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Title: The Siege of Kimberley
Author: T. Phelan
Release Date: October 18, 2004 [EBook #13777]
Language: English
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THE SIEGE OF KIMBERLEY
Its Humorous and Social Side
ANGLO-BOER WAR (1899-1902)
EIGHTEEN WEEKS IN EIGHTEEN
CHAPTERS
BY T. PHELAN
DUBLIN M.H. GILL & SON, LTD. 1913
Contents
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Introduction
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Chapter I Week ending 21st October, 1899
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Chapter II Week ending 28th October, 1899
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Chapter III Week ending 4th November, 1899
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Chapter IV Week ending 11th November, 1899
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Chapter V Week ending 18th November, 1899
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Chapter VI Week ending 25th November, 1899
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Chapter VII Week ending 2nd December, 1899
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Chapter VIII Week ending 9th December, 1899
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Chapter IX Week ending 16th December, 1899
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Chapter X Week ending 23rd December, 1899
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Chapter XI Week ending 30th December, 1899
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Chapter XII Week ending 6th January, 1900
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Chapter XIII Week ending 13th January, 1900
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Chapter XIV Week ending 20th January, 1900
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Chapter XV Week ending 27th January, 1900
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Chapter XVI Week ending 3rd February, 1900
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Chapter XVII Week ending 10th February, 1900
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Chapter XVIII Week ending 17th February, 1900
INTRODUCTION
The famous Ultimatum had gone forth
to the world. War had come at last. We, in Kimberley, were in
for it—though happily unconscious of our destiny until it was
revealed by the gradations of time. Nothing awful was
anticipated. The future was veiled. The knowledge of what was
to come was brought home to us by a gradual process that kept
us permanently sane. Dull Kimberley was to be enlivened in a
manner that made us wish it were dull again. We felt it from
the first—the sense of imprisonment—the deprivation of
liberty. But that was all, we thought—all that we should be
called to endure. Nobody could leave Kimberley for a little
while; it was awkward, certainly; but nothing more. How long
would the Siege last? "About a week" was a favoured illusion;
until reflective minds put our period of probation at a
fortnight. But the higher critics shook their heads, and
added—another seven days. Three weeks was made the maximum by
general, dogmatic consent. Nobody ventured beyond it; in fact,
nobody dared to. Suspicion would be apt to fall upon the man
who suggested a month. Feeling ran high, and as we all felt
the limits of our confinement narrow enough already, we
entertained no wish to have them made narrower still, by
knocking our heads against the stone walls of the gaol. Not
then. There came a time, alas! when we reflected with a sigh
upon the probability of our rations being more regular and
assured if we broke a window, or the law in some way, and gave
ourselves up. For the nonce, however, three weeks would pass,
and with them all our woes. The idea of eighteen weeks
occurred to nobody; it would have been too farcical, too
puerile. That starvation must have killed us long ere the
period had fled, would have been our axiom, if it were
pertinent to the issue, when the 'pros' and 'cons' of the
situation were being eagerly discussed on the opening days of
a Siege that was to send the fame of the Diamond City farther
than ever did its diamonds. A few weeks would terminate the
trouble; and if, in the interim, we ran short of trifles, like
salt or pepper, well—we would bear it for sake of the Flag.
Kimberley is a British stronghold, with a loyal population
imbued with a fine sense of the invincibility of the British
army. Many people were surprised to find that they could
descant sincerely and patriotically upon the might and glories
of the Empire. Even the Irish Nationalist seemed to feel that
it took a nation upon whose territory the sun itself could not
set to subjugate his native land; and he was moved to remind
his Anglo-Saxon mates that the absent-minded beggars of the
Emerald Isle had contributed to the promotion of daytime all
night.
The Diamond City was in certain
respects well adapted to withstand a siege. The old residents
delighted to call it a city. Newcomers, who had Continental
ideas on the subject, inclined to think the term a misnomer,
and a reflection upon Europe and America. But although its
buildings were not high, nor its houses very majestic,
Kimberley was a rich place, and a large place, with a good
white population and a better coloured one. It had its
theatre, and it had its Mayor. Arrogant greenhorns were soon
made to cease winking when we talked of the "city"; for
Kimberley was a city (after a fashion), and the most
important centre in the Cape Colony. The young Uitlander (just
out) who described it as "a funny place, dear mother; all the
houses are made of tin, and all the dogs are called 'voet
sak,'" was more cynical than truthful.
The numerous debris heaps
surrounding the city made excellent fortifications, and it was
not surprising that the Boers put, and kept, on view the
better part of their valour only, when from their own
well-chosen positions they looked across at our clay Kopjes.
To have attacked or taken Kimberley, they would have been
obliged to traverse a flat, open country; and they have an
intelligent antipathy to rash tactics of that sort, when
fighting a foe numerically stronger than themselves. They were
reputed to believe that Providence was on their side; it was
even stated that their ardour to "rush" Kimberley knew no
bounds, until it was cooled by the restraining influence of
General Cronje. That astute leader, though fully cognisant of
the virtues of his people, had a respect for "big battalions,"
and thought that the virtue designated patience would best
meet the necessities of the situation. Accordingly, he and his
army, well primed with coffee, lay entrenched around
Kimberley, in the fond hope of starving us into submission.
Artillery of heavy calibre was utilised to enliven the
process—with what result the world knows.
And how were we prepared to meet
the attentions of this well-equipped and watchful enemy? We
had a few seven-pound guns capable of hurling walnuts that
cracked thousands of yards short of the Boer positions; and a
Maxim or two, respected by the enemy, but easily steered clear
of. Of what avail were these against the potent engines of
destruction on the other side? And as for men; with great
difficulty, and by dint of much pressure, the authorities had
been persuaded to send us five hundred (of the North
Lancashire Regiment, and Royal Engineers) under command of
Colonel Kekewich (who constituted himself Czar, in the name of
the Queen)—a small total with which to defend a city—"a large,
straggling city, thirteen miles in circumference," as Lord
Roberts subsequently observed, that he could hardly have
thought it possible to defend so long and so successfully with
the forces at our command, that is to say, with five thousand
men; for such was the strength of the garrison when the shop
boys, the clerks, the merchants, and the artisans had stepped
into the gap with their rifles.
In anticipation of trouble, a Town
Guard had already been formed when the Federal forces invaded
the Cape. The noisy and discordant hooters of the mines were
to signal the approach of the foe, and to intimate to the
members of the Guard that they were to proceed to the redoubts
of their respective Sections to prepare a greeting. Over at
the Sanatorium, facing the suburb of Beaconsfield, the
movements of the enemy were being closely watched. A conning
tower soared high above the De Beers mine, from which coign of
vantage a keen eye swept the horizon for signs of their
advance. At the Reservoir, a look-out was on the qui vive.
The Infantry were encamped in a central position, ready for
instant despatch to wherever their services might be needed
most. The Kimberley Regiment of Volunteers had turned out—to a
man—for Active Service. War was certain; its dogs, indeed,
were already loosed. The Boers, by way of preliminary, had
been cutting telegraph wires, tearing up rails, blowing up
culverts, and had taken possession of an armoured train at
Kraaipan. Our defences were being strengthened on all sides.
The enemy appeared to be massing in the vicinity of Scholtz's
Nek. Such was the condition of things on the fourteenth of
October (1899). Next day (Sunday) the siege of Kimberley had
begun.
THE
SIEGE OF KIMBERLEY
ITS HUMOROUS AND
SOCIAL SIDE
Chapter I
Week ending 21st
October, 1899
The news relative to the tearing up
of the railway line, and the cutting of the telegraph wires at
Spytfontein, spread fast and freely on Sunday morning. Rather
by good luck than good management there happened to be an
armoured train lying at the railway station, and into it, with
a promptitude that augured well for his popularity, the
Colonel ordered a number of his men. The train had not
proceeded far when it was discovered that the rails had been
displaced at points nearer home than Spytfontein. They were
soon relaid, however, by the Royal Engineers, and the train in
due course reached its destination. A number of residents in
the neighbourhood were taken on board for conveyance to the
beleagured city. These included the local stationmaster, whose
services were not likely to be in demand for some weeks,—three
as we conceived it. It shortly became evident that there were
Boers in the vicinity who had been watching the progress of
operations, and had deemed it prudent to sing dumb until the
train made a move for Tiome. They then opened fire and hurled
several shells at it; but though a carriage was struck by the
fragments, no serious damage resulted. In appreciation of the
compliment, the invisible soldiers sent back a disconcerting
volley, which led, as excess of gratitude often does, to some
confusion. It proved, indeed, to be a kindness that killed one
burgher and wounded half-a-dozen. The armoured train steamed
back to Kimberley in triumph.
