The reason for all this hurry-scurry
became plain when we learnt that De Wet, tired of
playing at hide-and-seek with the enemy on the other
side of the Vaal, had crossed over and passed by Potchefstroom
the night before. It was into the pursuing force
that we had ridden.
Reaching the laager, we found the
majority of our comrades there. Of the fate of
those who had delayed to leave the town we were ignorant.
The laager inspanned and followed De Wet, who had
just passed here, and after a few hours’ rapid
trekking caught up to him. A halt was called
for breakfast, but before the water boiled for coffee
the enemy came in sight behind us. The cattle
were rapidly driven together, oxen yoked and horses
saddled, and in about three minutes’ time we
were on the move once more. De Wet’s force
and our own combined comprised nearly three thousand
men, with six hundred waggons and carts, forming a
train that made a splendid target for the British
gunners.
There was not much difficulty in keeping
the enemy back, but still they hung on persistently,
worrying us day after day, until our horses, and even
the tougher mules, began to drop in the road, and our
men to grow weary of the saddle.
The oxen bore up best of all; we now
made the discovery that they could trot just as well
as mules, and with less effort. But even they
felt the strain.
As far as we went the road we left
behind us was littered with abandoned animals.
It was pitiful to see these dumb creatures try to drag
themselves after us, as if they too feared the pursuing
foe. But still the weary march went on, night
and day, until a numbed indifference settled over
us.
Shells fell to the right and left
unnoticed; was the apathy, not of despair, for our
faith would never let us feel that, but of sheer and
utter exhaustion.
Haggard men, sunk in slumber, beat
a mechanical tattoo on their horses’ ribs as
the gaunt animals dazedly staggered forward. And
now came the stunning news that Prinsloo, Prinsloo
with 4,000 men, had surrendered! Only one hope
sustained us the Magaliesberg. There
we would find shelter and rest.
But Clements was lying in wait for
us there, waiting for us to walk blindly into the
trap he had set. Well was it for our straggling
train that Delarey came dashing down on Clements in
the night, slaying and capturing right and left, till
the British general was glad to take refuge in entrenched
Pretoria! Else we were surely taken and the war
ended. When at last we struggled over Olifant’s
Nek, it was to find the pass held by friends, not
foes, many signs of the enemy’s occupation,
from plundered farm-houses to hundreds of biscuit tins,
strewing the ground.
Our waggons were drawn up in a line
behind the mountain, and we manned the passes, confident
in our ability to hold them. But we were too
wearied, and the enemy too persistent. On the
third day they forced the weaker of the passes, and
we were forced to fly once more. Had the British
continued their stern chase our capture were almost
certain; strange to say, with success within their
grasp, they held their hand, halted, and followed
us no further. In the retreat the Free State and
the Transvaal commandoes took different directions,
myself remaining with the latter. We marched
all night, past frowning kopjes, and camped in a thick
mimosa forest at dawn.
Here the commando decided to remain
for a while. I obtained a pass from Liebenberg
and set off alone to make my way through the dense
bush to Middelburg.
The first day I discovered De Wet’s
“meagre commando,” about a thousand men,
who had been ordered to conceal themselves here and
feed up their animals, whilst De Wet himself, with
the other half of his force, scoured the country to
within ten miles of Johannesburg.
In the evening I arrived at a mission
station, where the only whites were the missionary’s
young daughter and her youthful brother. Their
father had left for a visit shortly before the war
broke out, and had not been able to return. They
themselves had done the mission work, unaided, through
all these anxious months. And remember that at
this time the bushveld Kafirs were waging war amongst
themselves!
The next day I encountered a couple
of waggons laden with ammunition for Delarey.
The escort told me they had left Middelburg eighteen
days before. Making circuits to avoid the enemy
and taking wrong roads had delayed them.
Then it is wonderful how
news travels amongst the Kafirs I heard
that Steyn was also somewhere in the bush, on the
way to join the Transvaal Government. Fortunately
for me, I rode right into his party that evening,
just as they were starting off again. I had only
off-saddled once since sunrise, but the chance was
too good to be missed, and I joined them. The
party consisted of barely fifty men not
an extravagant escort, but sufficient, under the circumstances.
We travelled till midnight, halted
for an hour, and then forward again till sunrise,
when we crossed the Pienaar’s River. Here
we found a fair-sized commando under a general whose
name I forget, as that was the only time I ever heard
it. He was expecting an attack, the waggons were
already retreating. We halted long enough to prepare
breakfast, during which time the President shot a
few bush doves. Hardly had we finished the meal
when the rat-tat, rat-tat of small-arms showed that
the British were approaching. Then a Maxim rattled
forth amongst the rocks, and warned us that the action
had begun in earnest.
The commando kept the enemy back just
long enough to give us a decent start, and then retired.
We afterwards learnt that this British force under
Barnum-Powell, of Tarascon had been sent
out from Pretoria expressly to intercept us.
It was a close thing had the enemy been
a little smarter they might have had us. As it
was, we doubled away under cover of the bush, and
were soon out of reach.
Now followed a week of rapid trekking,
varied with a little shooting now and then at the
partridges and bright-plumaged birds that abound in
the bushveld, and once relieved by the sight of a
magnificent bush fire, a sea of roaring flame.
I must not forget our banjoist, who of nights beguiled
our careworn chief with cheery marches, quicksteps,
and comic songs. Finally we emerge upon the hoogeveld
of Middelburg, to find the town in the enemy’s
hands. We make for Roossenekal. Again the
British are before us. We turn away towards Machadodorp.
As we near the village Schalk Burger comes out to
meet us. He and Steyn speak earnestly together.
Burger is more silent, more taciturn than ever.
We push on, and reach Machadodorp, where a train is
in waiting. The station is crowded with Transvaalers,
all eager to shake their gallant Free State brethren
by the hand. The President and party enter the
carriage, the engine whistles, and the train speeds
down to Waterval Onder, where Paul Kruger and his
advisers are impatiently awaiting its arrival.