overlooking the
stream, which seemed an inviting place for luncheon; but we were
quickly driven away, as thereon were lying seven or eight
carcasses of dead horses and mules. Curiously enough, the
vultures, or "aas-vogels," had left the skins on these poor
beasts, for I remember noticing how their coats glistened in the
sunshine. This sight was not very conducive to a good appetite,
and a little farther on we saw another pathetic spectacle: a very
deep trench, made in the past by some gold-prospector, had been
filled in with rocky boulders, and was covered with withered
ferns. Here lay those who had fallen of the Chartered Company's
Forces. No doubt by now the space is enclosed as a tiny part of
God's acre, but at that time the rough stones in the deep grave,
and the faded flowers, seemed to enhance the dreariness of the
scene.<SPAN name='FNanchor_10_10' id="FNanchor_10_10"></SPAN><SPAN href='#Footnote_10_10'><sup>[10]</sup></SPAN> As to the locality of the
final encounter and surrender of the Raiders, there was not much
to interest any but military men. Standing on the top of the
eminence before alluded to, one could see the Boer position and
the sore strait of their foes. Whether the column had come
purposely towards this drift, as being the only possible ford for
many miles, or whether they had been guided thereto by a
treacherous guide, no one knew. One thing was certain:
destruction or surrender must have stared them in the face. The
kopjes on the farther side of the stream were bristling with
Boers, and away on the veldt beyond was drawn up the Staats
artillery. And then one realized a most awful blunder of the
Reform Committee, from their point of view. The Boer forces,
arriving hereabouts in hot haste, from a rapid mobilization, had
been almost entirely without ammunition. We were told on good
authority that each burgher had but six rounds, and that the
field-guns were without any shells at all. During the night the
necessary supply was brought by rail from Pretoria, actually
right through Johannesburg. Either by accident or mature
reflection on the part of the conspirators in that city, this
train was allowed to pass to its destination unmolested. It
proved to be one of those small happenings that completely alter
the course of events. If the burghers had not stopped the Raiders
there, nothing could have prevented them from entering
Johannesburg, for after another three miles the long-sought-for
chimneys—the overhanging cloud of smoke—would have
come into view. The very stars in their courses seemed to have
fought for the Boers, and justified President Kruger's belief
that his people were specially under the protection of
Providence.<SPAN name='FNanchor_11_11' id="FNanchor_11_11"></SPAN><SPAN href='#Footnote_11_11'><sup>[11]</sup></SPAN> Neither will anyone ever
determine the number of Boers killed at Krugersdorp. One
<i>Veldtcornet</i> inserted in all the papers that he defied
anyone to prove that more than four burghers were shot, and of
these two were killed accidentally by their own rifles. Residents
on the spot, however, averred that many more fell; but I think
the point was not disputed in view of President Kruger's famous
claim for "moral and intellectual damages," which was then
already beginning to be mooted.</p>
<p>The lengthening shadows at last reminded us that we had to
return to town for a dinner-party given in our honour. It usually
takes some time to catch a team of six mules and two horses
turned out to graze on the veldt; it is endless, however, when
they are as frightened of their drivers as ours appeared to be.
