<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
<div class='blkquot'>
<p>MY RETURN TO CIVILIZATION ONCE MORE—THE MAFEKING
FUND—LETTERS FROM THE KING AND QUEEN</p>
</div>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"Let us admit it
fairly,</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>As business people
should,</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>We have had no end of a
lesson:</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>It will do us no end of
good."</span><br/>
<br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>KIPLING.</span><br/>
<br/>
<p>On June 27 I left Johannesburg under the escort of Major Bobby
White, who had kindly promised to see me safely as far as Cape
Town. We travelled in a shabby third-class carriage, the only one
on the train, which was merely composed of open trucks. Our first
long delay was at Elandsfontein, practically still in the Rand
District. There the officer in charge came up with the pleasing
intelligence that the train we were to join had broken down, and
would certainly be four hours late; so we had to get through a
very weary wait at this most unattractive little township, whose
only interesting features were the distant chimneys and unsightly
shafts of the Simmer and Jack and the Rose Deep Mines, and far
away, on the horizon, the little white house, amid a grove of
trees, which had been Lord Roberts's headquarters barely a month
ago, and from which he had sent the summons to Johannesburg to
surrender. All around, indeed, was the scene of recent fighting,
and various polite transport officers tried to while away the
tedium of our enforced delay by pointing out various faint
ridges, and explaining that <i>there</i> the Gordons had made
their splendid charge, or, again, that farther back General
French had encountered such a stubborn resistance, and so on,
<i>ad libitum</i>. In response I gazed with enthusiastic
interest, but the flat, hideous country, which guards its deeply
buried treasure so closely, seemed so alike in every direction,
and the operations of the victorious army covered so wide an
area, that it was difficult to make a brain picture of that rapid
succession of feats of arms. At the station itself the "Tommys"
buzzed about like bees, and the officers were having tea or
dinner, or both combined, in the refreshment-room. One overheard
scraps of conversation, from a subaltern to his superior officer:
"A capital bag to-day, sir. Forty Mausers and ten thousand rounds
of ammunition." Then someone else remarked that a railway-train
from the South passed yesterday, riddled with bullets, and
recounted the marvellous escape its occupants had had, which was
not encouraging in view of our intended journey over the same
route. A young man in uniform presently entered with a limp, and,
in answer to inquiries, said his wounded leg was doing famously,
adding that the bullet had taken exactly the same course as the
one did not six weeks ago—only then it had affected the
other knee; "so I knew how to treat it, and I am off to the
Yeomanry Hospital, if they will have me. I only left there a
fortnight ago, and, by Jove! it was like leaving Paradise!"
Another arrival came along saying the Boers had received a proper
punishing for their last depredations on the railway, when De Wet
had brought off his crowning <i>coup</i> by destroying the
mail-bags. But this gentleman had hardly finished his tale when a
decided stir was observable, and we heard a wire was to hand
saying the same De Wet was again on the move, and that a strong
force of men and guns were to leave for the scene of action by
our train to-night. At this juncture, seeing there was no
prospect of any immediate departure, I installed myself
comfortably with a book in the waiting-room, and was so absorbed
that I did not even notice the arrival of a train from
Heidelberg, till the door opened, and my nephew, the Duke of
Marlborough, looked in, and we exchanged a surprised greeting,
being totally unaware of each other's whereabouts. Except for
meeting Winston in Pretoria, I had not seen the face of one of my
relations for more than a year, but so many surprising things
happen in wartime that we did not evince any great astonishment
at this strange and unexpected meeting. In answer to my inquiries
as to what brought him there, he told me he was returning to
Pretoria with his temporarily incapacitated chief, General Ian
Hamilton, who was suffering from a broken collar-bone, incurred
by a fall from his horse. Expecting to find the General in a
smart ambulance carriage, it was somewhat of a shock to be guided
to a very dilapidated old cattle-truck, with open sides and a
floor covered with hay. I peeped in, and extended on a rough
couch in the farther corner, I perceived the successful General,
whose name was in everybody's mouth. In spite of his unlucky
accident, he was full of life and spirits, and we had quite a
long conversation. I have since often told him how interesting
was his appearance, and he, in reply, has assured me how much he
was impressed by a blue bird's-eye cotton dress I was wearing,
the like of which he had not seen since he left England, many
months before. His train soon rumbled on, and then we had a snug
