DT ^33 /n i4 . . ... — Ljn .- r- .tj_«, ._r.-»- ^ j^j- - -J • 1 -rir>---nqM.„. jr (IJurttEll HmuErstty ICtbrara Stliata, Kcm ^ark FROM ^ The dafe^gfiows "When this volume was taken. To renew this book copy the call No. and give to the librarian. HOME USE RULES All Books subject to recall All borrowers must regis- ter in the library to bor- i'llik "a 'fcB ^'^''^ booka for home use. iNTtRUBRART LOAN A11 books must be re- turned at end of college year for inspection and repairs. Limited books must be returned within the four week limit and not renewed. Students must return all books before leaving town. Officers should arrange for the return of books wanted during their absence from town. Volumes of periodicals ~ and of pamphlets are held in the library as much as possible. For special pur- poses they are given out for a limited time. Borrowers should not use their library privilege3 for the benefit of other persons. Books of special value and gift books, when the giver wishes it, are not al- lowed to circulate. Readers are asked to re- port all cases of books marked or mutilated. Do not deface books by marks and writing. Cornell University Library DT 933.M16 For the flag or, Lays and incidents of 3 1924 028 617 532 The original of tiiis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924028617532 rOQ THE riAG OR Lays and Incidents OP The South African War BY MPS. MACLEOD, Authoress of Carols of Canada, life. w? >D ISLAND, CHRRLO 1 1 irrowN, PRINCE CDWAR Archibald Irwin, Printer. 1901. x*. e H U H L i- HHtViiR SItY LIBRA RY ^^%ZA^^ Entered according to Act of Parliament, in the year 1901. By Euzabeth S. MacLeod, In the Office of the Minister of Agriculture. "M^ I , I -I Ci )\ '0 ^ V OUR EMPIRE'S FLAG. Dedicated to our Patriots. Ho fairest light on land or wave I Ho brightest gleam of glory ! Shine forth that all beneath thy rays May read thy wondrous story. How Freedom rose when rose thy dawn And, though the way was gory, Passed on ereH., with unbou7id hands, To climb the heights of glory. To climb the heights of glory. Beneath thy beams. Oh guiding star ! From off the hills of heather, Fiom western plains, from southern seas Leal sons, troop on together. That sword which sought the mother-heart Hath nerved her every daughter; Now all the world shall learn that blood Is thicker far than water. Is thicker far than water. Thou droopest not 'neath summer sun; Thou heed'st not winter hoary; Nor years shall dim that steadfast light Which gilds thy path of glory. Then on! lead on thou conquering Flag! Wave out for aye thy story! Since none but Heaven may link the bars Across thy march of glory. Across thy march of glory. TKe BritisK Cabinet. 1900-1901. PRIME MINISTER — MARQUIS OF SALISBURY. Secy of State — Foreign Marquis of Lansdowne Lord Pres. of the Council Duke of Devonshire I St Lord of Treasury and Leader in House of Commons Rt. Hon. A. J. Balfour Lord Halsbury Lord G. Hamilton Sir Mat. White Ridley Rt. Hon. J. Chamberlain Rt. Hon. W. St. John Broderick Lord Balfour of Burleigh Sir Matt. Hicks-Beach Lord High Chancellor Secy for India Home Sec3'. Secy, for the Colonies Secy, for War Secy, for Scotland Chancellor of the Exchequer 1st Lord of the Admiralty Earl of Selborne Pres. of the Board of Trade Rt. Hon. Gerald Balfour Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Lord James Lord Privy Seal Pres. Local Government Board Lord Lieut, of Ireland Lord Chancellor of Ireland Pres. Board of Agriculture ist Commissioner of Works Lord Salisbury- Rt. Hon. H. Chaplin Earl Cadogan Lord Ashbourne Rt. Hon. W. Long Rt. Hon. Ackers Douglas PREFACE. THERE is no attempt in this little book to give a detailed sketch of the war; the pen of the gifted historian may do that. I have merely endeavored to set before "those who sit at home at ease' ' an ever present reminder of the great and varied sufferings and sacrifices endured, and of the daunt- less deeds accomplished b>- those patriot hearts who went forth to fight and, if need be, to die for freedom's and for country's cause in a far, unkindh- clime — the oft-tried veteran of the old home-land and his youthful comrade-in-arms from the islands and continents of either sea. The day has departed when civilians spoke with contempt cf the private in the arnty and fawned upon the officer of the same. Even the rustic simpleton who, in a dazed and drunken mood, accepted the "shilling" and left the paternal acres amid the lamentations of a mourning hamlet, has so often dignified by his after prowess, de-\'eloped in the storms of war, the humble \'illage of his birth, that British valour has come to be respected and feared wherever British feet have trod, or British hearts have bled. Even France, yet smarting under the defeat of Waterloo, during the Crimean war produced in Charivari a picture of a Highlander standing sentinel at his post with a precipice over-looking the sea at his back ; a French soldier and a Tartar peasant regarding him from below. " What folly," says the Tartar, " to place a sentry in such a position!" To which replied the Chasseur, " There's no danger; ces soldats la ne reade?it jamais." Again, it is somewhat of an amelioration to our grief over the horrors of war to know that our heroes, our substitutes in the path of danger, are better attended to in these later days during the mishaps of battle or disease, and that there need PREFACE be no repetition of the cruelly thoughtless neglect experienced in former campaigns. To those who believe the war to have been of un- necessary duration, I would recommend the perusal of one of Lord Roberts' despatches, in which he points out the magnitude of the area over which hostilities were carried on; and if this despatch fails to carry conviction, then the reader thereof must be either profoundly opaque or hopelessly pre- judiced. The verse matter, etc. , in these pages are original. The incidents are gleaned from the public press of the period. Owing to the kindness of His Lordship I am enabled to laj- before his many friends a copj- of " Strathcona's" latest photograph, also of his autograph; and for figures in relation to Canadian Contingents I am indebted to the politeness of Colonels Irving, of Halifax, and Moore, of Charlottetown, respectively Commanders of the Militia of Nova Scotia and P. E. Island. It would seem invidious to prefer a few likenesses of famous generals to the exclusion of others; thus I choose the one. par excellence , the Chief, Earl Roberts; while in bounden loyalty, as also in token of the distinction of having this book entered for publication on the first day of the reign of King Edward VII., I have the honor to insert therein, as frontis- piece, a photo of his Most Gracious Majesty. While lamenting the loss of the great and good Queen Victoria, we have reason to be thankful that her successor by inheritance is also her successor by choice of the people. May the love and the loyalty which has ever surrounded His Majesty and the peerless Queen Alexandra live on, untarnished, through the years; and nowhere else will they exist more generously than in this our great and wide Dominion, our beautiful and hopeful Canadian land, wherein " God bless our own dear Canada!" With heart and voice we sing; " God bless Britannia far and near! God bless our Sovereign King!" E. s. M. CONTENTS. PAGE. Introclijction Part 1 1 l^ecorcl of the war Part II 7 Incidents of Battle, etc Part III 32 Canada Part V 56 Stratr^cona's nen Part V 95 Rt. Hon. Boron strathcona and Mount Royal 105 Part VI Incidents of Canadians, etc 109 Part VII The Southern Seas Pari VIII 157 Generals of the War Part IX 165 nedals ol Generals Part X 173 The Victoria Cross 179 Finale 151 INTRODUCTION. Statistics of South Africa. THE nine states and protectorates of South Africa were, in the year 1899, as follows: — Basutoland, (British Colony) area 10,293 square miles, population 250,000; chief city, Maseru, 862. Bechuanaland, (British Protectorate) area 213,000 square miles, population 200,000 ; chief cities, Mafeking, Palapye, Palachwe, Cape Colony or Cape of Good Hope, (British Colony) area 266,775 square miles, population 1,559,960; chief cities, Beaconsfeld, population 10,479; Cape Town 83,898; Cradock 4,389; East London 6,924 ; Graaf Reinet 5,946; Graham's Town 10,498; Kimberley 28,718; King William's Town 7,226; Paarl 7,668; Port Elizabeth 23,266; Uitenhage 5,331; Worcester 5,404. German South-West Africa, (German Colony) area 322,450 square miles, population 200,000 ; chief city Windhoek. Natal, (British Colony) area 36,000 square miles, population 829,005; chief cities Durban 39,245; Pietermaritzburg 24,595. Orange Free State, area 48,326 square miles, population 207,503 ; chief city Bloemfontein 5,817. Portuguese East Africa, (Portuguese Colony) area 297,750 square miles, population 1,500,000; chief city Lorenzo Marquez, 7,700. Rhodesia, (British Protectorate) area 750,000 square miles, population 450,000; chief city Buluwayo 5,000. South Africa Republic or Transvaal, area 119,139 square miles, popu- lation 245,697 ; chief cities, Johannesburg, 102,714 ; Klerksdrop, 2,500 ; Potchefstroom, 4,000 ; Pretoria, 12,000. Recapitulation: 2,062,733 square miles, population 5,481,865. A Warning. In July, 1879, the late Sir Bartle Frere, who was High Commissioner in South Africa from April, 1877, to August, 1880, placed on record the following prophecy : "Any attempt to give back or restore the Boer Republic in the Transvaal must lead to anarchy and failure, and probably, at no distant period, to a vicious imitation of some South American 2 FOR THE FLAG Republic, in which the more uneducated and misguided Boers, domi- nated and led by better educated foreign adventurers — Germans, Hollanders, Irish Home Rulers, and other European Republicans and Socialists — will become a pest to the whole of South Africa, and a most dangerous fulcrum to any European power bent on contesting our naval supremacy or on injuring us in the colonies. . There is no escaping from the responsibility which has been already incurred, ever since the English flag was planted in the Castle here. All our real difficulties have arisen, and still arise, from attempting to evade or shift this responsibility. ... If you abdicate the sovereign position, the abdication has always to be heavily paid for in both blood and treasure. " Testimonies against the Boer. I. It is because I fear that a considerable section of the Christian world of England, because of its tender sympathy with present suffering and its yearning after a present peace, is being led by writers, who have appealed only to these sentiments, into an attitude with regard to this war which is out of harmony with the Divine purpose at this time, that I am driven to write this appeal. In the name of the Lord Jesus, and for His dear sake, I appeal to the Christian people of England to suspend the judgment they have been led to form on the question of the war in which Great Britain is now engaged. If ever there was a war for the Lord of hosts, if ever there was a war for truth and right, for the putting down of oppression and wrong, for the deliverance of a people powerless to deliver themselves, whose wrongs have cried up to heaven until the Lord has come down to deliver them, this is the war. Let no Christian heart think that the immediate events which have led up to this war are the chief cause why the life-blood of tlie British Empire is being poured out to-day. No ! British soldiers are dying on African soil to-day to put an end to conditions of atrocious wTong — a wrong continued throughout generations, and which, apparently, nothing but this sacrifice of life could right. Burghers of the Republics and colonists together, the innocent witli the guilty, are to-dav expiating crimes which, unavenged for long years, have sent up tlieir cr\- into the ear of Eternal Justice. For over 200 years the progenitors of the Transvaal Republic and their descendants have crushed, maltreated, and as far as they had power to do so, robbed of all rights belonging to them as fellow human beings the colored people of this land. Under Transvaal rule a ceaseless connnittal of crimes, legislative, social and individual, have been perpetrated upon the helpless natives both within and be\on- their dead. FOR THE FLAG II " We wrapped them around in their patriot shroud, The crimson dye hid of the brown, — Oh ! the angels might weep, o'er those heroes who sleep, As from regions of peace the^' look down. " For the pihroch shall sigh through the lone Highland glen. And the ,'=urges shall moan on the shore, But the step that was music, and sunshine, and mirth Shall be heard on the threshold no more. " We silently dug them a grave on the waste, And we buried them side by side ; And the stoutest heart failed as we tenderly gazed On those comrades, laid low in their pride. " Together we'd shared in the hardships of war. And together had braved the fight ; But this was the sorest, the .saddest of all. When we covered them from our sight. " Then a voicing of prayer, then a last, low dirge, — Oh ! the wail of those pibroch notes ! — And over that altar, for country and cause Rich incense of sacrifice floats." December 14th. General Buller advanced to the relief of Ladysmith but was surprised by the Boers at Magersfontein and repulsed with heavy loss. 15th. Repulse of the British, under General Buller, at Tugela River, after a fierce and blocdy battle in which the British casualties amounted to one thousand men. The Boers were led by General Joubert. 17th. Lord Roberts was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the army in South Africa, and sailed with a large body of troops for Cape Town. Towards the end of the month the shelling of the Boers upon the besieged cities of Mafeking and Ladysmith proved more constant and more vigorous, and increasing anxiety was felt respecting their fate. 27th. General Kitchener, who came from Egypt to Gibraltar to join Lord Roberts as his Chief -of-Staff, embarked 12 FOR THE FLAG at that port on the S. S. Dunottar Castle, which was convey- ing the Commander-in-Chief to Cape Town. 28th. General BuUer was joined bj- General Warren with a large division. January 3rd. General French drove the Boers from Colesburg. 6th. The Boers, under General Joubert, bombarded Ladysmith, but were driven back by General White. Short as the supply of ammunition was, and hard pressed as the suffering defenders were they nevertheless repulsed the Boers and, after several hours of fighting, won the day. 8th. The Queen telegraphed cong^ratulations and thanks to General White and the troops. 13th. General Warren crossed the Tugela River. 17th. Colonel Baden- Powell, defender of Maf eking, compelled the Boers to retire out of range. 23rd. Spion Kop, defended by the Boers under General Schalkburgher, was taken by General Warren, but after great loss of life was abandoned on the 25th. General Wood- gate was mortally wounded. 27th and 28th. At Ventnor's Spruit one hundred and fifty American scouts joined the British army. 31st. Captain Percy Scott, Commandant of the towns, General Wolfe-Murray, Commandant of the line of communi- cations, and others visited the American Hospital Ship Maine, and met Lady Randolph Churchill, head of the American Patriotic nursing scheme for the British wounded in Africa. Feb'y. ist. General Kelly-Kenny, Commandant of the 6th Division, repaired the bridge at Thebus, west of Strenberg. 2nd. The Hospital Ship Maine took on board a number of the wounded from Spion Kop. 12th. Lord Roberts arrived at Modder Ri\-er and was enthusiastically cheered by the troops. On the 15th was raised the siege of Kimberly, defended by General Kekewitch. General French, after a magnificent march, through a blinding dust storm and attacks from the enem>-, entered the cit)-. Lord Kitchener was much pleased with the work of the Naval Brigade, who had placed FOR THE FLAG 1 3 a i2-pounder gun on a kopje commanding the river. Great jo)' and thankfulness prevailed all over the Empire. A company of Kitchener's Horse, consisting of onl}- 50 men, were besieged in a farm house on the Riet River for four days bj' a bodj' of 400 Boers, under DeWet. They defended them- selves all that time without food; their horses died, and seeing no chance of escape they surrendered. 1 8th. First battle of Paardeberg. 19th. General Buller took Colenso. The enemy admitted heavy loss. Two Boer women were fatally wounded while defending the trenches. 23rd. General Cronje's clever night march from Magers- fontein ended in his being trapped. During a terrible thunder and lightning storm the British clcsed around him on all .sides. 25th. A fierce attack on Mafeking was bravely repulsed. 26th. General Brabant occupied Jamestown. 27th. Battle at Paardeberg, and surrender of Cronje with over 3,000 troops. This was considered one of the great epochs of the war, and was the more memorable as having occurred on the anniversary of Majuba's disastrous defeat of the British in 1881. Victory. Ring out. Oh bells of gladness! Peal through the frosty air; The God who lent us sadness Hath heard the nation's prayer. And dawn hath risen o'er darkness, And right shall oust the wrong; For, over Afric's blood-stained veldts Shall soar fair Freedom's song. Droop low. Oh flags of Boerish land ! Majuba's bloody day. Through British steel and brother h°arts, Shall be redeemed for aye. Not ours to place a laurel wreath, On every patriot's head; Nor drop a tear upon each mound Which tombs our glorious dead. 14 FOR THE FLAG For noblest deeds and noblest lives Oft shun the glare of day; While rare and costly monuments Oft vaunt most common clay. And many a gifted, noble life Hath passed into the night, Content to hide from mortal ken Its heaven-afforded light. Yet we may join that grateful song. Imbued with homage meet, Which circles from a nation's heart Around her heroes' feet. That song which, in a minor tone, Wails by the crimsoned sod; Yet riseth to triumphant strains In paeans to our God. 28th. General Clements, escorted by a squadron of Enniskillings, entered Colesburg and received an enthusiastic reception. March ist. I,adysmith was relieved by General Buller, who entered the town unnoticed amid the cavalry-, but news of his arrival spreading. General White and his staff at once went to receive him. General Buller telegraphed to the War Office : ' ' General Dundonald, with the Natal Carbineers and a composite regiment, entered Ladysmith last night." Great rejoicing all over the Empire. The Governor of Cape Colony, Sir Alfred Milner, prorogued the Cape Parliament till April 6th. 2nd. Cronje and party reached Cape Town and were escorted on board the cruiser Doris, which sailed for St. Helena. Kruger issued an appeal to the Boers, ending "the British will never reach Pretoria." Boasting-. 'Tis one thing to conquer in dreams. Another to fail in the fight; FOR THE FLAG The morning of golden bright gleams Oft waneth to darksomest night. 'Tis one thing to combat in word, Another to stand in the field And measure one's might with the sword Of foemen who know not to yield. The threatening and boasting are vain. The head of the haughty bends low; And the voice of the tyrant no more May issue his mandate of woe. As Herod, who kissed not the rod, But boasted when under the ban, Who mount to the seat of a god Shall sink 'neath the footstool of man. Cape Town was loud in praise of the reliever of L,ady- smith, who kept his men attacking the enemy for twelve days previous to entry. I,ord Roberts published an order thanking the troops for their zeal and endurance. 5th. General Brabant defeated the Boers at Dodrecht. 8th. The Queen made a state entry into L,ondon. Never had she received such an ovation. Her carriage had to be forced by the troops. She smiled and bowed continuously. Kruger and Steyn were both on the battlefield at Drie- fontein : but in vain endeavoured to rally their troops. The route was complete. 9th. The Naval Brigade reached Durban. The gunners marched, amid great acclamation, with the tattered Union Jack which had flown through the siege of Ladysmith. 1 2th. lyord Roberts addressed a message to the Boer authorities ' ' that, should the gross abuse of the white flag and holding up of hands be continued, he would be compelled to disregard the white flag entirely." Kruger and Steyn made overtures to Great Britain which were, with the approval of the Government, rejected by I^rd Salisbury. General French reached Bloemfontein and occupied two hills near the railway station. 1 6 FOR THE FLAG 13th, Bloemfontein, capital of the Orange Free State, was captured. Lord Roberts sent following de.spatch to the War Office : "By the help of God, and by the bravery of Her Majesty's soldiers, the troops under my command, I have taken possession of Bloemfontein. The British flag now flies over the Presidency evacuated last evening by Mr. Steyn, late President of the Orange Free State." The Union Jack hoisted at Bloemfontein was made expressly for the purpose by Lady Roberts. 1 6th. Lord Roberts started a movement to crush the enemy. The forces under his command were divided between Generals Clement, Gatacre and Brabant. 17th. As a tribute to the exceeding valor of the Irish troops in South Africa, St. Patrick's Day was celebrated throughout the Empire. Shamrocks were brought to England by the car loads. The Irish flag was hoisted over the Mansion House, London; and, by order of Her Majesty, the bell in the Tower of Windsor was rung, and all the soldiers of the Empire wore a bunch of shamrocks in their helmets. The Shamrock. Oh the dear little Shamrock ! the sweet little Shamrock ! The proud little Shamrock, I ween: For the nursling which bloomed through the dool of the years Now blossoms ' neath smile of a Queen ! ' ' Though Queen of the mightiest empire Which earth has ever known I joy but in my peoples' joy Their sorrows are my own. " I have wept when the sun of my bright, summer hours In the glory of manhood went down ; I have mourned and have missed the glad voices long stilled. More precious than pearls of my crown. "And shall I not mourn with those mourners who weep O'er the tomb of that glorious band Who have died for fair freedom, for country and Queen On the heights of the far-awa^- land ? FOE THE FLAG 1 7 ' Oh ye daughters of Erin ! hght-hearted and true ; Oh ye sons of the loyal and brave ! I stoop from earth' s grandeur to gather a wreath For my brave Irish soldiers' grave. ' ' It shall be of the flower of the land of their love. And green as its leaves shall their name Be enshrined in my heart, and the hearts of all those ^^'ho link Ireland with honour and fame. "Oh! bear it, all proudly, aloft on your crest; That the world of the future may know How much of the glory, and triumph and rest To the leal sons of Erin we owe." Oh the dear little Shamrock ! the sweet little Shamrock ! The proud little Shamrock, I ween ; For the nursling which bloomed through the dool of the years Now blossoms 'neath smile of a Queen. 20th. Lord Kitchener occupied Prieskal unopposed. The rebels surrendered their arms. 28th. GeneralJoubert died, and was buried on the day following. April 2nd. The Queen, out of sympathy for the friends of her brave Irish soldiers who had fallen in Africa, left ^Vindsor Castle for a visit to Ireland. 4th. Her IMajesty reached Dublin. At Kingston an address of welcome was i)resented. The Queen replied, and asked "God's blessing on Ireland." Over a million people witnessed the pageant and heartily cheered the Queen. The Duke of Abercorn said, " It is the most wondrous and most spontaneous exhibition I have ever seen. I am immensely proud of being an Irishman." 5th. Lord Methuen captured a force under General \'illebois Mareuil, at Boshop. The leader was killed. lOth. Remounts were continually arriving, but the shortage of horses monthly was calculated at 5,000. 11 th. The Boers were ill-treating their prisoners, the Co- lonials particularh^ They used them as they would malefactors. I 8 FOR THE FLAG 13th. Wepener was still surrounded: but the garrison, 500 British Horse, under Colonel Dalgetty, was holding out well. 23rd. Lady Sarah Wilson mred from Mafeking, ' ' Situation unchanged, the garrison depressed, but determined to deprive the Boers of a crowning triumph. A pound of flour sold for two guineas; and a case of whiskey realized one hundred and eight pounds. ' ' 25th. Wepener relieved. 26th. The Queen left Dublin for England. Amid all the jubilation, not one arrest required to be made by the police during Her Majesty's visit. Lord Roberts. Halted his army for six weeks in Bloemlontein. The ilnorant at home grjmbleJ over the delay. What means this sudden halt. This seeming aimless ride On war's tumultuous tide, Is't need or is it fault ? Say, is the warfare o'er. Hath strength of battle sped, Is vaunted courage dead — Dead, and to rise no more ? No ! should those colors pale Which never knew defeat ? Speak not of mean retreat To those who fear no gale. They rest but on their oars; They nurture needful strength ; Well knowing peace, at length, 'Yond war, shall rule those shores. May 1st. Lord Roberts with his army marched northward from Bloemfontein. 5th. Defeated the Boers at \'et River. 6th. General Hamilton occupied A\'inberg. 12th. Lord Roberts occupied Kroonstadt. 15th. A patrol, under Commandant Eloff, Kruger's grand- FOR THE FLAG 1 9 son, entered Mafeking. Colonel Baden-Powell opened fire on them, killing 17 and taking Eloff and several men prisoners. Colonels Plumer and Mahon joined forces. General Buller occupied Dundee, and on the I6th advanced and captured Glencoe. 16th. The Queen visited Netley Hospital and talked with and distributed flowers amongst the wounded. 17th. Mafeking relieved. News of the relief were wired abroad and congratulations reached the brave General Baden- Powell from every corner of the globe. The occasion was made a day of rejoicing throughout the British Empire. General Lord Methuen entered Hoopstad. General Broad- wood occupied Lindley, and General Hutton' s mounted Infantry surprised and captured Commandant Botha and his troops 30 miles north of Kroonstadt. 18th. General Buller occupied Newcastle, having marched 138 miles since the 10th. 19th. Lord Roberts was at Kroonstadt, his cavalry extending like a semi-circle for many miles. General Clery was at Ingogo and Lord Dundonald at Laing's Nek. 21st. General Hunter was pushing up the railway with supplies for Mafeking. 25th. Lord Roberts, and his troops, were at Verdefort Road. 27th. The British army had crossed the Vaal River and were in the Transvaal. 28th. Lord Roberts and his army marched 20 miles and were then 18 miles from Johannesburg. The enemy were hard pressed, and had barely time to get their guns into a train and leave the station as the West Australians dashed into it. 29th. Kruger was ready for flight. Aspecial train, provisioned and with steam up, awaited him beyond Pretoria. 30th. The British forces under Lord Roberts entered Johannesburg, the occupation of which marks an epoch in the war ; it being by far the largest and most populous city in the Transvaal, and the most populous of any in South Africa. General Hildyard had occupied Utrecht, and General Clery was bombarding Laing's Nek. June 2nd. Generals Botha and Buller met at 0' Neil's 20 FOR THE FLAG farm, near Majuba. BuUer asked Botha to surrender, but Botha rephed that he was not empowered to do so. 5th. General Botha surrendered the city of Pretoria, capital of the Transvaal, and Lord Roberts marched in. The Union Jack was hoisted on top of the Government offices. The Queen, then at Balmoral, surrounded by several members of the Royal Family, and by many notables of her court, drank the health of Lord Roberts, and the whole nation joined in the toast; glorifying the victors and rejoicing in the victory. A huge bonfire, lit by Her ^Majesty's command, blazed on Craig Gowan mountain, and illuminated the country for miles around. Pretoria- Pretoria ! Pretoria ! Fair harbinger of peace; Bright goal, at which the storms of war Shall have their long surcease. Now, three cheers for our glorious Flag ! The loved Red, A\'hite and Blue, And blessings on each patriot heart To Britain's honour true. Pretoria ! Pretoria ! With gladness and with mirth The sons of Fresdom swell the song O'er this, thy second birth. Three cheers for ' ' Bobs' ' and Kitchener ! And French and Buller brave ! And blessings on the rank and file Who fill a warrior's grave. Pretoria ! Pretoria ! We hail thy glad, new hour; Since tyranny hath dropped its chain And lost its lease of power. Cheers for our valiant heroes all ! May everlasting sheen Illume the record of their deeds For country and for Queen. FOR THE FLAG Pretoria ! Pretoria ! ' Neath firm, yet gentle hand, Dark Afric's deserts yet shall bloom To fair and fruitful land. Then glory to that Sovereign Power Who rules by land and sea. And blessed be His glorious name Through Whom all victories be ! 11th. General Carrington was moving southward. A despatch of the 12th says: "The Fourth Derbyshire; Battalion of Militia has been overpowered and the Colonel killed and prisoners to the number of about six hundred are in the Boers' hands. The catastrophe is much more serious for the British than the capture of Spragge and his men. ' ' 14th. Botha was returning to the eastward. 15th. Lord Roberts offered preference to Colonials in the men wanted for the new Mounted Police in South Africa. 25th. De Villier's commando surrendered to General Warren at Bilkefontein. 26th. Sir Charles Warren reported that the rebellion in Cape Colony, north of Orange River, was ended, the last formidable body of Boers, under Commandant De Yillier, having surrendered. July 7th. General Buller visited Lord Roberts in Pretoria. He looked none the worse for his eight months arduous work. Colonel Thorneycroft and his men drove back a company of Boers at Greylingstad. 19th. At Lindley General DeWet's force broke through Geherpl Hunter's cordon, but was repulsed after several hours' hard fighting. 21st. The Boers made a determined attack on Heidelberg but were beaten off after a sharp engagement. Generals Hamilton and Mahon were marching eastward to join General Pole-Carew. It was stated in the House of Commons thai over 12,000 troops had been despatched to Africa since the capture of Pretoria. 22 FOR THE FLAG Lord Salisbury. " i fs ('eciYcd to Increase, by'a very larife addition, the 'Army and Navy ol Great Britain.' Why smileth Peace o' er many a plain, Where, in those days gone by, The clang of arms and groans of pain Thrilled earth and heaven on high ? Is it that nations shame their birth. And their escutcheons mar. By dallying on a peaceful earth In coward fear of war ? The bravest mariner who sails, Ere entering unknown seas. Sets rudder firm and never fails To watch the rising breeze. So is it with the wiser course; Those statesmen see afar Whose active minds, of vast resource. Stem off the tide of war. And hold that bounteous show of arms Doth guarantee fair peace; And that through force of war's alarms All needless wars shall cease. 23rd. Commandant DeWet cut off Lord Robert's commu- nication and captured 100 Highlanders. August 1st. General Knox attacked a Boer force near Kroonstadt. 