A large body of natives were now kept
at work on the road up to the Prah. The swamps
were made passable by bundles of brushwood thrown into
them, the streams were bridged and huts erected for
the reception of the white troops. These huts
were constructed of bamboo, the beds being made of
lattice work of the same material, and were light and
cool.
On the 9th of December the Himalaya
and Tamar arrived, having on board the 23d Regiment,
a battalion of the Rifle Brigade, a battery of artillery,
and a company of engineers. On the 18th, the Surmatian
arrived with the 42d. All these ships were sent
off for a cruise, with orders to return on the 1st
of January, when the troops were to be landed.
A large number of officers arrived a few days later
to assist in the organization of the transport corps.
Colonel Wood and Major Russell were
by this time on the Prah with their native regiments.
These were formed principally of Houssas, Cossoos,
and men of other fighting Mahomedan tribes who had
been brought down the coast, together with companies
from Bonny and some of the best of the Fantis.
The rest of the Fanti forces had been disbanded, as
being utterly useless for fighting purposes, and had
been turned into carriers.
On the 26th of December Frank started
with the General’s staff for the front.
The journey to the Prah was a pleasant one. The
stations had been arranged at easy marches from each
other. At each of these, six huts for the troops,
each capable of holding seventy men, had been built,
together with some smaller huts for officers.
Great filters formed of iron tanks with sand and charcoal
at the bottom, the invention of Captain Crease, R.M.A.,
stood before the huts, with tubs at which the native
bearers could quench their thirst. Along by the
side of the road a single telegraph wire was supported
on bamboos fifteen feet long.
Passing through Assaiboo they entered
the thick bush. The giant cotton trees had now
shed their light feathery foliage, resembling that
of an acacia, and the straight, round, even trunks
looked like the skeletons of some giant or primeval
vegetation rising above the sea of foliage below.
White lilies, pink flowers of a bulbous plant, clusters
of yellow acacia blossoms, occasionally brightened
the roadside, and some of the old village clearings
were covered with a low bush bearing a yellow blossom,
and convolvuli white, buff, and pink. The second
night the party slept at Accroful, and the next day
marched through Dunquah. This was a great store
station, but the white troops were not to halt there.
It had been a large town, but the Ashantis had entirely
destroyed it, as well as every other village between
the Prah and the coast. Every fruit tree in the
clearing had also been destroyed, and at Dunquah they
had even cut down a great cotton tree which was looked
upon as a fetish by the Fantis. It had taken
them seven days’ incessant work to overthrow
this giant of the forest.
The next halting place was Yancoomassie.
When approaching Mansue the character of the forest
changed. The undergrowth disappeared and the
high trees grew thick and close. The plantain,
which furnishes an abundant supply of fruit to the
natives and had sustained the Ashanti army during
its stay south of the Prah, before abundant, extended
no further. Mansue stood, like other native villages,
on rising ground, but the heavy rains which still
fell every day and the deep swamps around rendered
it a most unhealthy station.
Beyond Mansue the forest was thick
and gloomy. There was little undergrowth, but
a perfect wilderness of climbers clustered round the
trees, twisting in a thousand fantastic windings, and
finally running down to the ground, where they took
fresh root and formed props to the dead tree their
embrace had killed. Not a flower was to be seen,
but ferns grew by the roadside in luxuriance.
Butterflies were scarce, but dragonflies darted along
like sparks of fire. The road had the advantage
of being shady and cool, but the heavy rain and traffic
had made it everywhere slippery, and in many places
inches deep in mud, while all the efforts of the engineers
and working parties had failed to overcome the swamps.
It was a relief to the party when
they emerged from the forests into the little clearings
where villages had once stood, for the gloom and quiet
of the great forest weighed upon the spirits.
The monotonous too too of the doves not
a slow dreamy cooing like that of the English variety,
but a sharp quick note repeated in endless succession alone
broke the hush. The silence, the apparently never
ending forest, the monotony of rank vegetation, the
absence of a breath of wind to rustle a leaf, were
most oppressive, and the feeling was not lessened by
the dampness and heaviness of the air, and the malarious
exhalation and smell of decaying vegetation arising
from the swamps.
Sootah was the station beyond Mansue,
beyond this Assin and Barracoo. Beyond Sootah
the odors of the forest became much more unpleasant,
for at Fazoo they passed the scene of the conflict
between Colonel Wood’s regiment and the retiring
Ashantis. In the forest beyond this were the
remains of a great camp of the enemy’s, which
extended for miles, and hence to the Prah large numbers
of Ashantis had dropped by the way or had crawled
into the forest to die, smitten by disease or rifle
balls.