little dinner in the ladies' waiting-room that the
Station-Commandant, a gallant and hospitable Major, had made gay
with trophies, photographs, and coloured pictures out of various
journals. From a deep recess under his bed he produced an
excellent bottle of claret, and the rest of the dinner was
supplied from the restaurant.</p>
<p>The short African winter's day had faded into a blue and
luminous night, resplendent with stars, and still our belated
train tarried. However, the situation was improved, for later
advices stated that the Boers had cleared off from the vicinity
of the railway-line, and that we should surely leave before
midnight. All these rumours certainly added to the excitement of
a railway-journey, and it occurred to me how tame in comparison
would be the ordinary departure of the "Flying Scotsman," or any
other of the same tribe that nightly leave the great London
termini.</p>
<p>At length, with many a puff and agonized groan from the poor
little undersized engine, we departed into the dim, mysterious
night, which hourly became more chill, and which promised a sharp
frost before morning. As we crawled out of the station, our kind
military friends saluted, and wished us, a little ironically, a
pleasant journey. When I was about to seek repose, Major White
looked in, and said: "Sleep with your head away from the window,
in case of a stray shot"; and then I turned down the light, and
was soon in the land of dreams.</p>
<p>The much-dreaded night passed quite quietly, and in the
morning the carriage windows were thickly coated with several
degrees of frost. The engines of the Netherlands Railway, always
small and weak, were at that time so dirty from neglect and
overpressure during the war, that their pace was but a slow
crawl, and uphill they almost died away to nothing. However,
fortunately, going south meant going downhill, and we made good
progress over the flat uninteresting country, which, in view of
recent events, proved worthy of careful attention. Already
melancholy landmarks of the march of the great army lay on each
side of the line in the shape of carcasses of horses, mules, and
oxen. Wolvehoek was the first stop. Here blue-nosed soldiers
descended from the railway-carriages in varied and weird
costumes, making a rush with their billies<SPAN name=
'FNanchor_40_40' id="FNanchor_40_40"></SPAN><SPAN href='#Footnote_40_40'><sup>[40]</sup></SPAN> for hot water, wherewith to
cook their morning coffee, cheerily laughing and cracking their
jokes, while shivering natives in blankets and tattered overcoats
waited hungrily about for a job or scraps of food. After leaving
Wolvehoek, we entered on Commandant De Wet's hunting-ground and
the scene of his recent exploits. There, at almost every culvert,
at every ganger's house, were pickets of soldiers, all gathered
round a crackling fire at that chill morning hour; and at every
one of these posts freshly constructed works of sandbags and deep
trenches were in evidence to denote that their sentry work was no
play, but grim earnest.</p>
<p>We next crossed the Rhenoster Spruit, and passed the then
famous Rhenoster position, so formidable even to the unskilled
eye, and where my military friends told me the Boers would have
given much trouble, had it not been for the two outspread wings
of the Commander-in-Chief's army. A little farther on, the
deviation line and the railway-bridge were pointed out as one of
the many triumphs of engineering skill to be seen and marvelled
at on that recently restored line. The achievements of these
lion-hearted engineers could not fail to impress themselves even
on a civilian. Many amongst them were volunteers, who had
previously occupied brilliant positions in the great mining
community in Johannesburg, and whose brains were the pride of a
circle where intellectual achievements and persevering resource
commanded at once the greatest respect and the highest
remuneration. Some of these latter had family ties besides their
considerable positions, but they gladly hastened to place their
valuable services at the disposal of their Queen, and, in
conjunction with the regular Royal Engineers, were destined to
find glory, and in many cases death, at their perilous work. The
task of the engineers is probably scarcely realized by people who
have not seen actual warfare. We do not read so frequently of
their doings as of those of their gallant colleagues on foot or
on horse; but soldiers know that neither the genius of the
Generals nor the intrepidity of the men could avail without them;
and as the scouts are called the eyes, so might the engineers,
both regular and volunteer, be termed the hands and feet, of an
advancing force. The host sweeps on, and the workers are left
with pickaxe and shovel, rifles close at hand, to work at their
laborious task loyally and patiently, while deeds of courage and
daring are being done and applauded not many miles away from
them. This particular Rhenoster bridge was destroyed and rebuilt
no less than three times up to the date of which I write, and the
third time was only ten days previously, when Christian De Wet
had also worked havoc among the mail-bags, the only cruel thing
attributed to that commander, respected both by friends and foes.