5th. Commandant Olivier escaped to the hills, near Bethlehem, with 1500 men. General Bundle went after him. 6th. Boers were damaging property around Pretoria, and attempting to destroy the coal mines which are necessary to the running of the railway. Several residents of the city have been sent into exile for having behaved cruelly or shamefully to British subjects during or before the war. 9th. A plot to shoot all the British officers and to capture Lord Roberts was opportunely discovered. The conspirators FOR THE FLAG 23 numbered 15, of whom 10 ringleaders were arrested. The houses which contained the officers had been marked, and were to have been set fire to after the massacre, and horses stood in readiness to carry off the Commander-in-Chief. The affair caused great excitement and indignation. 25th. General De^^'et was prevented by General Baden- Powell from joining forces with Botha. Baden-Powell captured De Wet's waggons. 27th. Major Brooke, commanding at Kerai Riilway Station, attacked and completely routed the Boers, who were holding a kopje near by. H. Pretorius was among the wounded. The Boers were beaten back by Bruce Hamilton at Winburg. General Olivier has been captured; also three of his sons. Olivier formerly defended Colesburg against General French. He was an able general. 31st. Eighteen hundred British prisoners, released at Nooit Gedacht, reached French and Pole-Carew. They were badly clothed and half-starved. Ambulances were sent out to pick up the sick and weakly ones. The officers had been taken to Barberton, whence some had escaped. Those included the Earl of Leitrim and Viscount Ennismore. September 2nd. The Transvaal was annexed to the British Empire. General Buller engaged the Boers under General Botha near Lyndenburg. The enemy, 2000 strong, held the pass and fired continually the whole day at the British. 3rd. General Hamilton drove back the Boers and occupied Swartzeskopjes. Colonel Plumer defeated the foe near Warm Baths. 5th. DeWet captured a British train near Kroonstadt, securing 44 loads of supplies. DeWet declared he vi^ould fight "to the bitter end." The seige of Ladybrand was raised, after several attempts to capture the small garrison of 150 British troops. The attacking Boers numbered over 2000. They twice tried to rush the position, but failed. General Baden-Powell arrived in Cape Town. He was carried shoulder high, by the crowd, to Government House. 8th. DeWet joined Theron near Johannesburg. General 24 FOR THE FLAG Paget defeated the Boers near Warm Baths and sent over 4000 head of cattle to Pretoria. 1 6th. General BuUer captured the Boer position near Spitzkopje . The enemy lost heavily. 20th. Kelly-Kenny was dealing with the enemy at Dormberg. 22nd. Lord Methuen, at Harris River, captured many thousands of cattle, guns, etc. 24th. The Guards, under Pole-Carew, occupied Koom- atipoort. 28th. Boers attacked Paget's force but were driven off. 30th. Rundle's troops recaptured a battery gun lost at Nicholson's Nek, also 65,000 rounds of Martini ammunitiun. Oct. ist. Twenty Gordon Highlanders were killed at Korriespoot. Ian Hamilton found a number of guns in Crocodile River. 8th. Commandant Muller surrendered to Clerj-. Boer prisoners aggregated 16,000. 17th. General Botha's brother surrendered. 19th. Kruger sailed from Lorenzo Marques, on the Dutch cruiser Gelderland, for Holland. 25th. DeWet with 3000 Boers was reported in the north of the Orange River Colon}^ 29th. Prince Christian of Sleswig Holstein, the Queen's grandson, died of enteric fever. He was Major in the King'sR.R Prince Christian, " He wished to be'burled 'beside his comrades in South Africa." " I have fought in the ranks of the loyal and brave, I have marched 'neath a withering sk}-. Yet not in the battle, in fury of fight Is it mine, as a soldier, to die. " Sweet life, with its pleasures, its largess of hope Shall not be my portion, I ween; — But I go at the call of a Higher command. As I went for my countr)- and Queen. FOR THE FLAG 25 'Then, la}- me adown with my comrades who sleep In the shrine of a patriot's grave; Where calmly I'll rest since, for aje o'er my breast The loved colours of England shall wave. ' ' 30th. Trains to Pretoria were attacked by the Boers, and a Boer commando of 300 captured 30 British, but afterwards released them. 31st. Rundle occupied Bethlehem. The railway at Edenburg was wrecked by the Boers. November 14. Major Mcintosh, Seaforth Highlanders, occupied Phillipolis. 6th. I,ord Roberts took his sick daughter to Johannes- burg, and Lord Kitchener was left in command. nth. Lord Methuen defeated the Boers at Lichtenbury, capturing several waggons — Prinsloo and Fournee were killed and Groebler wounded. 1 6th. The Queen received a detachment of Colonial troops at Windsor, and personally thanked them for their loyal services to the Empire. A plot against Lord Roberts' life was discovered. The intention was to explode a mine under the church which he usually attended, St. Mary'.s, while he was within at worship. Five Italians, four Greeks and one Frenchman were arrested. 22nd. Lord Roberts was thrown from his horse, but telegraphed to the Secretary of War that he ' ' felt no ill effects whatever. ' ' This timely message allayed the anxiety produced by the tidings that the beloved General had met with a serious accident. 24th. A skirmish took place at Dainsfontein. Captain Watson, seeing a New South Wales trooper fall, turned back under a hot fire and carried the wounded soldier out of danger. 26th. General Sir Redvers Buller reached London. The city gave him a hearty welcome. The royal carriage awaited the General at Windsor; and he and Lady Aubrey dined with the Queen and remained at the Castle overnight. 30th. Lord Roberts handed over the command of the British troops in South Africa to Lord Kitchener. 26 FOR THE FLAG. December ist, The first despatch from General Kitchener in his capacity as Commander-in-Chief, confirms the reports of heavy fighting between Generals Pilcher and DeWet. December 3rd, Lord Roberts reached Ladysmith. He said he trusted the day was not far distant when peace would reign supreme, and without ill feeling towards a conquered foe. Clemency. To fight when honor calls to arms, But, when the fight is o'er, On helpless victims of defeat To wield the gun no more. It is not thine, Britannia, To tread upon the weak ; Nor through unfair excuse of war A dire revenge to seek. No son of thine shall idly stand Where coward victors be; Nor ghoulish knave, nor fiendish soul May claim a part in thee. 6th. The 15th Parliament of the reign of Queen Victoria opened. Lord Salisbury paid a tribute to the skill of Lord Roberts and General Kitchener, and to the bravery of the ofiicers and soldiers of the South African war. nth. A battle was in progress beteen Generals Knox and DeWet. At a reception in Cape Town Lord Roberts made a telling speech in the course of which he referred in feeling terms to the Imperial unity the war had made manifest, and to his pride in being the first General to command the Empire's troops from all parts of the world. ' ' God has given into our hands, ' ' said the Field Marshal, " a great heritage for which a heavy price has been paid in the blood of the best and bravest; and we must not be neglectful of the trust, as we have been in the past, but must be able to give a good account of our steward- FOR THE FLAG 27 ship and must remember there are other duties tlian national glorification. ' ' Lord Roberts. Unto a nation's song of praise, To all the homage meet, Which gilds the laurels on thy brow And circles round thy feet. Since dauntless deeds of patriot hearts Should every muse inspire, I fain would touch one other chord On Victory's tuneful lyre. Aye prompt to strike for country's cause Aj-e slow to hear re-call ; Amid those valiant men of arms The greatest of them all. High on that scroll, Britannia, Where glows thy patriots' fame, Encircled with a triple wreath, Shines forth thy Robert-;' name. The supplementary estimates of ;^i6, 000,000 were adopted in Parliament, by a vote of 284 against 8. 14th. Botha was near Standerton with 2.500 men. General Clements was compelled, by Delarey, to retire with a loss of 5 officers and a number of men. The War Office ordered all the available mounted infantry at Alder.shot, Malta, etc. , to leave for Africa. 15th. The prisoners taken by the Boers were released. 17th. A big battle at Orange River, which lasted several hours. Total defeat of the Boers, who numbered 2000. Lord Kitchener wants the wounded Imperial Bushmen now convalescent in South Australia sent back to Africa, having found them very valuable troops Sir Alfred Milner has been gazetted Administrator of the Orange River Colony and the Transvaal. 28 FOR THE FLAG 1 8th. The Boers invaded Cape Colony. General McDonald engaged them near Burghersdorp. General Clements' entire force had a narrow escape from capture. Colonel I/Cgge of the 20th Hussars, at Nooitdacht, killed five Boers with his revolver before being mortally wounded. 2 2 nd , The Boer movement into Cape Colony was checked . DeWet was near Senekal. 28th. The Boers cut the railway south of DeAar junction. General French pursued them. Commandant Kruse was captured. Canadians were invited to enroll for service in the South Africa Mounted Police, under General Baden- Powell. 28th. Lord Kitchener announced that all who voluntarily surrendered would be allowed to live in the Government laagers till the abatement of the guerilla warfare. Seventy- six Boer prisoners were permitted to return to their homes. Every trooper in General Knox's column was supplied with three horses. January ist. General Knox was following DeWet; had captured horses, waggons of supplies and 6,000 rounds of ammunition. General French captured Boers and a quantity of cattle. 6th. The Canada, with Lord Roberts on board, anchored off Osborne. Lord Roberts was given a warm welcome. At the Palace the Queen corif erred an Earldom on him, with remainder to his daughter. Babington engaged the enemy and forced them to retire — 20 Boers killed, and Commandant Dupeit taken prisoner. Lieutenant Laing, 2 of&cers and 15 men were killed in action against a superior force of Boers near Lindley. loth. Lord Kitchener surprised many by his lenient dealing with the enemy. Kitchener — Buonaparte. By the dusky tombs of the pyramids In the glow of their splendor were spread The glittering hosts of the Gallic land With their ever conquering Head. FOR THE FLAG 29 Grim Cheops looked down from his giddy heights Which rang with the wail of defeat, For the heart of the spoiler was barren of weal As the desert beneath his feet. He looked on the slaughter of helpless men At the hands of an armed host, While the warm winds carried the shameful tale Of triumph where honor was lost. But Thou ! Oh thou land of the noon-day light ! Thou land of the undying brave ! Thine annals are clear, thy honor is dear. No son fills a tyrant's dark grave. 1 2th. l,ord Kitchener holds all the railway lines. He was organizing a force of 30,000 irregular horse. The defense of Cape Town was completed. The Admiral's Cape Fleet was prepared to land a naval brigade of 2,800 men with six Hotchki.ss guns at Murray's Bay, 13th. Fourteen hundred Boers crossed the line, attacking Zurfontein and Kaalfontein, but were driven off. L,ord Kitchener telegraphed that three agents of the Peace Com- mission were taken prisoners before DeWet, January loth. By his, orders one, a British subject, was flogged and then shot — the others were flogged. Until the reckoning with DeWet comes this action ought to be borne in mind, 15th. Five thousand men were sent, from England, to reinforce the Imperial Yeomanry. 1 6th. A severe engagement took place at Murray sburg — 6 British killed, 17 wounded and 5 missing. L^rd Roberts, in delaying the presentation of a sword of honor from Portsmouth, said: "It is most distasteful to me to be honored and feted and called upon to rejoice while so many are in bitter grief. ' ' 1 8th. Colonel Grey, with New Zealanders and Bushmen, routed 800 Boers near Ventersburg — General Colville engaged the Boers near Standerton, and drove them off with heavy 30 FOE THE FLAG. loss — 300 Boers entered Aberdeen, looting streets, but retired before 100 British. igth. The Queen was announced to be .seriously ill at Osborne House, Isle of Wight. 21st. Great anxiety regarding Her Majesty's condition overspread the Empire. Public and private engagements were postponed and a settled gloom rested on all classes of society. H. R. H, the Prince of Wales telegraphed to the people, " My painful duty obliges me to inform you that the life of our beloved Queen is in the greatest danger. ' ' 22nd. This day forms an epoch in history, and will always be held memorable as not only the closing of one reign and the beginning of another, but as the day upon which there passed from earthly life the longest reigning and the best beloved sovereign who has ever graced the throne of the great British Empire. " My beloved mother just passed away, surrounded by her children and grandchildren," was the announcement made by the affectionate and dutiful son who is now destined to wield the sceptre as our future king. May his throne, "established in righteou.sness, " ever rest secure under the blessing of Heaven, and in the love of a loyal people ! The Queen died at 6. 50 English time. 23d. The King took the oath before the Privy Council, and made a noble accession speech. 24th. The King was proclaimed Edward \'II.. at St. James's Palace. 28th. Welzel, one of the peace envoys to the Boars, was shot by order of DeWet. 29th. The United States Embassy sent beautiful wreaths for the late Queen's funeral from President McKinley, Mrs. Garfield and Ambassador Choate. The King telegraphed General Kitchener that the late Queen had spoken of him shortly before her death. February 2nd. Queen Victoria's remains were taken from Osborne House to Windsor Castle, followed by the Royal Family and representatives from every European Court. The funeral, according to the wishes of the late Queen, was strictly military, the coffin being conveyed on a gun carriage. FOR THE FLAG. 31 The mourning pageant was the largest ever witnessed. Religions services were held all over the Empire. 4th. The late Queen was finally laid to rest beside her mother and her long and faithfully mourned husband, "Albert the Good;" in Frogmore Mausoleum. Sth. General French, near Bethel, was driving the enemy eastward. At Moddersfontein 1400 Boers made an assault on the British, and killed two officers. 8th. A British column at Petersburg brought in 4000 horses and cattle. Lord Methuen captured 13 waggons of supplies. Louis Botha, with 2000 men was repulsed by General Smith-Dorien at Bothwell. 16th. Colonel Plumer's column engaged DeWet near Philipstown. DeWet, after a sharpdefeat, rode off, telling his followers to look out for themselves. March 3rd. In an engagement at Lichtenburg 2 officers and 14 men were killed. The Boer General Celliers was killed. 12th. Colonel Pilcher's column cleared the Boers between Bloemfontein and the Orange River, capturing many prisoners and 800 horses. 14ih. The end of the war was, apparently, not far off. Commandant-General Botha sent a message to Lord Kitchener with a view to surrender. His brother was lately killed, and his two nephews wounded. 21st. Botha declined British terms for peace, and hostilities were resumed. A combined movement of the forces against the Boers, near Thaba N'Chu, resulted in great loss to the enemy. Besides taking several hundred prisoners in Thaba N'Chu, with thousands of sheep, horses and cattle. Major Byng and Colonel Bethune brought in 16,000 cattle and 140,000 sheep from the Wepener district. The long hoped for day of peace cannot be far distant ; for, despite the dogged determination of the Boer leaders to prolong a hopeless struggle, and that indifference to the sufferings of their kin which permits them to continue the work of bloodshed merely for the gratification of an ignoble revenge, the systems of evil must ever give way before the inroad of a freer, broader faith, a truer conception of the rights of humanity and the strength of a Power which has hitherto proved invincible. PART II. Incidents of Battle, Etc. TALANA HILL. "As soon as the Boer guns silenced our artillery General Symons gave the order for an assault on Talana Hill. The hill rises 800 feet, and the distance to the top is more than a mile. The first portion of the ascent is gentle and over open ground to a homestead surrounded bv broken woods. Above the woods the ground is rough and rockv, the as- cent steep, and half way up a thick stone wall runs around the hill, as the fringe of a wide terrace of open ground. Above the terrace the ascent is almost perpendicular, and atthe end of this was the Boer position, on the fiat top so characteristic of African hills. Altogether, the position seemed impregnable even if held by a small body, against large forces, and General Symons must have had ex- traordinary confidence in his men when he ordered 2,000 of them to take it in the teeth of a terrible and well-sustained fire from superior numbers of skilled riflemen. His confidence was fully justified. It is said that he deliberately resolved to show the Boers that Majuba hill was not the measure of what British infantry could do, and if so, he more than succeeded. To find a parallel for the endurance, tenacity and heroic determination to press forward over all obstacles and at all hazards, one has to go back to Wellington's invincible infantry in the Peninsula. The men had to go through eight hours of fighting, without break- fast. The wood was the first cover available, and in the rush for this position the Dublin Fusiliers led the way, though afterward the three regiments went practically side by side. The advance of the infantry was covered by a vigorous cannonade, but the appearance of our men in the open was the signal for a storm of rifle fire from the Boers. Though our losses at this stage were extraordin- arily small, in the wood, which for some time marked the limit of the advance, they were considerable, and here, about 9.30 o'clock. General Symons, who had galloped up to tell the men that the hill nmst be taken, fell mortally wounded. Throughout the morning lie had exposed him- self, perhaps unnecessarily. His position was always marked by a red flag, carried by his orderly. By ten o'clock our men, creeping up inch by inch, and taking ad- vantage of every available cover, had gained the shelter of the stone wall, but for a long time further advance seemed impossible. As often as a FOR THE FLAG 33 man became visible the Boers poured a deadly fire in his direction, while, whatever their losses from our artillery fire, they rarely afforded a mark for the rifle. About twelve o'clock, however, a lull in their fire afforded our men an opportunity for scaling the wall and dashing across the open ground beyond. Then the almost sheer ascent of the last portion of the hill be gan. Here our lossses were greatest, the Rifles losing most heavily. Col. Gunning, who was always in the front of his men, was shot through the head. Near the top of the hill Captain Pechell , who had only arrived two days before from the Soudan, also fell. Out of seventeen ofiicers the bat- talion lost five killed and seven wounded. As our men neared the top of the hill our guns were compelled to stay their fire, and the Boers of course were enabled to stay their rifle fire accordingly. The last portion of the ascent was rushed with the bayonet, but the Boers did not await the charge, a few who stood ground till near the end being seen flying precipitately across the top of the hill when our men reached the crest." ELANDSLAAQTE. "It was about a quarter to five, and it seemed curiously dark. No won- der, for as the men moved forward the heavens opened aud from the eastern sky swept a sheet of rain. With the first stabbing drops the horses turned their heads, and no whip or spur could bring them up to it. It drove through mackintoshes as if they were blotting paper. The air was filled with a hissing sound, and under foot you could see the solid earth melting into mud, and the mud flowing away in the water. The rain blotted out hill, dile and enemy in one great curtain of swooping water. You would have said that the heavens had opened to drown the wrath of man. Through it the guns still thundered and the khaki columns pushed doggedly on. The infantry came among the boulders and began to open out. The supports and reserves followed. Then in a twinkling, on the stone-pitted hill face, burst loose that other storm — a storm of lead and blood and death. In the first line, down behind the rocks, the men were firing fast, and the bullets came flickering around them. The men stopped and staggered and dropped limply, as if a string that held them upright had been cut. The line pushed on and a colonel fell, shot in the arm. The regiment pushed on and they came to a rocky ledge, twenty feet high. They clung to the cover, firing, then rose and were among the shrill bullets again. A major was left at the bottom of the ridge, with a pipe in his mouth and a Mauser bullet through his leg. His company pushed on. Down again, fire again, up again and on. Another ridge won and passed, and only one more hellish hail of bullets beyond. More men down. More men pushed into the firing line, more death-piping bullets 34 FOR THE FLAG than ever. The air was a sieve of them ; they beat on the boulders like a million hammers ; they tore the turf like harrows. Another ridge crowned, another welcoming whistling gust of perdi- tion. More men down ; more pushed into the firing line. Half the ofB- cers were down. The men puffed, stumbled on — another ridge taken. God ! Would this curs'd hill never end ? It was sown with bleeding and dead behind, it was edged with a stinging fire before. On, and now it was surely the end. Merry bugles rang like the cock- crow on a fine morning. "Fix bayonets ! " staff officers rushed shouting from the rear, imploring, cajoling, cursing, slamming every man who could move into line. But it was a line no longer. It was a surging wave, of men. The Devonshires, Gordons, Manchesters and Light Horse were all mixed. Subalterns commanding regiments, soldiers yelling advice, officers firing carbines, stumbling, leaping, killing, falling — all drunk with battle. And there beneath our feet was the Boer camp and the last of the Boers galloping out of it. There also, thank heaven, were squad- rons of Lancers and Dragoon Guards storming in among them, shouting, spearing, stamping them into the ground. "Cease fire !" It was over. Twelve hours of march, of reconnaissance, waiting and preparation and half an hour of attack — but half an hour crammed with the life of a half lifetime." The same correspondent, describing the end of the battle when the Highlanders, the Manchester Regiment and the Light Horse were sweeping to the final charge says : — "To our astonishment we heard ' Cease fire and retire, ' sounded by the buglers. It was difficult to account for them, but not when we knew that the Boers had learned our bugle calls. In obedience to the sound the Gordon Highlanders were beginning to fall back, when their boy bugler, saying, "retire be dammed," rushed forward and blew a hasty "charge," whereupon the ranks closed up and the victory of Elandslaagte was won." Colonel Scott-Chisholme, who resigned his command of the 5th Lan- cers and raised the fine Corps of the Imperial- Light Horse, South Africa was killed in the battle of Elandsgaate. COLENSO. By An Officer Who Was Present. After the most terrible and one-sided battle of Colenso last Friday I fainted when I got to camp, from sunstroke, and on Saturday morning found I had dysentery. How any one escaped on Friday is a man-el to me. We were nine and a half hours under fire, and it was like a severe hailstorm on a tin roof. I couldn't put my glasses up without hearing "phit," "phit," "phit." From the very first I saw it would be no go. Directly we got under fire a corporal said to me : "I wonder how many FOR THE FLAG 35 Boers there are hidden in that wood opposite, along the Tugela," I said "I expect it is full of them, as Buller never shelled it at all." I was right. Two companies of the 23rd went in and joll}- soon come out through us and expo.'td our four companies to a double fire, and I don't see how we e.scaped at all. Then I saw about three companies of the 7th Fusiliers go in on the left of the taken guns, and they soon came out of it. After that we were told to advance a bit, and eventually we were told off as escort to the lost guns with the result that we retired (when ordered to, and "Tommy" did not like that word at all), and had six officers taken and over one hundred men killed, wounded, missing, or prisoners, out of a total of thirteen officers and 472 men, with which we started at 4 a. m. London, April 21. — The Gazette announces that the Queen has conferred the Victoria Cross on Major William Bablie, of the armj- medical corps, for conspicuous bravery at the battle of Colenso. THE DYINa SOLDIER AT COLENSO. "He wai only a boy * * * i bent down to listen. * * * 'Oh, mother mother! Oh, Qoi ! ' came in a low moan, and then — a great silence." Oh, mother ! whereroe'er thou art, Afar o'er land or sea, In angu'sh keen each mother-heart Doth bleed for thine and thee. Oh! for that sore, that "woeful cry Of longing, 'midst the pain. For her whose help, through all the years, Was never sought in vain. First name, and last upon his lips. Save His, who, at the close Of life's brief da}-, relieved all pain With undisturbed repose. Oh, mother ! whereso'er thou art. That prays by land or sea, Death cannot part, Heavjn will not keep Thy loved for a3-e from thee. Describing the battle of Colenso, Pte. H. Morris, 3rd Battalion King's Royal Rifles, saj-s . "As man after man in the British regiment jumped into the river to gain the other side, they were shot down or drowned. When we retired wounded men kept coming into camp for hours. One man had been shot no fewer than six times, but still managed to crawl into our lines. The colonel of the Connaught 36 FOR THE FLAG Rangers, who was reported amongst the killed, appeared in camp hardly recognizable. He was bespattered with blood from head to foot, and he was cheered as only British soldiers could cheer him." Private John Stroud, of the I2th Bearer Company, A. M. S., in a letter to his father at Maidstone, says: "We fought a great battle (Colenso) on Friday, an attack on the Boer position which was not successful. There were over i,ooo casualties among our own men. We had four bearer companies here and they were under fire most of the time, and the bullets and shells were dropping amongst us too close to be comfortable. Fortunately the Boer shells are badly made and sel- dom burst; if they did a good many of us would not be alive now. Many of the shells dropped within three or four feet of us, doing no damage but covering us with dust. . . In many places on the field a dog could scarcely cross, bullets and shells dropping like a shower of rain. One battery of guns had to be left, all of our oflScers were shot, and horses dead and injured, and only a few of the men got away safe. It was terrible while it lasted. The Bearer Company were kept on the go until late at night, and many awful sights were to be seen. In one place over twenty were found within a couple of yards round, and the place was thick with wounded." THE FIRST TUQELA REVERSE. Many brilliantly written accounts of the first Tugela reverse appeared in the English papers. Mr. Bennet Burleigh, ^vriting of the terrible ordeal of fire through which those who manned our guns passed, says : — The gunners never flinched nor winced, buckling to their work like men who grip a heavy load. Nay, more, some of them in derision began to ' field ' as at cricket, with the badly aimed spent shot of the mach- ine cannon. Running aside, they would make a catch, and call, 'How's that, umpire ?' Astounding, and yet more astounding, for this stors- is absolutely true ! Within a quarter of an hour Colonel Long was knocked over, shot through the arm and body, a bullet passing through his liver and kidneys. He was carried aside two hundred yards, into a shallow donga, where lay several of the Devons and others. There, wounded as he was, Colonel Long sent for help to overcome the enemy's rifle fire. But it did not come, for there was a difficulty about quickly finding either General Buller or General Clery Colonel Long became delirious, constantly repeating : 'Ah ! my gimners are splendid. Look at them ! Colonel Hunt, shot through botli legs, was also carried to the donga. As the men were being shot down very rapidly — for the Boer fire was by that time increasing — Colonel Hunt advised that it would be better to abandon the guns, but Long's characteristic reply was : 'Abandon be dammed ! We never abandon guns !' After the order was given to abandon the guns four men persisted FOR THp; FLAG 37 in serving two guns and remaining beside their cannon. One of either pair carried the shell ; the others laid and fired their beloved 15-pounders. But two men were left. They continued the unequal battle. They exhausted the ordinary ammunition, and finally drew upon and fired the emergency rounds of case, their last shot. Then they stood to 'Attention' beside the gun, and an instant later fell, pierced through and through by Boer bullets. The British forces began their advance at daylight and the Boers left them absolutely unmolested till at 6.25 there suddenly burst an awful crash of Boer musketry upon the batteries and advancing infantry. The rattle of Mausers swelled and maintained as one continuous roar. From the buildings, and lines of trenches south of the river and from the river bank itself the Boers fired at our gunners ond footmen, and from the trenches on the northern side of the Tugela River and from Fort Wylie and elsewhere they sent out a hurricane of leaden hail, and the bullets venomously rained upon the ground in all directions, raising puffs of dust and tearing through the air with shrill sounds. Few have ever seen so heavy and so deadly a fusilade : but neither the British gunners nor the infantry hesitated or winced. The cannon were wheeled into position although many of the horses and men were shot down ere the manoeuvre was completed, and our indomit- able soldiers walked erect and straight onward. Not even Rome in her palm- iest days ever possessed more devoted sons. As the gladiators marched proud and beaming to meet death, so the British soldiers doomed to die saluted and then with alacrity stepped forward to do their duty — glory or the grave. Anglo-Saxon soldiers always advance that way. I asked an American who had seen warfare at home, in Cuba and Manila, if his own countrymen generally did this and he answered, 'Yes, it is marvelous but wasteful.' Closer and closer walked the soldiers to the Boer trenches until within 400 yards of the nearest rifle pits. Then lying down they returned the fire, but there was little or nothing to aim at. By 7.15 the Irish Brigade had driven the Boers to the north bank of the Tugela. They found that the enemy had planted the ground with barbed wire entanglements. Even in the bed of the river barbed wire was laid down. Into the water went Dublins, Inniskillings, Borderers and Connaughts, but it was found at the ford that the Boers had cunningly dammed the river and there was ten feet of water where ordinarily it is but knee deep. They strove to find the crossings and many a fine fellow with the weight of ammunition and accoutrements was drowned. It was a desperate and serious situation. The attack upon the right was making no progress and the hearts of the men had reached an appar- ent impasse. But there were furious and angry Irishmen who had resolved to get across somehow. By dint of scrambling from rock to rock and swimming, a number won the other side. Yet most of them found that they had but passed across a winding spruit. The Tugela still lay in front. 