There was a general feeling of pleasure
as the party emerged from the forest into the large
open camp at Prahsue. This clearing was twenty
acres in extent, and occupied an isthmus formed by
a loop of the river. The 2d West Indians were
encamped here, and huts had been erected under the
shade of some lofty trees for the naval brigade.
In the center was a great square. On one side
were the range of huts for the general and his staff.
Two sides of the square were formed by the huts for
the white troops. On the fourth was the hospital,
the huts for the brigadier and his staff, and the
post office. Upon the river bank beyond the square
were the tents of the engineers and Rait’s battery
of artillery, and the camps of Wood’s and Russell’s
regiments. The river, some seventy yards wide,
ran round three sides of the camp thirty feet below
its level.
The work which the engineers had accomplished
was little less than marvelous. Eighty miles
of road had been cut and cleared, every stream, however
insignificant, had been bridged, and attempts made
to corduroy every swamp. This would have been
no great feat through a soft wood forest with the
aid of good workmen. Here, however, the trees
were for the most part of extremely hard wood, teak
and mahogany forming the majority. The natives
had no idea of using an axe. Their only notion
of felling a tree was to squat down beside it and
give it little hacking chops with a large knife or
a sabre.
With such means and such men as these
the mere work of cutting and making the roads and
bridging the streams was enormous. But not only
was this done but the stations were all stockaded,
and huts erected for the reception of four hundred
and fifty men and officers, and immense quantities
of stores, at each post. Major Home, commanding
the engineers, was the life and soul of the work,
and to him more than any other man was the expedition
indebted for its success. He was nobly seconded
by Buckle, Bell, Mann, Cotton, Skinner, Bates and Jeykyll,
officers of his own corps, and by Hearle of the marines,
and Hare of the 22d, attached to them. Long before
daylight his men were off to their work, long after
nightfall they returned utterly exhausted to camp.
Upon the 1st of January, 1874, Sir
Garnet Wolseley, with his staff, among whom Frank
was now reckoned, reached the Prah. During the
eight days which elapsed before the white troops came
up Frank found much to amuse him. The engineers
were at work, aided by the sailors of the naval brigade,
which arrived two days after the general, in erecting
a bridge across the Prah. The sailors worked,
stripped to the waist, in the muddy water of the river,
which was about seven feet deep in the middle.
When tired of watching these he would wander into
the camp of the native regiments, and chat with the
men, whose astonishment at finding a young Englishman
able to converse in their language, for the Fanti and
Ashanti dialects differ but little, was unbounded.
Sometimes he would be sent for to headquarters to
translate to Captain Buller, the head of the intelligence
department, the statements of prisoners brought in
by the scouts, who, under Lord Gifford, had penetrated
many miles beyond the Prah.
Everywhere these found dead bodies
by the side of the road, showing the state to which
the Ashanti army was reduced in its retreat. The
prisoners brought in were unanimous in saying that
great uneasiness had been produced at Coomassie by
the news of the advance of the British to the Prah.
The king had written to Ammon Quatia, severely blaming
him for his conduct of the campaign, and for the great
loss of life among his army.
All sorts of portents were happening
at Coomassie, to the great disturbance of the mind
of the people. Some of those related singularly
resembled those said to have occurred before the capture
of Rome by the Goths. An aerolite had fallen
in the marketplace of Coomassie, and, still more strange,
a child was born which was at once able to converse
fluently. This youthful prodigy was placed in
a room by itself, with guards around it to prevent
anyone having converse with the supernatural visitant.
In the morning, however, it was gone, and in its place
was found a bundle of dead leaves. The fetish
men having been consulted declared that this signified
that Coomassie itself would disappear, and would become
nothing but a bundle of dead leaves. This had
greatly exercised the credulous there.
Two days after his arrival Frank went
down at sunset to bathe in the river. He had
just reached the bank when he heard a cry among some
white soldiers bathing there, and was just in time
to see one of them pulled under water by an alligator,
which had seized him by the leg. Frank had so
often heard what was the best thing to do that he at
once threw off his Norfolk jacket, plunged into the
stream, and swam to the spot where the eddy on the
surface showed that a struggle was going on beneath.
The water was too muddy to see far through it, but
Frank speedily came upon the alligator, and finding
its eyes, shoved his thumbs into them. In an
instant the creature relaxed his hold of his prey and
made off, and Frank, seizing the wounded man, swam
with him to shore amid the loud cheers of the sailors.