The sad, dumb testimony of this lamented misfortune was to be
seen in the shape of thousands of mutilated envelopes and torn
letters which covered the rails and the ground
beyond—letters which would have brought joy to many a
lonely heart at the front. It was really heartbreaking to behold
this melancholy remnant of 1,500 mail-bags, and, a little farther
on, to see three skeleton trucks charred by fire, which told how
the warm clothing destined for the troops perished when De Wet
and his burghers had taken all they needed. Many yarns were
related to me about the chivalry of this farmer-General,
especially respecting the mail-bags, and how he said that his
burghers should not make fun of the English officers' letters,
and therefore that he burnt them with his own hands. Another
anecdote was remarkable—namely, that of an officer
searching sadly among the heap of debris for some eagerly
expected letter, and who came across an uninjured envelope
directed to himself, containing his bank-book from Messrs. Cox
and Sons, absolutely intact and untouched. It can only be
conjectured whether he would as soon have known it in ashes.</p>
<p>On arriving in the vicinity of Kroonstadt, the most risky part
of the journey was over, and then a wonderfully novel scene
unfolded itself as we crawled over a rise from the desolate,
barren country we had been traversing, and a tented city lay in
front of us. Anyway, such was its appearance at a first glance,
for white tents stretched far away east and west, and appeared to
swamp into insignificance the unpretentious houses, and even a
fairly imposing church-spire which lay in the background. I had
never seen anything like this vast army depôt, and examined
everything with the greatest attention and interest. Huge
mountains of forage covered by tarpaulin sheets were the first
things to catch my eye; then piles upon piles of wooden cases
were pointed out as "rations"—that mysterious term which
implies so much and may mean so little; again, there was a
hillock of wicker-covered bottles with handles which puzzled me,
and which were explained as "cordials" of some kind. Powerful
traction-engines, at rest and in motion, next came into sight,
and weird objects that looked like lifeboats mounted on trucks,
but which proved to be pontoons—strange articles to
perceive at a railway-station. Then we passed a vast concourse of
red-cross tents of every description, proclaiming a hospital. As
far as outward appearances went, it looked most beautifully
arranged in symmetrically laid-out streets, while many of the
marquees had their sides thrown back, and showed the patients
within, either in bed or sitting about and enjoying the breeze
and the rays of a sun never too hot at that time of year. "How
happy and comfortable they look!" was my remark as we left them
behind. Someone who knew Kroonstadt said: "Yes, they are all
right; but the Scotch Hospital is the one to see if you are
staying long enough—spring-beds, writing-tables, and every
luxury." I was sorry time admitted of no visit to this
establishment or to the magnificent Yeomanry Hospital at
Deelfontein, farther south, to which I shall have occasion to
allude in a later chapter. This last establishment was, even at
that early stage of the war, a household word among the soldiers
at the front, a dearly longed-for Mecca amongst the sick and
wounded.</p>
<p>Our train had come to an abrupt standstill, and, on looking
out, the line appeared so hopelessly blocked that the only way of
reaching the station and lunch appeared to be on foot. We walked,
therefore, upwards of half a mile, undergoing many perils from
shunting engines, trains undecided whether to go on or to go
back, and general confusion. It certainly did not look as if our
train could be extricated for hours, but it proved there was
method in this apparent muddle, and we suffered no delay worth
speaking of. The station was densely packed with Staff officers
and soldiers. Presently someone elbowed a way through the crowd
to make way for the General, just arrived from Bloemfontein. A
momentary interest was roused as an elderly, soldierly gentleman,
with white hair and a slight figure, passed out of sight into one
of the officials' rooms, and then we joined the throng trying to
get food in the overtaxed refreshment-room. We had some
interesting conversation with the officer in command of the
station, and learnt how the Kroonstadt garrison were even then
living in the midst of daily alarms from De Wet or his followers;