38 FOR THE FLAG and all the while the murderous fire of cintion and ai lujsr cras'isd, and comrades fell weltering in their blood. In the meanwhile Colonel Long had lost his guns and Generals BuUer and Clery with their staffs and escorts had ridden to the scene. The spouting hail of lead and iron snapped and spluttered, and the dust puffed more than ever. Lord Roberts' son , with Captain Schofield and Congrove, volunteered to ride out and endeavor to save the two field batteries in the open. Readily other volunteers were found. Corporals from the lines, men and drivers of the ammunition waggons, taking spare teams, galloped out, and men and heroes again began falling on everj- side. Young Roberts' horse was blown up by a shell, Congrove was hit with a bullet and his clothes were cut with other missiles. Schofield alone escaped untouched. Across that valley of death quickly the sun'iving animals were rounded up and the guns were hooked and dragged away. Again and again that day attempts were made to haul off the remaining guns, but the Boer fire was incessant and withering. At four the battle was over. General Buller abandoned the guns and retreated." It appears that the battle orders, drawn up by General Clery, pro- vided forthe effective support of the artillery by Generals Hart, Barton and Dundonald's brigades. Those were never completed. The retreat, contrary to many of the accounts which have been published, was made after dark, and in a blinding rain storm. The army, with its vast transport system, its ammunition trains and guns, had to cross the Tugela River, then a raging torrent, with precipitious banks, but not a man or a pound of stores was lost. So carefully was every detail arranged that the various units of the force, cavalrj-, infantry, etc., mide their way to the river through lines of men located at intervals of from thirty to fifty yards, whose duty it was to keep them in the right track. Guided in this manner they came to the Tugela River opposite the pon- toon bridge laid down by the Engineers, and crossed in safety. Still guided in the manner indicated they were brought at last to a temporary camping ground three miles south of the river. In the morning the Boers, with every gun at their command well placed and flushed by the results of the fierce fighting on Spion Kop, prepared to bomb.ird and attack the British forces, but found that they had been outwitted. LIEUTENANT ROBERTS Killed at Tugela River, Dec. 17th, iS:)9. Oh! calmly shall thy loved one rest Within that ever sacred earth, Baptized, through floods of sacrifice. Unto fair Freedom's glorious birth. FOR THE FLAG 39 Calm shall he rest, beneath that flag — That flag he nobly died to save — Xor foot of tyranny may dare To desecrate his hallowed grave. Even in our dcol we joy for those Who sleep beneath the Afric sod ; Their lives unto their country given Their souls unto the patriot's God. Oh ! never through the waning years Shall wane the memories of those brave ; While Freedom, smiling through her tears Stands guardian o'er each honored grave. Out-looking 'yond the storms of war. To halcyon days when war shall cease ; And every breath which stirs the grove Shall sing the psalm of lasting peace. THE MAGERSFONTEIN SLAUGHTER. The men were fairly caught in a trap. From the Boer trenches, not two hundred yards away, from trenches tier upon tier, from rifle and machine gun, there poured an awful storm of death and destruction. Our men were still in their close formation, presenting a mark that the poorest marksman could not fail to hit. There was no time to deploy. In a flash every man lay down, some to rise no more. The men in the rear began firing in all directions and many a poor fellow was wounded by bullets from the rifles of his comrades. For five long minutes the Highland Brigade was prone upon the ground, a struggling mass of humanity in places four and six deep. Then two companies of the Black Watch alone heard the order to charge, and whipping out their bayonets, they sprang like demons upon the first trench and left not a man alive in it. Mad with anger, and crazed with grief, for their beloved General, Wauchope of Omdurman fame fell among the first, they thrust their gleaming bayonets right and left. Every man in these two companies deserves special recognition. 'Tis such as they that have built up our vast Empire. But they simply withered away before the terrific fire from the other trenches, drawing much of the fire that otherwise would have decimated the whole brigade. This all took place in the dusk of the early morning. They fought like heroes. Had all the brigade heard that order and obeyed it, what is virtually a severe repulse — yes, a defeat, would have been turned into a 40 FOR THE FLAG glorious British victory which would have wiped out all memory of Majuba Hill and 1881. But, unfortunately, some one, as is usual on such occasions, gave the order to retire, and utterly demoralized, leaving the ground littered with dead, dying and wounded, the Highlanders fell back, leaving the two companies of the Royal Highlanders unsupported and compelling them likewise to retire from the trench gained with their heart's blood. Then again the whole brigade caught it, for the men were stiil " en masse." From Simonski's account there appears little reason to blame Methuen. The Highlanders had marched several miles in the darkness, such darkness that the leading companies marched with a rope carried across their front to keep the men from losing line and touch with each other. The force expected to meet the Boer pickets first, and then to open out for attack. But the Boers, expecting the attack, had drawn back the pickets into their trenches. The Highland brigade had no skirmish- ers or scouts in front, and just as the darkness began to break they found themselves in solid quarter column, right under the Boer position. The blame which can attach to Methuen can apparently be only such as may pertain to an order to infantry to attack a strong fortified position, without previous or simultaneous use of artillery. SPION KOP. For real ghastliness, for a glimpse into the gory realities of war and the horrors of the battlefield, the private letter of a j-oung medical officer at Spion Kop, printed in the Daily Grapnic, can hardly be beaten ' ' I selected a pass, ' ' he writes, ' ' overhung by steep clay banks on the top of which I got up a Red Cross flag. Cases now began to pour down from Spion Kop on stretchers. The Boers opened fire on us, and three bullets went into the fire, knocking the sticks about. The reason for this fire was not the Red Cross flag, but owing to some Tommies who were strolling over to it, either to take cover there or to see what we were doing. I promptly ordered them away. A few minutes after the Boers let fire five shells in quick successson in my direction, but they fell short and did no harm. This sort of thing went on round me for the rest of the day, but I always kept well in the shelter of the bank. From this time to ten o clock next morning the wounded came through my dressing station, as the pass was the only exit from tlie hill. I saw every case, and some of them were mutilated beyond description. Fully 330 wounded, and dead who had died on the way, passed through my hands. The cheerfulness of the wounded struck me as remarkable — men with shattered wounds smoking their pipes, and, although starving, not a grumble did I hear. Many a poor chap, shot in the morning in the front trenches, who could not be reached, lay in the blazing sun all da}-. One old Colonial in Thonncroft's, with a gray beard, walked down leaning on his rifle. He was a mass of wounds — one ear cut through by a FOR THE FLAG 4 1 Imllet, his chin, neck and chest also shot through by others, and his back and legs torn by shell. He came in and said he just dropped in to let me take his finger off, as it was so shattered that he could not pull the trigger of his rifle, and it got in the way of the next finger, which he could use, for he wanted to get back up the hill to pay the Dutchmen out. Of course, I could not let him go back. The bullet wounds are beautifully clean, just a little round hole, and as a rule do not do much damage, as they often go through the bone without shattering it, and the wounds do not bleed much. The shell wounds are hideous. It was now frightfully dark and I put two lanterns on a stick as a direction to my pass. Shortly after this both lanterns went out, and I had a pretty bad time, as the pass often got blocked with wounded. Finally, I could send no more wounded across the drift and had to stack them with the dead in rows on the grass. I collected all the wounded oflicers on stretchers around me and gave them brandy and a hypodermic of morphia. The morning light began to dawn about 4.30 and lit up the ghastly faces of the patients around me. My men now got a fire ready and got some beef tea and coflfee, and after giving the wounded some, I sent them on the ambulances across the drift. Commandants Botha and Burgess, the Boer generals, now came upon the scene. The former, who was the chief general, was a smallish, thin man, with yellowish beard and hair, and bad a magnificent rifle beautifully carved with his name and a text from the Bible. He had a couple of mounted Kaffirs carrying his ammunition and water bottle, and an interpreter. He seemed, however, to understand English, though he refused to speak it, but now and then said: "Certainly, certainly." There was quite a number of German officers. I heard that one of them had been killed. They let our men search the dead for their identification cards and letters and money. It was very sad to see the things we found in their pockets — love-letters, Christmas cards, little pocket-books with accounts, half-finished letters. Several of the Boers handed in little things they found— a cheque for ten shillings, a purse with money, etc. Some of the officers had trinkets round their necks. One poor fellow had a locket with a spray of white heather, and we had to cut his name off his shirt and pin it to the locket as a means of identification." ' ' Lack of water, " is one reason General Buller gives for the evacu- ation of Spion Kop. The unthinking and frivolous may imagine this is an excuse when they read that another reason for the retreat was "the heavy Boer fire." Let us read this newspaper correspondent's description of the British retreat after the battle of Colenso: By this time the battle was almost over. The retreat, however, had 42 FOR THE FLAG only just begun. So we agreed to ride out over the plain across the lines on which the troops were retiring. In the far distance, near the blotch of green in the veldt which marked the grove of trees about the town, we could see the guns of the deserted batteries standing black in the fierce sunlight of noon and beyond this the squad of troops pouring out from among the houses of the town. All over the vast sweep of sun- burned veldt the scattered troops of four brigades of infantry were crawling, half-exhausted, back to camp. Here was part of a skirmish line, wavering as it crept to the rear because the men of the centre were lagging; here a man lay behind an ant hill, thinking perhaps in his thirst-dried brain that he still was under fire of the Boers. An officer walked with painfully steady steps, his chin sunk in on his neck. The first man we came to was a soldier of the Scotch Fusileers. He looked up at us with half-shut eyes. ' You see me ? ' said the man. 'Yes.' ' And you see those five men up ahead ? ' 'Yes.' ' We were escort to one of the guns. The rest are down there in the ditch. Last evening they gave us a pint of water apiece, and that was the last we ever got. An' now I'm goin' up there, ;an' I'm goin' to say, 'Give me water,' an' if they don't give it me I'm goin' to shoot 'em.' We had had no water ourselves since dawn, and though we had only looked on at the battle we thought we knew what he meant. Then we came to more men, who always looked at us with their eyes half -closed. ' Water? ' they would ask, and we had none, and the men dragged on as before. This always with the stifling sunlight pouring down upon us from the heat- blurred, whitened sky; and underneath the dry, dead grass. Later we came to another native dwelling, which likewise had been turned into an hospital. Coming towards this place we could see a man on a horse, who refused to sit straight in the saddle. The man was wobbling heavily forward, half down the horse's shoulder, while another man walked slowly alongside and tried to keep him held on the horse. We rode away from the hospital only to meet two stretcher-bearers carry- ing a man between them. ' I'm afraid you're too late with that man,' said an oflBcer. ' See his open eyes staring at the sun.' The stretcher-bearers left him to carry some other man who lived. These were among the last of the army, so we joined in with the struggling throng that was crawling so slowly up the steady rise of the veldt. On the bottom of an old water course was an oblong hole half filled with a pool of still water as thick as potato soup with mud and around this hole the men were kneeling close packed together, eagerly FOR THE FLAG 43 drinking of the pool. For the rest of the way we rode alongside of two troopers leading horses. ' Where are those horses from ' we asked the first man. He answered something, but the thirst was hot in his throat, and there came out only a dry huskiness for what he had intended to be words. The second man chewed savagely at a blade of grass, with all his teeth showing and his eyes, like theirs, half closed. In this company we rode into camp." A private in the King's Royal Rifles, of the name of Goodman, was brought from Spion Kop to No. 4 Field Hospital with many others. He had been lying on the hill all night. He had not had his clothes off for six days. Rations had been scanty, and he had been sleeping in the open since he left the camp. He had been struck, it appeared, in the face by a fragment of shell, which had carried away his right eye, the right upper jaw. and the cor- responding part of the mouth and cheek, and had left a hideous cavity at the bottom of which his tongue was exposed. He was unable to speak, but as soon as he was settled in a tent he made signs that he wanted to write. A little memorandum book and a pencil were handed to him, and it was supposed that his inquiry would be as to whether he would die — what chance he had. Could he have something to drink ? Could any- thing be done for his pain ? After going through the form of wetting the pencil at what had once been a mouth, he simply wrote, " Did we win ? " No one had the heart to tell him the truth. MODDER RIVER. It is easy to lament the lack of strategy and tactics with which Lord Methuen directed the battle, but his critics do not point out where there was any room for the display of either in such a situation. Lord Methuen himself in his despatch poiuts out that the position of the Boers left him no choice but to attack them directly in front, and this he did with such determination and with such persistence that he won a victory over a superior force having every advantage. British generals in all ages have under similar circumstances done as Lord Methuen did, attacked under disadvantage, trusting to the soldiers to win, and the result has justified his confidence." SALUTING THE WOUNDED AT THE BATTLE OF THE MODDER RIVER It has long been a tradition of the British army to salute the first of the dead and wounded carried from the field of battle. One popular picture of the Duke of Wellington shows him in the act of saluting the body of a drummer boy. A REQUIEM FOR THE ENEMYS' DEAD. At Modder river on the morning after the battle, at daybreak, burial 44 FOR THE FLAG parties were sent out by the British. They were met by the Boers, who assisted them in the interment of their dead, and sang psalms over the graves. "It was a trying time," writes Pte. William Moon, describing the Modder River battle. " Every minute you could hear some poor soldier's cry for help, while not one, but a great many lay dead and dying all around us. To as many as I could I gave all my water, for that is the first thing the wounded ask for. It was a sight which I shall never forget in all my life, and I thank God that I am spared to write this letter to you. More than once we said to one another that death would be a relief to us. " Several deeds of valor were performed by the Derbyshires at the River here — notably the removal by Captain Grant and Lieutenant Popham of the explosives underneath the wagon bridge which had been mined. Pte. John Murphy, 3rd Grenadier Guards says : ' ' Oh, its extra to be out in the wars. It's then you see everybody prajring. The biggest of villians come to it when they see the first fight. Seeing poor fellows shot at your feet, it's then the thoughts come into your hearts." A Youthful Patriot. "On Christmas Day, 1899, shotin Market Square,Harrismith, Orange Free State, for refusing to fight against his own countrymen, John Mcl/achlan, aged 30 years, eldest son of John McLachlan, of Wandsworth, formerly of Lambeth." They marched him along 'mid the wondering throng ; Oh ! he carried his head full high ; And proudly he walked, for he deemed it no crime For the sake of his country to die. He had Said that his hand, his honest right hand. Should never yield service to wrong ; For he came of a land where no traitor may thrive, Where the pillars of freedom stand strong. They halted ; they stood him in midst of the crowd, Neath the glare of a withering sun ; Yet he flinched not, but straightened as warrior might Who knows his last battle is won. One volley ! and cowards have finished their work. Injustice hath honoured its name ; A spirit hath soared from the triumphs of wrong. And valour is richer in fame. FOR THE FLAG 45 Yes, he was but one — Oh ! the thousands beside Who have struggled and suffered and died : As the sword of the tyrant dripped red with the blood Which the altar of freedom supplied. Men die for a cause, yet the principle lives, For, as night-shade doth brighten to day. So the aftermath, rising from darkness of doom. Shall glow in its glory for aye. BOERS' DEADLY FIRE. Private Dutton writes of Magersfontein : " I was firing from behind a bit of a bush, on my stomach, for eleven hours. Every time I moved I was shot at. It was terrible. I got away, dodging from bush to bush, until I was out of range pf the Boers' shots. Three of us were behind a bush. A Black Watch man was shot in the neck. One of our officers crawled to him and bandaged him up. He crept back again, when he was shot in both hands ; he got up and ran, and was shot in the leg." A BRAVE QRENADIBR. Amongst the many individual acts of bravery displayed by our men . in South Africa, that of Private Fitzmaurice, of the Grenadier Guards, stands out prominent. During the thick of the fight at Belmont, Colonel Crabbe, commanding the Grenadiers, became detached from his regi- ment, and was immediately surrounded by Boers. Seeing his Colonel's danger, Fitzmaurice rushed to his assistance. He shot two Boers, bayoneted a third, and amidst the firing carried Colonel Crabbe to the ambulance wagon. The Colonel was shot in the wrist and injured in the thigh, and these were the wounds he described as scratches when writing the result of the battle to Windsor. He was soon about again, and recom- mended Fitzmaurice for the Victoria Cross. Fitzmaurice was one of the first Grenadiers who volunteered from Windsor to join the 3rd Battalion. GENEROUS. At Magersfontein the Boers were so moved by the heroic indifference to death displayed by a party of two officers and twelve privates, who charged up to the very muzzles of their opponents, that casting their weapons aside, they rushed in an overwhelming number upon these men, seized the whole of them, and dragged them into their trenches. Then, when they had been disarmed, the Boer commandant said : "There, you are free to go, and we will not re-open fire until you are within your lines. ' ' HONOURABLE. As Wauchope fell in the trenches at Magersfontein he said to his servant by his side, " Take my charger home to my wife.'' These were his last words. The man got the horse out, and after waiting in hiding behind some rocks until twelve hours later, when all the firing had ceased. 46 FOR THE FLAG ventured out of his hole. He was at once captured by the Boers, but when he told them the storj- they bade him go and fulfil Wauchope's dying wish. UNSELFISHNESS. An orderly was bringing some water to a wounded man lying on the ground. He was shot through the abdomen, and he could hardly speak owing to the dryness of his mouth, but he said, ' ' Take it to mv pal first ; he is worse hit than me. " This generous lad died next morning, but his friend got through and is doing well. An article of faith with the soldier, it seems, takes the form of a grim stoicism under pain. Thus one enormous Irishman, with a shattered thigh, yelled out in agony as he was being lifted upon the operati.ig table to be examined. The pain was evidently terrible, and excuse enough for an}' degree of exclamation. But he apologized quaintly and profusely for the noise he had made, urging as an excuse that ' ' he had never been in an hospital before. ' ' COOLNESS. Sir Redvers Buller had left the position he had appointed for himself at the naval battery ^he situation on the right ( where the guns lay useless) was too serious for a man of Buller's spirit to stay there now — and had ridden off towards the guns with all his staff and the escort of the Natal Police. He was down among the naval twelve-pounders behind Long's guns now. The Boers had perhaps recognized the staff ; the whistling in the air trebled. ' You oughtn't to be here, sir,' gasped Ogilvy, ' I am all right, my boy, said the general." BLOEMFONTEIN. The capital of the Orange Free State is a fine, modern city ; with all the improvements special to the times. The Government ofiices, the College for boys and the Institute for Ladies, along with the Public Library, the Natural History Museum, etc., are handsome and substantial structures, while many elegant private dwellings lend ornament to the general appearance of tlie cleanly, wide-streeted city, which can also boast the possession of several well laid-out public parks. JOHANNESBURG. The famous city of Johannesburg is at once botli the largest and, previous to the outbreak of the war, contained the greatest population of any city in South Africa. It is situated on the southern slope of the Witwatersrand range of mountains, from the summit of which it is onlj- a couple of miles. It is one thousand and fourteen miles distant from Cape Town, four hundred and eighty-three from Durban, FOR THE FLAG 47 three hundred and ninety-six from Delagoa Bay, and tliirty-two miles from Pretoria. It may be imagined the city is well above the level of the sea, its elevation being five thousand six hundred and eighty-nine feet. Its altitude is greater than that of any other town in South Africa. Out of a population of over a hundred thousand that Johannesburg possessed previous to the outbreak of the war over fifty thousand were whites, sixty-seven per cent, of whom were of British origin, there being about six thousand Transvaal citizens amongst them. The growth of Johannesburg has been something marvelous and forms a record in the history of the cities of the world. Other cities have possibly risen as quickly, but few there are that can show such substantiality as Johannesburg, with its palatial hotels and stately busi- ness blocks, its handsome public buildings and its suburbs with its comfortable villas and pretty gardens. Fourteen years ago to-day Johannesburg was not. One year ago it was full of commercial life, its streets were full of people, business ac- tivity was rampant, and all its industries, especially the chief of all, the mines, were in full operation. For months past it has been a silent and deserted city in comparison, its trade dead and its streets empty save for a few natives and ' Zarps, ' or Transvaal Police, merely living in the city to prevent incendiarism and disorder. It is now likely, however, that with the advent of the British army Johannesburg will in a brief space of time become itself again. Johannesburg dates from September, 1886, when a few straggling shanties began to rise along the line of gold reefs now forming the Wemmer and Ferreira companies' ground. The existence of the reef at this point was not then known but on its discovery steps were at once taken to secure more suitable locality, and in December, 1886, the nucleus of the present city was laid out. The land around was previously considered of so little value that not long ago farms had changed hands for the value of n team of oxen. In January 1895, two stands in Commissioner street sold for forty-two thousand pounds, and one on Pritchard street at forty thousand pounds. All around the undu- lating country is dotted in all directions with battery houses and other buildings connected with the working of the mines. The annual output of the Johannesburg mines has reached over a hundred million dollars. The general consensus of opinion of the mining community has of late years favored the expectations of increased value of ore with increased depth of working, and so far as the results of one boring may be trusted, this theory does not seem unfounded. Besides the Witwatersrand region, there are in the Transvaal many other gold fields, such as the Venterskroom, the De Kaap, the Steynsdorp and the Sontpausberg, the latter of enormous area. The city of itself extends over an area of six square miles of roads and streets. In the course of the last few years many outlying suburbs 48 FOR THE FLAG have been created for the benefit of those wishing to live a little vs'ay from the town. The streets are regularly laid out and several open squares exist, among which is the Market Square, which is the largest in South Africa. In the buildings the city is particularly rich considering its youth. They include the public offices, the Stock Exchange, the market buildings, the public library; the hospital and a number of churches and theatres, beside several fine hotels and business houses. St. Mary's Anglican Church is the largest in the city, but a still larger one, to meet increasing need, was about to be built. The city is well provided with public parks, including Kruger's Park, Joubert's Park, the Hospital Gardens and other breathing spaces. The transportation facilities are very good, including several lines of street cars and the railway that runs through to Pretoria, to the north and to Cape Town on the south. The lighting system, both gas and electric, is good, but the water supply is poor both in quantity and quality, besides being very dear. The scarcity of water is owing mainU' to the undermining of the earth or the mining industries, but it is expected that in future measures will be taken to successfully cope with the difficulty of obtaining a copious supply of pure fresh water. The sanitary condition of Johannesburg is a horror ; its streets are foul and unpaved, and, as very few of the Boers live in the metropolis, the typhoid epidemics that frequently devastate Johannesburg are com- placently ignored by the Government. Anything that thins out the Uitlander population is hailed by the Boers as a friendly interposition of Providence in behalf of the Transvaal. The water supply is inadequate, and what there is is contaminated. A petition signed by 30,000 residents of Johannesburg praying for municipal improvements was presented to Com Paul during my residence there. The President sipped his coffee, puffed Lis great pipe, spat excessively into a huge porcelain dish, and laughed immoderately. " If the Philistines do not like the land of my people, let them depart in peace, " was his only reply. PRETORIA. On a map the city seems easy of approach by any army, but such is not the case. On three sides the mountains rise from one to two thousand feet above the streets of the city, which is itself 4,500 feet above sea level. On the fourth side the south, facing Johannesburg, the range flattens away to a vast level plateau exposed at every point to the sweep of any guns that may command it. The city is i,oSo miles from Cape Town, and about 50 miles from Johannesburg. Seven modern forts command the approaches to the town and it would take at least twenty thousand men to properly defend it. The civil engineers who built the railroad from Johannesburg to Pretoria found such problems of grade and mountain resistance offered them that the train was finally forced to enter the city on a line resembling the curves and twists of a giant boa constrictor. You look at the mountain fronts as your train struggles to find its FOR THE FLAG 49 way into Pretoria, and wherever the eye rests there appears to be a line of forts, a redoubt, the front of masked batteries or the domes of bomb- proof rifle and cannon pits. They command the few, and very few. narrow entrances to Pretoria. They command the railroad to Lorenzo Mirques and the railroad to Johannesburg. They face the north of Winderboom and guard the ways of Beersheba, Hebron and Polonia. These two formidable fortifications were built by the best men and engineers obtained in Berlin, others from Amsterdam, while French and Italian engineers constructed other of the defences. In external appearance the seven are alike. They have masonry faces with earthworks which cover their front to a great depth. In this they conform with plans and suggestions to be found in M. Block's much studied work, " The Future of War." Pile upon pile of sandbags are .stacked up wherever shot or shell from an enemy might strike. There are many hidden recesses, secret recesses, secret passages, complete telephone connection not only with each other, but with the official buildings in Pretoria. It is also reported that the near approaches are mined, and that it would mean destruction to an army to storm the works. For fifteen years Oora Paul has been quietly, with secrecy, putting up these defences, paying something like {10,000,000 it is said. You would know more of these forts, but it is impossible to find out. Vou ask questions, but they are not answered. None seems to know the in- ward mechanisms, nor how the batteries are placed. .A'l say that Oom Paul can tell, but not even an inquisitive American would ask him. When the forts were building workmen employed in one part were not allowed to work on another. Sentries were posted at all the entrances. Details of the work were kept from all but the President and the commanding officers. It has been said that British spies have gained entrance. It is said that enough food has been accumulated within the forts and the city of Pretoria to last the inhabitants and the army in the event of a siege, for five years. The ammunition supply is estimated for three years. How many guns are mounted it is difficult to say, but undoubtedly many of the Boer guns have been taken to the mountains north. The guns originally placed in the fort were fifteen centimeter Creusots, but their number is not definitely known. Pretoria is in many respects the most agreeable of all South African towns for permanent residence. The air is dry and bracing, and is ad- mirable for persons of weak lungs. " Pretoria is not as pretty a town as Bloemfontein," says Poultney Bigelow, but that is for reasons which mav be obvious. Bloemfontein gives the impression of good taste, of general comfort, of harmonious development. At Pretoria, on the contrary, we find Boer cabins with mud floors ranged alongside of pretentious Govern- ment buildings, built obviously to impress the beholder by their size. The streets of Pretoria are vride avenues, and were laid out with refer- ence to the o.x-trains, and are today much too wide for the normal traffic 50 FOR THE FLAG of the city, costing much to keep them in repair. But this is a good fault and will abound to the benefit of the city in the future. Anxiety. "fie reached home safe and well. Meantime fals mother had died of a .xietj'." Oh ! war hath its shadows as well as its shines, And sorrows abound in its train ; The pean of triumph floats out o'er the wail Of sadness, bereavement and pain. She heard not the music, she saw not the flags As they streamed on the calm summer air; Her eyes with her heart were in far away clime, For the loved of his lifetime was there. She saw him, her hero, stand forth in first rank 'Mid the hosts of the youthful and brave, She saw him, the target of death-dealing guns, Lie tombed in a warrior's grave. She faded and died 'neath her harrowing thoughts, ' Neath the picture her fancy had drawn ; Ne'er looking through darkness of withering night For the rays of a bright after dawn. Ah ! what of the hearts which have sorrowed for those. For whose coming the longing was vain ; Those lights of the homestead, those hopes of the hearth Who will ne'er cross the threshold again. Oh Thou ! Who wert human. Who tasted of woe, Give comfort, if sparing of Joy ; Since many a mother throughout this broad land Is heart lonely for loss of her boy. IN KIMBERLY DURING THE SIEGE. When we come to making the terms of settlement with these inhuman Boers, every woman in England must remember why her sisters in Kim- berly were in more danger from shells than their husbands. It was because the Boers purposely shelled the houses knowing that only women and children were in them. Different women behaved differently. 