Meanwhile the excitement in town
was great. The situation, in all its bearings, was being
eagerly discussed by gesticulating groups of men and women.
Intelligence arrived that the enemy had cut off our water
supply; and the public were commanded to use what remained in
the reservoir with circumspection, and for domestic purposes
only. The public became duly alarmed, and just retained
sufficient presence of mind to take a drought by the forelock,
by filling their buckets, crocks, and cooking utensils with
water. It was one of many little contingencies that had not
been bargained for; the idea of water evaporating while there
was yet tea to brew with it was both ridiculous and appalling.
But there was not much danger of such a calamity; the
reservoir was yet half full, and when it was empty, ways and
means could be devised—with the permission of De Beers—to fill
the tea-pots. The ladies were reassured.
Huge posters, proclaiming Martial
Law, adorned the dead walls, and were being eagerly scanned by
the populace. The publicans of the town had been noting events
with the composure of men who had already made their "piles";
but they were, nevertheless, smitten with sudden fury when
they read that all bars and canteens were to be shuttered each
evening at nine o'clock. They showered anathema upon the
Colonel, and gave expression to opinions of his administrative
capacity which were at variance with the views of people
outside the "trade." Pedestrians were warned against walking
out before six in the morning, or after nine in
the evening—under pain of a heavy penalty. All persons not
enrolled in the defence forces, the proclamation went on to
say, were to deliver up whatever arms and ammunition they
possessed. This was an article of much significance and
importance. We had in our midst a number of people, enjoying
the rights and privileges of British subjects, whose
"loyalty," in the minds of the authorities, was an uncertain
quantity. Their sympathy with the Boers was natural enough;
but it was at the same time too deep—in the eyes of Martial
Lawyers—to be compatible with the duty due to the Queen. A
house to house visit was inaugurated by the police—the sequel
to which was the lodgment of some twenty persons within the
solid masonry of the gaol. The most prominent of the prisoners
was one employed as a guard in the mines. De Beers had always
been credited with a desire to observe strict impartiality in
their choice of servants, and the prisoner had hit upon a
curious way of demonstrating his appreciation of such a
policy. Ever since they had learned to handle an assegai the
pugnacious natives shut up in the compounds had been spoiling
for a fight; and, having heard of the Ultimatum, they were
just then particularly restless, and keen on expediting a
Waterloo. The obliging guard had thrown open the gates to
gratify the "niggers"—on condition that British heads only
were to be hit! The natives itched to hit somebody, and could
not afford to let slip so good a chance by dilly-dallying over
details. They agreed to the terms; but were fortunately herded
together again before they could strike a blow. It may have
been only a slip of the tongue on the guard's part; but the
canons of martial law held such "slips" to be unpardonable.
The one in question lost a man his liberty for two years, and
his billet for ever.
The public were enjoined to hold no
communication with the enemy, and to give them no direct nor
indirect assistance. Finally, the proclamation informed us, a
Court of Summary Jurisdiction had been established, armed with
power and authority to hang traitors until they were dead; to
confiscate their property; to lash them (when they escaped
death); and even to deal severely with Imperial persons who
failed to comply with the various regulations set forth in the
plain English of one who had the advantage of being only a
Martial lawyer.
It was not until eleven
o'clock—during the hours of Divine Service—that the hundred
thousand ears adorning the anatomy of the human population
were first shocked by the horrisonous banshee wail of the
hooters. The music was awe-inspiring, and ineffably weird. It
seemed to portend the cries of the dying; and it was small
wonder that the people subsequently endeavoured—as they did
successfully—to have a more tuneful instrument employed. The
immediate effect of the alarm was to send members of the Town
Guard running from their respective homes and churches to the
Town Hall, and thence, in orderly squads of four, with grim
and stern faces, to the redoubts. Non-combatants, in
compliance with the proclamation, went reluctantly to their
houses. Tram-loads of scared women and nonchalant babies were
hurried in from Beaconsfield. The streets were soon deserted.
There was no panic; but many a poor woman felt that the life
of a husband, a father, a lover, or a brother was in jeopardy,
and many a fervent prayer went up to heaven.
The battle, however, did not begin.
Large commandoes of Boers had been seen hovering about, and by
boastful display had given us the impression that they
purposed attacking the city. It was merely display; the wily
Boer did not yet mean business. He eventually betook himself
to coffee as a more profitable way of spending the afternoon.
Late in the evening the Town Guard entertained some similar
ideas with respect to tea, and were permitted to go home and
drink it there.
Next morning, the armoured train
was out early; but the Boers discreetly connived at its
effrontery—having, doubtless, still in their minds unpleasant
recollections of its volley-firing. At Modder river, twenty
miles away, the enemy, it was said, were making prisoners of
inoffensive persons, and blowing up the bridge. Bridges seem
to have been their pet aversions everywhere. At Slipklip one
was blown sky-high; and artistic skill was displayed in the
picturesque wreck that was made of Windsorton Road Station.
The town, preparing for anything
that might happen, presented a scene of bustle and confusion.
What with strengthening and extending the defence works,
levelling native locations (which might possibly prove
advantageous to the Boers as a cover), and finding new homes
for the evicted, Kimberley looked a stirring place—though
train and telegraph services were suspended.
The ranks of the Town Guard were
being augmented daily; fresh men were coming up in batches to
be "sworn in." There was no medical examination, nor any such
bother. Anybody in trousers was eligible for a hat, a
bandolier, and a rifle; and lads in their teens affected
one-and-twenty with the sang froid of one-and-forty.
Camp life, and, mayhap, a little fighting, would be a
novelty—for three weeks. Certain employers were at first
disposed to keep their employees exclusively to the work they
engaged them to perform; but the most obtuse among the
captains of industry were soon made to realise that such an
attitude, if persisted in, would scarcely pay. This truth was
brought home to them so forcibly that they forthwith developed
the fighting spirit, and became the most blood-thirsty
entities in, the service of the Queen. All were needed, and
When afterwards a merchant found himself "officered" by his
factotum, he enjoyed (after a fleeting spasm); the humour
of the revolution as much as anybody.
The manner in which the drills were
muddled through at the beginning was primitive and amusing.
The agony depicted on the faces of the "raw"; the hauteur
of the seasoned campaigner; the blunders of the clerks; the
leggings of the lieutenants: made spectators risk martial law
and laugh in the face of it. Ever and anon, the butt of a
rifle would come in contact with some head other than that of
him who carried the gun, and the victim—not the
assailant—would be sharply reprimanded for omitting to "stand
at ease." The marching and the turning movements were comical,
too; but practice did much to make perfect the amateur
soldiers in mufti. They, naturally, desired a little target
practice. With many of them experience in the use of arms had
been limited to a snowball, a pop-gun, or a bird-sling; and
they were not only dubious of their marksmanship, but fearful
that their rifles in the rough and tumble of war's realities
would "kick" to pieces their 'prentice shoulders. The
authorities, however, could not allow ammunition to be wasted;
it might all be needed for actual warfare. This only tended to
make the men anxious to try conclusions with the Boers—or,
better still, the foreign officers who, it was supposed,
directed operations "from behind, when there was any
fighting," like the Duke of Plaza Tora in the play.
The De Beers Corporation continued
with untiring energy to do what in them lay for the further
protection of the town, and on Monday offered to provide the
military with a thousand horses. The offer was gladly
accepted. It was decided to form a mounted corps of men who
could ride well and shoot straight. We had a good few denizens
of the Rand in our midst, and there was no difficulty in
finding men proficient in both accomplishments to place on the
backs of the horses. There came into being, accordingly, the
famous Kimberley Light Horse—a corps destined to play an
heroic, a tragic part in defence of the Diamond City. To the
refugee the pay was convenient, the work bracing and
congenial, and the prospect of "potting a Boer" not at all
bad. With the Light Horse were soon to be associated some
hundreds of the Cape Police (who came in from Fourteen
Streams); and the combined forces inflicted considerable
damage, and were a perennial source of irritation to the enemy
all through. De Beers came out strong in another direction by
heading the list of subscriptions to a Refugee fund which had
been opened. The amount subscribed ran up to four figures.
