It was at this juncture-the
Christmas-tide of 1834, and the summer-time in South
Africa-that a merry party was assembled
under the shade of umbrageous trees that crowned a
little knoll from which could be seen the blue smoke
curling from a prosperous-looking homestead in the
vale below. It was a party of settlers enjoying
their Christmas festivities in the open air.
Hans Marais and Charlie Considine were among them,
but, feeling less inclined than was their wont to join
in the hilarity of the young folks, they had sauntered
into the shrubbery and conversed sadly about the departure
of Conrad Marais and his family, and of the unsettled
state of the frontier at that time.
While they talked, an armed band of
savages had crept past them unperceived, and advanced
stealthily towards the party of revellers on the knoll.
Coming suddenly across the tracks of these savages,
Hans cast an anxious look at his companion, and said
quickly-
“Look here, Charlie-the spoor of
Kafirs! Let’s go-”
The sentence was cut short by a wild
war-cry, which was immediately followed by shouts
of men and screams of women.
Turning without another word, the
two friends ran back to the knoll at full speed, drawing
their hunting-knives, which were the only weapons
they happened to carry at the time.
On reaching the knoll a fearful scene
presented itself. The Kafirs had already killed
every man of the party-having come on them
unawares and thrown their assagais with fatal precision
from the bushes. They were completing the work
of death with shouts and yells of fierce delight.
Not a woman was to be seen. They had either been
dragged into the bushes and slain, or had sought refuge
in flight.
With a mighty shout of rage Hans and
Considine dashed into the midst of the murderers,
and two instantly fell, stabbed to the heart.
Seizing the assagais of these, they rushed through
the midst of their foes, and, as if animated by one
mind, made for the homestead below. To reach
the stables and get possession of their horses and
rifles was their object.
The savages, of whom there were about
thirty, were so taken aback by the suddenness and
success of this onset that for a few seconds they did
not pursue. Then, probably guessing the object
of the fugitives, they uttered a furious yell and
followed them down the hill. But Hans and Considine
were active as well as strong. They kept well
ahead, gained the principal house, and secured their
rifles. Then, instead of barricading the doors
and defending themselves, they ran out again and shot
the two Kafirs who first came up.
Well did the savages know the deadly
nature of the white man’s rifle, although at
that time they had not themselves become possessed
of it. When their comrades fell, and the two
white men were seen to kneel and take deliberate aim
at those who followed, the whole party scattered right
and left and took refuge in the bush.
But the friends did not fire.
These were not the days of breech-loaders.
Prudently reserving their fire, they made a rush towards
the stables, “saddled up” in a few seconds,
and, mounting, rode forth at a gallop straight back
to the blood-stained hillock. To rescue, if
possible, some of the females was their object.
Regardless of several assagais that whizzed close
to them, they galloped hither and thither among the
bushes, but without success.
“Let’s try yonder hollow,”
cried Considine, pointing as he spoke.
The words had scarce left his lips
when a host of some hundreds of Kafirs, with the shields,
assagais and feathers of savage warriors, burst out
of the hollow referred to. They had probably
been attracted by the two shots, and instantly rushed
towards the white men.
Hans Marais dismounted, kneeled to
take steadier aim, fired, and shot the foremost warrior.
Then, springing on his steed at a bound, he galloped
away, loading as he went, and closely followed by his
friend. Having reloaded, Hans pulled up and again
leapt to the ground. This time Considine, appreciating
his plan, followed his example, and both were about
to kneel and fire when they perceived by a burst of
smoke and flame that the farm-buildings had been set
on fire.
In a straight line beyond, two other
columns of dense smoke indicated the position of two
neighbouring farms, and a third column, away to the
right, and further removed from the line of the frontier,
suddenly conveyed to the mind of Hans the fact that
a general rising of the Kafirs had taken place.
Instead of firing, he rose and remounted, exclaiming-
“Home, Charlie-home!”
At the moment a shout was heard in
another direction. Turning round, they observed
a body of a dozen or so of mounted Kafirs making straight
towards them. To have killed two or four of these
would have been easy enough to first-rate shots armed
with double-barrels, but they knew that those unhurt
would continue the chase. They therefore turned
and fled in the direction of their own home.
Their steeds were good and fresh, but their pursuers
were evidently well mounted, for they did not seem
to lose ground.