'As a rule, we think they showed more pluck than the men,' a leading citizen said to me. Two women were sitting on different stoops on different days. In each case a shell fell nearby and exploded in the street. One — an English woman — looked on rather amused than otlierwise, and went out and gathered the pieces to give away as mementos. The other — a Dutch woman — died of fright. FOR THE FLAG 51 Two Kaffir women were walking in the main street side by side. A shell came, killed one and did not touch her companion. Dr. Ashe tells of a lady who walked or rode out with her husband every day, shells or no shells. Plenty suffered dreadful deaths. Plenty enjoyed amazingly narrow escapes, mainly while at thejr daily work in their homes. One young lady hid in a shell-proof pit until it was time to dress for dinner and then went to her room and was killed. That is precisely how death came to George Labram, the mechanical wizard who made a big gun for the town. Another shell fell under a bed on which a babe was sleeping, but it did not explode. A lady was lying down full dressed on her bed resting after dinner. A man came in to say that he found a man with firewood (which was very scarce ) who wanted a certain sum for a load. The lady turned over on her side to get her hand in the pocket at the back of her dress, and just as she rolled away from the side of the bed a hundred pound shell came and bored its way through the bed in exactly the same place where she had been lying. It went through the bed and the floor and into the foundation of the house without exploding; but it would have cut her to pieces had she been dressed as men are clad and been able to put her hand down at her side and take her purse out of a pocket there. Plenty of women who stood the smaller shelling very well, found their nerves at the breaking point when the Boers brought the hundred- pounder to play on their homes. That was when, as if by common con- sent, the servant girls vised to dive under the beds whenever the alarm was sounded to announce the coming of a big one. There came a few days towards the end of the siege when Mr. Rhodes invited all the women and children to seek perfect safety in the diamond mines. Imagination runs riot at the mere idea of their treasure caverns becoming the familiar haunt and rendezvous of a populace. Their thoughts on finding themselves walled in with rocks whose contents could purchase principalities and stir the longing of queens — these and the emotions of a thousand fair women of more modest mold, who are of common clay, and yet love diamonds fully as fondly, are too complex, too intense, too tremedous for handling here. But, apart from these suggestions, the actual scenes in these subterranean chambers are said by Dr. Ashe to have been too strange ever to be forgotten by him. To one of these gem-encrusted caverns hollowed deep in the earth's interior, came fifteen women and children; to another came a thousand. Small as were their companies, it seemed impossible to move without treading on a sleeping child. Rugs, sheets, blankets and mat- tresses had been lowered into the depths, and those who lived in these strange refuges were fed as were no people on the earth's surface over- head, for the great monopolists produced milk and tinned soups, and many delicacies for their guests. A few wretched men, shaming the honor of their mothers and the sex of their fathers, crept into the mines to share the safety of the babes and women, but such was the silent contempt 52 FOR THE FLAG they inspired that they presently fled to the upper air, and none of their kind took their detestable places. Jlany women worked in all the ways that charity, humanity and benevolence suggested, and those who formed an organized corps dis- tributed the few delicacies obtainable, and especially the tinned milk, which was most precious, taking care that it went only to the nursing mothers, the bnbes and the v.ounded. FRENCH'S RIDE INTO KIMBERLY. From Modder River, from Rensburg and from DeAar the cavalry, mounted infantry and horse artillery, came in long lines concentrating at Gras Pan and Honeynest Kloof, On Monday the march began. Ram- d .m, eight miles to the southeast, was soon passed, and a sharp skirmish secured Devil's Drift on the Riet. After a halt of n day the column marched on. At Kiip Drift the cavalry division halted at night. The breathless haste of a dash through the enemy'.s country, carried out with a rapidity probably without a parallel, had left its mark on the horses, and the transport was hopelessly in the rear. On the 15th, at 10 o'clock, the critical advance was made, and the shelling and capture of two laagers a few miles out of Klip Drift on the northern side of the river, cleared the way for the junction of the forces encamped on the Modder, some five miles east of the border fence. This bod}- was composed of Kitchener's and Roberts' Horse and two more regiments of mounted infantry. Before they entered the great plain of Alexamdersfontein the contingent from Modder River, the Scots Greys, Household Cavalry and two Lancer regiments joined the force, which now numbered some 10,000 men, seven batteries of horse artillery and three field batteries. Their entry into the plain was the signal for the great event of the day. The plain is perhaps three miles in widtli and five in length, converging slightly to the north and fringed with kopjes. The kopjes on either sides were held by tlie Boers who poured bullets and shells into the advancing mass, almost hidden by the curtain of dust that rose from under the hoofs of the horses. These were quickly cleared of their occupafits by the impetuous rush of the mounted infantrj-. Lieut- enant Sweet Escott, of the i6th Lancers, was the first o6Bcer to fall, shot dead at 50 yards by a Boer, who received a lance through his tliroat almost before he could produce the inevitable cry for mercy. Kopje after kopje was cleared, and the Boers were driven from them right and left, as the column crashed forward like some great ploughshare, thrusting aside the enemj- on either side, helpless to withstand this tremendous charge and almost powerless to harm it. A barbed rider fence stretching across the plain checked the advance for a moment, and the halt enabled the Boers to withdraw their guns. It was no time for a flank movement to capture them. At Bevillier's Farm at the northern end of the plain, the column halted, and reformed in column after watering the horses. They had FOR THf: FLAG 53 come ten miles and broken the ring around the besieged town. The pace at which the advance had been made had both minimized the casualities and prevented Cronje from appearing with 10,000 men to Hne the kopjes on the plain. The latter realized that he was defeated, and acted with his usual sagacity. By the evening of this same day not a man was left on the hills on the ridges that had been the camping ground so long. Meanwhile the cavalry pushed on. From Bevillier's Farm the coun- tr_\- resembled some great English park, studded with single trees and undulating under the long sunburnt grass, through which the guns ploughed long tracks in the crumbling red soil. Here the pace began to tell, and horse after horse that had struggled on so far fell dead from so ne wound unnoticed in the fight. There was no time to pause, and at a point some three miles further, the first sight of Kimberly burst upon the column through the fringe of the trees. The Boers on the north of the town were firing their shots from their great gun, but they soon stopped, and General French entered the town, which in a moment put out its flags and decorations. The panic that had been caused by the continuous bursting of the huge shells over every part of the besieged town vanished, and from the 1200 foot level of the diamond mines thousands of women and children emerged into the light of day. MEMORIES OF LADVSMITH'S TRIAL. The " Daily Chronicle's" correspondent, under date of March 21, draws a pitiful picture of conditions in this corner of Northern Natal. He writes: — " One hardly knows whether to call Ladysmith a cemetery, a hospital or a slaughter house. It is true a thousand dead would well cover the fatal losses of the siege, and of these five hundred and twenty-two died of disease. Why, enteric fever alone cost us three hundred and eighty-two lives, and dysentery one hundred and nine, while of wounds only eighty died, not counting those three or four hundred whom death found suddenly on the hills. But the siege is over, and the hospitals are crowded still. From Intombi, certainly, the victims of a feverish ground sodden with disease are being quickly drafted down to the sea ; all but those whose shattered bones would break again at moving. But the new hospital in the tin camp is filled already, and we are actually sending the sick to the front, instead of the rear, for want of room. Enteric gives us no rest. Friend after friend of the old garrison falls at my side. And now it has attacked the new garrison, too. In one brigade fifty are down, in another sixty-four. There seems no end of it, though they tell us the touch of frost next month may do us good, and the other morning I saw the precipices of the Drakensberg once more outlined by thin ledges of snow. But, enteric apart, chronic diarrhoea torments us, and dysentery to follow. We were so reduced in strength that the improved diet does us harm rather than good. The men eat and drink, but fade away. No need to speak of the smell of death that hangs over all the town and the 54 FOR THE FLAG encircling hills — the smell of horses still unburied on the rock or swelter- ing in the river, where washed — the smell of ground putrid with long encampment — the smell of shallow graves. Apart from mere health, these things would not matter much, were one not haunted by memories. As I ride around the familiar fortifications, so lately full of men, and see them slowly falling to pieces, while the trenches are filling up with the rainy weather, it seems as if at every step my horse kicked upthe bones of some friend that is gone. Here it was that Avi. the fearless and adven- turous gentleman, worthy of Elizabethan days, stood upright among the rocks, having orders to find out the enemy on that terrible January 6th, and fell with a tiny hole in his forehead and a gap at the back of his head as big as a baby's foot. Here Dick Cunygham, just recovering from his Elandslaagte wound, was riding out at the head of his Gordons to relieve the Manchesters on Caesar's Camp, w'nen a bullet from a mile away just dropped into his liver. Here young Digby-Jones tried to beat back the Boer onslaught with the butt end of a revolver till he died. And there are so many more — men of all ranks and conditions. On almost even.- rock there sits a ghost who nods his head and speaks quietly to me as I pa.ss. CHRISTMAS IN L\DYSMITH The sun beats down with pitiless persistency on tlie miserj- of the war-stricken town. For the curse of strife is with us here in these daj-s, when, in common with every people in Christendom, we are singing. ' ' Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, goodwill toward men." Ours is the strangest of Christmastides that io,oo3 Britons have celebrated within the memor}- of living man. A brilliant, cloudless sky supplies the high lights of a picture of death, of bloods'ied, of privation, and of hardship that is set in a frame of unspeakable ruin and desolation. Of course, we haven't a monopol}' of misery. I know that. In many a home in England, alas ! our picture is reflected with awful reilism, and many are the thoughts which turn to the little mounds of earth in our midst where some poor fellow rests who will never again meet those whom he held dearest. No, we haven't a monopoly of miserj-. All that we can lay claim to is the terrible light which proximity casts upon sufferings. And what wouldn't we give now for the gloomy days and the dull skies that are associated with an English Christmastide ! The mocking sunshine, the glorious brightness of the heavens simply befool the season and belie the grief that is around us. We have no long nfght. Every day reaches us early and leaves us late. With the grey streak of dawn in the eastern sky, when the first bird chirps a greeting to its mate comes the report of the distant gun and the crash of the shell near by ; and then, with the western sky bathed in rich purple, when the last bird twitters itself and its mate to sleep, comes again the report of the distant gun and the crash of the shell near by. FOR THE FLAG 55 And in a few brief hours — even these sometimes broken by the noise of warfare — the same day of strife will be recommenced. So it has gone on during the eight weeks which have preceded our Christmastide. The shadow of the festival of peace and goodwill was upon us when we gathered in the English church last Sunday. It was a congregation of men. Half a dozen brave women — of the few score who have remained in the town of desolation — worshipped in the midst of men whose swords hung by their sides and whose breasts were encircled with cartridge belts. Half a dozen children — unwitting witnesses of the terrible scenes of war — twisted and fidgeted in their seats as youngsters are wont when the service is lengthy and the heat is overpowering. And as I stepped inside the door of this temple of peace a sound of voices filled the tiny church : " Give peace, O God, give peace again." The portal of the edifice was wrecked by the enemy's shell ; a gaping crevice laid the walls open from roof to floor. What a reminder of the devastation outside. ' ' Remember ! ' ' struck up the choir and congregation in vmison, and our thoughts went beyond the building and we recollected the shot-pierced roofs, the walls laid low, of houses in the town "Remember!" and we recollected the holes torn in the streets, the caverns rent in the hills by the mighty explosives hurled at the place where war wrought its worst. "Remember!" and we recollected the awe-giving crashes which had accompanied this destruction, and which will never cease to haunt the ears of those who have listened to the death-dealing engines of modern warfare. "Remember!" — but we reverently sung the verse to the end, and the sound of the voices fills the church with the prayer : " Give peace, O God, give peace again." The rumblings of a heavy wagon shook the ruins of the temple before the choir and congregation joined in the singing of the third verse of this hymn for us in time of war. An ambulance cart, with the Red Cross painted on its sides and a white flag floating above it, rolled past to collect our wounded from some field where battle had raged in the early morn. And our thoughts went to those other places of public worship — the Dutch church, the Congregational chapel — in fact, to all the build- ings erected to the glory of God which were now tenanted by wounded to the exclusion of worshippers. A church bell has not rung in Ladysmith for eight Sabbaths, and, that no sound but the roar of artillery might disturb the calm of the sufferers, the striking of the town clock has been silenced. And I suppose there was not one man in that congregation who did not call tip the vision of some comrade who had been killed or maimed for life. There was not a woman or child to whom the sight of wounded men being carried from the battle field to the hospital was not familiar. For awful scenes of pain and human agony have passed before the eyes of all 56 FOR THE FLAG who remained in the besieged town. There were choking voices when the church next echoed with the prayer : " Give peace, O God, give peace again." Nobody wanted to catch his fellow-worshipper's eyes, feeling that his own were tear-dimmed, and that tremor was upon his lips. So those who were near looked out through the wrecked porch and, though dazzled by the brilliant sunshine, they gazed over devastated orchards and gardens to the plain where cattle starved and vultures circled around the half-buried bodies of horses and oxen. Beyond it, at the foot of the Mbulwana, lay the white flag camp of intombi Spruit. Here war's dread hand-maiden Disease was reaping her harvest. And we thought of the Christmastide that was to be for the hundreds who lay there between life and death (their cemetery already filled), with a few medicaments and no luxuries to coax them back to health and strength. And we thought of the emotion of those who, knowing a relative or a friend was dying, were forbidden by the enemy's regulations to leave the desolate town for a few hours to visit this neutral spot and say a last farewell. And we thought that war was horrible — that its miseries overwhelmed its glories — and with quiet, earnest, "Amen" subscribed to the fervent prayer ; " Give peace, O God, give peace again." THE ADVANCE ON LADYS.VIITH During the day the Boers maintained a brisk artillerv fire from long range and automatic guns, but the British losses were slight. The Inniskillings advanced to assault along the main or eastern side. The Boers immediately opened a terrific fire which was heard rattling above the loudest artillery from a stone sangar on the top of the hill and a cross fire from the surrounding heights. In apite of the scores of shells bursting about the the trenches, hurling rocks, bullets and splinters in the faces of the defenders the Dutch stood the fire, all their heads, slouch-hatted, plainly visible against the sky, maintaining their terrible fire. And when the supreme moment arrived several in their reckless excitement sprang on the top of the walls waving their rifles and firing furiousl}-. But if the defence was magnificent, the attack was superb. The Inniskillings climbed steadily up the hill to within five hundred j-ards of the summit without much loss. Then tlie leading companies charged, running swiftly onward across the rocky slopes between a few small trees, while the whole ground was stirred and .spurted with bullets striking ground. The attack was spent. Then away the supports advanced to sustain it, but only to share its fate. In spite of the gallantry and devotion, after repeated attempts, the heroic Irish soldiers, having lost very heiivily in officers and men, recognized that they could not prevail, FOR THE FLAG 57 Yet they clung to the ground already won, and finding all further advance impossible, lay down upon the slopes and building shelters of walls of stone, sullenly, stubbornly refused to retire. The Connaughts now advanced to support the attack, and the Dublin Fusileers, the famous regiment which had already suffered so terribly in this war, marched eagerly forward, the soldiers brandishing their rifles and cheering loudly, inspiring all who saw them with wonder and admir- ation ; but the light was fading every minute and the night closed before the main strength of the attack was developed. Sharp fighting took place in the afternoon, and the musketry grew very heavy. As darkness fell the Boers made a vigorous daring counter attack, evidently with the intention of driving the British across the river. Confused, close fighting of a fierce, sanguinary nature continued throughout the night. The British losses were severe, but it is certain the Boers suffered proportionally. The British troops closed with the Boers several times. Sixteen men of Wortley's composite battalion of rifles, all reservists, showed blood on their bayonets. Kruger's grandson was among the killed. Prisoners were taken and lost by both sides. Many officers and men were killed or wounded, but the morning showed the British to be in full possession of all their ground. As the relieving column passed through the street Colonel Donald, of the Royal Fusiliers, halted in front of Sir George White, and he and his men gave three cheers for the defender of I/adysmith, and this was carried on by each succeeding regiment. Sir George White stood in front of the Town Hall, its honor scatter- ed by Long Tom, the most significent sight of the times that have gone. Facing him were the pipers of the Gordons who played "Highland Laddie" as the Scotch Fusiliers passed, "The wearing of the Green," for the Irish regiments, and "Cock of the Walk" (?) for the others. Some Tommies, in spite of the fatigue, danced passed White in time to the music. It was a wonderful scene, full of comradeship and loyal feel- ing. The relieving column was covered with rags and mud, robust and tanned, like coastguards. The men in the lines through which they passed were yellow with fever, cadaverous, some scarcely able to stand. They hailed each other with mutual understanding that each had done his best and his full duty. White received Lord Dundonald to-day before an immense crowd of soldiers and civilians who cheered the greeting between the saviour and the saved. After wringing Dundonald's hand, General White turned to the throng and said : " People of Ladysmith, I thank you one and all for the heroic and 50 FOR THE FLAG patient manner in which you have assisted me during the siege. From the bottom of my heart I thank you." ■' It hurt me terribly when I had to cut down the rations, but, thank God, we have kept our flag flying." White's voice broke at this point, and some one started " God Save the Queen," which was taken up by the crowd and sung with bared heads. It was a memorable scene. GENERAL BULLER. "After the relief of Ladysmith General Buller thanked both of the forces and expressed his sjmpatliy with the relatives and friends ot the gallant men who had fallen. " By the exhibition of truest courage," he said, " courage that burns steadily besides flashing brilliantly, they had accomplished their object and added a glorious page to the history of the country." BULLER'S BOYS. Beneath the fierce rays of the sun, Waist-deep in watery flood. In unknown paths, through tangled growths, Where hidden foemen stood. They bravely pushed their gallant path, Through swamp, o'er hill and lea, Till o'er the moans of battle rang The shouts of victory. Britannia, to her trust}' sons. In sending words of cheer. With great, full heart of mother-love Doth drop a mother's tear. With mingled pride and sorrowing Upon her silent brave. Who rest within their patriot shroud. In glor3-'s honoured grave. HOW LADYSMITH SUFFERED. All accounts from relieved I,adysmith speak of the joy of the rescued garrison and population as indescribable, and well it might he. Their sufferings had been terrible. General White tells that when the siege began a total population of iS.ooo souls was shut in by the Boer armies — 12,000 troops. 2,000 civilians and 4,000 natives. Very few of them escaped sickness of some sort. Of the 12,000 soldiers, 8,000 had at various times been inmates of the hospital, As food became reduced, the water bad and the stress of the siege and general privations became greater a man once down with sickness was lost. From 15th January to ist of March there were 2,000 deaths from disease alone — an awful mortalitv. Living on reduced rations, killing the cavalry and artillery horses to FOR THE FLAG 59 mak? their flesh into sausages, with the field batteries unhorsed, brave General White and his men did not despair. The cavalry were converted into infantry and helped to man the trenches. An interior line of de- fences had been constructed so as to still fight on if the outer works should be carried. Ammunition as well as food was scarce, and for many weeks not a shot was wasted. Yet White tells that he could possibly have held out for six weeks longer. Fortunately the timely arrival of the relieving force prevented the dreadful and costly necessity. No thought of surrender was for a moment indulged. The public, who did not know or imagine how terribly trying were the conditions, nor how awful the mortality was, feared and even expected momentarily for many weeks to hear of the garrison being made prisoners. They did not realize of what stuff General White and his brave little army were made. Little as persons living in comfortable homes can know of the actual privations which Ladysmith has suffered in those four terrible months, our reason tells us that the courage, fortitude, endurance and devotion of the besieged have been beyond all praise. SIEQE OF MAFEKINQ. On Oct. 12 the Boers, having captured an armoured train, sent out from Mafeking, practically cut off communication between the town and the outside world, and, advancing two days later, commenced a heavy bombardment of the town on Oct. 17, which, however was ineffectual. After four hours firing, which killed one dog, Commandant Cronje, who commanded the Boers, sent a messenger demanding the surrender of Majeking, 'to save further bloodshed.' The messenger found Colonel Baden-Powell fast asleep, When he awoke he invited the messenger to lunch, and sent him back with the reply that he ' would let him know when he had enough.' Towards the end of October, Piet Cronje, Commandant Cronje's son, taunted his father with his failure to reduce Mafeking, and undertook to do it himself. On October 31 young Cronje led 800 Boers against Cannon Kopje and there was a keenly contested engagement which lasted for five hours with heavy shell and rifle fire. The Boers were driven back with heavy loss ; young Ctonje received wounds from which he died soon after. Then commenced a series of sanguinary fights, the result of gallant sorties by the defenders and desperate attempts at ' rushing ' the town by the Boers. During the rest of the time the bombardment continued with more or less effect, the artillerv fire doing more execution as the Boers advanced nearer to the town. On November 27 it was found necessary to reduce the rations of the garrison. The British, however, managed by great exertions to force the Boers away from their more advanced posts. On December 26 occurred one of the bloodiest episodes of the siege — an unsuccessful attack being made upon the Boer position at Game Tree Hill. The British attacked bravely, but the Boer fire was so murderous that flesh and blood could not stand it, and the order to retire was at length reluctantly given. Captains Vernon and Sanford, Lieutenant Paton and 18 men were 6o FOR THK FLAG killed ; Captain Fitzclarence and 23 men were wounded ; three Biltish prisoners were captured by the Boers. The Boers celebrated the New Year by resuming the bombardment with unusual vigor, deliberately shelling the women's laager, and thereby killing and wounding some of the children therein. On Feb. 2, the hundredth day of the siege, the garrison sent a message to the Queen expressing their loyal devotion. Towards the end of February some of the besiegers were recalled to repel the British advance towards Kimberley, but after Kimberley had been relieved the Boers who had retreated northward with the heavy guns pressed the siege. On March 3 the Boers furiously bombarded the brickfields and trenches about a mile from Mafeking for three hours, killing one and wounding two colonials. On March 5 they made a determined attack. Owing to a misunderstanding, the colonials evacuated the foremost trench. This the Boers occupied, but reserves were called upon and the trench was recaptured with a rush The Boers continued very active, and Colonel Baden-Powell and the garrison had all they could do to prevent them from encroaching on the defensive lines. The Boers captured some of the outworks, and from these bombarded the town. The garrison about this time began to feel the pinch of want. They were reduced to the use of horseflesh and bread made from horse forage, while the water was so filthy that typhoid, dysen- tery and diphtheria were epidemic. There was a heavj- death rate among the women and children. Colonel Baden-Powell on March 27 reported the Boers to be pushed back so far as to cause the town to be compara- tively out of rifle range. In April the bread eaten by the garrison grew worse and worse in respect to quality and quantity. The enemy were repulsed on April nth. On April 29, the two hundredth day of the siege was celebrated with horse dinners; and as late as May 7 Colonel Baden-Powell reported that all was going well and that the garrison was cheerful. On Saturday, May 12, the Boers made a determined effort to storm the town, but lost heavily, losing some fifty killed, and Sarel Eloff, President Kruger's son-in-law, and ninety men were taken prisoners. It was this day report- ed in the town that General Hunter, with the army of relief, had, two days previously, reached Vryburg, ninety-four miles distant. At last, on Friday, after weary waiting, the Empire heard with joy the official Boer announcement, the news being dated from Pretoria, Mav 18, that when the laagers and forts around Mafeking had been severelv bombarded, the siege was abandoned, a British force from the south taking possession. Mafeking is a small place. Its fall would have made no difference in the course of the war; but while the balance of battle was in doubt upon the great fields of conflict, the unconquerable little town, shut up in the FOR THE FLAG 6 1 north, saw the few weeks for which it was expected to hold out, pass into months of isolation. Never will England forget the happy, hopeful thrill that came to her when Colonel Baden-Powell said: " Mafeking can't be taken by sitting down and looking at it." There is no advance- ment which the nation would hail as a fair reward for the brilliant capacity, cheerfulness and iron courage of the hero of the Empire. At 9.40 the Lord Mayor of London, in his robes of office, announced the news to the crowds in front of the Mansion House. The I/ord Mayor was accompanied by the Lidy Mayoress to the front of the Mansion House, where an immense portrait of Colonel Baden-Powell was displayed, bearing the iriscrption, " Mafeking relieved." While the attendants were waving Union Jacks, the Lord Mayor briefly a(ldres<;ed t le assemblage, saying, '• I' wish your cheers could reach Mafeking." There the speech was interrupted by a redoubled cheering and the singing of ' Rule Britannia,' after which the Lord Mayor remarked : " We never doubted what the end would be, or that British pluck and courage would conquer at last." The Lord Mayor then led the crowd in singing ' God Save the Queen,' and with renewed cheering and the waving of flags by the assemljled multitude and the singing of ' For he's a jolly good fellow, the Mayor and his party retired. Ten thousand people stood in front of Mrs. Baden-Powell's house in St. George's Place, cheering, and a score of cabs brought congratulations. TRIBUTE TO A BRAVE ENEMY. General Pretorius, discussing the three sieges, said: 'The Ladysmith men were good, but there were 10,000 of them, and all fighting men. Kimberley was remarkable because of the large number of its civilian population and natives, but the siege of Mafeking however it may end, will always live in South African history, because a flat and absolutely unprotected country village ( for that is what Mafeking is) has by the genius of one man been defended, and defended against the most strenuous efforts not only of our leading general, Cronje, but of his sviccessors. 