Much distress prevailed, and the Refugee committee set about
distributing the fund to the best advantage. The ladies came
out strong here, and gave yeomen service—scooping out flour,
meal, tea, and sugar to the needy, and in sifting and
rejecting, with rare acumen, the bogus claims of the "Heaps"
who affected humble poverty.
The Summary Commission sat for the
first time, and with a courageous disregard for the despotism
of red tape, proceeded to business. The first case called was
that of one, Pretorious, whose open and vehement condemnation
of the war, and the policy that led to it, had rendered him an
object of suspicion. A search of his house had resulted in the
discovery of a revolver and two rifles, with ammunition to
suit all three. The Proclamation had been very clear as to the
seriousness; of this offence, and the penalty it entailed. The
Court pronounced the accused guilty, and sentenced him to six
months' imprisonment. The cases of minor offenders were
postponed, and some of the prisoners awaiting trial were
released on bail. The fate of Pretorious was paraded by
mischief-makers as something which had produced a salutary
effect in the Dutch element at large. It induced them to
cultivate a remarkable reticence; but reticence is not
essentially a product of good government.
On Wednesday, the Boers—in so far
as their demeanour could be gauged from a distance—betrayed a
tendency to wax indignant with us and our determination to
fight. Large numbers of them perambulated to and fro, keeping
nicely out of rifle range. A section of the Town Guard went
out to the Intermediate Pumping Station, and sought to entice
them into battle; but they were not to be drawn. The
Beaconsfield Town Guard was afterwards deputed to try its
powers of persuasion—to no purpose. The armoured train was
finally resorted to as a decoy; but beyond eyeing it from a
distance—and if looks could smash, it would have been reduced
to small pieces—the Boers made no attempt to catch it. So far
from being lured or wheedled by us, they rather conveyed by
their wariness that green had no place in their eyes.
A copy of a Boer proclamation,
which had been wafted into Kimberley by a cynical breeze, gave
rise to much astonishment and criticism. In substance, it
presented the Transvaalers with all territory north of the
Vaal river; the Free Staters with the Cape Colony; and the
British with—the sea! The Colonel read and appreciated the
excellence of the joke, but thought it politic to give people
who lacked a sense of humour a little illumination. He,
accordingly, issued a counter-proclamation which made the
"point" of the other clear: it was not to be taken seriously.
The British element, which largely predominated, found scope
for their humour in the Boer proclamation; that the enemy
should limit his pretensions to portions of a single continent
was surprising. Punch subsequently published a cartoon
which represented President Steyn artistically painting all
territory south of the Equator a pleasing Orange hue. Oom
Paul, looking on in dismay, enquires: "Where do I come in?"
"Oh," Steyn replies airily, "there is the rest of the British
Empire."
But to return to the proclamations.
Colonel Kekewich had yet another to draft; the conduct of the
natives compelled it. Many of the aborigines were addicted to
drinking more than was good for them of a species of brandy—a
fiery concoction, with a "body" in it, called Cape Smoke. They
staggered through the streets, rolled their eyes, flourished
big sticks, and sang songs of Kafirland in a key that did not
make for harmony. So the Colonel reasoned that he might as
well write out another proclamation while he was about it, and
had pen and ink convenient. He restricted the sale of "smoke,"
and decreed that all Kafir bars and canteens were to remain
open between the hours of ten and four o'clock only. He also
provided for the imposition of heavy penalties upon all and
sundry who dared to disobey.
The bar-keepers, it need hardly be
said, were angry; it was going rather too far, they thought.
Was it the province of a military man to advocate, still less
to enforce, temperance? Had not the "black" an "equal right"
to quench his thirst? The canteen-men thought so; some of
them, indeed, were sure of it, and went so far as to defy
"despot sway," by ignoring it. They continued ministering to
the needs of the horny-handed sons of toil. But the
police—miserable time-servers—would do their duty; they
were forced to uphold the Colonel's law, and to requisition
the services of the celebrated local "trappers." The rebel
Bonifaces were thus duly indicted, arraigned before the
Summary Court, and heavily fined or deprived of their
licenses.
The death of a sergeant of the
Diamond Fields' Artillery threw a gloom over the city. He was
mourned for as one who, indirectly, had sacrificed his life in
defence of Kimberley. It was our first casualty; and made us
wonder how many more there were to be—or rather, if there were
to be any more.
Friday came, and with it came two
English prisoners who had made good their escape from the
Boers. Their story was interesting. They carried Martini-Henry
rifles, but (as they explained) given a choice in the
selection, would have chosen Mausers. Their friends, the
enemy, had presented them with the weapons—conditionally; all
they had asked in return was that the recipients should join
the Republican ranks. The Englishmen scratched their heads,
hesitated about striking a bargain, and were promptly
commandeered. They determined, however, to get the best of the
bargain at last; they escaped; and here they were in our
midst, easing their consciences with expressions of their
intention to restore the rifles to their rightful owners when
the war was over, and as much of the ammunition as possible,
on the instalment plan, while it lasted.
They had heard pitiful tales of the
straits to which we had been reduced. Imaginative natives had
assured them that there was "no more Kimberley"; the "fall" of
Mafeking, forsooth, had staggered us so much that we did not
want to fight. We were in our last gasps for a drop of water.
Terrible guns were being wheeled to the diamond fields, to
scatter it to the four winds of heaven. The diamonds were
first to be blown out of the mines, and with them the local
"imaginative" shareholders; while the Verkleur was to
be unfurled Over the City Hall. All the perishable property
was to be confiscated, and consumed as a sort of foretaste of
what was due to the proud invaders' valour. Such was the
romance dinned into the ears of our visitors. Happily, they
made allowances for Bantu palsy, and did not hesitate to
ignore it.
Saturday proved altogether
uneventful, and prolific in nothing but outrageous lies. One
item of news, however, was but too true: the good folk of
Windsorton had surrendered to the Boers. Intelligence of a
more agreeable nature followed soon after. Cronje's repulse at
Mafeking, and the British victory at Glencoe, made us hopeful
at the end of a week, the beginning of which had looked so
ominous; and nearly all things were to our satisfaction on
Saturday night when the third part of our "time" had formally
expired.
Chapter II
Week ending 28th October, 1899
After a hard and anxious week,
Sunday was indeed a day of rest. We enjoyed it because we felt
instinctively that an enemy who sincerely believed that
Providence was necessarily on his side, would leave us
unmolested on the Sabbath. We were therefore justified in
feeling a sense of immunity from stray shells and bullets. We
enjoyed the day, too, because it gave us time and opportunity
to look about us; to make a general inspection; and to
pronounce the arrangements for the city's defence
satisfactory. The volunteer forces had assumed gratifying
proportions, and their eyes were all "right." Walls and
buildings on the outskirts of the town, which might serve as a
cover for the invader—in the improbable event of his drawing
so near—or that might stand within the zone of our gun-fire,
had been ruthlessly levelled to the ground. A high barbed wire
fence surrounded the various camps, and the vigilant piquet
had orders to shoot down anybody who attempted to cross it.
Every imaginable precaution had been taken to hold the fort at
all costs. The rumour-monger had formally made his debut,
and was busy drawing upon the reservoirs of his excellent
imagination, and disseminating information gathered from a
mystic source known only to himself. He knew the exact day and
hour of the entrance into Kimberley of the British troops; he
could detail their plans to the letter, and a lot more than
anybody else (including the British troops) concerning them.
The rumour-monger became a character, a siege character, an
adventitious celebrity, destined to receive attention from a
facetious press and the tongues of men. So the day passed,
with plenty to encourage, plenty to talk and laugh about,
plenty to predict about, plenty to see and hear, and as yet,
thank goodness, plenty to eat and drink.
Early on Monday morning, a mounted
detachment, accompanied by the armoured train and two hundred
men of the Lancashire Regiment, went forth to reconnoitre. The
procession was an imposing one; at least the Boers encamped at
Scholtz's Nek appeared to think so; they made no attempt to
interfere with it, and thus debarred the procession from
interfering with them.
But meanwhile domestic concerns
were getting serious, and absorbing the minds of the people.