At length they were collected and we made a start, and then our
adventures began. First the leader, a white horse, jibbed. Off
jumped the Kaffir coachman, and commenced hammering the poor
brute unmercifully over head, ears, and body, with what they
called in Africa the <i>shambok</i>.<SPAN name='FNanchor_12_12' id="FNanchor_12_12"></SPAN><SPAN href='#Footnote_12_12'><sup>[12]</sup></SPAN> In consequence the team
suddenly started off, but the long whip, left on the carriage
roof, slipped down, and was broken in two by the wheel passing
over it. Anyone who has driven behind mules knows how absolutely
powerless the Jehu is without a long whip; so here we were face
to face with a real misfortune: increasing darkness, jibbing
leaders, no whip, and fifteen sandy miles to traverse before
dinner-time. With every sort of ejaculation and yell, and a
perfect rain of blows with the <i>shambok</i> from the Kaffir
still on foot, we lurched forward at a gallop, escaping by a
hair's-breadth another gold-prospector's trench. But the same
leader jibbed again after another mile. I must admit he was a
most irritating brute, whose obstinacy had been increased by the
cruelty of the driver. It was now decided to put him in the
"wheel," where he would be obliged to do his work. We crawled on
again till our white friend literally threw himself down. I have
related this incident to show how cruel Kaffirs can be, for now
the rage of the evil-looking driver burst forth. He not only
hammered the prostrate horse to any extent, but then made the
rest of the team pull on, so as to drag him along on his side. Of
course this could not be allowed, and Major —— jumped
out and commanded him to desist, take out the useless horse, and
tie him behind. At first the Kaffir was very mutinous, and it was
only when a stick was laid threateningly across his back that he
sulkily complied, looking the while as if he would like to murder
the man he was forced to obey. One hears so much nowadays of the
black population having equal rights with the white inhabitants,
that it is well to remember how ferociously their lack of
civilization occasionally comes out. Doubtless there are cruel
men both white and black, but for downright brutality the nigger
is hard to beat, and it is also quite certain that whom the
latter does not fear he will not love. I have personally
experienced great devotion and most attentive service on the part
of natives, and they are deserving of the kindest and most
considerate treatment; but it has often made me indignant to hear
people, who have had little or no experience of living in the
midst of a native population, prate of the rights of our "black
brothers," and argue as if the latter thought, judged, amused
themselves, or, in short, behaved, as the white men do, who have
the advantage of hundreds of years of culture.</p>
<p>The day following our drive to Krugersdorp we left for Cape
Town and England. We made the voyage on the old <i>Roslin
Castle</i>. Always a slow boat, she had on this occasion, in
sporting parlance, a "wing down," having broken a piston-rod on
her way out from England, when we had vainly awaited her at Cape
Town, and I think it was nearly three weeks before we landed at
Plymouth. Again Randolph's African journey was brought back to my
recollection. The captain of the <i>Roslin Castle</i>, Travers by
name, had commanded the <i>Scot</i>, which brought his party home
from Mashonaland, and he had very agreeable recollections of many
an interesting conversation and of quiet rubbers of whist.</p>
<p>Numerous and exciting events had been crowded into the past
six weeks, and in spite of revolutions and strife we had found
our South African visit a very pleasant one. A curious thing
about that continent is: you may dislike it or fall under its
charm, but in any case it nearly always calls you back. It
certainly did in my case; and while recalling the people we had
met and the information we had acquired it was impossible not to
think a little of the Boers themselves, their characteristics and
their failings. At Johannesburg I had been specially struck by
men, who knew them from long experience, telling me how fully
they appreciated the good points of the burghers—for
instance, their bravery, their love of their country, and their
simple, unquestioning, if unattractive faith, which savoured of
that of the old Puritans. Against these attributes their
pig-headedness, narrow-mindedness, laziness, and slovenliness had
to be admitted. All these defects militated against their living
in harmony with a large, increasing, and up-to-date community
like the Johannesburg Uitlanders. Still, one could not forget
that the Transvaal was their country, ceded to them by the
English nation. They left Cape Colony years ago, to escape our
laws, which they considered unjust. It is certain we should never
have followed them into the Transvaal but for the sudden
discovery of the gold industry; it is equally true they had not
the power or the wish to develop this for themselves, and yet
without it they were a bankrupt nation. There is no doubt that
the men who made the most mischief, and who for years embarrassed
the President, were the "Hollanders," or officials sent out from
the mother-country of the Dutch. They looked on the Transvaal
only as a means for getting rich. Hence the fearful state of
bribery and corruption among them, from the highest official
downwards. But this very bribery and corruption were sometimes
exceedingly convenient, and I remember well, when I revisited
Johannesburg in 1902, at the conclusion of the war, hearing
people inveigh against the hard bargains driven by the English
Government; they even went so far as to sigh again for the good
old days of Kruger's rule. Now all is changed once more, after
another turn of the kaleidoscope of time, and yet it is well to
remember that such things have indeed been.</p>
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