added to these excitements, there was a colossal amount of work
to be got through in the way of supplying Pretoria with food, by
a line liable to be interrupted, and in coping with the task of
receiving and unloading remounts, which were arriving from the
South in large numbers. I saw some of these poor animals packed
nine in a truck, marvellously quiet, and unmindful of strange
sights and sounds, and of being hurled against each other when
the locomotive jerked on or came to a stop. They were in good
condition, but their eyes were sad and their tails were woefully
rubbed. After seeing Kroonstadt Railway-station, I realized that
the work of a Staff officer on the lines of communication was no
sinecure.</p>
<p>Marvellous to relate, in the early afternoon we found our
train in the station, and, climbing into our carriage once more,
we proceeded on our road without delay, congratulating ourselves
on our good fortune in not being held up at Kroonstadt, as had
been the fate of many travellers going south. Immediately south
of Kroonstadt we crossed the Vaal River, with its fine high-level
bridge reduced to atoms by dynamite. This had given the engineers
another opportunity to display their skill by a clever deviation
of a couple of miles in length, winding down almost to the
water-level, and then serenely effecting the crossing by a little
wooden bridge, from which its ruined predecessor was visible
about a quarter of a mile up the stream. Darkness and approaching
night then hid the landscape. That evening we were told we need
have no fears, for we were practically out of the dangerous zone.
We dined comfortably in our compartment, and I heard many more
reminiscences of the advance from two travelling companions who
had taken part in it. Suddenly in the next compartment a party of
Canadian officers commenced singing part-songs with real musical
talent. We relapsed into silence as we heard the "Swanee River"
sung more effectively than I have ever heard it before or since,
and it reminded me that we, too, were going home. Presently we
found ourselves joining in the chorus of that most touching
melody, "Going back to Dixie," greatly to the delight of our
sociable and talented neighbours. Daylight next morning brought
us to Bloemfontein and civilization, and what impressed me most
was the fact of daily newspapers being sold at a bookstall, which
sight I had not seen for many months. On arriving at Cape Town, I
was most hospitably entertained at Groot Schuurr by Colonel Frank
Rhodes, in the absence of his brother. This mansion had been a
convalescent home for many officers ever since the war began.
There I passed a busy ten days in seeing heaps of friends, and I
had several interviews with Sir Alfred Milner, to whom events of
the siege and relief of Mafeking were of specially deep interest.
I gave him as a memento a small Mauser bullet mounted as a
scarf-pin, and before leaving for England I received from him the
following letter:</p>
<span style=
'margin-left: 2.5em;'>"GOVERNMENT HOUSE,</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"CAPE TOWN,</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"<i>November 7,
1900.</i></span><br/>
<br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"DEAR LADY SARAH,</span><br/>
<p>"How very kind of you to think of giving me that interesting
relic of Mafeking! It will indeed revive memories of anxiety, as
well as of the intensest feeling of relief and thankfulness that
I have ever experienced.</p>
<p>"Hoping we shall meet again when 'distress and strain are
over,'</p>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"I am,</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"Yours very
sincerely,</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"ALFRED MILNER."</span><br/>
<p>Much of my time was also occupied in corresponding with
Mafeking about the distribution of the fund which was being
energetically collected in London by my sister, Lady Georgiana
Curzon. Many weeks before we were relieved I had written to Lady
Georgiana, then hard at work with the organization of the
Yeomanry Hospital, suggesting to her to start a relief fund for
the inhabitants of Mafeking. It had all along seemed to me that
these latter deserved some substantial recognition and
compensation beyond what they could expect from the Government,
for damage done to their homes and their shops, and for the utter
stagnation of the trade in the town during the siege. The nurses,
the nuns and their convent, were also worthy objects for charity.