The grocers of Kimberley are a respectable and, in the
aggregate, a public-spirited body of citizens; they are men of
substance; most honourable; most humane, too; and, as events
were to show, most human. With fine foresight they detected in
the conflagration of patriotism which consumed the consumer, a
chance of bettering themselves. Having a constitutional right
to do it, they took this tide in their affairs at what they
(rather hastily) conceived to be its flood. Actuated by
motives of the new ("enlightened") self-interest, they had
proceeded to run up the prices of their goods by nice and easy
gradations of from ten to twenty, thence to fifty, and were
well on their way to a hundred, per cent., when a thunderbolt,
an unexpected projectile, smashed the ring. It was a pity, in
a way, for the process of welding the ring, so to speak, had
been carried out with admirable skill. Rich folk, whose
balances at the bank ran into six, and seven, figures, had
commenced operations; they were buying up supplies of all and
sundry, and hanging the expense. People with a thousand or two
were nowhere in the aristocratic rush, and they waxed
indignant; they could buy a quantity of provisions, to be
sure; but semi-millionaires could buy so much more—a shop or
two, perchance. Thus it was that the "comfortable classes"
deemed it their duty to protest. And right royally did the
common people, who had only the sweat of their brows, join in
the protest. The public, in fine, were thoroughly roused, and
denounced in unmeasured terms the conduct and the "enterprise"
of the grocers. The women were much alarmed; they collected
together in wrathful groups to enquire where the matter was to
end, and with peculiar unanimity, not to say satisfaction, to
prophesy a revolution. This bound in the cost of living
brought us nearer to a state of panic than ever did the sharp
practice of the Boer artillery. The Colonel heard of it—what
did he not hear? Deputations waited on him; his intervention
was solicited; he agreed to intervene. And then came a
splendid exhibition of the autocracy of Martial Law. We had
not yet seen all that it could do (far from it!), and it was a
pleasure, in the circumstances, to see the Colonel put his
foot down, since the step was highly approved and ratified by
the people.
Forth from Lennox Street,
accordingly, another popular proclamation was launched, A
whole page of our local newspaper was commandeered for its
insertion. By virtue of the powers reposed in him, Colonel
Kekewich fixed the prices to be charged for "necessaries,"
such as tea, sugar, coffee, meat (the butchers also had been
brushing up their Shakespeare). Goods were to be sold
practically at ordinary rates; and if any storekeeper charged
more, or affected to be "sold out" of this, that, or the
other, the Colonel was to be told, and he would talk to the
storekeeper. There followed, of course, a grand slump. The
combination of the "upper" and "lower" middle-classes was
irresistible. The Commanding-Officer's prompt action was
highly esteemed, and even those who afterwards inveighed
against him most severely (for other actions) never denied him
credit for it.
Paraffin oil is worthy of special
mention. Coal not being much in evidence in the diamond
fields—where the sun is ever shining with all its
might—paraffin was an important factor in the culinary sphere.
When, therefore, a few gentlemen formed a syndicate, to vaunt
their loyalty in a crisis by cornering all the kerosene in
town, another outcry followed. They bought all they could lay
hands on at market price (sixteen and six per case), and next
day imperturbably continued buying at twenty-five shillings.
On Tuesday the wide-awake vendors asked fifty shillings, and
were paid it cheerfully. Another sovereign was added to each
case of what remained on Wednesday, and the seventy shillings
was put down without a murmur. How much farther the bidding
would have gone will never be known, for a vicious little bird
must needs tell the Colonel all about it. That gentleman
happened to be engaged in his favourite (proclaiming) pastime;
he sat ruminating on the high price of coal, and evolving
schemes to bring wood back to its proper level. The latter
article was what the poorer classes used as fuel. The Colonel
had no scruples about dotting down a reasonable figure for
coal; but wood was new to him; he sympathised with the
woodman, yet could not spare the tree. Water (sold in casks)
had evinced propensities to bubble over, and to prevent
consequent waste it was necessary to make it simmer down to
its normal tepidity. Having settled these little difficulties,
the worried autocrat was about to affix his signature to the
magic manuscript, when the little feathered informer alighted
on his shoulder and warbled "wacht-een-beitje, what
price oil?" The Colonel had no hesitation in pouring it on
troubled waters, by making eighteen shillings the maximum
charge per case.
What the feelings of the syndicate
were is not recorded. There was only one thing certain, the
deal was not a profitable thing—for the buyers. Rumour
had it that one gentleman, "with a pigtail," had paid fifty
shillings each for two hundred cases. The story was false—rumour
is never quite right; the man wore no pigtail. A Celestial
speculator indeed he was, but he had long since discarded, if
he had ever sported, his national plait.
The afternoon brought a fight—a
fight at last. Nothing less sensational could explain the wave
of excitement that set men, women, and children struggling in
a wild scramble for the debris heaps, which commanded a view
of the match. Yes; a battle at last, was the cry on all
sides,—varied with divers witticisms apropos of the
"beans" the Boers were sure to be given. The military critic,
perched high above everybody else, held his glass to his eye,
giving expression the while to a paradoxical longing to be
"blind," etc. He criticised, candidly, the tactics displayed
by both sides—but this chapter would never be finished if I
reproduced, in their entirety, the banalities of the military
critic.
The railway line had been torn up
again, and a patrol of mounted men under the command of
Colonel Scott-Turner had been out since early morning to
superintend repairs. The repairs were soon effected, and after
the patrol had rested at Macfarlane's Farm it meandered in the
direction of Riverton. A large body of the enemy shortly
became visible to the right of Riverton, and after a little
seductive manoeuvring on the part of Turner's men, they were
drawn within range of Turner's rifles. The rifles went off; a
few Boers toppled from their horses, while the rest drew rein
and rode back at a goodly speed. Reinforcements, however, were
galloping to their assistance, and soon a lively duel was in
full swing. Colonel Kekewich, who was an interested spectator
away back on the conning tower, thought he detected a movement
on the enemy's part to surround Turner; and to frustrate this
design, he forthwith despatched a "loaded" armoured train. The
maxims (in the armoured train) came into play, and spread
confusion in the Boer ranks. Their Commandant was killed and
left behind on the field. The rifle duel was maintained with
dogged perseverance on both sides for some time afterwards. We
were not without losses—three men having been killed and
nineteen wounded. The enemy's casualties were estimated to be
thirty. Our men had conducted themselves throughout with
conspicuous courage and coolness, though many of them were
quite new to the game of war. To the Boer, too, a meed of
praise is due; for, contrary to popular tradition, he
could—and did—fight a good fight on the open veld. Turner's
force returned to the city, well satisfied with their first
brush with the enemy. The news which appeared in a special
edition of the Diamond Fields' Advertiser, relative to
the successful dash of Atkins at Elandslaagte (Natal), added
to the enthusiasm that prevailed during the evening; and made
optimists—there were no pessimists—more sanguine than ever in
regard to the speedy capitulation of the Boers.
Our men, on Thursday, patrolled in
different directions—alert for a second encounter, if the
fates were propitious. But the foe declined to oblige; he lay
low all day, presumably imbibing coffee. In the afternoon,
heavy rains, which made piquet duty none too pleasant, came
down in torrents. Tents had just been pitched at our redoubts
in the nick of time. The three men killed on Tuesday were
buried with military honours. The funeral was large—the
Colonel, his staff, and several sections of the Town Guard
marching in processional order.
Meanwhile a detachment of the Cape
Police were endeavouring, with all due prudence, to lure the
Boers into battle. But they did not succeed. It was advanced
as an explanation of this singular inactivity that the nerves
of the enemy were shattered—since Tuesday. It was rumoured,
too, that a number of our "friends" had gone off on a
recuperating pilgrimage to Windsorton and Klipdam—two villages
which had been taken without the waste of a cartridge and
placed under the Verkleur. Looting operations, it was
said, were being carried out on an extensive scale, and
property was being destroyed. Such was the local estimate of
Boer shortcomings—based on flimsy data, or no data at all. In
Kimberley, we only laughed at looting, and if the Boers
effected an entrance we had no objection to the exercise of
their talent for vandalism. We said so; because we were
profoundly confident of our collective capacity to keep them
out. Cynicism was the fashion. There was so much to say
on the great topic, and so little to read about it. The
evenings seemed so long; at half-past five, when the shops
were closed, it appeared to be much later. Nice people
exchanged visits as usual, albeit they had to be home at the
disgustingly rural hour of nine o'clock, sharp. It was amusing
sometimes to watch the abnormal strides of fat men and women,
and to see them dodging the night patrol when they had to do a
ten minutes' walk in five. The patrol was not a policeman. Oh,
dear, no; he was far more stern, and had banished his
politeness for three weeks. If at nine-fifteen you wished to
be directed to Jones Street, you would be shown the way to the
gaol instead. No explanations would be accepted, no protests
heeded, no excuses listened to; no consideration for persons,
no bank-balance however huge, would soften the inflexible
patrol. "I did not read the proclamation," would not do; you
must have heard of it. You might swear you had not, or at
the insulting sceptic, but he would neither yield nor
apologise. He was always armed with a rifle, and accompanied
by three or four men with ammunition. It was a common
experience with us to wake up during the night and list to the
same old hackneyed dialogue. "Halt!" in a voice of thunder,
"who goes there?" "A friend," would be the invariable
response, the tone, pitch, and temper of which would be
regulated by the "pass" the friend had or had not in
his pocket. "Advance, friend, and give the countersign,"
Excited families would by this time have their heads thrust
through the windows to watch the denouement.