The soldier, who proved to be a marine, was insensible,
and his leg was nearly severed above the ankle.
He soon recovered consciousness, and, being carried
to the camp, his leg was amputated below the knee,
and he was soon afterwards taken down to the coast.
It had been known that there were
alligators in the river, a young one about a yard
long having been captured and tied up like a dog in
the camp, with a string round its neck. But it
was thought that the noise of building the bridge,
and the movement on the banks, would have driven them
away. After this incident bathing was for the
most part abandoned.
The affair made Frank a great favorite
in the naval brigade, and of a night he would, after
dinner, generally repair there, and sit by the great
bonfires, which the tars kept up, and listen to the
jovial choruses which they raised around them.
Two days after the arrival of Sir
Garnet, an ambassador came down from the king with
a letter, inquiring indignantly why the English had
attacked the Ashanti troops, and why they had advanced
to the Prah. An opportunity was taken to impress
him with the nature of the English arms. A Gatling
gun was placed on the river bank, and its fire directed
upon the surface, and the fountain of water which rose
as the steady stream of bullets struck its surface
astonished, and evidently filled with awe, the Ashanti
ambassador. On the following day this emissary
took his departure for Coomassie with a letter to the
king.
On the 12th the messengers returned
with an unsatisfactory answer to Sir Garnet’s
letter; they brought with them Mr. Kuhne, one of the
German missionaries. He said that it was reported
in Coomassie that twenty thousand out of the forty
thousand Ashantis who had crossed the Prah had died.
It is probable that this was exaggerated, but Mr. Kuhne
had counted two hundred and seventy-six men carrying
boxes containing the bones of chiefs and leading men.
As these would have fared better than the common herd
they would have suffered less from famine and dysentery.
The army had for the most part broken up into small
parties and gone to their villages. The wrath
of the king was great, and all the chiefs who accompanied
the army had been fined and otherwise punished.
Mr. Kuhne said that when Sir Garnet’s letter
arrived, the question of peace or war had been hotly
contested at a council. The chiefs who had been
in the late expedition were unanimous in deprecating
any further attempt to contend with the white man.
Those who had remained at home, and who knew nothing
of the white man’s arms, or white man’s
valor, were for war rather than surrender.
Mr. Kuhne was unable to form any opinion
what the final determination would be. The German
missionary had no doubt been restored as a sort of
peace offering. He was in a bad state of health,
and as his brother and his brother’s wife were
among the captives, the Ashanti monarch calculated
that anxiety for the fate of his relatives would induce
him to argue as strongly as possible in favor of peace.
Frank left the camp on the Prah some
days before the arrival of the white troops, having
moved forward with the scouts under Lord Gifford,
to whom his knowledge of the country and language proved
very valuable. The scouts did their work well.
The Ashantis were in considerable numbers, but fell
back gradually without fighting. Russell’s
regiment were in support, and they pressed forward
until they neared the foot of the Adansee Hills.
On the 16th Rait’s artillery and Wood’s
regiment were to advance with two hundred men of the
2d West Indians. The Naval Brigade, the Rifle
Brigade, the 42d, and a hundred men of the 23d would
be up on the Prah on the 17th.
News came down that fresh portents
had happened at Coomassie. The word signifies
the town under the tree, the town being so called because
its founder sat under a broad tree, surrounded by
his warriors, while he laid out the plan of the future
town. The marketplace was situated round the
tree, which became the great fetish tree of the town,
under which human sacrifices were offered. On
the 6th, the day upon which Sir Garnet sent his ultimatum
to the king, a bird of ill omen was seen to perch
upon it, and half an hour afterwards a tornado sprang
up and the fetish tree was levelled to the ground.
This caused an immense sensation in Coomassie, which
was heightened when Sir Garnet’s letter arrived,
and proved to be dated upon the day upon which the
fetish tree had fallen.
The Adansee Hills are very steep and
covered with trees, but without undergrowth.
It had been supposed that the Ashantis would make their
first stand here. Lord Gifford led the way up
with the scouts, Russell’s regiment following
behind. Frank accompanied Major Russell.
When Gifford neared the crest a priest came forward
with five or six supporters and shouted to him to
go back, for that five thousand men were waiting there
to destroy them. Gifford paused for a moment to
allow Russell with his regiment to come within supporting
distance, and then made a rush with his scouts for
the crest. It was found deserted, the priest and
his followers having fled hastily, when they found
that neither curses nor the imaginary force availed
to prevent the British from advancing.