In the kitchen of Conrad Marais’s
homestead Gertie stood that day, busily employed in
the construction of a plum-pudding, with which she
meant to regale Hans and Charlie on their return.
And very pretty and happy did Gertie look, with her
white apron and her dark hair looped up in careless
braids, and her face flushed with exertion, and her
pretty round arms bared to the dimpled elbows and
scarcely capable of being rendered whiter by the flour
with which they were covered.
A young Hottentot Venus of indescribable
ugliness assisted in retarding her.
“The master will be here soon,”
said Gertie, wiping the flour and pieces of dough
off her hands; “we must be quick. Is the
pot ready?”
Venus responded with a “Ja,”
and a grin which displayed a splendid casket of pearls.
Just then the clatter of hoofs was heard.
“Why, here they come already,
and in such a hurry too!” said Gertie
in surprise, untying her apron hastily.
Before the apron was untied, however,
Hans had pulled up at the door and shouted “Gertie!”
in a voice so tremendous that his wife turned pale
and came quickly to the door.
“Oh, Hans! what-”
“Come, darling, quick!”
There was no time for more.
Hans held out his hand. Gertie took it mechanically.
“Your foot on my toe. Quick!”
Gertie did as she was bid, and felt
herself swung to the saddle in front of her husband,
who held her in his strong right arm, while in the
grasp of his huge left hand he held the reins and
an assagai.
Poor Gertie had time, in that brief
moment, to note that Charlie Considine sat motionless
on his panting horse, gazing sternly towards the karroo,
and that a cloud of dust was sweeping over the plain
towards them. She guessed too surely what it
was, but said not a word, while her husband leaped
his horse through a gap in the garden wall in order
to reach the road by a short cut. Double-weighted
thus, the horse did not run so well as before.
Considine was frequently obliged to check his pace
and look back.
The stern frown on the Dutchman’s
brow had now mingled with it a slightly troubled look.
“Go on. I’ll follow
immediately,” said Considine as he reined in.
“Don’t be foolhardy,”
cried Hans, with an anxious look as he shot past.
Without replying, Considine dismounted,
knelt on a slight eminence on the plain, and deliberately
prepared to fire.
The pursuing savages observed the
act, and when within about six or seven hundred yards
began to draw rein.
Charlie Considine knew his rifle well;
although not sighted for such a range, it was capable
of carrying the distance when sufficiently elevated,
and practice had accustomed him to long-range shots.
He aimed a little above the head of the foremost
rider, fired, and killed his horse. With the
second barrel he wounded one of the Kafirs. At
the same moment he observed that his late home was
wrapped in flames, and that the cattle and sheep of
Conrad Marais, which had been left in charge of Hans,
were being driven off by the savages towards the mountains.
This was enough. Remounting,
Charlie followed his friend, and was rejoiced to find
on looking back that the Kafirs had ceased their pursuit.
“Strange,” he said on
overtaking Hans, “that they should have given
in so easily.”
“It is not fear that influences
them,” returned his friend, with deeply knitted
brows; “the reptiles know there is a pass before
us, and they will surely try to cut us off.
They know all the short cuts better than I do.
Push on!”
Urging their horses to their utmost
speed, the fugitives soon approached a more broken
country, and skirted the mountain range, through which
the pass referred to by Hans led into level ground
beyond. It was a narrow track through jungle,
which was dense in some places, open in others.
They were soon in it, riding furiously. At one
of the open spaces they caught a glimpse of a mounted
Kafir making towards a part of the pass in advance
of them. Hans pulled up at once, and looked eagerly,
anxiously round, while he pressed the light form of
Gertie tighter to his breast.
“We must fight here, Charlie,”
he said, as he made for a little mound which was crowned
with a few bushes. “If you and I were alone
we might risk forcing a passage, but-come;
they observe our intention.”
A few bounds placed them on the top
of the mound, where they took shelter among the bushes.
These were scarcely thick enough to cover the horses,
but among them was found a hole or crevice into which
Hans told his wife to creep. She had barely
found refuge in this place, when several assagais
whizzed over their heads. Sheltering themselves
behind stones, Hans and Considine looked eagerly in
the direction whence the assagais had been thrown,
and the former observed the ears of a horse just appearing
over a bush. He fired at the spot where he conjectured
the rider must be, and a yell told that he had not
missed his mark. At the same moment his companion
observed part of a Kafir’s form opposite to
him, and, firing, brought him to the ground.