Satisfactory explanations would generally follow the final
command; but occasionally a babel of recrimination would
ensue, and become gradually indistinct as the poor law-breaker
was hustled off to prison.
The people, for the most part, sat
on their steps, discussing the events of the day, the paucity
of news, the doings of the army, the destruction of the
Republics and the probability of its easy accomplishment by
Christmas (1899). They would break off now and then with a
reference to the activity of the searchlight. The searchlight
was of powerful calibre and shed a brilliant radiance which,
revolving, illuminated the surrounding country. Needless to
say, it shone all night; a surprise visit from the Boers was
out of the question. We felt light-hearted on Saturday, and
profoundly satisfied, that we were too intrepid for the enemy.
Our patrols kept vainly seeking to provoke a quarrel. At the
camps the "Death of Nelson," and "comic" melodies not less
doleful, were rendered with much feeling. At the hospital, the
wounded were doing well, and one man was quite himself again.
They were extremely well tended, and thanks to public
solicitude, were the recipients of countless delicacies,
including bottled cheer.
Thus two weeks were over—well over,
it was affirmed. Alas! we had another sixteen to put behind
us; but no; nonsense! what am I saying? Even the wags, and
everyone was inclined to be waggish in the first great
fortnight of faith, never put the number higher than eight,
lest their jokes should lose point or their wit its subtlety.
Chapter III
Week ending 4th November, 1899
The day of opportunity for
reflection was with us again, and since so little occasion for
action presented itself we talked about war in peace. The man
in the street—omniscient being!—discussed it threadbare on the
pavement. A man who knew the Boers was the man in the street.
He knew the British army, too, though; and was sanguine of its
ability to go one better—the shrewdness of which view was
loudly applauded. And he really did much to make morbid people
easy, and to lighten the burden of weak minds. The man in the
street was respected. It was deemed a privilege to chat on the
situation with this exalted personage, whom it took a rare and
great occasion to make.
On the Stoep, after dinner, the
history of the 'eighty-one struggle was reviewed and
punctuated with commentaries on the character of Mr.
Gladstone. The probable date of the relief column's arrival
was settled, and the consequent discomfiture of the enemy
laughed at. The talk was all of war. The children on their way
from Sunday school halted the passer-by to enquire "who goes
there"; they formed fours, stood at ease, and shouldered
sticks enthusiastically. The natives shut up in the compounds
eulogised the sword in their own jargon; they were filled with
ambition to lend an assegai in the fray, and to have a cut at
the people who treated them as children—with the sjambok!
It was remarkable the unanimity of
opinion which obtained among Kimberley men at the beginning of
the campaign with reference to the attitude of the Free State.
They were in the first place convinced that war was certain,
inevitable, unavoidable; Great Britain would enforce her
demands, and the Boers would "never" give way to them. So much
was agreed. But the idea of the Free State joining hands with
the Transvaal—to stand or fall with it—was ridiculed as a
monstrous proposition. England had no quarrel with the Free
Staters, and they were not such "thundering fools" as to pick
one with England, or to be influenced by shibboleths bearing
on the relative thicknesses of blood and water. When, however,
we learned how very much mistaken folks may be, the "villainy"
of President Steyn was—rather overstated, and the continued
independence of his country pronounced an impossibility.
This was all very well; but it
involved some inconsistency, in that we had veered round to
the belief that the Transvaal would never have faced the music
alone, and without the aid of the neighbouring State!
That is to say: war was certain from the beginning; the Free
Staters were equally certain to be neutral; but since they
were not neutral, responsibility for the war was theirs, and
theirs only. Perhaps it was; but how was the view to be
reconciled with our previous positiveness to the contrary? As
a fact, few were conscious of any weakness in their way of
laying down the law, and they (tacitly) admitted their
fallibility.
On Monday the enemy betrayed signs
of activity in the building of a redoubt opposite the Premier
Mine. This was disappointing; it looked as if the purpose was
to place a gun in the redoubt—to shy shells at the Premier. A
special edition of the Diamond Fields' Advertiser lent
colour to the assumption. The Boers, the special stated, had a
gun fixed up at Mafeking, and had actually trained it on that
town. The shells, we were assured, had not burst; but (flying)
they could hit a man in the head, we thought. Whence they (the
Boers) got the gun was a puzzle to not a few; and how they
managed to make it "speak" was beyond the comprehension of
others. "They might have another gun," these people exclaimed
in horror! They might indeed; the question soon ceased to be
one of speculation, for when a body of the Light Horse
attempted to cross the Free State border, the boom of "another
gun" was unmistakably real. Shell after shell was burled at
the Light Horse; none of them were hit, and not having
bothered bringing artillery with them, they were unable to
retaliate.
Later in the day an express rider
made his way through the Boer lines. The most interesting news
he was able to impart was summed up in the Proclamation he
carried in his pocket. It bore reference to the prohibition by
the Governor of the sale of arms and ammunition throughout the
Cape Colony. It was feared that the Africanders might buy the
goods and throw them across the border; it had been done. But
information in disproof of this was forthcoming when the story
reached us that a number of the Cape Dutch had risen in
rebellion and needed the weapons for themselves! Kimberley's
voice at once favoured the extreme penalty—death for high
treason! Even moderate men, who allowed for racial sympathies,
held that neutrality was in the circumstances the proper
attitude to assume. But the local extremist—and he was the man
of the hour—argued that the object of the rebels was to sweep
the English into the sea, and to make Africa the exclusive
privilege of the Africander. In the evening, a terrific
explosion was heard; a dynamite magazine had been blown up at
Dronfield. It was stated that some people went up along with
it; but that part of the story has yet to be verified.
All this made Wednesday an
interesting day, but the gallant Colonel had yet to crown it
with his quota. Having previously omitted to fix a charge for
meal and flour, he now brought back to their normal modesty
the prices of the two commodities. The two hardly provided
sufficient material for a proclamation, but with some
stretching they were made to do so. It was easy to discover a
disparity in the relative quantities of the two foodstuffs in
Kimberley; we had a great deal of the one, and comparatively
little of the other. Thus when Kekewich in his wisdom deemed
it prudent to take precautions, the populace did not object.
We knew in our wisdom that precautions were
superfluous, but we approved, in a general way, the principle
of prudence. The proclamation accordingly ordained that every
loaf baked in future should be three parts meal and one part
flour. The bakers were given the recipé gratis, with
instructions to sell it (the bread, not the recipé) cheaply,
namely, at three pence per loaf. Theoretically, the new loaf
was to prove a palatable change; practically, the wry
expression of countenance it evoked in the process of
mastication demonstrated the contrary. The bread was light
"khaki" in colour, and only in this respect was it
fashionable;—not too fashionable, because "Boer meal" was its
chief ingredient, and racial prejudice was strong. The
sweetness of the old-fashioned white loaf was wanting, and we
soon clamoured for its restoration. But the brazen baker would
talk of colour-blindness, and insist that yellow was white.
And when we hit upon the plan of demanding brown bread, the
fellow would argue that yellow was brown! When black was asked
for—well, we did not ask for that. But there was no option in
the matter; the Colonel's prescription had to be accepted. The
sensible course was to try to acquire a taste for it; and we
did; we succeeded—too well!—until at last we could not get
enough of the dough. The unkindest cut of all, however,
did not come until pies, pastry, and sweet cakes of all kinds
were pronounced indigestible. The refined cruelty of this
revolutionary decree was bitterly resented; not only by the
confectioners, whose shop windows were works of art, but also
by the public, who loved art. Even gouty subjects and folk
with livers protested. As for the ladies, the war on sponge
cakes almost broke their hearts. Pastry was to many of them a
staple sustenance, and conducive—besides being nice—to a, wan
complexion. Five o'clock teas lost prestige; the tarts were
gone. It was a case of Hamlet without the Prince of Denmark.
