<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
<div class='blkquot'>
<p>ELOFF'S DETERMINED ATTACK ON MAFEKING, AND THE RELIEF OF THE
TOWN—THE MAFEKING FUND</p>
</div>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"War, war is still the
cry—war even to the knife!"—BYRON.</span><br/>
<br/>
<p>"The Boers are in the stadt!" Such was the ominous message
that was quickly passed round from mouth to mouth on Saturday
morning, May 12, 1900, as day was breaking. One had to be well
acquainted with the labyrinth of rocks, trees, huts, and cover
generally, of the locality aforementioned, all within a
stone's-throw of our dwelling, to realize the dread import of
these words.</p>
<p>All the previous week things had been much as usual: inferior
food, and very little of it; divine weather; "bridge" in the
afternoons; and one day exactly like another. Since the departure
of the big gun during the previous month, we had left our
bomb-proofs and lived above-ground. In the early hours of the
morning alluded to came the real event we had been expecting ever
since the beginning of the siege—namely, a Boer attack
under cover of darkness. The moon had just set, and it was
pitch-dark. A fierce fusillade first began from the east, and
when I opened the door on to the stoep the din was terrific,
while swish, swish, came the bullets just beyond the canvas
blinds, nailed to the edge of the verandah to keep off the sun.
Now and then the boom of a small gun varied the noise, but the
rifles never ceased for an instant. To this awe-inspiring tune I
dressed, by the light of a carefully shaded candle, to avoid
giving any mark for our foes. The firing never abated, and I had
a sort of idea that any moment a Dutchman would look in at the
door, for one could not tell from what side the real attack might
be. In various stages of deshabille people were running round the
house seeking for rifles, fowling-pieces, and even sticks, as
weapons of defence. Meanwhile the gloom was still unbroken, but
for the starlight, and it was very cold. The Cockney waiter, who
was such a fund of amusement to me, had dashed off with his rifle
to his redoubt, taking the keys of the house in his pocket, so no
one could get into the dining-room to have coffee, except through
the kitchen window. The two hours of darkness that had to elapse
were the longest I have ever spent. Hurried footsteps passed to
and fro, dark lanterns flashed for an instant, intensifying the
blackness, and all of a sudden the sound I had been waiting for
added to the weird horror of the situation, an alarm bugle,
winding out its tale, clear and true to the farthest byways and
the most remote shanties, followed by our tocsin, the deep-toned
Roman Catholic Church bell, which was the signal that a general
attack was in progress. We caught dim glimpses of the town guard
going to their appointed places in the most orderly manner, and I
remember thinking that where there was no panic there could be
but little danger. An officer of this guard came down the road
and told us all his men had turned out without exception,
including an old fellow of seventy, and stone-deaf, who had been
roused by the rifle-fire, and one minus several fingers recently
blown off by a shell. I went out to the front of the house facing
the stadt, and therefore sheltered from the hail of bullets
coming from the east; and just as we were noticing that objects
could be discerned on the road, that before were invisible,
forked tongues of lurid light shot up into the sky in the
direction where, snug and low by the Malopo River, lay the
natives' habitations. Even then one did not realize what was
burning, and someone said: "What a big grass fire! It must have
commenced yesterday." At the same moment faint cries,
unmistakable for Kaffir ejaculations, were borne to us by the
breeze, along with the smell of burning thatch and wood, and the
dread sentence with which I commenced this chapter seemed to grow
in volume, till to one's excited fancy it became a sort of chant,
to which the yells of the blacks, the unceasing rattle of
musketry, formed an unholy accompaniment. "Hark, what is that?"
was a universal exclamation from the few folk, mostly women,
standing in front of Mr. Weil's house, as a curious hoarse cheer
arose—not in the stadt, half a mile away, but nearer, close
by, only the other side of the station, where was situated the
B.S.A.P. fort, the headquarters of the officer commanding the
Protectorate Regiment. This so-called fort was in reality an
obsolete old work of the time of Sir Charles Warren's 1884
expedition, and was but slightly fortified.</p>
<p>The Boers, after setting fire to the stadt, had rushed it,
surprising the occupants; and the horrible noise of their
cheering arose again and again. Then a terrific fusillade broke
out from this new direction, rendering the roadway a place of the
greatest danger. My quarters were evidently getting too hot, and
I knew that Weil's house and store would be the first objective
of the Boers. I bethought me even novices might be useful in the
hospital, so I decided to proceed there in one way or another.