'I should like,' said General Pretorius, to his English friend, 'to take you outside Mafeking where I have been, and look at the place. You would have thonghtthat the 8, 000 with which we once surrounded it could have got in on any night they chose. We had the best of Cronje's burg- hers there, but it is no confession of cowardice on our part to say that we knew Baden-Powell was not only prepared for every surprise of ours, but that he was ready to spring surprises at any moment. And though I think' (it should be stated that the general was speaking just prior to his release) 'that we shall eventually take Mafeking, it will be by starvation and not by attack. 'Our burghers have not exhibited fear on any occasion, but I do not think they will tackle Colonel Baden-Powell." 62 FOR THE FLAG When General Cronje left Mafeking to face Lord Methuen at the Modder river, he declared that the defenders of Mafeking were devils, not human beings. SALISBURY'S SON. Lord Edward Cecil, son of Lord Salisbury, deserves quite as much credit as Colonel Baden-Powell for the magnificent defence of Mafeking, as the following story, contained in a letter from Lord Kitchener dated from the Cape, for the first time shows. Lord Kitchener who had Edward Cecil serving on his staff in the Soudan, relates that shortly after reaching South Africa he came across a well-known Dutchman who has filled large contracts for provisioning the English army. Just before the war broke out he received instructions to send a certain quantity of stores to Mafeking. Whilst shiptaent was going on forward Lord Edward Cecil called upon the contractor and asked for particulars of the stores. These being supplied him, he said : "Could you send four times as much ?" "Yes, if I had authority," said the Dutchman. "Well," said Lord Edward," "you send four times as much as you have orders for and I will give you mj- note of hand for cost of the surplus quantity. If the government don't pay you I will." Considering the fact that Lord Edward's financial resources are chiefly represented by his pay as Major, his undertaking to pay out of his private purse a sum between 30,000 dollars and 40,000 dollars was characteristically daring. The Dutchman considered he was safe in deal- ing with the Premier's son. Mafeking was accordingly stocked with provisions and general stores for an amount four times more than highly- placed authorities thought was sufficient. According to Lord Kitchener's testimony this is how Mafeking manageed still to hold out. AFTER THE BATTLE AT ESCOURT. "One of the officers was found with a letter from home clasped tight in his dead hand. He had apparentlj' pulled it out of his pocket to con- sole therewith his dying moments. ' ' ' ' Several of the dead had letters or photos in their hands or by their sides." Oh! many a cheek will blanch with woe. And many an eye will weep; For many a hope has lived and died With those who rest in sleep. The mother will recall the hour ^\■llen first those lips she pressed; And, with a love that never failed, Close-clasped him to her breast. FOR THE FLAG 63 And, brooding o'er the after j'ears Of Aouth and manhood's prime, Will long to follow to that bourne Beyond the ills of time. The stricken wife will clasp her hands, The child will sob in vain ; The bulwark of his hearth and home "Will ne'er return again. The sister heart will sorely mourn The brother of her pride ; And who shall cheer her empty life. The disappointed bride. Thou ! Father of the fatherless ! Great God of battles, hear ! Have mercy, heal those hearts which bleed. O'er many a soldier's biec! FEEDING THE GUNS. If it were not that there is a very excellent and elaborate system of supplying soldiers with ammunition during the course of a fight, it would be almost hopeless to attack any position. Modern cartridges are very heavy things to carry. The long bullet, the heavy brasswork of the case and the weight of the wads and powder all combine to produce an article which, though it is of small compass, is very weighty. When our soldiers are attacking a Boer position, their operations re- quire that each man shall have a large supply of ammunition. This must all be carried forward as the fight progresses. The Boer intrenched upon a hilltop may have the largest supply of his ammunition by his side, and he is not weighted down by it, as our soldiers are when storming a position. During a protracted fight the British soldier is in most instances compelled to fire away all the ammunition which he is personallj' able to carry. An ordinary private carries 100 rounds. Just before an action, when heavy firing is expected, this 100 rounds is supplemented by 50 more from the battalion reserve of 77 rounds per man. Thus each private advances into battle carrying no less than 150 possible dealers of death. Whenever a soldier falls or is wounded he is immediately stripped of ammunition, and it is at once distributed among the men who are still capable of carrying on the fight. The reserve ammunition for each battalion is carried in four carts, and on the backs of two pack mules. When an action appears imminent, a temporary reserve called a ' ' British reserve ' ' is formed. This consists of two carts taken from each of the four battalions com- posing the brigade. The special reserve is placed under an officer selected 64 ' FOR THE FLAG for the occasion. In the event of any of the battalions becoming de- tached from the brigade they receive their own carts back again. In addition to the above there is always with the regular ammuni- tion column 87 rounds for each man, and a further supply is carried in the "ammunition pack "of 55 rounds per man. Accordingly the total amount carried in the field for each infantry soldier works out at 309 rounds. The men who, actually bring up the cartridges to their comrades of the fighting line are selected from each company for their strength and agility. The duty of bringing up supplies of ammunition during an engagement is a very arduous one, and only the most physically fit are able to attemptit. The mules which accompany a bjittalion are supposed to get within 500 yards of the men in action and the carts to within 1,000 }-ards. REALITIES OF WAR. ■'War must be endured to realize it. We have been at it night and day. I,ast night we had to lay down in our trenches and it literally poured. We were half covered with water." — Sergeant C. Relf, 2nd Devons. "I went to the front twice under a hot fire and brought in two wounded men, one of whom was shot again when we were carrying him. How I escaped in such a hail of bullets, God knows," — An officer at the battle of Tugela. A story is told how General Lord Roberts heard of the death of his only son, whom he adored, and who was one of the most promising officers in the British army. It was the occasion when the British forces suffered the very severe defeat and loss on the Tugela. In the Senior Service Club, of which Lord Roberts is a member, a group was standing about the ticker reading the list of casualties and had not observed the General, who was standing close behind. All at once one said ! " Great God ! Bobs' son is killed ! " An exclamation was heard from behind. Turning round he made way for Roberts, who advanced and read the fatal news. He said not a word, but, turning sharply round, silently left the club to break the news as gently as possible to his wife and daughters, waiting anxiously at home. His greatest fear was lest it should be conveyed to them in some brutal manner, for instance by the blatant cries which later must have echoed terribly in their ears throughout the evening. " Poor Bobs!" was all his fellow clubmen could say. Most of them were retired officers, but their looks were full of pity, and every heart was flowing with sjonpathy for the genial, kind-hearted, modest-minded "Bobs," whose greatest pride was just that very son. Lady Roberts lately presented Mr. H. A. Quinton, of the Bank of FOR THK FLAG 65 Ireland, with a handsomely-bound copy of " Forty-one years in India," by Ijord Roberts, accompanied by an autograph letter thanking Mr. Quinton for his services in connection with her fund for the wives and families of soldiers and sailors serving in South Africa. The Queen personally interested herself in the devoted women who have done so much splendid work in South Africa. In the midst of her anxiety and grief she sent for the Mother Superior Theresa and Sister Evangeline who labored so heroically among the sick and dying during the siege of Mafeking, and she asked that the names of all the nurses who specially distinguished themselves in the campaign should be sub- mitted to her. BOERS AND THE BIBLE. A missionary was visiting a Boer family, and found that they were daily using, and therefore wearing out, a Bible that had been brought over with the family three centuries or so before from Holland, and con- taining all the family names from father to son ever since. He pointed out to them that it was a treasure not to be ruined. They agreed, but did not know where to get another to replace it. He promised to make them a present of one. The old Boer was aghast. 'But,' he said, 'the English (^o not know anything about the Bible.' However, the book, printed in'"Dutch by the Bible Society, was duly presented. Of course, instead of the Dutch arms it had the English arms on the front page. The old man pointed this out, 'That is the Bible,' he said. A little further examination showed him, however, to his amazement, that this was only a matter of printing and that otherwise the two were identical. The explanation as to the arms led to a reference to the translation. ' Translation!' said the old man, ' This is no translation. The words were originally said in Dutch.' Literally that represents the ordinary state of the upcountry Boer mind. They look upon the promises and threaten- ings of the Old Testament as personally addressed to themselves and their forefathers. They worship a purely tribal God, who has given over ' the heathen as a prey to their teeth,' and they, feeling themselves fully justified in so doing, act toward them accordingly. If they see together in the street a Boer, an Englishman and a native they would describe them as ' a Christian,' 'an Englishman' and 'black trash.' After all, apropos to some of the letters that have lately appeared, that is worship- ping ' the same God,' or 'being Protestants,' with some little qualifi- cation, That Britain's patricians are of the right stock is shown by the fact that 36 members of the House of Lords are with the troops in South Africa. Besides these 36, there are hundreds of the brothers and younger sons of peers serving with their regiments. Besides the oldest sons of the Marquis of Dufferin, of Lord Roberts 66 FOR THE FtAG and of Viscount Frankfort de Montmorency, who have been killed, the heirs-apparent or presumptive to the following peerages are under orders for South Africa, or already there : the dukedoms of Athole, Richmond, St. Alban's and Westminster ; the Marquessate of Lansdowne ; the Earldoms of Abingdon, Arran, Beauchamp, Derby, Dunmore, Erne, Fitzwilliam, Gosford, Granard, I^anesborough, Listowel and Rosse ; and the Baronies of Bagot, Balfour of Burleigh, Ebury, Farnham, Iveagh, Leconfield, Loch, Lovat, O'Neill, Tweedmouth and Wimborne. IRISHIVIEN IN THE BRITISH ARMV. There are, at the present moment, sevan full regiments of Irishmen in the British Army — the Inniskilling Fusiliers, the Connaught Rangers, the Royal Dublin Fusiliers, the Royal Irish Regiment and the Royal Irish Rifles. And these Irish Regiments are freer from any admixture of foreign or non-Irish blood than probably any other seven regiments in His Majesty's army. Not only are these Irish regiments composed of Irishmen, but the mixture of Irishmen in the English and Scottish regiments is very material. Of the 202,000 troops in the British army last vear 158,560 were of English, 57,370 of Irish and 16,480 of Scottish birth. OLD ENGLAND. ' ' Some people insinuate that the English regiments have not been reaping as many laurels as the Irish and Scotch. Englishmen form 75 per cent of the army in South Africa, and the number and prominence of their deeds are not less than their numerical superiority demands." ' ' The Lancashire Fusiliers alone lost 470 men out of 900. * * Only iive officers out of twenty, left, and a captain in command, etc." ' ' Nearly every county in England is represented by those regiments, which have rendered brilliant service in the war. ' ' Oh England ! grand old England ! From distant isles, from far-off seas Fond hearts breathe forth the filial prayer. Which young life lisped around thy knees ; A prayer for all thy valiant ones. Those hero-hearts of .sterling mould ; From those who left thy palace halls, To those who farewelled on the wold. For England, dear Old England ! The famed in song and story ; — What other land may cast a shade On brave Old England's glory! Fair Scotia's tartan proudly waves Upon the blood-stained battle-field ; Sure signal of that dauntless host Who know to fight but not to vield, FOR THE FLAG 67 Whose sires have served in every land Which nigh or far-off ocean laves ; And triumphed in fair freedom's cause. Or sunk in glory's honored graves. Yet England, dear old England ! The famed in song and story ; — What other land may cast a shade On dear old England's glory! Those flashing lights upon the wild ! Who cheer with mirth the darkest path ; With softest heart for suffering weal, But iron-willed to foenian's wrath : See how they spring to front the fray ; Brave Erin bides not, asks not why ; No coward blood doth course those veins Which throb to conquer or to die. Yet England, dear old England ! The famed in song and story ; — What other land may cast a shade On brave old England's glory! Britannia's brood, from further West, And from the South Sea's utmost girth. With strong, young arms, and souls aflame Have dignified their kingly birth. And fought as veteran soldiers fi jht. And won as surely win the best ; Till that bright sun which gilds the brave Hath blazoned every youthful crest. Yet England, grand old England ! The famed in song and story ; — What other land may cast a shade On brave old England's glory! BISMARCK. A new story is told of the visit in 1883 of the Boer Deputies, Kruger, Du Toit and General N. J. Smit, to the continent after going to England to get " better terms " than they received after Majuba. At a banquet given them in Berlin, Smit was entertaining the company with stories of how the burghers had shot down the English during the war of 1881, " when Bismarck, who had been listening to the conversation, said to the person whom Smit was addressing, 'Ask him (the General) if he knows what would have happened to himself and friends had Disraeli been in power.' Smit answered ' No.' 'Well,' said Bismarck, 'I vrill 68 FOR THE FLAG tell you. You would have hanged on the tallest tree in the Transvaal long ago. ' BOER MANNERS. A letter from Durban gives an account of the suflferings of the refu- gees in the open railway trucks. "A woman from Dundee told me," the letter goes on, " that she had managed to obtain a bottle of milk for her baby to drink on the journey. The guard seized this from her and deliberately broke the bottle on the wheel of the train. At the end of the journey the mother obtained some milk, but the child was so raven- ous it drank too much of it and died. What respectable refugee women have had to put up with at the hands of the Boer is enough to make any one's blood boil. One case, which I can vouch for, should appeal to Britishers. A lady was coming down with a child in her arms, when the mite was snatched from her arms by one of these brutes, who delibera- tely spat in the babe's face, remarking, " there ! that is is what we think of you rooineks." A private of the Natal Mounted Police had his horse shot, and immediately cried out, "I'm hit." "Nonsense, man: it's only your horse," cried a comrade, and the man accepting the assurance, went on fighting. He returned to the camp with his corps, strolled about in the evening, suffered during the night from what he called spasms, and onh- next morning discovered that a Mauser bullet had gone through his body. Then he collapsed and was taken to the hospital. AN AGED PATRIOT. It is related in an English newspaper that a seventy-two year old recruit had passed the doctor's examination for the Imperial Yeomanry. He had served twenty-eight years in the Black Watch, the Gordons and other Highland regiments, and has six sons serving in the army, four at the front in South Africa. While the old lion has such cubs there need be no fear that the sun will ever set on the British Empire. A Morpeth man serving with the 67th batters- of artillen,-, which formed part of the garrison at Ladysmith, in a letter home states that during the battle of Waggon Hill he picked up a bag which contained fifty sovereigns and fourteen pounds in silver. For safety he placed his find in the magazine of one of the guns. A little later a shell from a. Boer i2-pounder Nordenfelt struck this particular British gun and blew it to bits. No money was found afterwards. ' What do j-ou think of that for hard luck ?' asks ' Tommy.' A TOUCHING INCIDENT. One of the most touching incidents of the war in South Africa oc- cured when Captain Towse received the first Victoria Cross bestowed by FOR THE FLAG 69 the Queen for valor in the veldt. Captain Towse earned the distinction by attempting to carrj- off Colonel Downman, who had been wounded, under a hail of bullets. He was unable to do so, and lay beside him and kept off the Boers all night until help came. By that time Colonel Downman was dead. Captain Towse was blinded in both eyes by a bullet wound. Captain Towse was taken to Windsor, and led into the royal presence by his wife, where he knelt at the feet of his Sovereign, who was so much overcome by the sight of the blind hero that her aged hands could scarcely pin on the most prized of all British decorations. The Queen's few words of simple praise of his gallantry and thanks for his devotion were spoken so low as to be almost inaudible, and when Queen Victoria was led out there was scarcely a dry eye among the oflBcials present. GRAVE OF LIEUT. ROBERTS. A loyal Dutchman, named Hatting, residing near Frere, has made a graceful offer to Lord and Lady Roberts, The remains of their son. Lieutenant Roberts, who fell at Colenso, lie in this man's farm, and he offers to make over to the parents of the deceased officer two acres of land around the grave. ON THE EVE OF BATTLE, A Holy Communion Service. It is a common error to represent the British soldiers as ne'er-do- wells, with little or no sense of religion. Soldiers may not be plaster saints, but if those who talk of them in this fashion would but attend a service at a garrison church, they would find there the best of congre- gations. Nowhere do the people join so heartily in the services as in a military chapel, and the spectacle of rows of soldiers all taking part is most impressive. Much more impressive, however, is the same act of worship when performed in camp. But nothing can exceed the solemn- ity of a military service on what may be a battlefield, especially if that service be the celebration of the Holy Communion. How many of the men kneeling reverently there will be alive to-morrow ? That is the question every participant asks himself. The scene presented is one not easily to be forgotten. At the altar, made of drums, stands the chaplain, in his surplice, administering the sacrament to men who will be in the thick of the battle in a few hours, while round the congregation stand men, fully armed, keeping guard. A HERO. Archdeacon Barker is one of the heroes of Ladysmith. A Boer shell fell at his feet, and the archdeacon picked it up as it was on the point of exploding and dropped it into a tub of water, extinguishing the fuse. BLOEMFONTEIN. The entry of Lord Roberts into Bloemfontein partook little of the glamour that is supposed to be attached to war. Provost-Battersby writes to the Morning Post : " Here was the greatest incident in the greatest war that Englan 70 FOR THE FLAG has waged for half a century ; here the capitulation of the capital of a state which had set itself for five months to break a power with which no power in Europe cares to meddle. And thus it was celebrated ! Why the coming of a circus would have made more show ! After our drab fashion there was significance in the worn and soiled khaki which on the first Sunday filled the cathedral, when the commander-in-chief, as many another great and pious general, took the sacrament of remembrance and thanksgiving at this first close of his campaign. There was perhaps, too, a new meaning sung into the psalms of the day for the men who had fought at Paardeburg and Magersfontein — 'A thousand shall fall beside thee and ten thousand at thy right hand.' War makes a reality of many metaphors ; it makes a reality, too, of some petitions, and many, perhaps, that morning in Bloemfontein Cath- edral, sad for lost friends and tired of fighting breathed as heartily as the first lips which spoke it, that promise which is half an intercession "to guide our feet into the way of peace." THE MAUSER BULLET. " It is some comfort to the bereaved to learn that the wounds, even to the death, caused by the Mauser bullet are almost painless." ' ' The missiles pierced through flesh and bone as if they had been tissue paper. He felt only a sensation of numbness in the arm. He went down, picked up his rifle, and fired several rounds before he collapsed from loss of blood." ■'Of the 123 wounded at Glencoe and Elandslaagte, onl3- three had to be carried off in cots, after reaching Capetown ; all the rest, wounded in head, arms or body walked to the train." Patriotism. Britannia ! thy true and brave Have hedged thee safely, surely round With loyalty unmixed, profound, Upon the land as on the wave. Not on the battle-field alone, Nor on the deck behind the guns Among the well-trained warrior sons, Is all the love of leal hearts shown. From lowly hut and palace home Meet service Cometh at thy call , And largess gifts — among them all Not least are those from o'er the foam. Oh, Motherland ! dear Motherland ! However far thy children be. Let evil dare to menace thee, I They>ise and as a bulwark stand. FOK THE FLAG 7 1 Oh Motherland ! land of all lands ! Thou ! land where Freedom rules the free ; We love, we live, we die for thee — God leave the sceptre in thy hands. THE PATRIOTIC FUND, ETC. All classes of people have contributed generously to the requirements of the war, and patriotism was never more extensively displayed than now. The Princess of Wales, after acquiring and fitting up the splendid hospital ship known by her title, spent large sums of money in providing comforts for the invalided soldiers; while Princess Christian procured and fitted up an hospital train which has been of the utmost service ; besides enlisting many well-trained nurses in her Army Nursing Reserve. L,ady Randolph Churchill procured, through American benevolence the hospital ship Maine, and Lady Furly, Lady Bentick, Lady Lausdowne, Mrs. A. Paget, Mrs. J. Bagot, Lady F. Poore, Lady Chesham, Lady G. Curzon, and others too numerous to mention, worked hard on behalf of the cause. The Duke of Westminster on his deathbed signed a cheque for ^i,ooo — and other contributions, large and small, swelled the Pat- riotic Fund to the millions. The Indian Patriotic Fund reached nearly ^100,000. Besides they equipped a Volunteer Force, under Colonel Lumsden, and sent 3000 natives, also thousands of horses and mules, and also a horse-hospital and thousands of suits of clothing, etc. Natal taxed itself to the very utmost in assisting all schemes of patriotism. Australia, rich country as it is, exceeded all anticipations in its generosity to the cause, while New Zealand did most nobly. The former contributed over ;^2oo,0oo to the Patriotic Funds, with 400 army service wagons, an ambulance section and horses and mules by the thousands, while the latter has expended on the cause no less a sum than /'25o,ooo. A short time since a Zulu chief and his men came in to do honor to the magistrate, and to offer their services in case they might be wanted in the war. The chief explained that he knew he was unworthy to fight with the Englishmen, but when the master went hunting did he not call the dogs to help ? He himself, and his men, were content to be the dogs if they might help. At the word ' Inkos' which means master these men saluted by raising their right hands high above their heads. These Zulus are born fighters. They had fastened their assegais to their saddles to show that they meant what they said. They were fine, big fellows, and were mounted on small horses. Mrs. Vaughan, Ipswich, London, relates an extraordinary family re- cord of services to the Queen. "My husband and my father," she writes, " served in the old 31st Regiment, now the North Lancashire, the former y2 FOR THE FLAG thirty-nine years, and the latter twenty-one years. I had six sons. One served twenty-six years, one twenty-three years, three twenty-one years, aril one who died of enteric fever in Egypt, eighteen years. Four of my sons served in the Royal Engineers, and the youngest is still serving, although his time is up. The other two served in the North Lancashire Regiment." The male members of the Vaughan family have thus given 190 years to the service of the Queen. The widowed Lady Decies has a family of three sons, all serving at the front. She will sail shortly for Cape Town to be near them. Daughters of the Empiie. The dearest treasures of the heart Upon thine altar laid; Not through the costliest gifts of earth Could just award be paid. They freely give, aud give.their best, What more can mortal do ? Since each successive offering Is sacrifice anew. Still hands ! that may not combat With weapon on the field ; Lone hearts ! which mourn in sadness. Yet joy their best to yield. Britannia ! thy daughters brave In trustful loyalty, Have wiped the tear and stilled the plaint And raised the song for thee. For thee, Oh bounteous Motherland ! Unto thy generous heart Still firmer be the tie that binds Thine own, "till death doth part." If you |take a dozen soldiers as like escli others as peas so far as height, weight, age, courage and general appearance are concerned, and wound them all in precisely the same way, you will find that scarcely any two of them are affected alike. One man, on receiving a bullet in his leg, will go on fighting as if nothing had happened. He does not know, in fact, that he now con- tains a bullet. But perhaps in two or three minutes he will grow faint and fall. Another man, without feeling the slightest pain, will tremble all over, totter and fall at once, even though the wound is really very slight. A third will cry out in a way to frighten his comrades and will forget everything in his agony. A fourth will grow stupid and look like an idiot. Some ,'ioldiers wounded in the slightest manner will have to be FOR THE FLAG 73 carried off the field. Others, although perhaps fatally injured, can easily walk to an ambulance. Many die quickly from the shock to the nervous system. A very curious case is recorded in the surgical history of the civil war in which three oflScers were hit just at the same time. One had his leg from the knee down carried away, but he rode ten miles to the hospital. Another lost his little finger, and he became a raving lunatic. The third was shot through the body and, though he did not shed a drop of blood externally, dropped dead from the shock. The conduct of the wounded men of various nationalities was worth studying. A sandy-haired, square-headed German, with a lance wound through the muscles above the knee joint, we brought in howling and shivering. He kicked up such a row that a man in the Gordons with his arm in a sling, threatened to brain him with an empty beer bottle. The German was then lifted off the table upon which he had been placed and put into a corner out of the way of the exasperated Scotchman. In contrast to the cowardly Teuton was a Gordon Highlander, who swore with a very strong Dundee accent. He had his wrist shattered with a Mauser bullet which had passed on and possibly killed somebody else. On the " field dressing ' ' being removed the blood spurted out of the wounded arm like a garden spray, which caused the gallant Dundonian to ejaculate, " Ma God ! " After getting his wound attended to he immediately tackled a plate- full of bread and jam, saying apologetically, "I he'na' had onything tae eat the day." Among the wounded who arrived at Cape Town, Oct 31, by thejeluga was a non-com. of the Gordon Highlanders who was struck in the right shoulder by a Mauser bullet at Elandslaagte. Knowing he was hit, he took his rifle in his left hand and flung it as far down the hill as he could so that in the worst event it should not be taken by the Boers. But in a few minutes the numbness departed. Our gallant non-com. went down, picked up his rifle and fired several more rounds before he almost collapsed from loss of blood. Others wounded on board the Jeluga spoke of the Mauser bullet as causing only a sharp prick when it passed through arm or leg. The wound it makes at entry and exit is so tiny that a lead pencil could not be used as a probe. The " paralyzing shock" credited to the small bore missile does not seem to be borne out by experience. A Dublin Fusilier was removing forage from the old camp at Glen- coe when a shell came from the Boers' 4o-pounder,and entered the ground with a bang five yards distant. The Dublin was bending at the time, and did not even take the 74 FOR THE FLAG trouble to look up. His officer heard the Dub. saying to himself as he turned his back on the shell, "Ach! go to blazes with you ! " Ohjvell ! that in face of a threatening doom The mind may in triumph take wing ; And soar from the regions of sorrow and gloom And rob the last foe of its sting. 