The Adansee Hills are about six hundred
feet high. Between them and the Prah the country
was once thick with towns and villages inhabited by
the Assins. These people, however, were so harassed
by the Ashantis that they were forced to abandon their
country and settle in the British protectorate south
of the Prah.
Had the Adansee Hills been held by
European troops the position would have been extremely
strong. A hill if clear of trees is of immense
advantage to men armed with rifles and supported by
artillery, but to men armed only with guns carrying
slugs a distance of fifty yards, the advantage is
not marked, especially when, as is the case with the
Ashantis, they always fire high. The crest of
the hill was very narrow, indeed a mere saddle, with
some eight or ten yards only of level ground between
the steep descents on either side. From this point
the scouts perceived the first town in the territory
of the King of Adansee, one of the five great kings
of Ashanti. The scouts and Russell’s regiment
halted on the top of the hill, and the next morning
the scouts went out skirmishing towards Queesa.
The war drum could be heard beating in the town, but
no opposition was offered. It was not, however,
considered prudent to push beyond the foot of the
hill until more troops came up. The scouts therefore
contented themselves with keeping guard, while for
the next four days Russell’s men and the engineers
labored incessantly, as they had done all the way
from the Prah, in making the road over the hill practicable.
During this time the scouts often
pushed up close to Queesa, and reported that the soldiers
and population were fast deserting the town.
On the fifth day it was found to be totally deserted,
and Major Russell moved the headquarters of his regiment
down into it. The white officers were much surprised
with the structure of the huts of this place, which
was exactly similar to that of those of Coomassie,
with their red clay, their alcoved bed places, and
their little courts one behind the other. Major
Russell established himself in the chief’s palace,
which was exactly like the other houses except that
the alcoves were very lofty, and their roofs supported
by pillars. These, with their red paint, their
arabesque adornments, and their quaint character, gave
the courtyard the precise appearance of an Egyptian
temple.
The question whether the Ashantis
would or would not fight was still eagerly debated.
Upon the one hand it was urged that if the Ashantis
had meant to attack us they would have disputed every
foot of the passage through the woods after we had
once crossed the Prah. Had they done so it may
be confidently affirmed that we could never have got
to Coomassie. Their policy should have been to
avoid any pitched battle, but to throng the woods
on either side, continually harassing the troops on
their march, preventing the men working on the roads,
and rendering it impossible for the carriers to go
along unless protected on either side by lines of
troops. Even when unopposed it was difficult enough
to keep the carriers, who were constantly deserting,
but had they been exposed to continuous attacks there
would have been no possibility of keeping them together.
It was then a strong argument in favor
of peace that we had been permitted to advance thirty
miles into their country without a shot being fired.
Upon the other hand no messengers had been sent down
to meet us, no ambassadors had brought messages from
the king. This silence was ominous; nor were
other signs wanting. At one place a fetish, consisting
of a wooden gun and several wooden daggers all pointing
towards us, was placed in the middle of the road.
Several kids had been found buried in calabashes in
the path pierced through and through with stakes;
while a short distance outside Queesa the dead body
of a slave killed and mutilated but a few hours before
we entered it was hanging from a tree. Other
fetishes of a more common sort were to be met at every
step, lines of worsted and cotton stretched across
the road, rags hung upon bushes, and other negro trumperies
of the same kind.
Five days later the Naval Brigade,
with Wood’s regiment and Rait’s battery,
marched into Queesa, and the same afternoon the whole
marched forward to Fomana, the capital of Adansee,
situated half a mile only from Queesa. This was
a large town capable of containing some seven or eight
thousand inhabitants. The architecture was similar
to that of Queesa, but the king’s palace was
a large structure covering a considerable extent of
ground. Here were the apartments of the king
himself, of his wives, the fetish room, and the room
for execution, still smelling horribly of the blood
with which the floor and walls were sprinkled.
The first and largest court of the palace had really
an imposing effect. It was some thirty feet square
with an apartment or alcove on each side. The
roofs of these alcoves were supported by columns about
twenty-five feet high. As in all the buildings
the lower parts were of red clay, the upper of white,
all being covered with deep arabesque patterns.
Fomana was one of the most pleasant
stations which the troops had reached since leaving
the coast. It lay high above the sea, and the
temperature was considerably lower than that of the
stations south of the hills. A nice breeze sprung
up each day about noon. The nights were comparatively
free from fog, and the town itself stood upon rising
ground resembling in form an inverted saucer.
The streets were very wide, with large trees at intervals
every twenty or thirty yards along the middle of the
road.