Although the rifle-fire was slackening towards the east, from the
fort, on the west it was continuing unabated; and the way to the
hospital lay through the most open part of the town. Calling to
our soldier servant of the Royal Horse Guards to accompany me, I
snatched up a few things of value and started off. "You will be
shot, to a certainty," said Mr. Weil. But it was no use waiting,
as one could not tell what would happen next. The bullets were
fortunately flying high; all the same, we had twice to stop under
a wall and wait for a lull before proceeding. Then I saw a native
boy fall in front of me, and at the same moment I stumbled and
fell heavily, the servant thinking I was hit; and all the while
we could hear frightened cries continuing to emanate from the
flaming stadt.</p>
<p>The day had fully broken, and never had the roads appeared so
white and wide, the sheltering houses so few and far between. At
length we reached the hospital trench, and the last 500 yards of
the journey were accomplished in perfect safety. My dangerous
experiences ended for the rest of that dreadful day, which I
spent in the haven of those walls, sheltering so much suffering,
and that were, alas! by evening crammed to their fullest
capacity. It was a gruesome sight seeing the wounded brought in,
and the blood-stained stretchers carried away empty, when the
occupants had been deposited in the operating-room. Sometimes an
ambulance waggon would arrive with four or five inmates; at
others we descried a stretcher-party moving cautiously across the
recreation-ground towards us with a melancholy load. It is easy
to imagine our feelings of dread and anxiety as we scanned the
features of the new arrivals, never knowing who might be the
next. During the morning three wounded Boers were brought
in—the first prisoners Mafeking could claim; then a native
with his arm shattered to the shoulder. All were skilfully and
carefully attended to by the army surgeon and his staff in a
marvellously short space of time, and comfortably installed in
bed. But the Boers begged not to have sheets, as they had never
seen such things before. Among the English casualties, one case
was a very sad one. A young man, named Hazelrigg, of an old
Leicestershire family, was badly shot in the region of the heart
when taking a message to the B.S.A.P. fort, not knowing the Boers
were in possession. Smart and good-looking, he had only just been
promoted to the post of orderly from being a private in the Cape
Police, into which corps he had previously enlisted, having
failed in his army examination. When brought to the hospital,
Hazelrigg had nearly bled to death, and was dreadfully weak, his
case being evidently hopeless. I sat with him several hours,
putting eau-de-Cologne on his head and brushing away the flies.
In the evening, just before he passed into unconsciousness, he
repeated more than once: "Tell the Colonel, Lady Sarah, I did my
best to give the message, but they got me first." He died at
dawn.</p>
<p>All through the weary hours of that perfect summer's day the
rifles never ceased firing. Sometimes a regular fusillade for ten
minutes or so; then, as if tired out, sinking down to a few
single shots, while the siren-like whistle and sharp explosion of
the shells from the high-velocity gun continued intermittently,
and added to the dangers of the streets. So the hours dragged on.
All the time the wildest rumours pervaded the air. Now the Boers
had possession of the whole stadt; again, as soon as night fell,
large reinforcements were to force their way in. Of course we
knew the Colonel was all the while maturing his plans to rid the
town of the unbidden guests, but what these were no one could
tell. About 8 p.m., when we were in the depth of despair, we got
an official message to say that the Boers in the stadt had been
surrounded and taken prisoners, and also that the fort had
surrendered to Colonel Hore, who, with some of his officers, had
been all day in the curious position of captives in their own
barracks. Of course our delight and thankfulness knew no bounds.
In spite of the dead and dying patients, those who were slightly
wounded or convalescent gave a feeble cheer, which was a pathetic
sound. We further heard that the prisoners, in number about a
hundred, including Commandant Eloff, their leader, were then
being marched through the town to the Masonic Hall, followed by a
large crowd of jeering and delighted natives. Two of the nurses
and myself ran over to look at them, and I never saw a more
motley crew. In the dim light of a few oil-lamps they represented
many nationalities, the greater part laughing, joking, and even
singing, the burghers holding themselves somewhat aloof, but the
whole community giving one the idea of a body of men who knew
they had got out of a tight place, and were devoutly thankful
still to have whole skins. Eloff and three principal officers
were accommodated at Mr. Weil's house, having previously dined
with the Colonel and Staff. At 6 a.m. Sunday morning we were
awakened by three shells bursting close by, one after the other.