The propriety of a deputation to the Colonel, to test his
gallantry, was mooted; but the proposal, strange to say, found
no seconder. Meanwhile, he (the Colonel) was on the trail of
the butcher again. Prior to the promulgation of the
eight-penny regulation the butcher had been in his element,
charging what he liked, and liking generally a shilling. The
small people in the trade had sold their cattle to their
richer brethren who now made hay in the "ample sunshine" with
great ardour. Their prices, it is true, had been limited by
proclamation; but they still catered for the wealthy classes,
and the "greater number" suffered much in consequence. Some
people could get no meat, and when the Colonel awoke to the
situation he suddenly limited the allowance of each adult to
half-a-pound per diem. A howl of indignation followed,
and Kekewich was denounced as a "high-handed vegetarian." To
be limited to less meat in a day than a man was accustomed to
"shift" at one meal, was at once "too much" and "too little."
Even this restriction worked badly. Coaches and fours were
driven through the proclamation; the well-to-do got good
weight, and the toiler—shinbone! The system of meat
distribution was a source of trouble to the end.
Friday morning was one to live in
our memories, it brought the execrable hooters again. No
pen-picture can be drawn of their effect on the nerves; their
unearthly melody must be heard. It sounded incidental to
carnage, and wailed forth that the enemy was at last about to
grapple with us. The shops were promptly closed; employers and
employees rushed off in carts, on bicycles, or on foot to
their respective redoubts. It was admirable: the readiness,
the despatch with which every man hurried to his place. Women
and children—liable to arrest—hastened to their homes. Soon
the streets were completely deserted, save by the alert
constable who walked his 'beat'—ready wherever he saw a head
(outside a door) to crack it. All ears were strained to hear
the first shot; and the suspense was probably more poignant
than in later times when we had grown accustomed to the cry of
wolf.
But there was no first shot; the
cautious Boer had not made up his mind to beat us just yet. By
a series of elaborate movements he had affected to gird his
loins for a swoop that nothing could withstand, and adroitly
managed the while to capture some oxen and horses—the property
of our local Sanitary Conductors. When this was discovered, a
batch of mounted men were deputed to ride out and question the
legality of the proceedings. The enemy, nothing loth, opened
the arguments themselves with a pungent volley, and when our
side proceeded to reply, through a similar medium, the other
would not listen. Later in the afternoon the Light Horse went
out again, and got near enough to unlimber their guns and to
plant a few shells among the Boers who guarded the route to
the Reservoir. In this skirmish one of the Cape Police was
killed—a regrettable circumstance which brought our list of
deaths up to five.
The enemy still kept showing signs
of activity, and of resolution to make it not only impossible
to get out of Kimberley, but also unpleasant to live in it.
They brought a gun as close as they dared to the De Beers
Mine, and impudently endeavoured to shell it. They seized a
second position at Kamfers Dam, and placed a second gun there.
We had good people in Kimberley who asserted that the gentle
Boer knew not how to use a gun; that he considered it so much
lumber, an incumbrance. These were apart from the school given
to postulate that the farmers had no guns to use. No
need to say that both theories were dispelled, by sight as
well as by hearing. Much attention was devoted to Otto's
Kopje—our most exposed position—and many missiles dropped
dangerously close to it. They burst, too, though nobody was
hit. But they burst; and that was a visible fact that
astounded a host of knowing people. There was a story in
circulation about a respectable refugee from Johannesburg who,
irritated by the fallacies that passed for facts in regard to
Boer armaments and resources, always made it a point to speak
the truth on the subject. He was an Englishman, quite loyal,
and stimulated by a glass of beer was one evening in his
boarding house unfolding the facts of the case. He discoursed
fluently on the calibre and the accumulation of modern
instruments of warfare he had beheld in Pretoria with his own
eyes. His candour nettled his listeners, and on going outside
he was threatened by one with pains and penalties if he did
not curb his tongue and be careful. Another gentleman indulged
in some vigorous criticism of spies and traitors in the
abstract; while a third produced a pocket-book and took down
the name of the frank offender, with a view to having him
arrested. They went on in this strain until quite eight or ten
muscular men had formed a cordon round the transgressor. "What
did I say?" he enquired, plaintively. "You said a lot too
much," was the crushing retort. One Ajax finally removed his
coat and invited the Radical to a fistic encounter in the
garden—if he felt aggrieved. The challenge was declined, more
in sorrow than in anger, and the clamour subsided.
Contempt for the Boers, their
methods of warfare, and their resources, was so marked that
facts—traitorous things—were best left unspoken.
We had been informed that the ranks
of the enemy had been largely augmented by commandoes from the
north. Thus when on Saturday morning an alarm was raised we
expected a tug-of-war for sure. The Boers were apparently
massing for a concentrated attack on Wesselton, which was
situated a couple of miles from the city proper. The day was
particularly ugly; a dust storm blew with blinding fury. The
portion of the Town Guard on duty the previous night had just
settled down to slumber when they were obliged to jump out of
"bed" and betake themselves in hot haste to their posts. But
the Boers were only joking; they retired after an out-of-range
demonstration of pugnacity. The citizen soldiers went back to
"bed," but ere their winks had totalled forty they were again
roused by the sacred goose-cackie of the hooters and again
running to their trenches. The scenes in the streets were
pretty similar to the pictures of the day before. We waited
six hours, in expectation that "the hope which shone through
them would blossom at last." It was all in vain; the
Boers—incorrigible humourists—would not be serious, or draw
close enough to be shot at. It was suggested that the hooters
told them a march was not to be stolen on us; hence so many
postponements of the "fall" of Kimberley. The sound, the
weirdness of the hooters in itself, would keep back a braver
foe. We wanted them silenced, however, and were beginning
actually to desire a fight. All the hardships of active
service, minus its real excitement, were ours; and the
cadets of the Town Guard—who cared not whether they lived to
be one-and-twenty—were dying to fire and definitely to learn
from the "kick" of a gun whether there was really "nothing
like leather."
Other things contributed to the
eventfulness of Saturday; the Boers continued to display the
same ominous energy, digging trenches, erecting forts, and
making themselves generally comfortable—pending our submission
to the inevitable like practical men. To emphasise the wisdom
of surrender on our part, it was freely stated that the town
was to be bombarded from Kamfers Dam. There was a feeling—it
was in the air—that mischief was brewing. In obedience to a
sudden order, the women and children of Otto's Kopje and the
West End were hurried into the city for better protection.
Finally, a letter from the Boer Commandant was received by the
Colonel, the contents of which went far to justify the feeling
of anxiety which was abroad.
The Commandant was a Mr. Wessels—and
a very courteous gentleman his note proclaimed him. After some
conventional preliminaries, he commenced by suggesting how
natural it would be if the Dutch families living in Kimberley
desired to betake themselves to more congenial surroundings.
The Colonel thought it would be natural. Mr. Wessels would
take it as a favour if said families were permitted to trek.
Mr. Kekewich would gladly grant the favour; but the people
concerned could not take a natural view of the matter at all;
they decided to remain where they were. Mr. Wessels next
graciously proposed that all women and children,
irrespective of race, should be expatriated. The Colonel was
still anxious to oblige, but the women, unfortunately, were
not. They scouted the proposition. Its impertinence had
attractions, but they declined to leave. It was too
ridiculous; living in a desert as they were, with railway
communication cut off on every side. They never heard the
like! The surrender of the entire city was the final little
favour solicited by the Commandant; and lower down it was
hinted that the bombardment of Kimberley would be the painful
alternative to a refusal. Here all courtesy was brushed aside,
and Wessels was challenged to "take it—if he could."
In the evening a "special" was
published which contained a few vague assurances of the
satisfactory progress of the war in Natal; also some items
concerning Mafeking, and the philosophic pluck of
Baden-Powell. "The British troops," the special protested,
"were rapidly arriving." At the redoubts the news was
enthusiastically digested to the strains of "Rule Britannia,"
"Tommy Atkins," and kindred national ballads. The troops were
arriving, but had not yet reached Kimberley. The prophets were
false; the three weeks were over; but not so the siege. One,
two, aye, three weeks more of it distinctly stared us in the
face.