This latter residence, but lately built, and including a nicely
decorated chapel with many sacred images, had been, as I have
said, practically destroyed; and the Sisters had borne their part
most nobly, in nursing the sick and wounded, while many were
suffering in health from the privations they had undergone. In
response to my appeal, Lady Georgiana inserted the following
letter in the <i>Times</i> just before the news of the Relief
reached England:</p>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"20, CURZON
STREET, W.,</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"<i>May 11.</i></span><br/>
<br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"SIR,</span><br/>
<p>"I venture to address an appeal to the people of the United
Kingdom, through the columns of your paper, on behalf of the
inhabitants of Mafeking. Nothing but absolute knowledge of their
sufferings prompts me to thus inaugurate another fund, and one
which must come in addition to the numerous subscriptions already
started in connection with the South African War. I admit the
generous philanthropy of our country has been evinced to a degree
that is almost inconceivable, and I hesitate even now in making
this fresh appeal, but can only plead as an excuse the
heartrending accounts of the sufferings of Mafeking that I have
received from my sister, Lady Sarah Wilson.</p>
<p>"The last mail from South Africa brought me a letter from her,
dated March 3. In it she implores me to take active measures to
bring before the generous British public the destitute condition
of the nuns, refugees, and civilians generally, in Mafeking. She
writes with authority, having witnessed their sufferings herself,
and, indeed, having shared equally with them the anxieties and
privations of this prolonged siege. Her letter describes the
absolute ruin of all the small tradespeople, whose homes are in
many cases demolished. The compensation they will receive for
damaged goods will be totally inadequate to cover their loss.
Years must pass ere their trade can be restored to the
proportions of a livelihood. Meanwhile starvation in the
immediate future lies before them. The unfortunate Sisters in the
convent have for weeks hardly had a roof over their heads, the
Boer shells having more or less destroyed their home. In
consequence, their belongings left intact by shot or shell have
been ruined by rain. The destruction of their small and humble
properties, in addition to their discomfort, has added to their
misery; and yet no complaining word has passed their lips, but
they have throughout cheerfully and willingly assisted the
hospital nurses in their duties, always having smiles and
encouraging words for the sick and wounded.</p>
<p>"Sitting at home in our comfortable houses, it is hard to
realize the actual sufferings of these besieged inhabitants of
Mafeking. My letter tells me that for months they have not slept
in their beds, and although no opposition to the Boer forces in
the first instance would have saved their town, their properties,
and in many cases their lives, yet they one and all bravely and
nobly 'buckled to,' and stood by that gallant commander,
Baden-Powell. Loyalty was their cry, and freedom and justice
their household gods. Have not their courage and endurance
thrilled the whole world? I feel I need not ask forgiveness for
issuing yet this one more appeal. It comes last, but is it least?
A handful of soldiers, nearly all colonials, under a man who must
now rank as a great and tried commander, have for six months
repelled the Boer attacks. Could this small force have for one
moment been a match for the well-equipped besiegers if the
inhabitants had not fought for and with the garrison? Some worked
and fought in actual trenches; others demonstrated by patient
endurance their cool and courageous determination never to give
in. Would it not be a graceful recognition of their courage if,
on that glorious day, which we hope may not be far distant, when
the relief of Mafeking is flashed across thousands of miles to
the 'heart of the Empire,' we could cable back our
congratulations on their freedom, and inform Mafeking that a
large sum of money is ready to be placed by this country for the
relief of distress amongst the Sisters, refugees, and suffering
civilians of the town?</p>
<p>"I feel I shall not ask in vain, but that our congratulations
to Mafeking will take most material form by generous admirers in
the United Kingdom.</p>
<p>"Subscriptions will be received by Messrs. Hoare and Co.,
bankers, Fleet Street, E.C.</p>
<span style=
'margin-left: 2.5em;'>"I remain,</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"Your obedient
servant,</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"GEORGIANA CURZON."</span><br/>
<p>The fund had reached unhoped-for proportions. In our most
optimistic moments we did not expect to collect more than two or
three thousand pounds, but subscriptions had poured in from the
very commencement, and the grand amount of £29,267 was
finally the total contributed. This sum was ably administered by
Colonel Vyvyan of the Buffs, who had been Base-Commandant of
Mafeking during the siege. He was assisted by a committee, and
the principal items allocated by these gentlemen were as
follows:</p>
<span style='margin-left: 24em;'>£</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>Widows and orphans
6,536</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>Refugees
4,630</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>Town relief
3,741</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>Seaside fund
2,900</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>Churches, convent, schools,
etc. 2,900</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>Wounded men
2,245</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>Small tradesmen
1,765</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>Hospital staff, nuns,
etc.