I believe no one was more frightened than Eloff; but he told us
that it was a preconcerted signal, and that, if they had been in
possession of the town, they were to have answered by rifle-fire,
when the Boers would have marched in. These proved to be the last
shells that were fired into Mafeking.</p>
<p>The same morning at breakfast I sat opposite to Commandant
Eloff, who was the President's grandson, and had on my right a
most polite French officer, who could not speak a word of
English, Dutch, or German, so it was difficult to understand how
he made himself understood by his then companions-in-arms. In
strong contrast to this affable and courteous gentleman was
Eloff, of whom we had heard so much as a promising Transvaal
General. A typical Boer of the modern school, with curiously
unkempt hair literally standing on end, light sandy whiskers, and
a small moustache, he was wearing a sullen and dejected
expression on his by no means stupid, but discontented and
unprepossessing, face. This scion of the Kruger family did not
scruple to air his grievances or disclose his plans with regard
to the struggle of the previous day. That he was brilliantly
assisted by the French and German freelances was as surely
demonstrated as the fact of his having been left more or less in
the lurch by his countrymen when they saw that to get into
Mafeking was one thing, but to stay there or get out of it again
was quite a different matter. In a few words he told us, in
fairly good English, how it had been posted up in the laager, "We
leave for Mafeking to-night: we will breakfast at Dixon's Hotel
to-morrow morning"; how he had sent back to instruct Reuter's
agent to cable the news that Mafeking had been taken as soon as
the fort was in their hands; how he had left his camp with 400
volunteers, and how, when he had counted them by the light of the
blazing stadt, only 240 remained; moreover, that the 500
additional men who were to push in when the fort was taken
absolutely failed him.<SPAN name='FNanchor_34_34' id="FNanchor_34_34"></SPAN><SPAN href='#Footnote_34_34'><sup>[34]</sup></SPAN> He was also betrayed in
that the arranged forward movement all round the town, which was
to have taken place simultaneously with his attack, was never
made. The burghers instead contented themselves by merely firing
senseless volleys from their trenches, which constituted all the
assistance he actually received. This, and much more, he told us
with bitter emphasis, while the French officer conversed
unconcernedly in the intervals of his discourse about the African
climate, the weather, and the Paris Exhibition; finally observing
with heartfelt emphasis that he wished himself back once more in
"La Belle France," which he had only left two short months ago.
The Dutchman, not understanding what he was saying, kept on the
thread of his story, interrupting him without any compunction. It
was one of the most curious meals at which I have ever assisted.
That afternoon these officers were removed to safer quarters in
gaol while a house was being prepared for their reception.</p>
<p>As after-events proved, Eloff's attack was the Boers' last
card, which they had played when they heard of the approaching
relief column under Colonel Mahon,<SPAN name='FNanchor_35_35' id="FNanchor_35_35"></SPAN><SPAN href='#Footnote_35_35'><sup>[35]</sup></SPAN> and of his intention to
join hands with Colonel Plumer, coming from the North. After
lunch, two days later, we saw clouds of dust to the south, and,
from information to hand, we knew it must be our relievers. The
whole of Mafeking spent hours on the roofs of the houses. In the
meantime the Boers were very uneasy, with many horsemen coming
and going, but the laagers were not being shifted. In the late
afternoon a desultory action commenced, which to us was
desperately exciting. We could see little but shells bursting and
columns of dust. One thing was certain: the Boers were not
running away, although the Colonel declared that our troops had
gained possession of the position the Boers had held, the latter
having fallen a little farther back. As the sun set came a
helio-message: "Diamond Fields Horse.—All well.