'Tis said that when 'gulfed in the ocean's embrace One dreameth of amaranth bowers, With fairy-like visions of beauty and grace In gardens of gorgeous flowers. Brave martyrs have triumphed o'er torture and fire. And stoics have smiled over pain; But what of those others whose spirits aspire From death-wound or deep in the main. Blessed thought ! that to anguish of bodily pain The senses are of ten-times numb ; Blessed knowledge ! that grandeur of soul life shall reign When mortality's voices are dumb. BOY BUGLER AND THE QUEEN. The Queen's personal interest in the men fighting her battles was constantly illustrated by her visits to Netley Hospital and the private houses where lay officers and men wounded in South Africa. She stood godmother to the child of a major's wife whose husband was killed at Elandslaagte, and she summoned to Osborne Bugler Dunn, aged fifteen, of the 1st Royal Dublin Fusiliers, who was the first to cross the Tugela River though the men of the regiment tried to keep him back. While running with the soldiers, holding the bugle with his right hand, Dunn sounded the "Advance." A bullet struck his arm and the bugle fell. The boy immediately lifted it up and repeated the call. He was brought to Xetlev Hospital, and was visited there by Princess Christian and Princess Henrj- of Battenburg, who asked the boy what he would like the Queen to do for him. He replied : — " I hope Her Majesty will send me back to The front. I'm to have a medal and three bars, because I was in three engage- ments. My father has only two bars to his medal." The lad's father, a sergeant, returned to the front, having recovered from his wound. On his arrival at Portsmouth young Dunn was tenderly borne on the shoulders of the delighted populace. Her Majesty presented the lad with a silver bugle suitably inscribed. The Mayor of Portsmouth recently visited Her Jlajesty's ship Power- ful in the harbor, and presented each min of the naval brigade who was present during the siege of Ladysmith, with a handsome silver hunter FOR THE FLAG 75 watch, each of which bore the name of the recipient and the inscription, ■' Siege of Ladysmith, Ii8 days, 1899-1900." In all 220 watches were dis- tributed to the men, who were drawn up under the poop. The mayor, in the course of a brief congratulatory speech, said the gift was made by a few London admirers who did not wish their identity to be disclosed. PRINCE VICTOR. The grandson of Queen Victoria, Prince Christian Victor, who died of fever in South Africa, was a soldier born, who owed nothing to rank, but obtained his advance in recognition of his military ability. He knew everything about Tommy Atkins, from the existing fees down to the can- teen extortions, which he labored to abolish. In the last 10 years he served in six campaigns — a rare record — and he constantly obtained deserved recognition for valor. A VALIANT TROOPER. "A party of Rimington Scouts were galloping back, hotly pursued by a large body of Boers, when they came to a fence of stout wire. They had not a wire-cutter among them, and so turned and galloped along, hoping to come to some opening. Far from this, however, they came to a second fence running at right angles to the first. It seemed that they must be all shot down or captured, when a trooper — Fraser was, I think, his name — took his feet from the stirrups, rammed in his spurs, and went straight at the fence. The impact was tremendous, killing the horse and throwing the man some twenty yards like a stone from a catapult, but also snapping the wires. His comrades rode through the gap, and pick- ing up his senseless body, escaped. Ey a miracle he wasn't dead, and recovered. I think such a deed as that done in cold blood is hard to beat; for, as all horsemen know, by all the rules of the game he rode to certain death," We honor the soldier who falls in the ranks, The victor who shouts in his glee. The sailor who weathers the stormiest gale ; What crown shall we offer to thee ? The soldier may conquer, the sailor reach haven. But thou ! is thy spirit divine ? Has't chosen the surety of undeserved doom ; The crown of the martyr be thine. ' 'A staff ofificer of engineers told General Roberts that he could do certain work assigned to him in the course of a fortnight. 'lam sure,' said General Roberts, ' that you will do as well as you can.' General Kitchener asked the same officer how much time he would require to do the job. 'A fortnight, ' was the answer. Kitchener smiled 76 FOR THE FLAG grimly. ' Either you will do it in a week,' he said, ' or you will be sent home.' The work was finished in a week." General Buller said : " We began fighting on February 14, and liter- ally fought every day, and every lii'ght also-, till the 27th. I am filled with admiration for the British soldiers ; really the manner in which they have worked, fought arid endured during the last fortnight has been something more than huma:n;broiled in a burning sun by day, drenched in rain by night, lying but 300 yard's off an enemy who shoots you if you show as much as a finger. They could hardly eat or drink by day, and as they were usually attacked by night; they got but little sleep, and through it all they were as cheery and willing as could be." "To be Knight of the Thistle is a big honor," remarked an old quartermaster-surgeon amid a discusson among some military men at Chatham; " but I can claim a distinction lots in front of that. "Well," the veteran non-com. went on to explain, "the good for- tune which befell me was to be kissed by the Queen," an intimation which caused the little party to gather round yet closer. " You may have heard," said the distinguished soldier, '• of my being the youngest bugler that took part in the Crimea, and such fact secured for me a place among the survivors who were inspected by the Queen (ifter peace was proclaimed. Well, I was then a little flaxen-haired, red- cheeked youngster, small for my age, and, I suppose, contrasted a good deal with the worn veterans, When my turn came to pass. Her Majesty asked how old I was, and on replying a little over 13, at the same time giving quite the best salute possible, the Queen said, 'Dear little fellow! ' and then gave me a kiss on the cheek. So you see how I came to receive a gracious distinction which, from generals downward, no other soldier has ever been able to lay claim tq. That honor's mine alone." Honoured. Previous to leaving Cape Town Lord Roberts, amid a great demon- stration of enthusiasm, was presented with a sword ; and also an address, to which he made a suitable reply, "Costly and rare as the offering may be, 'Tis the symbol of red-handed war ; God grant that it never lead forth in a fight Whose actions the conscience may mar. "If e'er it be drawn from its glittering belt Let it's rising ne'er shadow the light Which glows on the sword of the fearless and true, Whose watchword is "Country and Right," FOR THE FI^AG 77 "Yet, should war's wakeful trumpet recall me once more, Till our banpers in laurels are wreathed, This emblem of honor, of union of hearts, To your honor shall never be sheathed. ' ' Describing the medical work done after the battle of Colenso, Dr. Treves pays a notable tribute to the four nurses in the camp. He says : — I should have said that two Netley sisters — one an old "London" nurse — joined us before we left Frere, and better nurses and more devoted women I never met. They worked night and day, and their work was of the very best. Poor Tommy may not think much of the "Orsepittle" at Cheiveley, but I know he will never forget the four women who stood by him after Tugela, and tried to make him comfortable. President Kruger's sons, who surrendered to General Badeu-Powell, are back on their farms, working peacefully. Col. Baden-Powell is only 42, Lieut-Col. Kekewich is 45, Lieut-Col. Pilcher is 41, Lieut-Col. Plumer just a year older. A gunner of the 44th Battery, Royal Field Artillery, owes his life to having a pack of cards in his pocket. In a letter just received at Col- chester, a member of Nesbitt's Horse states that at Priesk the gunner was struck in the left breast by a bullet. It lodged in a pack of cards in the pocket of his khaki jacket, and passed through the whole pack with the exception of the last card — the ace of spades. He was unhurt. THE MESSAGE, During the attack on Ladysmith Lieutenant Masterson was sent back across the fire-swept zone with a message. He was hit by three bullets, but struggled in and delivered his message, which was important, to the Devon's firing line. Lieutenant Masterson's wounds are doing well, though he has eleven. BULLER. ' ' When the engagement was over General Buller went round, and to show how bad he felt it, big tears rolled down his face to see such a lot killed and wounded." "An orderly who did not know Lord Roberts, for whom he was carrying a despatch, riding up to another orderly asked, ' Where's Bobs? ' ' Here I am, my lad; what can I do for you ? ' said a cheery voice close by. It was that of the Commander-in-Chief. ' ' 78 FOR THE FLAG GENERAL WAUCHOPE. Before leaving Edinburgh for the seat of war he told a friend that he had a presentiment he would never return. " But," he added, " if I had to choose the manner of my death, I would prefer it to meet me at the head of my troops." Thou had'st thy wish. Thou ! grand in life. Thou ! lit of purpose high ; Yet nobler spirit in the strife Went never forth to die." Clear light unto thy lesser kind ! Bright sun within thy sphere ! Each precious hour of life refined Weeps tribute o'er thy bier. When General Buller and his army marched into Ladysmith, the If ind-hearted commander, perceiving the utter weakness of the men who were lined up to receive him, sent his aide-de-camp to ask General White to order them to sit down. " Before the order was given," says General Buller, " I counted six who had dropped." What an appeal to a nation's gratitude ! During the attack on Caesar's camp a remote comer was held bj- six- teen Manchesters, who fought from 3 in the morning until dusk, when the Devonfhires reinforced them. Fourteen lay dead, but the two sur- vivors, one of whom was wounded, still held the position. The same day the sergeant with one of the guns had a leg and one arm shot off. He fell across the trail of the gun, and said, " Roll me out of the way and go on working the gun . " The telegram received by the Tsar from the Russian Attachee with Lord Roberts ran thus : — ' ' The attack and endurance of the British infantry is such that no officer in the Russian army had any conception of. I am so filled with admiration I can add nothing to this message." BRITISH VALOR. I will quote the words of a military attachee sent here b%- a nation which loves England none too well ; " I always thought the Turk was the finest soldier in the world," said he, " but — leaving out your cavalry, which have not done so well — I shall always say that there is no other army to compare with the British. For courage, da.sh, staying power, discipline, and all that makes for success with an army, there is no other like it." GOOD WORK. General French said to one of tlie gunners, " See those three wagons FOR THE FLAG 79 over there," (a distance of about 3^ miles) " see what you can do with them." The gunner fired three shells and the wagons were no more. FAITHFUL TO THE LAST. " Captain Sanford was the first to fall, mortally wounded with a bullet in the spine. He fell down calling to his men to continue the charge, "where he had fallen he died." ' ' When poor Colonel Stopf ord received the wound that finished him he exclaimed 'I am done for ! ' then, putting his hand in his pocket, took out a piece of jewellry and gave it to the drill sergeant who was standing by, saying, ' Here's something to remember me by.' " "When General Woodgate dropped, mortally wounded, at Spion Kop, not to discourage his men, — he protested he was ' all right. ' " Devotion unto duty paved Their pathway unto death ; One grand, unselfish spirit spoke From out their latest breath, What more, thou country of their love. Could hero-patriot yield Thai life unto thy service given, Or death thy cause to shield ? Ho, lilies of the purest white ! Ho, amaranthine bloom ! With reverent hands we softly twine Your fragrance round their tomb, BRITISH AT COLENSO. On going over the battlefield I made this significant discover)-, that on the average there were sixty empty cartridges around every one of our dead. That is to say, every man fired his rifle with courage and determina- tion until the last, even when completely isolated from companionship. I came across quite a number of instances in which two comrades had fought together and died together far from the main body of their regiment. KITCHENER. Let this story be told to I,ord Kitchener's credit, though it may sur- prise many. A certain Yeomanry commander, whilst on parade, rated his men in unmeasured terms. Nothing was right in his judgment, that the troopers did. They set their horses wrong, they moved on like machinery, etc., and were " no better than a d d rabbit." "A lot of guttersnipes,' etc. " That," said Lord Kitchener, who came up, "is not the way to address men. They are not a d d rabbit, and to be spoken to as such. No troops can be trained in that fashion, and the commander who does not respect his men is unable to lead them." The 8o FOR THE FLAG whole force heard the observation, and the men were as decorously elated as the yeomanry officer was obviously crestfallen. Lord Kitchener said no more openly on parade, but he took that overstrung gentlemen aside and read the " Riot Act, " or what stands for it in military phraseology, to him in such severe fashion that he will never forget the lesson, OUR NAVAL BRIQADE. " Her Majesty the Qtieen has graciously conferred the Companion- ship of the Bath upon Captain Lambton, of H. M. S. Powerful, and Capt. Scott, of H. M. S. Terrible, in acknowledgement of their services in connection with the relief of Ladysm ith." Not only on those gallant ships. On many a deck beside There are who've earned our gratitude; A nation's hope and pride. Though lessened not our debt to those Who trod with weary feet ; Who drooped 'neath ills of scorching clime, Yet never owned defeat. Honor the brave ! Whether high, or of lowly name ; Whether crowned or unkent of fame. Honour the brave ! One golden link Binds each Commander and his crew ; Together they had dared to do Upon fate's brink. True union nerved • The minds and hearts that struck the blow. Which crushed a formidable foe To doom deserved. Together rove By thoughts of freedom and of home, Britannia's seamen ride the foam. Taut-bound of love. At Graspan, Belmont and Magersfontein the Naval Brigade did splendid work. They saved Ladysmith. Captain Scott's able-minded- ness was followed up by the active heroism of his Marines and Blue- jackets. God bless our Naval Heroes ! THE SALVATION ARMY. "At Colenso our Salvation Army officer, Capt. Ashman, was under fire all day, from davHeht till night, with the Surreys, just as they FOR THE FLAG 8l were. In the blazing sun and the thick of the battle there he was carry- ing off the dying and wounded. When he came in at ii at night I hardly knew him. He was covered in the blood of those he had helped, ^^'e two women moved with the troops, advancing about the same time as the hospitals, but Captain Ashman went through side by side with the soldiers. ' ' BRAVERY AND TREACHERY. The son of Mr. E. Lunn, Wakefield, England, writes: "I was in company with a sergeant in charge of some wounded Boer prisoners. One of these was lying on a stretcher, and was being carried in when he whipped out a revolver and aimed it at an oiEcer near. The sergeant was carrying his gun on his shoulder with the barrel in front of him. He quickly dashed the revolver out of the Boer's hand, clubbed his own rifle as he would a striking hammer, and dashed the prisoner's brains out where he lay. He was not satisfied with one blow, but had three, and beat the man's head to a pulp. The captain did not see what the prisoner had done, so he ordered the sergeant's arrest. A comrade slipped out of the marching line, asking to be excused, sayinghe thought the sergeant's circumstances needed some explanation, and told the captain how things stood. The captain gave the order for the sergeant's release, congratvi- lating him, and thanking him for saving his life." Our Boys in Blue— Durban, S. A., March J 9th. J 900. They come, they come ! the crowds surge fast Along the echoing street ; In eager haste, with earnest will To tender welcome meet. They come, they come ! Britannia waves Her colors overhead ; While, unto music's sprightliest tones. They march with rythmic tread. Oh ! sweetly smiles that southern sun. And gaily streameth f.orth The banner of that patriot host, Sons of the loyal North. As all along their line of march. Through shouts of loud acclaim. Admiring eyes light up the scene And tongues bespeak their fame. Oh ! bright the glorious aftermath When, victory's course is run ; But purer far the light that gilds True hearts, whose loves are one. 82 FOR THE FLAG Then glory to His Glorious Name Through whom all feuds are healed ; Who, with the badge of Liberty, Blessed unity hath sealed. THE GORDONS AT THABA N'CHU. " Captain Towse, with about fifty of the Gordons, got isolated from the main body of British troops, and the Boers, with that marvellous dexterity for which they are fast becoming famous, sized up the position and determined upon a capture. They little dreamt of the nature of the lion they had snared in their toils. With fully 250 men they closed in on the little band of kilted men, and in triumphant tones called upon them to throw down their arms and surrender. It was a picture to warm an artist's heart. On all sides rose the bleak, black kopjes, ridge on ridge, as inhospitable as a watch-dog'sgrowl. On one hand the little band of Highlanders, the picturesque colour of their clan showing in kilt and stocking, perfect in all their appointments, but nowhere so absolutely flawless as in their leadership. Under such leaders as he who held them there so calm and steady their forebears had hurled back the chivalry of France and had tamed the Musco%-ite pride, and they were soon to prove themselves men worthy of their captain. On the other side rose the superior numbers of the Boers. A wild motley crew they looked compared to the gem of Britain's army. Boys stood side by side with old men, lads braced themselves shoulder to shoulder with men in their manhood's prime, ragged beards fell on still more ragged shirt fronts. But there were manly hearts behind those rag- ged garments, hearts that beat high with love of home and country, hearts that seldom quailed in the hour of peril. Their rifles lay in hands steady and strong. The Boer was face to face with the Briton ; the numbers lay on the side of the Boer, but the bayonet was with the Briton. " Throw up your hands and surrender. " The language was Eng- lish, but the accent was Dutch ; a moment, an awful second of time, the rifle barrels gleamed coldly towards that little group of men, who stood their ground as pine trees stajid on their mountain sides in Bonny Scotland." Then out on the African air there rang a voice, proud, clear, and high as clarion note : ' ' Fix bayonets, Gordons ! ' ' Like lightning the strong hands gripped the ready steel ; the bayonets went home to the barrel. Rifles spoke from the Boer lines, and men reeled a pace from the British and fell, and lay where they fell. Again that voice with the Scottish burr on every note : " Charge, Gordons ! Charge! " and the dauntless Scotchman rushed on at the head of his fiery few. The Boer's heart is a brave heart, and he who calls them cowards lies ; but never before had they faced so grim a charge, never before had FOR THE FLAG 83 they seen a torrent of steel advancing on their lines in front of a tornado of flesh and blood. On rushed the Scots, on over fallen comrades, on over rocks and clefts, on the ranks of the foe, and onward through them, sweeping them down as I have seen wild horses sweep through a field of ripening corn. The bayonets hissed as they crashed through breastbone and backbone. Vainly the Boer clubbed his rifle and smote back. As well might the wild goat strike with puny hoofs when the tiger springs. Nothing could stay the fury of that desperate rush. Do you sneer at the Boers ? Then sneer at the armies of Efirope, for never yet have Scotland's sons been driven back when once they reached a foe to smite. How do they charge, these bare-legged sons of Scotia ? Go ask the hills of Afghanistan, and if there be tongues within them they will tell you that they sweep like hosts from hell. Ask in sneering Paris, and the red records of Waterloo will give you answer. Ask in St Peters- burg, and from Sebastopol your answer will come. They thought of the dreary morning hours of Magersfontein, and they smote the steel down- wards through the neck into the liver. They thought of the row of com- rades in the graves beside the Modder, and they gave the Boers the "hay- maker's lift," and tossed the dead body behind them. They thought of gallant Wauchope riddled with lead, and they sent the cold steel with a horrible crash, through skull and brain, leaving the face a thing to make men shudder. They thought of Scotland, and they sent the wild slogan of their clan re-echoing through the gullies of the African hills, until their comrades far away along the line, hearing it, turned to one another, say- ing : " God help the Boers this hour ; our Jocks are into 'em with the bay' nit! " But when they turned to gather up those who had fallen, then they found that he whose lion soul had pointed them the crimson path to duty was to lead them no more. The noble heart that beat so true to honor's highest notes was not stilled, but a bullet missing the brain had closed his eyes forever to God's sunlight, leaving him to go through life in dark- ness ; and they mourned for him as they had mourned for noble, white- souled Wauchope, whose prototype he was. They knew that many a long, long year would roll away before their eyes would rest upon his like again in camp or bloody field. But it gladdened their stern warrior hearts to know that the last sight he ever gazed upon was Scotland sweeping on her foe, IN PARLIAMENT. "A Pro-Boer made several unseemly Interruptions.' No policy of earth may bar The blood-stained road towards release ; Heaven's will alone may wage for peace When served the purposes of war. Yet this we hope — nay, well we know That strife shall have its long surcease. When blissful, universal peace Shall wed high heaven to earth below. 84 FOR THE FLAG The text of Lord Robert's farewell order to the arm}' is eloquent tnough to stir the enthusiasm of to-day's leader writers. It is the strong- est possible summary of the sufferings and heroism of the British army in a campaign of unexampled severity, over 14,200 officersandmen having died from wounds fever and exposure. A BIQ WAR. In his despatches Lord Roberts furnishes a couple of tables which drive home the often described and seldom realized magnitude of the area over which hostilities have spread in South Africa. The area of the operations was ; Square miles- Cape Colony 277,151 Orange River Colony 48,326 Transvaal 113,940 Natal 18,913 Total 458,330 Rhodesia - 750,000 The distance troops had to travel by land : Miles Cape Town to Pretoria 1,040 Pretoria to Koomatipoort 260 Cape Town to Kimberly 647 Kimberley to Mafeking 223 Mafeking to Pretoria I60 Mafeking to Beira 1,135 Durban to Pretoria 511 " From these tables," the Commander-in-Chief observes, " it will be seen that the army in South Africa had to be distributed over an area of greater extent than France and Germany put together, and, if we include that part of Rhodesia with which we had to do, larger than the combined areas of France, Germany and Austria." THE ARMY IN AFRICA. ' ' When it is considered that this is by far the largest force that has ever crossed the sea since the days of Xerxes, and is beside the largest British force that has ever taken the field anywhere in the history of the nation, it must be admitted that the War Office and the whole system have covered themselves with glory, at least up to the present time. For it is one thing to move troops by lard and sea; it is quite another to move 150,000 men into what is practically a desert, and keep them perfectly supplied with food and the other necessaries of life. In this regard the Army Service Corps has done extraordinary work. Before a regiment of the army corps landed there was a million pounds worlh of supplies at De Aar, within 60 miles of the Orange River, and FOR THE FLAG 85 that in spite of the fact that two months ago the Army Service Corps was not even equipped with half its complement of horses. ' ' GROWTH OF EMPIRE IN VICTORIA'S REIQN. Attention has been centred on the British Colonies as never before by reason of their active loyalty during the Transvaal war. Representa- tive government was granted to all the important colonies in 1856. Distress in the British Isles during the early years of the reign led to a wave of emigration to the lands across the seas. In the case of Australia, a new impetus was given by the discovery of gold. Canadian federation began in 1867 and the dawn of this year saw the union of Australia take effect. Besides territory actually acquired, Great Britain has assumed practical control of Egypt while restoring the Soudan to Khedivial rule and there is no apparent prospect of her withdrawal from the Nile Valley. 1839 — Aden annexed. 1842 — Hong Kong acquired. 1842 — Natal taken. 1843 — Sinda annexed, 1836 — Sikh territory ceded. 1849 — Punjaub annexed. 1852 — Pegu, Burmah, acquired. 1 856 — Oude annexed 1858 — Crown assumed rule of India, i860 — Fiji Islands annexed. 1875 — Sultan's share in Suez Canal bought. 1878 — Island of Cyprus occupied. 1886 — Burmah annexed. 1890 — Zanzibar protectorate assumed. 1896 — Ashantees compelled to accept British sovereignty. 1896 — Kitchener occupied Dongola. 1899 — Partition of Samoa 1900 — Transvaal and Orange Free State annexed. ik:;A:::::::;::::::::::::::::i0i:::ii^ PART III. Canada — Seat of Government, Ottawa. GOVERNOR-GENERAL— The Right Hon. the Earl of Minto. mp:mbers of the king's privy council. Right Hon. Sir Wilfred Laurier, G. C. M. G.. Premier. Hon. SirL. H. Davies, K. C. M. G., Minister of Marine and Fisheries. Right Hon. Sir R. J. Cartwright. G. C. M. G. , Minister of Trade and Commerce. Hon. D. Mills, Minister of Justice. " F. W. Borden, Minister of Militia and Defence. " S. A. Fisher, Minister of Agriculture. " W. S. Fielding, Minister of Finance. " A. G. Blair, Minister of Railways and Canals. " J. S. Tarte, Minister of Public Works. " C. Sifton, Minister of the Interior. " W. Patterson, Minister of Customs. " W. E. Bernier, Minister of Inland Revenue. " R. W. Scott, Secretary of State. " W. Mulock, Postmaster-General. J. Sutherland, without portfolio. R. R. Dobell, without portfolio. Hon. C. Fitzpatrick, Solicitor General. " J. J. McGee, Clerk of K. P. C. •' H. G. La Motte, Clerk of the Crown in Chancery. High Commissioner for Canada in London — Right Hon. Baron Strathcona and Mount Royal, G. C. M. G. Secretary of Canadian Government OflSces in London. — J. C. Colmer, C. M. G. FOR THE FLAG 87 The Olden Flag. Raise high the Royal Standard! Shame not thy royal birth ; The prestige of thy might retain Thou ! noblest of the earth. Great Canada! thou fair, free land ! A world looks forth to thee ; No alien hand thy hand shall lead Thou' It bow no servile knee. Then rally round the olden flag ! The loved Red, White and Blue ; Let traitors scheme or boasters brag To Motherland prove true. Float on, Oh flag of Empire vast ! Long may thy colours wave O'er many a blood-bought heritage, O'er many a hero's grave. The lustre of thy fame doth light The field our fathers won ; The noblest gift which valiant sire Could e'er bequeath his son. Then rally, etc. High-sounding waves of ocean Cleave not the solid rock ; Ho land of Bruce and Nelson ! Ho shades of Wolfe and Brock ! While spirits of the dauntless brave Within our patriot s glow Think ye that one of Britain's brood Would yield to myriad foe. Then rally, etc. Droop not. Oh peerless standard ! Oh loyal hearts and true ! Forget not ye the olden land Though cherishing the new. 88 FOK THE FLAG Forget not hearts and hopes are one From far off Southern Isles To where, beyond the Rocky steep, The broad Pacific smiles. Then rally, etc. Wave on, Oh flag of Empire ! wave O'er mountain, rock and stream ; Where wholesome fealty rests secure Beneath thy fervent gleam. For, while the maple reddeneth. While surges swell the sea, Thou'lt guard the freeman's sacred rights, In country of the free. Then rally round the olden flag ! The loved Red, White and Blue ; Let traitors scheme, or boasters brag. To motherland prove true. "Enthusiasm such as has swept over Canada with the basis of sympathy for Britain, is a surpri.se to even those loy- alists whose fond dreams of imperial federation were not ex- pected to develop at least during their generation. Men who declared ten years ago that imperial federation was but a dream are caught up now and borne along on such a tide of enthu- siasm as they can hardly understand. It shouts 'Rule Britan- nia' and sings the National Anthem along with the stalwart young Canadians who have volunteered as soldiers of the Queen, to fight for Her Majesty and the honor of the British Empire in South Africa." In harmony with the earnest and everywhere expressed desire of the people of the Dominion it was decided upon by the Government to call for the services of a certain number of the militia with the view of assisting those veterans of Great Britain who are upholding the prestige of the Empire in the far away Southern land. The call was speedily responded to. In every section of the country, from the eastern to the far Pacific Coast came boldly forward the >-outh and .strength of each busy mart of commerce and of each quiet, rural hamlet ; everyone eager to FOR THE FLAG 89 offer the might of his arm and the purpose of his heart on the beloved shrine of one common country and Queen. Indeed, so eager and so plentiful were the applicants for this special service that many a patriotic son of the Dominion had. much against his will, to return unaccepted, to his former peaceful avocation. The Government contributed 2,000,000 dollars to assist the mother country in the prosecution of the war. This sum was generally conceded to be a liberal contribution on the part of a comparatively youthful colony. The First Contingent of Canadian troops. Commander, Colonel W. D. Otter, consisting of 63 officers with 998 N. C. officers and men, in all 107 1, and 7 horses, sailed from Quebec on board the S. S. Sardinian on the la.st day of October, 1899, for the port of Cape Town. The long sea voyage was, to many, a pleasing novelty and was heartiljf enjoyed despite the rather unfavorable weather and the heavy seas which prevailed. One very saddening occurrence tended to mar the enjoyment of life aboardship, that was the death, after only three days out, of Private Ed- ward DesL,auriers of C. Company, belonging to Quebec. The bursting of a blood vessel was the immediate cause. On 30th November the voyagers reached their destination; and as the Sardinian steamed forward amid troopships and all manner of lesser craft she received a most gratifying if a most noisy and elaborate welcome from the merry medley of human voices on the wharf and the roaring of guns and the shrieking of whistles around her in the harbor. Upon disembarking the troops were cordially greeted by the inhabitants of Cape Town and, after being the recipients of many courtesies they were marched to the quarters assigned them a few miles beyond. Here they at once commenced making preparations for pushing forward to join the British army, then operating at Belmont. On their arrival at the front the Colonials were deputed to take charge of the railway, at which work they continued for several weeks. They were attached to the brigade under command of a very successful British oflScer, General Smith- Dorien. go FOR THE FLAG On January ist the Canadians underwent their baptism of fire. The Queenslanders and Canadians, under command of Colonel Pilcher of the Imperial Army, who had replaced the Colonial officers, attacked the Boers 30 miles beyond Belmont. The enemy briskly replied to the attack with the consequence that the Queenslanders lost 20 men ; but when the Canadians followed up and charged with the bayonet the Boers threw down their rifles and surrendered. Next morning the same Company started for Douglas, which they found vacated, but had the good fortune to secure 500 rifles and 80,000 rounds of ammunition which the foe had left behind. On the 2ist of January, 1900, a second detachment of troops left Halifax in the S. S. Laurentian. This detachment, D. and E. Batteries of the Royal Canadian Artillery under command of Lieut. -Colonel C. W. Drury, consisted of 22 offi- cers and 343 N. C. officers and men, in all 365 ; and 263 horses. 