Chapter IV
Week ending 11th November, 1899
The three weeks were over, and
there was nothing to show that our inspirations in regard to
the duration of the siege might yet prove to be substantially
true. No immediate prospect of relief was observable, and our
thoughts mechanically took a gloomy turn. How sanguine we had
been, to be sure. Hardened sinners there were, of course, to
sing that fine old chorus, "I told you so!" They never did!
Nobody had ventured to tell us anything so inexplicit. The
three weeks dogma had never been questioned. It was not,
however, the detraction from our repute as prophets that
saddened us, so much as the wearing off of what was novel in
our beleagured state. It was beginning to pall a little. The
day was beautiful, and notable for an absence of dust. In the
morning, the Colonel sent out a patrol to have a look around.
He also issued some stringent regulations, affecting the
privileges and liberties of persons residing outside the
town's barriers. These good people were thenceforward obliged
to submit to the indignity of being searched, as a condition
precedent to permission to come or go like ordinary mortals.
The right to read their newspaper across the breakfast cup was
also denied them; the duty had to be performed In town, lest
the wind should blow the local journal into the hands of the
enemy and reveal—nothing at all. The position of the barrier
guard ceased to be—if it ever were—a sinecure, and he was kept
busy picking pockets, examining bills, perusing love-letters,
written in all sorts of prose, and in verse which was homely,
if not exactly Homeric.
As already pointed out, the day was
fine, and the Boers were silent; so that, recent
disappointments notwithstanding, there was little credit in
being jolly on such a Sunday. The Tapleys of the city had
accordingly no great trouble in inducing us to amuse
ourselves. The united bands of the Kimberley and Lancashire
Regiments were to give a concert in the Public Gardens; and at
four o'clock some thousands of people, arrayed in their best,
had gathered there. The Gardens were crowded; cares were
forgotten; the Boers were chaffed; while the strains of the
melodists were awaited with pleasurable anticipation. At the
psychological moment the music began. The tune was not
unfamiliar; we had heard it before—and prayed that we might
not hear it again! It was not from the bandstand the discord
was wafted; when I say, in a word, it was the hoot of the
hooters, sounding the alarm, it will be understood how far
from soothing was its spell. The exodus from the grounds was a
treat to watch; the ladies in their finery made a dash for
home, while the gentlemen rushed for their rifles with equal
despatch. The bandsmen laid aside their lutes for more deadly
instruments, and prepared themselves to give the Boer as much
music as he cared to face. It was altogether a magnificent
dissolution, rapidly accomplished. And, of course, it was as
usual, all for nothing. Wessels was a wag.
Monday morning revealed the Boer
clans foregathering in force on the south side of the city.
The citizen soldiers were quietly directed to get behind their
sandbags, while a mounted body was ordered out to anticipate
events, and, if practicable, to knock over a few of the
clansmen. But it was only bluff again. Our women folk,
although they dreaded a fracas, were particularly
impatient of this time-honoured game. During the day, a good
many shells were expended on the Premier Mine. The mines, it
may be said, were the objectives of special bombardments until
the end; but, so far, we were not inclined to think highly of
the enemy's marksmanship. The shells fell a long way short,
albeit not so short as at first; the aim was improving. Given
time, the Boer would yet hit his target; but of course he
would not get time.
Practice was resumed next morning
at an hour sufficiently preternatural to deprive us of a
portion of our legitimate sleep. We rose early in
Kimberley—long before the lark—to our credit be it sung; but
four o'clock was too far removed from breakfast time, and four
was commonly the hour chosen by the churlish Boers to commence
operations throughout the tedious months of our investment.
The whiz and the explosion were not invariably audible, but
the boom was always heard. Our "friends" rarely missed making
a noise, and, to secure proper rest, this break-of-day
penchant sent people early to bed. A big gun had been
placed by the enemy on the top of Wimbleton Ridge,
wherefrom—as our Garrison Orders grandiloquently stated—"the
strength of the fortress of Kimberley was tested." The shells
landed safely on the bare veld, and even when the dissatisfied
gunners brought their gun closer, no harm was done. Wimbleton
was three or four miles away, and we were not therefore in a
position to reciprocate the attentions we received from it.
Another assault was subsequently made on the Premier fort. Our
seven-pounders were this time able to do a bit of bowling, and
a ball was hurled at the enemy's wickets that stopped play for
the day.
There was considerable elation in
town at the non-success of the Boer as an artillerist, and the
belief was entertained that his stock of ammunition would soon
be blown to the winds. Nearly a hundred shells had been thrown
at us, without angering or damaging anyone or anything save—a
cook and his cooking-pot! The cook resided in a redoubt; his
pot had had the lid broken, and worse still, the stew it
covered driven through the bottom of the utensil, to be
incinerated in the blaze beneath; and he vowed—well, the
profanity entwined in his vow of vengeance will not admit of
its publication. The whole bombardment was a grand joke. In
the Law Courts, where the Criminal Sessions were being
conducted in the ordinary way, the lawyers waxed witty. The
witnesses responded. Even the prisoners laughed sorrowfully as
each abortive boom rang out. It was a superb joke. The judge
let fall some funny things and the jury smiled—without
prejudice. His lordship said it was a novel experience for
him, as indeed it was for all of us, who were to live and
learn that— the last laugher laughs best.
The results of the Colonel's mild
and forbearing efforts to keep the natives in check were not
satisfactory. The exuberance of the Kafirs knew no bounds;
they continued to glory in intoxication, and to "do" the
breadth of the streets, like the gay Bohemians of more
advanced civilisations. They did more; they defied authority,
and varied their pleasures with occasional bouts of
house-breaking and burglary. They appropriated such property
as they could lay hands on in the sequestered houses of the
West End, and played tug-of-war with mahogany that lacked the
merit of being portable. An epidemic of looting prevailed—and
fine sport it seemed to offer.
But Colonel Kekewich did not think
it a time for sport, and lost no time in ventilating his
thoughts on the subject. Drastic measures were adopted to
suppress the fun. Another proclamation adorned the dead
walls—decreeing that native bars and canteens were to be
closed altogether. To deal effectively with the hooligan
school stern methods were necessary, and total prohibition was
the initial step—a step highly lauded by the public in
general, and by the white topers of the city in
particular. The coloured bibbers were thus suddenly reduced to
water, and some twenty of them—caught red-handed in crime—were
lashed and sent to prison for two years. One or two got off
with a caution, and with instructions to preach to the
locations on the heinousness of hooliganism, and of the power
of Martial Law to hang "boys" for less than murder—as the next
roost-robber would learn to his cost. No remarkable curiosity
to be learned in the "Law" was afterwards manifested for some
time.
As for the aggrieved liquor people,
the Colonel's proclamation well-nigh broke their backs. Their
feelings must be left to the sympathetic imagination of the
reader. That thirty thousand of her Majesty's subjects should
be "by law forbid" to quench their thirst was incredible. That
men in the "trade" should by consequence suffer financial
loss, and have the sweat of their brows, as it were,
confiscated, was an evasion of the Constitution (superseded
though it was by Martial Law) which outraged the name of
liberty. It was a bitter pill to swallow; but it had to be
swallowed under pain of penalty for even a grimace. Some of
the patients could not let the purgative down; they
deliberately let nature take its course—the sequel to which
was the mobilisation of the Trapper Reserves for active
service. And still the slimness of the native contrived to
dodge the wiles of civilisation. With the assistance of some
Coolie shop-keepers (who acted as middlemen) he yet managed to
drink a fair share. But the middlemen, too, were hauled over
the coals. A few Indians went so far as to establish without
license little canteens of their own, thereby outraging all
law, civil and military. In such cases the canteens were
confiscated. The Summary Court had altogether a busy time, and
the Official Interpreters, Dutch, Kafir, and Indian, were
"sweated" at last.
Wednesday was quiet; so also was
Thursday, our peace being marred by neither shells nor
hooters. The hooters, indeed, were never to do it again—a
graceful concession, for which we gave thanks; their cat-calls
had been so nerve-shaking. The monotony was relieved on Friday
by some shells which came right into the city—as far as the
Post Office. They omitted to burst. The boom of a gun, which
had been wont to play havoc with the nervous, had come to be
regarded as of no consequence, a mere tap on a drum, eliciting
a nonchalant "Ah, there she goes," and nothing more.