Good-night." We went to dinner at seven, and just as we were
sitting down I heard some feeble cheers. Thinking something must
have happened, I ran to the market-square, and, seeing a dusty
khaki-clad figure whose appearance was unfamiliar to me, I
touched him on the shoulder, and said: "Has anyone come in?" "We
have come in," he answered—"Major Karri-Davis and eight men
of the Imperial Light Horse." Then I saw that officer himself,
and he told us that, profiting by an hour's dusk, they had ridden
straight in before the moon rose, and that they were now sending
back two troopers to tell the column the way was clear. Their
having thus pushed on at once was a lucky inspiration, for, had
they waited for daylight, they would probably have had a hard
fight, even if they had got in at all. This plucky column of
1,100 men had marched nearly 300 miles in twelve days, absolutely
confounding the Boers by their rapidity.</p>
<p>We heard weeks afterwards how that same day of the relief of
Mafeking was celebrated in London with jubilation past belief,
everyone going mad with delight. The original event in the town
itself was a very tame if impressive affair—merely a score
or so of people, singing "Rule, Britannia," surrounding eight or
nine dust-begrimed figures, each holding a tired and jaded horse,
and a few women on the outskirts of the circle with tears of joy
in their eyes. Needless to say, no one thought of sleep that
night. At 3.30 a.m. someone came and fetched me in a pony-cart,
and we drove out to the polo-ground, where, by brilliant
moonlight, we saw the column come into camp. Strings and strings
of waggons were soon drawn up; next to them black masses, which
were the guns; and beyond these, men, lying down anywhere,
dead-tired, beside their horses. The rest of the night I spent at
the hospital, where they were bringing in those wounded in the
action of the previous afternoon. At eight o'clock we were having
breakfast with Colonel Mahon, Prince Alexander of Teck, Sir John
Willoughby, and Colonel Frank Rhodes, as additional guests. We
had not seen a strange face for eight months, and could do
nothing but stare at them, and I think each one of us felt as if
he or she were in a dream. Our friends told of their wonderful
march, and how they had encamped one night at Setlagoli, where
they had been taken care of by Mrs. Fraser and Metelka, who had
spent the night in cooking for the officers, which fact had
specially delighted Colonel Rhodes, who told me my maid was a
"charming creature." But this pleasant conversation was
interrupted by a message, saying that, as the Boer laagers were
as intact as yesterday, the artillery were going to bombard them
at once. Those of us who had leisure repaired at once to the
convent, and from there the sight that followed was worth waiting
all these many months to see. First came the splendid batteries
of the Royal Horse Artillery trotting into action, all the
gunners bronzed and bearded. They were followed by the Canadian
Artillery, who had joined Colonel Plumer's force, and who were
that day horsed with mules out of the Bulawayo coach. These were
galloping, and, considering the distance all had come, both
horses and mules looked wonderfully fit and well. Most of the
former, with the appearance of short-tailed English hunters, were
stepping gaily out. The Imperial Light Horse and the Diamond
Fields Horse, the latter distinguished by feathers in their felt
hats, brought up the procession. Everybody cheered, and not a few
were deeply affected. Personally, ever since, when I see
galloping artillery, that momentous morning is brought back to my
mind, and I feel a choking sensation in my throat.</p>
<p>About a quarter of a mile from town the guns unlimbered, and
we could not help feeling satisfaction at watching the shells
exploding in the laager—that laager we had watched for so
many months, and had never been able to touch. The Boers had
evidently never expected the column to be in the town, or they
would have cleared off. We had a last glimpse of the tarpaulined
waggons, and then the dust hid further developments from sight.