1,115</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>Colonel Plumer's Rhodesian
column, etc. 1,000</span><br/>
<p>Lady Georgiana Curzon's eloquent appeal proved to be the
salvation of many a family in Mafeking.</p>
<p>The popularity of the fund was enormously helped by the
interest of the then Prince and Princess of Wales, now our King
and Queen, in the town and in the assistance of the same. This
interest was evinced by the following letters, given to me later
by my sister:</p>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"TREASURER'S
HOUSE,</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"YORK</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"<i>June 20,
1900.</i></span><br/>
<br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>MY DEAR LADY
GEORGIE.</span><br/>
<p>"The Princess and I thank you very much for sending your
sister's letters for us to read. They are most interesting, and
admirably written. She has certainly gone through experiences
which ought to last her a lifetime! If the papers are correct in
stating that you start on Saturday for Madeira to meet her, let
me wish you <i>bon voyage</i>.</p>
<span style=
'margin-left: 2.5em;'>"Ever yours very sincerely,</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"(Signed) ALBERT
EDWARD."</span><br/>
<p>The Princess of Wales had already written as
follows:</p>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"MY DEAR
GEORGIE,</span><br/>
<p>"I saw in yesterday's <i>Times</i> your touching appeal for
poor, unfortunate, forsaken Mafeking, in which I have taken the
liveliest interest during all these months of patient and brave
endurance. I have therefore great pleasure in enclosing
£100 for the benefit of the poor nuns and other
inhabitants. I hope very soon, however, they will be relieved,
and I trust poor sister Sarah will be none the worse for all she
has gone through during her forced captivity. Many thanks for
sending me that beautifully drawn-up report of your Yeomanry
Hospital. How well you have explained everything! Hoping to meet
soon,</p>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"Yours
affectionately,</span><br/>
<span style='margin-left: 2.5em;'>"(Signed) ALEXANDRA."<SPAN name=
'FNanchor_41_41' id="FNanchor_41_41"></SPAN><SPAN href='#Footnote_41_41'><sup>[41]</sup></SPAN></span><br/>
<p>Some fourteen months after my return home a <i>Gazette</i>
appeared with the awards gained during the early part of the war,
and great was my delight to find I had been selected for the
coveted distinction of the Royal Red Cross. The King had
previously nominated Lady Georgiana Curzon and myself to be
Ladies of Grace of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem, which
entitles its members to wear a very effective enamel locket on a
black bow; but, next to the Red Cross, the medal which I prize
most highly is the same which the soldiers received for service
in South Africa, with the well-known blue and orange striped
ribbon. This medal was given to the professional nurses who were
in South Africa, but I think I was, with one other exception, the
only amateur to receive it, and very unworthy I felt myself when
I went to St. James's Palace with all the gallant and skilful
sisterhood of army nurses to share with them the great honour of
receiving the same from His Majesty in person.</p>
<p>FOOTNOTES:</p>
<SPAN name='Footnote_40_40' id="Footnote_40_40"></SPAN><SPAN href='#FNanchor_40_40'>[40]</SPAN>
<div class='note'>
<p>Small kettles.</p>
</div>
<SPAN name='Footnote_41_41' id="Footnote_41_41"></SPAN><SPAN href='#FNanchor_41_41'>[41]</SPAN>
<div class='note'>
<p>I am allowed to reproduce the foregoing letters by the
gracious permission of Their Majesties the King and Queen.</p>
</div>
<hr style='width: 65%;'>
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