27th — There sailed from Halifax the Pomeranian with 18 officers and 304 N. C. officers and men, in all 352; under com- mand of Lieut. -Colonel Herchmer. There were also 295 horses for the use of the troops, the 2nd Battalion, Canadian Mounted Rifles. February 13 — The Canadians started to march for Jacobs - dale, which they reached after having endured the greatest distress from the excessive heat ; so much =0 that they were obliged to press on during the night. A great battle was raging as they approached the citj-. They rested for the night on the outskirts and marched into the town by daylight to share with the conquerors in the spoil. A short halt and the march was resumed ; this time for these heights which have now become historic, the heights on which so many of the brave attested their courage and their loyalty with the ofiering of their precious lives, the fate decid- ing heights of Paardeberg. The long and dreary march was not to end in rest. In the words of one of our heroes : " As we neared Paardeberg we heard the advance column in action. Half an hour was allowed for a hasty breakfast and then we were to cross the river and get into action. Our breakfast consisted of a biscuit and a FOK THE FLAG 9 1 canteen of coffee. Col. Otter of course was in charge, and the order was given to take up the position on the left, crossing the river by means of ropes. The water was up to our necks and was running very swiftly. Horses were carried off their feet but as far as was known all reached the opposite side in safety. It was a wonderful sight; each man struggling against the wave carrying his rifle reidy for the affray. The P. E. Island boys were the first. An extended order was given to advance towards the enemy and we had only proceeded a short distance when the singing of the bullets an- nounced that the regiment was in the heat of battle and only a few minutes had elapsed before casualties had occurred. Bullets came thick and fast. At 4 o'clock a bullet struck me in the thigh, but it did not hinder me in the advance, and shortly afterwards another bullet struck my foot. I then told my mate that I was hit and he called for the stretcher-bearer, but when it came I was able to walk back to where the doctor was located, using my rifle for a crutch. The wound in the foot was very painful as the bullet had struck the bone, but fortunately did not splinter it. The wound on the thigh bled profusely, until it was dressed. I was then removed on a pontoon-boat across the river and placed in a hospital where I remained three days. Tongue cannot tell nor pen picture the scenes in the hospital. I would rather have been somewhere else. Some were dying, some in terrible agony and the groans and wails of those in the throes of death were terrible. It was impossible to get anything to eat, as the food was lost when the Boers captured our convoys at Modder River. ' ' But another and still more serious battle was to take place — a battle well described by another of Canada' s loyal sons : ' ' We have had another battle, this time a far more important affair than our first engagement. After having made the Boers retire on Sunday, i8th, they took up a stronger position further up the river bed, and we had to make trenches and advance upon them little by little until Tuesday morning at 2 o'clock when we were ordered to make a general advance. So we took up a position at about 200 yards from the first Boer trench. F, G. and H. Companies of the Canadians were in advance of our brigade and had to bear the brunt of the attack. Had the Boers held out longer than they did, our loss would have been terrible; for in one short five minutes our loss was about thirty killed and wounded. It happened like this : At five minutes to two a. m. our three com- panies got the order to steal up a few hundred yards further to the front, as we were going to charge the trenches with the bayonet, and we were to get as close as possible before making the final rush. Our duty out here is to do or die, and not to reason why, so we got ready. We were sup- ported on our left by the Gordon Highlanders and the Seaforths, while 92 FOR THE FLAG on our right were the Black Watch and Argyle and Sutherland High- landers, with the remaining five Canadian companies and other regiments of infantry in reverse and support. "We advanced slowly but surely until we got about 175 3-ards from the enemy, and still they did not appear to have observed us. We began to think that the birds had flown, and we were ordered to dig a trench for ourselves. Between the Engineers and ourselves we dug a two foot trench across our front. When that was done (and I might here say that it did not take long, for everyone of us knew that we were working for our lives and needed no one to tell us to hurrj- ) we were ordered to ad- vance a few yards further. Immediately we had carried out this order we found that some one had blundered. We were within fifteen yards of the Boers' trenches, if not closer, when one of the most awful rifle volleys we ever heard for the first time broke the silence of the night. There we were in the dark, and the South African nights are dark, in point blank range, with the enemy under cover and ourselves exposed. We all fell flat and at once retired, crawling to our trench. We carried out the short retirement amid the groans of the wounded and the whizzing of the bul- lets. It gives one a creepy sensation to undergo this; and the experience is one that you do not wish to have repeated. It is impossible to describe the moving about in the blackness, with the bullets fairly raining about, the only human sounds being the cries and moans of the wounded men, or a short, sharp order to 'advance,' or 'volley fire,' or 'charge.' We succeeded in getting to our trench, and we were not long in open- ing fire on the Boers and paying them out in their own coin, and with good interest. We saw that it was a fight for life or death, and all of us wanted to live very much ; for as dawn began to break we saw that the victory was to be ours and that it would be a glorious one. Daylight began to come, and we could see that we had them; but still we continued our fire. Then the word flew along our line that the enemy was flying a white flag. Knowing of their treachery on other occasions we did not at once stop firing. Then we saw several white flags waving in their line, and we got the order to "'cease." We remained under cover while a small party advanced to meet their white flag party, and we then learned that Cronje and all his force were willing to surrender unconditionally. So was accomplished one of the greatest British victories in South Africa up to that date. We were not long in marching to the main Boer laager and relieving our enemies of their arms. We had the honor of taking the largest num- ber of prisoners since the war commenced — somewhere between four and five thousand, including wounded. The most sorrowful part of this "fire-eating" business came when the thing was all over, and we gathered together to bury our dead com- rades. We dug a long trench and laid them down side bj' side while Father O'Leary said a short service over all creeds. Tears filled many FOR THE FI^AG 93 of our eyes, tears of grief for our lost brothers-in-arms, and of thankful- ness because we had escaped a like fate." After the Battle — Paardeberg:. ' ■ We gathered from the gory field Those who had earned their crown ; And tenderly we wrapped them round, Each in bis shroud of brown. ' ' Among the thorn trees in the glade Our heroes gently sleep ; And though nor maid nor mother dear By that lone grave may weep. ' ' Beneath the spreading hawthorn wild As peacefull)' they'll rest As if the flowers of Canada Bloomed sweetly o'er each breast. ' ' Rough stones from off the dismal veldt Shield well their lowly bed ; We piled them high and set a cross As guardian at the head. " And 'scribed thereon our comrades' names That all who mark that mound May learn that every patriot heart Doth sleep in hallowed ground. " Then, cru.shing back the rising sob- Deep feeling unexpressed ; We took one last, sad, lingering look And left them to their rest. ' ' Although great the sacrifice of precious life in the bloody battles at Paardeberg, great and satisfactory were the results. General Cronje, who, aside of Joubert, had been considered the most formidable leader amongst the Boers was at last brought to bay; and to the prowess of the youthful warriors of Canada was accorded the honor of hastening his surrender. Lord Roberts telegraphed the following to Lord Minto : ■'Paardeberg, Feb. 22. — The Canadian Regiment has done admirable service since its arrival in South Africa. I deeply regret the heavy loss it suffered during the fight- ing on the 1 8th and beg j'ou will assure^ the people how much 94 FOR THE FLAG we all admire the conspicuous gallantry displayed by our Cana- dian comrades." And also on the 27th advised the War Office, London, in these glowing terms : "A most dashing advance was made by the Canadian Regiment, supported by the Gordon Highlanders, a gallant deed worthy of our Colonial comrades and which, I am glad to say, was attended by comparatively slight loss." When this despatch was announced in the House of Com- mons it evoked tremendous cheering. Her Majesty the Queen cabled the people of Canada ex- pressing her admiration of the gallant Canadians, and her sor- row at the loss of .so many brave men ; and Princess Louise wired that she was "proud to have lived among them." From a former highly esteemed Governor of Canada, Lord Dufferin, came the following : "I cannot refrain from adding my tribute of admiration for the brave sons of Canada who are fighting and shedding their blood in defence of the Empire." Congratulations were also sent from Sir Alfred Milner, Governor of Cape Colony ; while the press of England paid touching tributes to the courage of the youthful patriots who had fought so gallantly side by side with the veterans of the Olden Land. "I know that you will be proud of us, mother," wrote one of the young soldiers. "After the surrender of Cronje Lord Roberts personally thanked us for being the immediate means of bringing it about." While from over the sea came the hearty acknowledgment : "The name Canadian is now a synonym for bravery, dash and courage," and to these the chaplain who attended on the battlefield adds, as with a heart sob, "Canada may well be proud of her noble boys. The deep sorrow which has entered into the hearts of loved ones far away will undoubtedly be tempered by the consoling assur- ance that all have done their duty — all, every one." Our Boys. Proud of them ! Yes, on every side, Through all our vast domains. Leal hearts beat high in loving pride And soar in praiseful strains. FOR THE FLAG 95 For those who chose dread danger's lot With eyes unto the goal, Whose deeds no tide of time may blot From off the nation's soul. Who may not answer to roll call, And who have victory won ; Who shall not say, "God bless them all ! They have their duty done. ' ' On February 21st another troopship, the Milwaukee sailed from Halifax for Cape Town. On board were 28 offi- cers, 605 N. C. officers and men, in all 633 and 614 horses. These troops were of the First Battalion Canada Mounted Rifles and C. Field Battery and were commanded by Lieut. - Colonel W. D. Gordon, D. O. C. March 17. — The last of the troops sent by Canada to the seat of war were despatched as "Reinforcements" on board the S. S, Monterey, which had been engaged to take out Strathcona's Horse. The "Reinforcements" consisted of 3 officers and 100 N. C. officers and men — in all 103 — in charge of Capt. Carpenter. The after career of the Canadian troops is so closely identified with that of the troops of the Motherland, and of the other Colonies, that it seems unnecessary to dilate upon each of their further very few losses and many remarkable successes. Their experience has been a wondrous one, and much, very much of the realities of war has been crowded into the comparatively short period of their service abroad. Many of them marched over six hundred miles, often on half rations, very seldom on full. They have taken part in the capture of 10 towns, fought in 10 general actions and on 27 other days. They were also privileged to witness, and to take part in, the deliverance of the long-besieged cities, and to join in the march of triumph with the beloved and high-souled Commanderof the whole Bri- tish Army in South Africa. Colonel Baden-Powell in his dis- patch announcing the relief of Maf eking, says: "Most grate- ful for invaluable assistance by Canadian artillery, which made 96 FOR THE FI^AG a record march from Beira to help us ; " and an appreciative nation, from the little rag-a-muiEn on the city streets to the beloved Sovereign who rules an Empire upon which the sun never sets, has united in one heartfelt acclaim of welcome upon the return of the heroes, who are now more firmly and more truly than ever before, the loyal and well-deserving sons of the grand old British Empire. Home Again. Ho! valiant sons of Canada! Ho, men of sterling mould! Well might ye grace ^-our heritage. Ye! nursed in Freedom's fold. Though brightly on those annals, Where ranks the hero name, Shines forth in li\-ing characters, Those sires of deathless fame. Those sires who, in the other years, Britannia's flag unfurled; And made her mistress of the seas, And Queen o'er all the world. Yet yours no borrowed lu.stre; Each patriot stands alone; Though blended in one common cause. His glory is his own. Ring out! clear peals of welcoming, Shine forth I fair guiding lights; Smooth be their path who clomb to fame. O'er Afric's blood-stained heights. Why shades the light on Glory s brow, We joy — and yet we weep, Since never Freedom's morning dawned. But Death came forth to reap. FOR THE FLAG 97 Oh, hearts of inborn courage! Oh, hands and voices still ! Ye've touched a chord on Memory's h're, Which through the years shall thrill. For worldly wealth and pride of power. Earth-born, with earth decay; But honour, justice, valour, truth Light on to nobler day. Ho! valiant sons of Canada, Ho, men of sterling mould ! Well have ye graced your heritage Ye! nursed in Freedom's fold. Part IV. Strathcona's Men. Hark to the swell of rich music ! Hark to the clatter of feet ! They come in their might, as a flash of sunlight They liven the olden street. Oh ! grandly they ride, in their beauty and strength, Those sons of the far distant West ; For the East-land hath called, and the country of snows Hath proffered her bravest and best. From the far away isles, from the prairie vast. Over mountain and river and fen; Their watch-word in fight, 'for country' and right,' Ride forward Strathcona's leal men. Oh ! proudly they ride, yet the strongest may weep As he leaves for a far, foreign shore ; For he knows that the patriot will never return Till the days of his warfare are o'er. Yet, onward he rides in his courage and hope. As he'll ride over kopje and glen ; For the foremost in battle, on African veldt Shall be loyal Strathcona's leal men. Although intimatelj' associated with the sending of Cana- dian troops to assist in fighting the battles of the Empire in South Africa, the fitting out of a detachment solely at the expense of one individual is an action so unique that it well deserves special notice in any record of the war. The whole reading world is by this time aware that the generous offer of the Canadian High Commissioner in London, Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal, to equip a company of 500 mounted soldiers for the service of the Empire was accepted in a most appreciative spirit by the Home Government. How FOR THE FLAG 99 carefully and completely His I,ordship's plans, in respect to this offer have been carried out results have amply demon- strated. The brg.very of the "Strathcona Horse" in every engagement in which they took part has been singularly con- spicuous while their invariable success has been phenomenal. LORD STRATHCONA'S HORSE "Kipling's reference to the 'duke's son and cook's son' applies to this crowd. Here you see men born on Canadian soil, the sons of farmers, a larger number probably the sons of traders and professional men, and a considerable majority of British birth. Here are "remittance men" who have been drawing an annual allowance from the old folks in England and have been spending it with considerable recklessness. Here are the sons of prosperous cattle ranchers and of thrifty traders and bankers, themselves men of good habits and good prospects. Here is the son of a former Canadian member of parliament, and beside him the sou of a railway navvy. Here is the owner of lands and herds of cattle, a man of limited education and yet something of a magnate in his own field, but not too proud to sleep in the same cattle shed with his late cook, an Ox- ford University graduate, the son, perhaps, of some bishop or Queen's counsel in England. " "When Strathcona' s Horse get their kit they will have the swellest outfit a Canadian troop ever boasted of. It was generally understood when it became known that Lord Strathcona was to furnish a troop, that that troop would not want for anything ; that money would not be an ob- ject. Expectations have been outdone. An officer said to-day • "I doubt if troopers or soldiers of any kind, for that matter, ever went to the front with as complete or costly a kit. ' ' Ottawa, March 8. — Strathcona's Horse to the number of 400 had a parade to-day to Parliament Hill. Many thousands reviewed them at Parliament Park. Lord and Lady Minto and Sir Wilfred Laurier were present. Strathcona's Horse and the Prince Edward Island contingent em- barked on the steamer Monterey, at Halifax. They paraded the streets with militia escort and bands, amid the cheering of thousands and the waving of almost numberless banners. No finer body of men, says a press despatch, ever paraded the streets of Halifax. The Island men led the contingent in the march and were presented with a flag. The ' Monterey ' left Halifax at 11 o'clock on March 17, and had on board besides 552 men constituting Strathcona's Horse, the draft for lOO FOR THE FLAG vacancies in the first Canadian contingent, due to fatalities and illness, numbering 203 men. The trip was made in 21 days, beating the record of the ' Milwaukee, ' by four days ; the ' Pomeranian, ' by five days ; and the 'Laurentian, ' by three days. All the men were clad in khaki and wore cowboy hats. The oiEcers were dressed in khaki serge. Among the officers were some of the best specimens of physical manhood ever seen. There were men who averaged six feet in height, broad shouldered, athletic in appearance, and every man's countenance was stamped with intelligence and had an in- dividuality of its own. The horsemen were not as well drilled in military movements as our own soldiers, but for robust constitutions, they appear- ed unexcelled. In the ranks as a private was a son of Lord Beresford, a six footer, ■vvho had been engaged as a mining engineer out West. Young Barrie was going to take the place of his brother, one of those who had fallen on the battlefield. So determined was j-ouug Barrie to en- list, that he insisted on paying his own passage and going independ- ently, had he not been accepted for regular service. But at the last moment he w.as accepted. TheP.E. Island boys had waded at timesalmost to the waist in icy water for a distance of six miles and in their wet clothes they had driven on an open woodsled for ten miles in order to catch the train at New Glasgow in time to embark at Halifax. The horses had been taken direct from the prairies. They had onlv been ridden twice, being what is termed broken and not trained. They were small but hardy-looking ponies, weighing from 930 to 1,200 pounds, and had never known the pampering of stable life or the luxury of brush- ing. These horses were capable of carrying a load 175 pounds for a journey of 100 miles in one day and they could return the next dav with- out any perceptible signs of fatigue. There were in all 703 horses. Each horse was placed in a sling just high enough to enable his feet to rest upon the floor. They would not lie down during the vo3-age to South Africa and each horse had a narrow stall to himself. The bridles, saddles and all the horses' equipments were of the best quality. At a quarter to five Friday evening the ilonterey was drawn off bv two tugs into the stream, and as the giant steamer with the ,;;;. * ****** Oh ! that wearisome march of a hundred miles. Over kopje, and river and glen; Yet he faltered not, fell not away from the ranks. But trod with the youngest of men. Through the rain-swollen wave in the Modder's bed. With the watery flood shoulder high : On, on through the sand-drift, and blistering heat Of the sun of an African sky. On, on through the desert, where hunger and thirst O'er the region of silence held sway: Where alike beast of burden and owner of soul. The weak from the strong fell away. In the dense hail of bullets on Paardeberg heights, On the open — he sought for no shield; But smilingly walked in the dread firing line Some help or some comfort to yield. Through the long night of horror, when battle had ceased. With fingers oft damp, dripping red. He searched, 'mid the darkness, that crimson-dyed field For the wounded who mixed with the dead. 122 fOR THE FLAG And when the bright sun of the morning looked down. And smiled o'er the streamlets of gore. That silvered head bent by those motionless forms Which would litart at reveille no more. Though prized be those badges which laurel the brave, And precious the honors they bring ; Oh ! what are earth's plaudits, or riches, or rank To a son of the Heavenly King. Sweet Spirit of mercy, and comfort and hope ! When from strivings of earth passed away, Thou shalt bloom 'neath the glow of a kindlier sphere And the light of a holier day. Why then should we weep that thy eventide sleep, Draweth nigh, since, the burden laid down, Thou shalt pass to thy rest, high in home of tTie blest: Rich-crowned of the conqiieror's crown. Chaplain O'Leary, the only clergyman allowed to go forward at first, marched with the troops, attended in the firing line at Paardeberg, min- istered to the dying, and helped all night to fetch in the wounded and to bury the dead. He was idolized by the soldiers of all creeds. Father O'Leary speaks in the highest terms of Rev. Jlr. Almond and Rev. Mr. Fullerton, the two other chaplains, remarking that they were splendid companions. FRO.Vl ALL THE CONTINGENT. Sir, — I have the honor of placing on record tlie noble disposition, self-denial and generosity of the true Christian leader. Dr. H. G. Barrie, of Toronto, whom the Young Men's Christian .Association sent out with us, the Canadian contingent for South Africa. Ever on the alert to give Christian counsel and advice, always on hand to assist materially every man, he has fairly captured the soldiers' hearts. He has been a brother to us all. I have some experience as a soldier in the field, then as a soldier, accept I beg you, this tribute to this man's noble work. I have the honor to be, Staff Serge.\xt, Canadian Contingent. Lieutenant Wood, of Halifax, was the first Canadian to die in .\frica from wounds received at Belmont, Nov. loth, 1S99. FOR THE FLAG 1 23 After the fight at Babuschagne's Nek, 30 men of the Colonial Mounted Infantry were left in a donga over-night to guard a wounded officer till reinforcements should come up. During the night this small force was attacked by 600 Boers with one field gun, but they managed to keep the enemy at bay. General Gatacre wired a special order com- plimenting the men on their coolness and bravery. "Private Malloy (of Winchester, Ontario) escaped the fate of eighty of his gallant compatriots at Paardeberg, but at Bronkhorst Spruit a Mauser bullet traversed his temple from side to side, with the result that his eye- sight is gone forever. For a youth to have all his hopes and aspirations in life thus destroyed at one fell swoop, and to be able to declare that he has no regrets for the past, argues the possession not only of splendid courage and cheerfulness, but a philosophic mind such as even a patri- archal patriot might envy. He obeyed the call to arms because he felt that it was right to do so, and having so decided, he accepts with manly forti- tude the vicissitudes of fortune which have to him been so hard to bear. We do not wonder that the company of eager business men who interupted their operations for a time that they might honor the Canadian heroes passing through the city, had great trouble in choking down the emotion that surged within them, as they listened to these noble utter- ances, and gazed into the sightless eyes of the youthful speaker. Sight- less eyes truly; but Mr. Malloy has also a soul which is unconquerable, for he wound up his little oration by leading the cheers for the Queen." — Liverpool, England. ' ' Our men are standing the fatigue and the intense heat with great pluck, and their enthusiasm is most contagious. Our long marches are enlivened by Canadian songs in both French and English, and all are eager for a battle in which they can prove their mettle. The heat and dust is dreadful, but all are well." Ottawa, June 11. — The following message from Her Majesty the Queen has been received at Government House, in response to one of congratulation addressed to the Sovereign on the fall of Pretoria — ■ " Balmoral, June 7. Grateful thanks for kind congratulations on this most satisfactory event. (Signed) V. R. I. His Excellency has received the following despatch from Lord Roberts : — Pretoria, July 5, 1900. — I have much pleasure in bringing to Your 122 FOR The flag And when the bright sun of the morning looked down, And smiled o'er the streamlets of gore. That silvered head bent by those motionless forms Which would start at reveille no more. Though prized be those badges which laurel the brave, And precious the honors they bring ; Oh ! what are earth's plaudits, or riches, or rank To a son of the Heavenly King. Sweet Spirit of mercy, and comfort and hope ! When from strivings of earth passed away, Thou shalt bloom 'neath the glow of a kindlier sphere And the light of a holier day. Why then should we weep that thy eventide sleep, Draweth nigh, since, the burden laid down, Thou shalt pass to thy rest, high in home of fbe blest: Rich-crowned of the conqueror's crown. Chaplain O'Leary, the only clergyman allowed to go forward at first, marched with the troops, attended in the firing line at Paardeberg, min- istered to the dying, and helped all night to fetLh in the wounded and to bury the dead. He was idolized by the soldiers of all creeds. Father O'Leary speaks in the highest terms of Rev. Jlr. Almond and Rev. Mr. Fullerton, the two other chaplains, remarking that they were splendid companions. FRO.M ALL THE CONTINGENT. Sir, — I have the honor of placing on record the noble disposition, self-denial and generosity of the true Christian leader. Dr. H. G. Barrie, of Toronto, whom the Young Men's Christian Association sent out with us, the Canadian contingent for South Africa. Ever on the alert to give Christian covmsel and advice, always on hand to assist materia!!}- every man, he has fairly captured the soldiers' hearts. He has been a brother to us all. I have some experience as a soldier in the field, then as a soldier, accept I beg you, this tribute to this man's noble work. I have the honor to be, St.^ff Serge.