Seeing this the other savages made
a rush at the mound, supposing probably that both
guns were empty. They had either forgotten about
or were ignorant of double-barrelled weapons.
Two more shots killed the two leading Kafirs, and
the rest turned to fly, but a gigantic fellow shouted
to them fiercely to come on, and at the same moment
leaped on Charlie Considine with such force that,
although the latter struck him heavily with the butt
of his rifle, he was borne to the ground. The
triumph however was momentary. Next instant Hans
Marais seized him, stabbed him in the throat, and
hurled him back among his comrades, a lifeless corpse.
Charlie, recovering himself, pointed his unloaded
gun at the savages, who recoiled, turned, and fled
back to the cover of the opposite bush.
“Now is our time,” said
Hans, dragging his wife from the place of shelter.
“Mount and make a dash before they recover.”
While speaking Hans was acting.
In another moment Gertie was in her old place, Considine
in the saddle, and the two men made a bold push for
life.
It turned out as the Dutchman had
conjectured. The Kafirs had left all parts of
the surrounding jungle to join in the assault on the
mound, and when the fugitives made a dash through
them, only a few had presence of mind to throw their
assagais, and these missed their mark. A few
bounds carried Hans and Charlie once more in advance
of their enemies, but the clatter of hoofs immediately
afterwards told that they were hotly pursued.
There is no saying how the chase might
have ended, if they had not met with a piece of good
fortune immediately afterwards. On emerging from
the other end of the pass, they almost ran into a small
patrol of Cape Mounted Rifles, who, attracted by the
shots and cries in the pass, were galloping to the
rescue.
They did not halt to ask questions,
but, with a hearty cheer and a friendly wave of the
hand from the officer in command, dashed into the
pass and met the pursuing savages in the very teeth.
Of course the latter turned and fled,
leaving, however, several of their comrades dead on
the ground.
During this early period of the war
the whole defending force of the frontier consisted
of only between seven and eight hundred men, composed
of Cape Mounted Rifles and the 75th regiment, with
a few of the Artillery and Engineers, and these had
to be broken up into numerous small companies, who
were sent here and there where succour was most needed.
With this little patrol, Hans, Gertie,
and Considine bivouacked that night, and, travelling
with them, soon afterwards reached Grahamstown.
The sight of the country as they approached
was a sad one. From all quarters, men, women,
children, vehicles, horses, cattle, and sheep, were
crowding into the town as a place of refuge.
At first the settlers nearest the eastern frontier,
taken by surprise, fled to temporary rallying-points.
These, however, had to be abandoned for stronger
places of refuge. On entering the town they found
that the greatest confusion and excitement prevailed.
The church had been set apart as an asylum for the
women and children, who had to put up, however, with
the undesirable accompaniments of fire-arms and gunpowder.
Public meetings were being held; picquets of armed
citizens were being despatched to watch the main roads.
All the houses were thronged to suffocation with
refugees-white, brown, and black.
The streets, squares, yards, gardens, and other vacant
places were crowded by night, and the surrounding
hills by day, with the flocks and herds that had been
saved from the invaders, while the lowing and bleating
of these were mingled with the sobs and wails of the
widow and fatherless.
“What misery!” exclaimed
Gertie, as she rode slowly through the crowds by the
side of her husband, mounted on a horse lent her by
one of the patrol, “Oh, how I dread to hear
the news from home!”
Gertie referred to her father’s
home, about the condition of which she knew nothing
at the time.
“Where shall we go to seek for
news?” she asked anxiously.
“To the barracks,” replied Hans.
“You need not be anxious, I
think,” said Considine; “if anything very
serious had happened, it is likely the patrol who rescued
us would have heard some account of it before leaving
Grahamstown.
“Don’t you think?”
he added, turning to Hans, “that we had better
inquire first at Dobson’s place?”
At that moment they were passing a
large store, over the door of which was a blue board
with the words “Dobson, Skyd, and Company”
emblazoned in large white letters thereon.
The store itself presented in its
windows and interior an assortment of dry goods, so
extensive and miscellaneous as to suggest the idea
of one being able to procure anything in it-from
a silk dress to a grindstone. It was an extremely
full, prosperous-looking store, and in the midst of
it were to be seen, sitting on the counters, James
and Robert Skyd, both looking bluffer and stronger
than when we last met them, though scarcely a day
older. James and Robert were the managing partners
of this prosperous firm; Dobson and John Skyd were
what the latter styled the hunting partners.
