With Steyn and De Wet by Philip Pienaar
page 17 of 131 (12%)
page 17 of 131 (12%)
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Half an hour further. I see the fires of a small camp twinkling in a gully to my left, and make my way thither. It is pitch dark. As I approach the camp I hear voices. It is Dutch they are speaking. Then several dim shapes loom up before me in the darkness. "Hello! What commando is this?" "Hello, is that you? By Jove, so it is! I thought I knew the voice," and dashing Chris Botha shakes my hand. "It is you, commandant! Where are those ten guns?" "Oh, that's what you're after. Sorry, but we took them early in the afternoon. Never mind, come along into camp. You'll see enough in the morning." In the camp they had six Connaught Rangers--a captain, lieutenant, and four men, about four of the lot wounded. They alone of all their regiment had managed to reach the bank of the Tugela--Bridle Drift, about two hundred yards from the trenches of the Swaziland commando. Finding no shelter in the river bank, exhausted, wounded almost to a man, they ceased firing, whereupon our men left them in peace until the end of the fight, when they were brought over and complimented upon their pluck. "I'm tired out after to-day's work," Botha said, "but there's no help for it. I must sleep in the trenches again to-night. Walk down with me, your friends down there will be glad to see you." |
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