Everybody was alive for fragments of the dead missiles;
curio-hunting was a craze, and hundreds of people were ever
ready to pounce upon the projectiles that wasted their
sweetness on the desert air. The tiniest crumb of metal was
treasured as a valuable memento. The shells fell and broke as
would a tea-pot, a brick, or an egg of the Stone Age. No
explosion followed; no fragments flew to hurt one's ribs, or
to play the dentist with one's teeth. The missiles declined to
burst.
It was natural that much
speculation should arise as to the cause of this anomalous
state of things; and there were people to doubt its being so
much due to obstinacy on the part of the shells as to
inexperience on the part of the Boers. One wiseacre held that
the missiles were antique and obsolete relics of the
'eighty-one struggle. Others questioned whether "the Boer"
then knew that shells were invented. A lot more contended that
"the Boer" was unacquainted with the mysteries of a fuse, and
knew as little about "timing" a shell as he did about
discipline. One or two suggested, tentatively, as a solution
of the puzzle, that "he had forgotten to put the powder in."
Another argued that he did not know how; while there were a
few who doubted whether "the Boer" considered powder in any
sense explosive. There was a garrulous "bore" (from somewhere
over-sea, not Holland) who advanced a still clearer
elucidation of the mystery. "What was Rhodes doing in Germany
for twelve months," he cried, "tell me that?" The relevancy of
this rather startling query was a little obscure, but somebody
replied: "He was visiting the Kaiser." This was too much for
our interlocutor; he pitied our ignorance of the world,
lamented our neglected education, and, as if our weakness in
arithmetic was peculiarly discreditable, deplored our
inability to put "two and two together."
Alarms were now nightmares of the
past, and the people could pursue their avocations undisturbed
and undistracted. There was little firing in the
afternoon—nothing more deafening than a rifle-shot. A Boer, on
sniping bent, was hit by one of our sharpshooters; three men
approached, and two only were observed to rush back with
their shields. Of what the British troops were doing we knew
nothing. Thousands of them, it was said, were congregated at
Orange River (seventy miles away), and we were curious to know
when they were to "move on"; only curious—not impatient. The
summer was yet in its infancy (as also was the siege) and our
patience was destined to be lost soon enough. Meanwhile, we
had not much cause for complaint in the matter of food. Meat,
some said, they found it hard to procure; one young lady
asserted positively that her family had had no meat for dinner
on Sunday, and that she herself had to dine off "tea." She was
the daughter of a public house, too! Just fancy the daughter
of a public house having to do with "tea" for dinner! Hers,
however, would have been a case of exceptional hardship; there
was the "half pound" for everyone who went shopping in time.
We were startled from our slumbers
at an early hour on Saturday morning by the booming of
artillery and a succession of very distinct explosions. The
shells fell broadcast, and whistled—while we sought vainly to
see them—with a disconcerting whiz above our heads. Their
contact with mother earth resulted in a loud crash; it was
hard to believe that the theorist who opined that the Boers
had "forgotten the powder" (before) was a clever fellow. They
had remembered it this time; its odour was everywhere. It was
our first real taste of a bombardment, and a nauseating taste
it proved. Men and women had a vague belief that hundreds must
be dead. Consternation reigned; and when it was reported that
a woman had been killed in Dutoitspan Road, the excitement was
at its height. The fatality sent a thrill of horror through
the people, who awaited in dread anticipation the news of
further massacres. The victim was a poor washerwoman, and the
possibilities it conjured up before the mind's eye made her
death doubly unfortunate. But, happily, no further damage to
life or limb was to be recorded. A good many houses were hit,
though not injured materially. A shell entered the Gresham
Bar, and it was surprising that so few glasses should have
been smashed; more marvellous still that the fair bar-tender
should have remained fair; she was merely frightened. As for
the proprietor, he held up fairly well. There was a hole in
his roof (I don't mean his head), but he made the price of a
decent patch in ten minutes. The men about town flocked in to
have a laugh at the mess, and were amazed to find a bottle
intact, or a bigger utensil to drink from than a "thimble"
indeed.
Feeling against the Boers grew
strong. Enquiries about the British troops, their movements,
their dilatoriness, were sternly renewed; it was reckoned time
to "clear the border." That Colonel Kekewich was angry goes
without saying; he despatched two mounted forces in opposite
directions to record a general protest. One of these, led by
Colonel Scott-Turner, rode towards Otto's Kopje. The enemy,
however, were apparently prepared for Turner; they opened fire
with a gun, and endeavoured to cut him off. In this they
failed; they drew rather too near, and so far from
intimidating the fighting Colonel, enabled him to register his
protest very forcibly. Nine Boers were shot down; three on the
British side were injured. Meanwhile the force under Major
Peakman was protesting at Carter's Farm. The enemy there made
a bold effort to silence Peakman. But a Maxim gun has a
remarkable gift of the gab; the Major had one with him, and he
let it do all the talking—with results that quickly drove the
Boers beyond the range of its Phillipics.
Notwithstanding these castigations,
or perhaps because of them, the bombardment was resumed in the
afternoon. Wesselton was assailed; a few shells also fell into
Kimberley, with no serious consequences. Silence reigned at
six o'clock. It was an exciting finalé to the week. The
morrow would be Sunday, and glad we were to hear it. And still
relief was deferred; but the troops were at Orange
River, and seventy miles, they told us, was a trifle in
darkest Africa. That they (the troops) would soon arrive did
not admit of a doubt. And then?—and then the Boer would run
away or die.
Chapter V
Week ending 18th November, 1899
Sunday again! the most popular day
of the seven; pre-eminently so since the war began. The peace
that marked an occasional week-day was the certain
accompaniment of the Sunday. The conditions of life were
normal on Sunday; its advent made us happy. Following upon the
unpleasant experiences of the previous day it was peculiarly
welcome, albeit, mayhap, the herald of troublous times. The
death of the poor washerwoman had opened up a world of
possibilities; morbid forebodings were conjured up by morbid
people, and nobody dreamt of measuring future fatalities by so
low an average as one per day. But yesterday, we were as safe
as if we were "in Piccadilly." A great man had said so—a great
man and millionaire. His name was Rhodes, Mr. Cecil Rhodes,
Chairman of the De Beers Corporation, and "no mean judge of a
situation," our newspaper stated in substantiation of his
Piccadilly peccadillo. He had come up specially for the siege,
it was said by some who, had they but half his foresight,
would have "specially" gone away for it. Well, Mr. Rhodes,
felt safe and we, too, had felt safe until the sad event of
Saturday rather neutralised the confidence inspired by the
shrewd, but human, millionaire. There was a minority, indeed,
who could not logically look for aught but ruin and disaster
as a sequence to the shock of Saturday. "Look at the narrow
escapes so many had," the minority argued. There were plenty
of stories. Legends of hairbreadth escapes were legion. They
were well told by fluent liars, by such raconteurs as talk
of prodigious things in fishing, and catch nothing but
colds. The narrow escapes were yet to come. Our wounded in the
hospital were doing well; some of them had already been
discharged. Their escapes had been narrow enough, in
all conscience; but they were not romantic; they occurred on
the field of battle.
The enemy apparently "slept it out"
on Monday. There was no firing until eight o'clock when a
beginning was made with Wesselton. A number of shells fell in
the vicinity of the mine; but, as a lady afterwards reported:
"they did not hit even a dog." Some missiles fell also on the
Bulfontein side, and were buried in the debris heaps. A more
serious assault was subsequently opened on the town itself;
for several hours shells came pouring in from Kamfers Dam and
the Lazaretto Ridge. The firing did not cease until upwards of
seventy missiles had burst in the streets. In the market
square a horse was killed—one of two attached to a Cape cart.
The other animal remained alive, very much alive, as its
kicking testified. The driver of the vehicle, a Dutchman,
received a wound in the arm. Another Dutchman, curiously
enough, was injured slightly while injudiciously exposing
himself on top of a debris heap. Happily, no more serious
casualities occurred. The Municipal Compound and the Fire
Brigade Station had to bear the brunt of the bombardment, but
the damage done was small.
Despite the real element of danger
now attending the mania, the thirst for souvenirs was
unquenchable yet, and the masses of struggling humanity that
seemed to drop from the clouds simultaneously with every
missile to be in at its dismemberment, were as fierce as and
more reckless than before in the fight for fragments.
When the shells had been wont to crumble accommodatingly, as
would |