Robert Skyd had recently married a pretty Grahamstown
girl, and her little boy-then about one
year old-was, so said his father, the sleeping
partner of the firm, who had been vaguely hinted at
by the “Company” long before he was born.
Indeed, the “Company” had been prudently
inserted with special reference to what might “turn
up” in after years. At the time the firm
was formed, it had been suggested that it should be
styled Dobson, Skyd, and Sons, but as it was possible
nothing but daughters might fall to the lot of any
of them, “Company” was substituted as
being conveniently indefinite. Dobson took precedence
in the title in virtue of his having brought most capital
into the firm. He had invested his all in it-amounting
to three pounds four and nine-pence halfpenny.
John Skyd had contributed half-a-crown, which happened
to be a bad one. James brought nothing at all,
and Robert entered it a little in debt for tobacco.
The great waggon of the hunting partners,
loaded with hides, horns, and ivory, stood at the
door of the store, as Gertie and her protectors passed,
having just arrived from a successful trip into Kafirland,
and fortunately escaped the outbreak of the war.
Fastening their bridles to one of
its wheels, Hans, Gertie, and Considine entered.
The first face they saw was that of Edwin Brook,
into whose arms Gertie ran with a wild cry of joy.
“Why, Hans Marais!” cried
James Skyd, jumping off the counter and grasping his
big friend by the hand, while Robert seized that of
Considine, “where have you dropped from?-But
I need scarcely ask, for all the world seems to be
crowding into the town. Not hurt, I hope?”
he added, observing the blood which stained his friend’s
dress.
“Not in person,” answered
Hans, with a smile, returning his cordial grasp.
“And what of property!” asked Edwin Brook,
looking round.
“All gone,” returned Hans
sadly. “I rose this morning a reasonably
wealthy man-now, I am a beggar. But
tell me, what of your family, Mr Brook?”
“All saved, thank God,”
was the reply. “Junkie, dear boy, who is
the most active young fellow in the land, managed
to-Ah! here he comes, and will speak for
himself.”
As he spoke a tall strapping youth
of about fifteen entered, opened wide his laughing
blue eyes on seeing Hans, and, after a hearty greeting,
told with some hesitation that he had chanced to be
out hunting on foot in the jungles of the Great Fish
River when the Kafirs crossed the frontier, and had
managed, being a pretty good runner, to give his father
warning, so that the family had time to escape.
He did not tell, however, that he had, in
a narrow pass, kept above sixty Kafirs in check with
his own hand and gun until George Dally could run to
the house for his weapons and ammunition, and that
then the two held a hundred of them in play long enough
to permit of the whole family escaping under the care
of Scholtz.
“But,” said Edwin Brook,
who related all this with evident satisfaction, “I
am like yourself, Hans, in regard to property.
Mount Hope is a blackened ruin, the farm is laid
waste, and the cattle are over the borders.”
“And where is Mrs Brook?” asked Considine.
“In this house. Up-stairs.
Come, Gertie is getting impatient. Let us go
to see her.”
“Now, friends,” said Considine
to the brothers Skyd, who had by that time been joined
by the hunting partners, “there is a matter on
which we must consult and act without delay.”
Here he told of Conrad Marais’s
departure with the boers across the frontier, and
added that if the party was to be saved at all it must
be gone about instantly.
“You can’t go about it
to-day, Charlie,” said John Skyd, “so don’t
give way to impatience. For such a long trip
into the enemy’s country we must go well armed
and supplied.”
“I will brook no delay,”
said Considine, with flushing countenance. “If
it had not been for the necessity of bringing Gertie
here in safety, Hans and I would have set out at once
and alone on their spoor. Is it not so?”
Hans nodded assent.
“No, friends,” he said,
turning to the brothers with decision, “we must
be off at once.”
“What! without your suppers?”
exclaimed Bob Skyd; “but to be serious, it won’t
be possible to get things ready before to-morrow.
Surely that will do, if we start at daybreak.
Besides, the party with your father, Hans, is a strong
one, well able to hold out against a vastly superior
force of savages. Moreover, if you wait we shall
get up a small body of volunteers.”
Hans and Charlie were thus constrained
unwillingly to delay. At grey dawn, however,
they rode out of Grahamstown at the head of a small
party, consisting of the entire firm of Dobson and
Skyd, inclusive of Junkie, whose father granted him
permission to go. His mother silently acquiesced.
