Four Months Besieged - The Story of Ladysmith by H. H. S. Pearse
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LADYSMITH INVESTED The exodus of the townsfolk--Communications threatened--Slim Piet Joubert--Espionage in the town--Neglected precautions--A truce that paid--British positions described--Big guns face to face--Boers hold the railways--French's reconnaissance--The General's flitting--A gauntlet of fire--An interrupted telegram-- Death of Lieutenant Egerton--"My cricketing days are over"--Under the enemy's guns--"A shell in my room"--Colonials in action--The sacrifice of valuable lives 15 CHAPTER IV EARLY DAYS OF THE SIEGE Moral effects of shell fire--General White appeals to Joubert-- The neutral camp--Attitude of civilians--Meeting at the Town Hall--A veteran's protest--Faith in the Union Jack--An impressive scene--Removal of sick and wounded--Through the Boer lines--How the posts were manned--Enemy mounting big guns--More about the spies--Boer war ethics--In an English garden--Throwing up defences--A gentlemanly monster--The Troglodytes--Humorous and pathetic--"Long Tom" and "Lady Anne"--Links in the chain of fire-- A round game of ordnance 30 CHAPTER V |
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