After about thirty minutes the artillery ceased firing, and as
the atmosphere cleared we saw the laager was a desert. Waggons,
horses, and cattle, all had vanished.</p>
<p>After their exertions of the past fortnight, Colonel Mahon did
not consider it wise to pursue the retreating Boers; but later in
the afternoon I went out with others in a cart to where the
laager had been—the first time since December that I had
driven beyond our lines. I had the new experience of seeing a
"loot" in progress. First we met two soldiers driving a cow; then
some more with bulged-out pockets full of live fowls; natives
were staggering under huge loads of food-stuffs, and eating even
as they walked. I was also interested in going into the very room
where General Snyman had treated me so scurvily, and where
everything was in terrible confusion: the floor was littered with
rifles, ammunition, food-stuffs of all sorts, clothes, and
letters. Among the latter some interesting telegrams were found,
including one from the President, of a date three days
previously, informing Snyman that things were most critical, and
that the enemy had occupied Kroonstadt. We were just going on to
the hospital, where I had spent those weary days of imprisonment,
when an officer galloped up and begged me to return to Mafeking,
as some skirmishing was going to commence. It turned out that 500
Boers had stopped just over the ridge to cover their retreating
waggons, but they made no stand, and by evening were miles
away.</p>
<center>
<SPAN name="218"></SPAN><ANTIMG src="images/218.jpg" alt="The artillery that defended Mafeking"
title="The artillery that defended Mafeking" width="500"
height="346">
</center>
<p>On Friday, May 18, the whole garrison turned out to attend a
thanksgiving service in an open space close to the cemetery. They
were drawn up in a three-sided square, which looked pathetically
small. After the service Colonel Baden-Powell walked round and
said a few words to each corps; then three volleys were fired
over the graves of fallen comrades, and the "Last Post" was
played by the buglers, followed by the National Anthem, in which
all joined. It was a simple ceremony, but a very touching one.
The same afternoon Colonel Plumer's force was inspected by the
Colonel, prior to their departure for the North to repair the
railway-line from Bulawayo. They were striking-looking men in
their campaigning kit, having been in the field since last
August. Some wore shabby khaki jackets and trousers, others
flannel shirts and long boots or putties. However attired, they
were eager once more for the fray, and, moreover, looked fit for
any emergency.</p>
<p>The next few days were a period of intense excitement, and we
were constantly stumbling against friends who had formed part of
the relief column, but of whose presence we were totally unaware.
Letters began to arrive in bulky batches, and one morning I
received no less than 100, some of which bore the date of
September of the year before. My time was divided between eagerly
devouring these missives from home, sending and answering cables
(a telegraph-line to the nearest telephone-office had been
installed), and helping to organize a new hospital in the
school-house, to accommodate the sick and wounded belonging to
Colonel Mahon's force. All the while my thoughts were occupied by
my return to England and by the question of the surest route to
Cape Town. The railway to the South could not be relaid for
weeks, and, as an alternative, my eyes turned longingly towards
the Transvaal and Pretoria. It must be remembered that we shared
the general opinion that, once Lord Roberts had reached the
latter town, the war would be practically over. How wrong we all
were after-events were to prove, but at the end of May, 1900, it
appeared to many that to drive the 200 miles to Pretoria would be
very little longer, and much more interesting, than to trek to
Kimberley, with Cape Town as the destination. Mrs. Godley (to
whom I have before alluded) had arrived at Mafeking from
Bulawayo, and we agreed to make the attempt, especially as the
Boers in the intervening country were reported to be giving up
their arms and returning to their farms. In the meantime it had
been decided that Colonel Plumer should occupy Zeerust in the
Transvaal, twenty-eight miles from the border, while Colonel
Baden-Powell and his force pushed on to Rustenburg. On May 28
Colonel Mahon and the relief column all departed to rejoin
General Hunter in or near Lichtenburg, and Mafeking was left with
a small garrison to look after the sick and wounded. This town,
so long a theatre of excitement to itself and of interest to the
world at large, then resumed by degrees the sleepy, even tenor of
its ways, which had been so rudely disturbed eight months
before.</p>
<p>FOOTNOTES:</p>
<SPAN name='Footnote_34_34' id="Footnote_34_34"></SPAN><SPAN href='#FNanchor_34_34'>[34]</SPAN>
<div class='note'>
<p>Later on, when I was at Zeerust, I met a telegraph clerk who
had then been in the employ of the Boers, and he told me how
indignant all were with General Snyman for deserting Eloff on
that occasion. When one of the <i>Veldtcornets</i> went and
begged his permission to collect volunteers as reinforcements,
all the General did was to scratch his head and murmur in
Dutch, "Morro is nocher dag" (To-morrow is another day).</p>
</div>
<SPAN name='Footnote_35_35' id="Footnote_35_35"></SPAN><SPAN href='#FNanchor_35_35'>[35]</SPAN>
<div class='note'>
<p>Now Major-General Mahon.</p>
</div>
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