“I landed twenty carboys of
carbolic to-day, and a lot of other Hospital stores,
by talking football to a man who knows the game, chiefly
from the ball’s point of view.”
“That counts to you, Colonel,”
called out Beauvayse, the Chief’s fair, boyish
junior aide-de-camp, from the bottom of the table,
“against the awful failure you were grousing
about this morning.”
“Ah! you mean when I tried to
frighten some Sisters of Mercy into leaving the town
by painting them a luridly-coloured verbal picture
of the perils of the present situation,” said
the Colonel. His keen hazel eyes twinkled, though
his mouth was grave. “I ought to have remembered
that you can’t scare a religious, be he or she
Roman Catholic, Buddhist, or Mohammedan, by pointing
to the King of Terrors. He does to frighten lay-folk,
but for the others Death’s grisly skeleton-hand
holds out the Keys of Heaven.”
“What will it hold for some
of us others, I wonder,” said one of the dinner-guests,
a moody-looking civilian, of Semitic features, whose
evening clothes made a dull contrast with the mess-dress
of the Staff officers gathered about their Chief’s
table in his quarters at Nixey’s Hotel on the
Market Square, “before this month is out?”
The host leaned forward to reply:
“My dear Mr. Levison ... special
mention in Despatches Above, with honours and promotion
for those of us who have been approved worthy.
For others, who have tried and failed, a merciful
overlooking of blunders, a generous acceptance of
the intention where the performance came short....
And for the rest ... a grave on the yellow veld in
the shadow of a rock or thorn-bush, with the turquoise
sky of day overhead, shimmering in the white-hot sunshine;
or an ocean of purple ether, ridden by what old Lucian
called ‘the golden galley of the regnant Moon.’
That in South Africa; and at home in England, one’s
memory kept warm and living in, say, three hearts
that recognised the best in one, and loved it.
A mother’s heart, the heart of a friend and
hers!”
There was no insincerity of flattery
in the hum of applauding comment that ensued.
All earnest original thought has beauty; and this man
could not only think, but clothe his thoughts in direct
and simple language, and add to it the charm of well-modulated
and musical utterance.
“I call that good enough,”
said the senior Staff Officer, a dark, handsome, eagle-faced
Guardsman, who bore a great historic name, “for
you or me or any other fellow here we’re
not taking into account the living dead ones.”
The Chief leaned forward in his characteristic
attitude, and spoke, a long, lean brown forefinger
emphasising the sentences, his hawk-keen glance driving
them home. “I tell you, Leighbury, that
some of those, the rottenest corpses among ’em,
will shed their grave-clothes, and rise up and do
the deeds of living men before, to quote Levison, this
month is out. Never take it for granted that
a man is dead until the grass is growing high over
his bare bones, and don’t make too sure even
then! Because to-day I saw such dry bones move and
it’s an instructive if an uncanny sight.”
“Whose were the bones, Colonel?”
called out the handsome young aide at the bottom of
the table.
The host, his thin, brown fingers
busy at the clipped moustache, was listening to the
Mayor of Gueldersdorp, who sat upon his right.
He withdrew his attentive eyes from that stalwart
sportsman’s broad, ruddy countenance, to glance
smilingly at the fair, handsome face, and reply:
“Whose? Well, up to the
present they have belonged to the Dop Doctor.”
“That man!” The Mayor,
in the act of taking another slice of the roast, looked
round as at the mention of a name familiar, shrugging
his portly shoulders. “Surely you know
who the fellow is, Colonel? He drifted up here
from Cape Colony three years ago. A capable confoundedly
capable man, handicapped by a severe muscular strain,”
the Mayor’s twinkling eye heralded the resurrection
of an ancient jest “contracted in
lifting a cask of whisky a glass at a time!”
White teeth flashed in alert tanned
faces. The schoolboy laugh went round the table;
then the Babel of talk rose up again. Most of
these men were quite young ... their seniors barely
middle-aged, not a man but was what they themselves
would have termed both “fit” and “keen.”
They had wrought for many days in the erection of
sand-bag defences, in the digging of trenches, in
the drilling of Baraland Irregulars and Rifle Volunteers
and the newly-enrolled Town Guard. This was the
pleasant social time of lull before the storm, and
they were not to get many more good dinners or peaceful
nights in bed for a long siege to come. They did
not show outwardly the tension of strung nerves that
waited, as the whole world waited, for the echo of
the first shot, rattling amongst the low hills to
the south. Nor did it occur to them that there
was anything heroic or dramatic in their quiet unaffected
pose. Gathered together upon one little spot
of border earth destined to be the vital, tragic, throbbing
centre of great events and tremendous issues, actions
glorious, and deeds scarce paralleled upon the page
of History, let us look upon them, well-groomed, well-bred,
easy-mannered, cheery, demolishing the good dishes
furnished by the chef of Nixey’s Hotel,
with the hungry zest of schoolboys, exchanging fusillades
of not very brilliant chaff.
Scraps of scientific and technical
conversation with reference to telephonic and telegraphic
installations between outlying forts and headquarters,
electric communication with mines, automatic warning-apparatus,
the most effective methods of constructing bomb-proof
shelters, the comparative merits of Maxim and Nordenfeldt,
crossed in the air like fragments of bursting projectiles,
impelled by those admirable engines of destruction.
Mingled with reminiscences of cricket, golf, tennis,
polo, and motoring, then in its infancy; anecdotes
new and old, and conjectures as to what the fellows
at home were doing? Hurlingham and Ranelagh,
Maidenhead and Henley, Eton and Oxford, Sandhurst and
Aldershot, Piccadilly in the season, Simla in the
heats, the results for Kempton Park and Newmarket
Races of all these they talked, with rhino
and elephant shooting and the big battues of pheasants
now taking place in the Home Midlands and up North.
But though the watch-fires of their pickets burned
upon the veld, and though the Boer lay in laager over
the Border, of him they said not one word. That
reticence upon the vital point was characteristically
English. The excitable Gaul would have wept, kneaded
his manly bosom, and alluded to his mother; the stolid
Muscovite would have wept also, referring to his Little
Father, the Czar; the Teuton would have poured forth
oceans of turgid sentiment about the Fatherland; the
dignified Spaniard would have recognised himself as
a warrior upon the verge of a Homeric struggle, and
said so candidly; the hysterical American would have
sung “Hail, Columbia!” and waved pocket-handkerchief-sized
replicas of the Star-Spangled Banner until too exhausted
to agitate or vocalise. But to these men indulgence
in sentiment was “bad form,” and unrestrained
patriotic utterance merely “gas,” tainting
the air with an odour as of election-eggs or sulphuretted
hydrogen. Therefore were many words to be avoided.
A pose, if you will, an affectation,
this studied avoidance of all appearance of enthusiasm
or excitement; showing the weak spot in the armour
of these heroes, henceforth to be of epic fame.
But Man is essentially a weak being. It is only
when the immortal spirit of him nerves the frame of
perishable bone and muscle that he rises to heights
that are sublime. Such souls of fire burned within
these men, that when the Wind of Death blew coldest
and the lead-and-iron hail beat hardest, they only
glowed more fiercely radiant; and Want and Privation,
instead of weakening, only seemed to make them more
strong; strong to endure, strong to foresee
plots and avert perils and oppose wit to cunning, and
strategy to deceit; so strong that, by reason of their
strength, that little frontier town became a fortress
of Titans. And their names, other than those
I have given them in this story, shall go ringing down
the grooves of Time, until Time itself shall be no
more.