\nt, Canadian Contingent. Lieutenant Wood, of Halifax, was the first Canadian to die in Africa from wounds received at Belmont, Nov. loth, 1899. FOR THE FLAG I23 After the fight at Babuschagne's Nek, 30 men of the Colonial Mounted Infantry were left in a donga over-night to guard a wounded oiBcer till reinforcements should come up. During the night this small force was attacked by 600 Boers with one field gun, but they managed to keep the enemy at bay. General Gatacre wired a special order com- plimenting the men on their coolness and bravery. "Private Malloy (of Winchester, Ontario) escaped the fate of eighty of his gallant compatriots at Paardeberg, but at Bronkhorst Spruit a Mauser bullet traversed his temple from side to side, with the result that his eye- sight is gone forever. For a 3'outh to have all his hopes and aspirations in life thus destroyed at one fell swoop, and to be able to declare that he has no regrets for the past, argues the possession not only of splendid courage and cheerfulness, but a philosophic mind such as even a patri- archal patriot might envy. He obeyed the call to arms because he felt that it was right to do so, and having so decided, he accepts with manly forti- tude the vicissitudes of fortune which have to him been so hard to bear. We do not wonder that the company of eager business men who interupted their operations for a time that they might honor the Canadian heroes passing through the city, had great trouble in choking down the emotion that surged within them, as they listened to these noble utter- ances, and gazed into the sightless eyes of the youthful speaker. Sight- less eyes truly; but Mr. Malloy has also a soul which is unconquerable, for he wound up his little oration by leading the cheers for the Queen." — Liverpool, England. "Our men are standing the fatigue and the intense heat with great pluck, and their enthusiasm is most contagious. Our long marches are enlivened by Canadian songs in both French and English, and all are eager for a battle in which they can prove their mettle. The heat and dust is dreadful, but all are well." Ottawa, June 11. — The following message from Her Majesty the Queen has been received at Government House, in response to one of congratulation addressed to the Sovereign on the fall of Pretoria — " Balmoral, June 7. Grateful thanks for kind congratulations on this most satisfactory event. (Signed) V. R. I. His Excellency has received the following despatch from Lord Roberts : — Pretoria, July 5, 1900. — I have much pleasure in bringing to Your 124 I'OR THE FLAG Excellency's notice the good work done by the First and Second Battalion Canadian Mounted Rifles, who have been repeatedly conspicuous for their gallant conduct and soldier-like instincts. During the attack bv the Boers on Katsbosch on June 22, a small party of pincher's Creek men of the 2nd Battalion displayed the greatest gallantry and devotion to duty, holding in check a force of Boers by whom they were largely outnumbered. Corporal Mordan and Private Kerr continued fighting till mortally wounded. Lance Corporal Miles and Private Miles, wounded, continued to fire, and held their ground. On June 18, a party of the First Battalion, under Lieutenant Young, when operating with a force under General Hutton, to the northwest of Pretoria, succeeded in capturing two of the enemy's guns, and brought in a herd of cattle and several prisoners without losing a man. THE RED CROSS NURSE. Breathe softly that name which the famine-struck breathe In a voice which through hunger is faint; That name which the soldier in laurels doth wreathe For to him 'tis the name of a saint. Not in Afric alone, not in warfare alone, Is the Red Cross of mercy anear; But wherever disaster, by fire or by flood, Bringeth ruin that badge doth appear. In the shell -shattered town , on the frozen heights. On the terror-struck banks of the Seine, The naked were clothed and the famished were fed. And the wounded were nursed in their pain. That Cross is a badge for the kinship of kings. Is a hope for the sorrowing throng. Ah ! weak is the effort of language to tell Of a life which out-soareth all song. Since earth is the better, since heaven is the dearer. For such visits of angels that be; Great Spirit of goodness be Thine to support In their richness, those lives lit of Thee. Quebec, August 13. — Among the arrivals ou the "Corinthian " last night was Surgeon-General Ryerson, Canadian and British Red Cross FOR THE FLAG 1 25 Commissioner in South Africa, who went out with D and E Batteries on the " Laurentian," and who, as an official at the seat of war, had an abimdant experience of the hospitals, their management and the salient fe: tures of the campaign. He was on the first train that entered Kimberley after the relief, and took with him an immense quantity of stores for the famine-stricken inhabitants. Speaking of the Colonials, he said : ' There were altogether 20,000 Colonial troops in the army, including the Cana- dians. It is an open secret that the majority of the British officers had a very hearty and healthy contempt for all Colonials, but now it is generally recognized that without the Canadians and their fellow Colonials the British arms would have had a very hard time. The brilliant and effective work performed b}- the irregulars both in the scouting and in the line of battle caused a great reaction in the minds of both officers and men, and now a Colonial can have almost anything he wants. It was my special work to see that the Canadian sick and wounded were carefully attended to. They wanted for nothing. Every wish they could express was granted owing to the liberal resources I had at my command. I made it my especial care to personally look after the Can- adian boys, and they were well served. Then also the boys who were convalescent were furnished with cash when they required it. At the Kimberley hospital, after Paardeberg, there were a hundred and forty-seven wounded Boers, all of whom were quartered in the roller- skating rink. Their wounds were in many cases in a terrible condition owing to the lack of dressing. Often serious wounds had been dressed with nothing more elaborate than tobacco juice. They did not receive any proper treatment for days — in some cases weeks. However they were very patient under pain and exceedingly grateful for what was done for them. All ages were represented, from the youth of fifteen to the old man of seventy. Owing to their hardy constitutions there were but few deaths among them." At Kimberley, Col. Ryerson caught veldt fever and went to Cape Town to recuperate, when he went to Bloemfontein and established a Red Cross depot there. The Bloemfontein hospital was the largest in South Africa, and it was there that enteric fever made such dreadful ravages. It began in April and increased so rapidly that at one time five thousand poor fellows were down with it, crowding every place and giving the doctors and nurses all that human beings could do. The Canadian nurses did excellent work both at Kimberley and Bloemfontein, but unfortunately both Miss Horn and Miss Richard- son got the enteric fever and were dangerously ill and will be 126 FOR THE FLAG invalided home. The others, however, worked like Trojans and are still at it. Within six weeks two thousani soldiers died of enteric fever, wounds and dysentery, this number including eighteen Cai.adians, Fifty-three poor fellows succumbed in one day. The dead were buried in long trenches. It was a terrible time and the attendants were nearly worn out by their incessant work. He attributed the epidemic to two main causes — filthy and undrink- able water and the multitude of flies, of which there were millions, it being certain that they carried a good deal of the infection. It must be a source of satisfaction to Englishmen to know that the noble Englishwoman, Miss Nightingale, is spared to see the splendid fruit of her noble life's work. Next to the Queen, who has always shown such a loving interest in her work, Florence Nightingale is the British soldier's idol. Lady Lansdowne, formerly a resident of Ottawa when her husband was Governor-General, was the foremost promoter of a recent patriotic concert at Covent Garden at which Patti sang. There was a great attend- ance of royalty, nobility and gentry, and the prices of boxes ranged from I500 to ^1,250 each. The big sum of |55,ooo was raised as the proceeds of this one concert. Lady Roberts and her daughters did much for the hospital in South Africa. Bloemfontein, April 16. — Please thank the people of Canada, on behalf of myself, the troops and Colopel Ryerson for their generous and timely gifts just received. (Signed) Roberts. Miss Gould says that about |3,5oo has been received so far in response to her chain letter, in aid of the African soldiers. When Private McRae of Co. G. was at Naauwport there were about 1,000 other cases there. He was very near being sent to Cape Town, and could have gone ; but wished to rejoin the Canadians, and the doctor did not press him. Private James Walker was in the same tent as he, with an affliction of the lungs. On the 23d the patients were moved into new (juarters. The convalescents, on the 22nd had an open air feast, — the FOR THE FLAG 1 27 first in five months for Private McRae. Lady Henry Bentinck was one of the waitresses. Besides her there were a great many of the nobility nursing. St. John's, Nfld., Feb. 11. — At the forthcoming special session of the Newfoundland Legislature, called for February 19, the government will propose a vote of $20,000 towards the Imperial patriotic fund, as the colony is unable to send any volunteers to South Africa. Writing to her sister from the Palace of Justice, Pretoria, now used as an hospital, under date of July 17th, Miss Afileck, nurse, who accom- panied the first Canadian contingent to South Africa, has this to say: ' ' Well , here we are at last — the height of our ambition realized so far, in getting into Pretoria ! Sister Russell and I at Springfontein, and Sisters Forbes and Pope at Kroonstadt, received telegrams ordering us to come here. Neither ki ew that the other had the order, nor whence it came as we were all very happy and contented to stay with No. 3 hospital. Our superintendent was so indignant that she at once wired to Bloemfonlein to the principal medical oflicer to know if we might remain where we were; but the answer came back that it was the Field Marshal's order that we should be in Bloemfontein Monday evening; so we had only one day's grace. We were very loath indeed to leave No. 3, and all our friends, whom we had been with for over six months, although we were delighted with the prospect of getting to Pretoria. We left Springfontein on Monday, noon, reaching Bloemfontein 6 p. m. in a pouring rain, slept there on train and left at 5 a.m. on board Lady Roberts' train en route for Pretoria. We were preceded all the way by an armoured train, for the track had been destroyed in several places only a few days previous. However, nothing exciting happened along the way. Tuesday evening we reached Kroonstadt, where we again stopped for the night. Here we visited the other sections of No. 3, met our old friends and were joined by the Sisters Pope and Forbes. The third evening we reached our destina- tion, and at the station met and had a handshake from Lord ' Bobs,' who was down to meet Lady Roberts and the two Misses Roberts. On our way up we had a few trying experiences. When we got on board at Springfontein who should we see but Captain Barker, also on his way to Pretoria. We were glad to see him, for we had not heard from him since we left the boat, seven months previous. Sister Ru.ssell and I very fool- ishly left without a lunch to eat along the way. We got a miserabje dinner at Bloemfontein, for which we paid three shillings each, but when breakfast time came we found ourselves starving, and not a morsel to eat We tried in vain to buy bread at the stations. At last a staff officer trav- 128 FOR THE FLAG elling on the train heard of our plight, and gave us a loaf and some butter (a rare commodity), and two English sisters with whom he shared the carriage (for there were twenty sisters on board) had some tea, so we managed, though late in the day, to appease our famishing appetites. We were all right after we got to Kroor.stadt and joined the others. They, likewise virgins, were supplied with rations for the journey. Major Tenniion tcok us to his quarters for the night. Here the luxuries were almost too much for us after six months of tent life. He gave up his room, a magnificent one — bed wide enough for four, an open fire-place and a fire, electric light, carpet, lovely furniture, etc. The sudden change from privation to luxuriance almost appalled us. Then the dinner! After being uted to one knife among a dozen, etc. Here we had two knives each, violets and roses on the tc^ble, and everything lovely. Thursday noon we proceeded to the Irish hospital, which is in the Palace of Justice, a magnificent building commandeered from the Boers. It had just been completed for the law courts, but had not been opened. I should think the Boers would be furious to see the English take pos- session of such a fine building. I v/as given charge of Sir William Thompson's ward of thirty patients, together with three small wards of sick oflScers — eighteen in all. I found the work immense — never a minute off, so made complaints, and have now onlj- the officers. An}- one who has ever nursed them knows what it means. Individually they are exceedingly nice, but they make ver}' trying patients. Among the eight- een 1 have at present one lord, two colonels, two doctors, one major, f even captains and the others are lieutenants. Another sister and myself take it week about for day and night duty. There has been fighting only .six miles off since we arrived. Just now the forces are all gathering north of us, and a big engagement is ex- pected to-morrow. It is so strange how we meet old friends out here. The first day I was here I met Dr. Arthur Ross, who is with Dr. Duff. They were stationed eight miles out, and he was in for supplies. To-da v when I was out I met Dr. Vaux, for whom I had nursed in Ottawa. He said: " How little did I think, when you had that case for me, that the next time I should see you would be in Pretoria ! " Then the second dav we were here who should happen in but Dr. Robinson, who was our doctor for three months at Rondebosch. I went out with him to see Kruger's house. Saw Mrs. Kruger and plucked violets from their gar- den in the face of the sentries. Our mails are very slow to reach us here- The way is so often blocked with transports that mail cannot get through. The climate here is quite warm, although it is winter (I shouldn't like their summer 1 and violets, roses, etc., still bloom in the gardens. We expect to go home by ICngland, but can hear no definite news as to when, but I expect it will be well on for winter anyway before we plant our feet on native soil. FOR THE FLAG 1 29 "A subscription of JsSo, all her sa\-ings, has been sent by a Canadian nurse in New York," Dr. Seward Webb and wife, of New York, sent f 1,000 to the Patriotic Fund. The money collected by the British South Africa Patriotic Fund Association, in Boston now amounts to about |8,ooo. This does not include large sums which have been subscribed independent of this organization. Worcester has started a fund for the families of British soldiers, and the first day the movement was inaugurated $3,288 was pledged. "A Friend." We know not who the givers were, Their rank is all unknown, What matter ! since in heart of hearts Their feelings match our own. That modesty which veils its face Before the noon-day light, Oft braves the world's supreme contempt When called to lead the fight. The tiny violet in the woqds, The rose 'neath summer glare, Like incensed of a Hand Divine With fragrance load the air. Thus with the titled and unnamed, Since, lit of kindred fiame. The outcome of each generous heart Accomplisheth the same, CRONJE. Captain Webster, of the S.S. 'Milwaukee," the vessel which con- veyed Cronje and the Boer prisoners to St. Helena, says : — Cronje and his wife used to sit for hours holding each other's hands, "nd occasionally reading the Bible. The British officers, anxious to en- liven their captives up a bit, invited them to listen to a graphophone which was on board. The Commandant and Mrs. Cronje and another Boer officer and his partner, were amazed and watched the box intently. They were charmed on hearing Sousa's march, but when Sankey's hymn, 'The Ninety-and-Nine,' was rendered, Mrs. Cronje burst into 130 FOR THE FLAG tears, while the other women sang the hymn throughout. A banjo solo was next ground out, and Cronje, highly tickled, kept time by nodding his head and tapping his feet on the floor, He became curious. He wanted to know whether the music was made by ventriloquism, whereupon Captain Webster, for his enlight- ment, took the machine to pieces. Cronje was more astounded than ever, and to fill up the cup of his pleasure, the graphophone was given him to beguile his exile in St. Helena. " The British troops, immediately upon taking possession of the laager, were ordered by Lord Roberts to devote all their attention to succoring the wounded and burying the dead, as well as to the caring for the women and children who were panic-stricken in expectation of some fearful punishment." After the surrender of Cronje. "That inhuman conqueror, the Duke of Cumberland, caused his prisoners, among whom were many of the highest and noblest in Scot- land, to be murdered in cold blood." After the battle of CuUoden. Mercy. Afar on Scotia's lonely moor Culloden's cairn doth raise its head ; Huge monument, through all the years. Of noble and ignoble dead. For there the highest in the land Before the Prince-born butcher stood; A conqueror, by force of arms, A fiend to slaughter in cold blood. Not such those lustrous warriors Who boast no empty badge of power ; Beyond each glorious feat of arms Rare, high-souled deeds of mercy tower. That monument which marks the brave Whom earthly force had hunted down , Doth also mark the ruthless deed Which dimmed the lustie of a crown. Thus, o'er Culloden's cold, grey stones, \\'hile mourning music wails for aye; Full many a heart in Afric land Shall bless the foemen of to-da\-. FOR THE FLAG I3I KRUOER'S CRY. When Kruger and Steyn were at Petrusburg exhorting the cornets and commandants a man galloped in shouting, ' ' The British are coming ! ' ' Kruger stopped short and cried, ' Inspan!' ONCE FOR, NOW AGAINST. Madame Alice Bron, a rich Belgian lady, who went out as a nurse to attend wounded Boers, has returned. She has made known her intention of publishing a pamphlet, which will be a strong indictment of the Boers. She says she has discovered all the vices of the corrupt and decaying count'r)-, and asserts that the Boers are hypocrites and liars, and that even the late Colonel De Villbois-Mareuil himself had lost all admiration for them. "Mr. Michael D..vitt, before leaving Lorenzo Marques, said to a ship- ping official : — " I came to the Transvaal too late this time, but in the next war, which won't be long, I hope to be in time to render some ser- vice.' We hope Mr. Davitt will repeat the remark to the Irish Fusiliers when they return from the war. ' ' It is a singular fact that "Major John McBride," organizer of the Irish Brigade in the service of the Transvaal Boers, who was a candidate for the House of Commons in the recent bye-election in South Mayo, received only 427 votes, while his opponent received 2,410. In Ireland, as in Canada, apparently, only the froth and scum and dregs of society have any sympathy with the Boers. LAST HOURS. The hospital train had taken up its load at Modder River. It had come from Paardeberg, only twenty-nine miles off. Authority had taken the ambulance mules for other purposes, so the proper ambulance stood idle, while the wounded went in ox waggons. These ox waggons had taken bully beef and biscuit, ammunition, and forage to the front, and as they had to return to the rail, what more simple than to fill them up in this way. It is true the wounded didn't like them ; they had no springs ; they weren't built for men to lie down in, and eight men per waggon was a tight fit. With their worn out oxen they took three days over the weary trip of twenty-nine miles while many of the men had shattered limbs, shattered from expanding bullets, and felt every jar. Still they got in somehow — unless they happened to die on the road — and were put between the sheets on a soft bed at last. One man sat up in his bunk, quietly giggling to himself. "What's the joke?" said the khaki-clad doctor. "Only that I'm so glad to be here at last." Ninety-six of them there were, and they mostly turned over in their 132 FOR THE FLAG clean pyjamas between the clean sheets and slept the twenty-four hours round, except when wakened for meals. Cot No. 48 was a fractured thigh, with a hole you could lay your fist in; another bullet had drilled his hips, leaving a couple of holes in him, through which his very life dribbled out. There he lay, crushed with the shame of his own noisesomeness and worn out with the pain of these grating bone ends, which the much-enduring splint couldn't keep still. The splint was soon taken off and re-applied. The doctor was a stout, stolid person of the unemotional sort, but he knew the pain he was giving and he saw something of the piteousness and all of the hopelessness of it. As he worked a lump rose in his throat, and he grit his teeth tight. His face must have shown more than he meant it to, for No. 48, too sorely tried to speak, and with big drops running together on his forehead, timidly reached out and patted the brown hand that had been torturing him. The doctor rose from his knees and as he did so he stroked the close-cropped head on the pillow. It was hardly more than a boy's head after all. Neither said a word. Then he had to pass on ; there was more than enough to do elsewhere. In the grey dawn the train stopped at a wayside camp. Something sewn up in a brown military blanket was put out. Cot No. 48 was empty. TRIFLES. A Chaplain of the army, through means of borrowing a book in Pretoria, found in the owner a countryman, who proved a very good friend. Oft seeming simple, trifling cause. Is hinge to very wondrous end; And doth a world of ill forfend; Or evil on ill's victim draws. One jarring note may start a strife AVhich, echoing from shore to shore, Doth rise into a cannon roar And needless waste of precious life. One graceful word may heal some wrong, May bring repose to tortured mind, May upward lead the spirit blind Till caught the tones of angel song. Thus goes it through the going years, Thus weakness takes the place of strength. Thus shall it be until at length Heart gladness overcomes all tears. FOK THE FLAG 1 33 INFLUENCE OF THE PIPES. " The pipes put me through several moods and changes of mind in those long weeks of waiting. At first, the abundance of their queer music — of which I had heard but little up to then — came as a novelty. Next, they roused my curiosity as to how a piper could have either the will or the strength to play for sixteen hours on end without a longer pause than the minute it required to change from one tune to another. And, next, the unceasing noise annoyed until it maddened me, and I cursed the pipes as an instrument of torture. The piper walked to and fro, the length of the regi- ment's lines, and, at a distance, the air was full of a ' zizz-zizz-zzz, ' like the note of a demon bee, while the nearer it came the more its nasal chords mastered the neighborhood and quivered in my very bones. At the last (I cannot tell why or how it came about) I grew to like the sound, and to miss the melody when the piper was afar and only the buzzing came to my ears. When he was near he played upon my body and my senses. My pen raced with the purple music of the reels, my blood warmed under the defiant, challenging, scarlet chords of the battle songs, a pleasant sadness possessed me when the tunes were plaintive and grave. Without a drop of Scotch blood in me, I yet began to love the Scotch, and to take interest in all that I could see and learn of them. With nothing to connect me with their land — except that my father at- tended a course of medical lectures in Edinburgh — I yet could feel the pipes move me and my heart go out toward their players. In time I used to leave my camp and cross the narrow lane to the canvas village of the Highlanders in order to watch a piper at his work. Andlo! I discovered that instead of one man being the sole piper a score of men shared his work. Those stood in line silently listening and watching as the musician of the moment strode jauntily up and down giving to his hips that swaggering, boastful, swaying movement which your true master of the bag and reeds never fails to practise. They looked at him for hours, now hungrily, now gloatingly, as he stepped to and fro, just touching his toes to the veldt like a man practising to walk on eggs — like one whose body is lifted like his soul by the music he creates. For hours, I say, but in every hour at least two different men were the players. Those who watched were waiting their turns, and ever and anon the player of the moment halted, the flying ribbons fell beside the ' drones, ' and the pipe was passed to one of the men in the patient line. Then off strode the fresh player with the streamers floating from his pipes, with his hips swaying, his head held high, and his toes but touch- ing the earth. Once I heard a man say, ' Gi'e me the pipes, Sandy; I can tell ye what naebody has said' — at least those were the strange words I thought that I distinguished. 134 I''OR THE FLAG What I was certain of was that I had discovered why it seemed that the regimental piper pla)'ed steadily for sixteen hours a day. I fell to studying the Scotsmen and their music after a battle in which the Highlanders had met with a great calamity. For weeks they were low spirited and unsocial, even with one another. Such is their temperament — a brave and gay one, but with a substratum of melancholy which will, at times, come uppermost. ' I should not like to crack a jrke at our mess,' said to me at this time an officer of theirs who was not wl:oIly Scotch. ' It would sound profane; and my fellow-officers would surely think me mad or idiotic. I suggested champagne the other night at dinner, and I'll not do that again until we get back our spirits. The men are in the same mood as the officers. It is the pipes that make them so. The pipes are keeping them a great deal resentful, and still more melancholy.' 'The pipes?' I echoed, inquiringly. ' What have the pipes to do with their feelings ?' ' Eh, man ? Don't you know that the pipes can talk as good Scotch as any man who hears them ? Surely 'tis so — and 'tis what the pipes are saying, first in one plaj'er's hand and then in another's, that keeps the men from forgetting their part in the last battle — Magersfontein.' Once, as the days passed, when I saw this officer again at leisure, I went to him for an explanation of his surprising disclosure. I had been trying to learn the language of the pipes in the meantime, but I acquired no more understanding than a dog has of English when he distinguishes between a kindly human tone and a cross one. I could tell when a tune was martial and when another was mournful. When a gay one rang out — if any had — I would not have mistaken it for a dirge. To some this may seem a very little learning, but I had begun by thinking all the tunes alike. ' Yesterday,' said my friend the officer, ' we'd a little match between men who had some skill at embroidering the airs ot the old ballads with trills of those grace-notes that they call ' warblers,' but this contest was broken up by a rugged son of the hills who, after asking for the pipes, flung from them a few strong, clear notes which gained the attention of all who are born to a knowledge of the music that speaks. I am not one of those, but I called my soldier-servant up and asked him what was being played. ' Well, sir,' said he, ' that's McCallum — a great museecian he is. And hark, sir; he has the right of it and boldly he is telling everv one his thoughts. He says that every man kens tliat yon General (Wauchope) who's dead, was as cunning and skillfu' in war as on^- man above him, and 'tis late in the day — now that he's laid away and dumb — to put blame on him as if he were an ignoramus and a butcher, like some others. And now — Oh! brnwly ye're tellin' it, McCallum — he savs there may be scheming and plotting in high places but no skulldrugger o' an}- FOR THE FI.AG 135 sort, however it is gilded, will ever deceive ane single true chiel o' the Highlands.' 'And then,' said my gossip, ' the pipes passed to the hands of another man, and my servant, seeing rue about to move away, touched my arm and bade me wait, as the new player was another adept with the pipes. 'He's grand at it,' said he. ' Well done, Stewart! He's saying, sir, that the reason none will heed those who blame our grand leaderthat'sgoneis that there's men of rank among us — and of the proud blood — that'll stand up to any man at home and swear that when our fallen chief came back with his orders for the battle he complained of them sorely, but he said, " No better could he get," and when he lay down in his blanket his head was full of trouble that was coming on him — he not being able to learn what he needed to know against the morrow. ' ' THE TRANSPORT SERVICE Splash ! A puffing, spluttering sound follows, accompanied by fer- vent criticism on South Africa generally. It is a trooper who has strayed a bit. His horse has fallen into a donga with about five feet of water in it. He scrambles out dragging his horse after him. He expresses his disgust in eloquent and forcible, but not parliamentary language. Our Mark Tapley friend here shines. He addresses remarks to the section generally about " some blokes as thinks they can get to Bloemfontein <|uicker by swimming. " The victim of the accident gives the delicate humorist one or two vitriolic words in reply. The rain comes down with increased force, the inky blackness seems to get even more inky. The bullocks cannot do any more work. The noble beasts have been gallantly striving to pull their loads thiough the clinging slush, but there is a limit even to the patience of a bullock. In vain the Kaffirs cruelly lash their teams. A halt has to be ordered, and a laager is formed for the rest of the night. If there is one thing in campaigning that damps a man's military ardor more than another it is bivouacking in the pouring rain on an empty stomach. He feels absolutely miserable. These men not on dutj' try to get as comfortable as possible. Some creep under the wagon tarpaulins, wagons loaded with fodder being especially sought after. Here some perservering individual has managed to ignite a fire under a wagon, (there are wooden articles subsequently missing). Round the fire are crouched 20 or 30 shivering mortals wrapped in their blankets, their wan, drawn, bearded faces showing the effects of this terrible game of war. The rain continues falling with a swishing noise, the cold night wind cuts through the wet khaki and chills one to the bone, but no inclemency of the weather can ward off the sleep so sorely needed by the troops on the convoy. Under ever)- wagon are sleeping forms snatching an hour or 136 FOR THE FLAG two of blissful forgetfulness 'midst the misery of seven months. Lying in mud, or washed by tiny rivulets it is all the Sdme. They are dead tired, and they sleep regardless of thunder, lightning, cold and rain. What are they dreaming of as they lie there ? Of home, perhaps; of the part- ing from all that made home home. But the reprieve sleep gives them can endurt but a little while with 40,000 men to feed at the further end of the endless veldt Towards dawn the storm abates and the advance is ordered. The troops, chilled and stiflF, mechanically repeat the process of the night before, and once more the convoy proceeds on its way o'er the pathless veldt. With the exception of a short halt for breakfast, con- sisting of a biscuit, a pint (or less) of coffee, the march is continued until about 10 a. m. when the convoy halts for the day, and the bullocks are turned out to grass. The above sketch is a true representation of an ordinary day's work in rough weather in the transport service, There is also a great danger of attack. Apart from this consideration, however, there is no more trying work on active service. Morals and physique are tested to the utmost, and there is no greater test of soldierl3' qualities of man. " Disease and Boer bullets have played havoc with the small band of newspaper correspondents who voluntarily remained in Ladysmith. Stevens, of the Daily Mail; Mitchell, of the Standard, and Stabb, of the Times of India, died of fever in one week. Stabb had attached himself to the Naval Brigade, and had fought magnificently. Ferrand of the Transvaal I