Mrs Scholtz violently protested; and when she found
that her protests were useless, she changed them into
pathetic entreaties that Junkie would on no account
whatever go to sleep in camp with wet feet.
As soon as the invasion took place,
an express had been sent to Capetown, and the able
Governor, Sir Benjamin D’Urban, took instant
and energetic measures to undo, as far as possible,
the mischief done by his predecessors. Colonel
(afterwards Sir Harry) Smith was despatched to the
frontier, and rode the distance-six hundred
miles-in six days.
Arriving in Grahamstown, he took command
with a firm hand, organised the whole male population
into a warlike garrison, built barricades across the
streets, planted cannon in commanding positions, cleared
the town of flocks and herds, which were breeding
a nuisance, sent them to the open country with a cattle
guard, and prepared not only to defend the capital,
but to carry war into the enemy’s country.
In short, he breathed into the people much of his
own energy, and soon brought order out of confusion.
The state of affairs in the colony
had indeed reached a terrible pass. From all
sides news came in of murder and pillage. The
unfortunate traders in Kafirland fared ill at that
time. One of these, Rodgers, was murdered in
the presence of his three children. A man named
Cramer was savagely butchered while driving a few
cattle along the road. Another, named Mahony,
with his wife and son-in-law, were intercepted while
trying to escape to the military post of Kafir Drift,
and Mahony was stretched a corpse at his wife’s
feet, then the son-in-law was murdered, but Mrs Mahony
escaped into the bush with two of her children and
a Hottentot female servant, and, after many hardships,
reached Grahamstown. A mounted patrol scouring
the country fell in with a farm-house where three
Dutchmen, in a thick clump of bushes, were defending
themselves against three hundred Kafirs. Of course
the latter were put to flight, and the three heroes-two
of them badly wounded- were rescued.
Nearly everywhere the settlers, outnumbered, had to
fly, and many were slain while defending their homes,
but at the little village of Salem they held their
ground gallantly. The Wesleyan chapel, mission-house,
and schoolhouse, were filled with refugees, and although
the Kafirs swooped down on it at night in large numbers
and carried off the cattle, they failed to overcome
the stout defenders. Theopolis also held out
successfully against them-and so did the
Scottish party at Baviaans River, although attacked
and harassed continually.
During an attack near the latter place
a Scottish gentleman of the Pringle race had a narrow
escape. Sandy Black was with him at the time.
Three or four Kafirs suddenly attacked them.
Mr Pringle shot one, Sandy wounded another.
A third ran forward while Pringle was loading and
threw an assagai at him. It struck him with great
force on the leathern bullet-pouch which hung at his
belt. Sandy Black took aim at the savage with
a pistol.
“Aim low, Sandy,” said Pringle, continuing
to load.
Sandy obeyed and shot the Kafir dead,
then, turning round, said anxiously-
“Are ’ee stickit, sir?”
“I’m not sure, Sandy,”
replied Pringle, putting his hand in at the waist
of his trousers, “there’s blood, I see.”
On examination it was found that the
assagai had been arrested by the strong pouch and
belt, and had only given him a trifling scratch, so
that the gallant and amiable Mr Dods Pringle lived
to fight in future Kafir wars.
In another place, near the Kat River,
thirty men were attacked by a hundred and fifty Kafirs.
The latter came on with fury, but five of the farmers
brought down seven of the enemy at the first discharge,
and thereafter poured into them so rapid and destructive
a fire that they were seized with panic, and fled,
leaving seventy-five of their number dead.
Instances of individual heroism might
be endlessly multiplied, but we think this is enough
to show the desperate nature of the struggle which
had begun.
In the course of one fortnight the
labours of fourteen years were annihilated.
Forty-four persons were murdered, 369 dwellings consumed,
261 pillaged, and 172,000 head of live-stock carried
off into Kafirland and irretrievably lost; and what
aggravated the wickedness of the invasion was the
fact that during a great part of the year the Governor
had been engaged in special negotiations for a new-and
to the Kafirs most advantageous-system
of relations, with which all the chiefs except one
had expressed themselves satisfied.
Writing on the condition of the country
Colonel Smith said: “Already are seven
thousand persons dependent on Government for the necessaries
of life. The land is filled with the lamentations
of the widow and the fatherless. The indelible
impressions already made upon myself by the horrors
of an irruption of savages upon a scattered population,
almost exclusively engaged in the peaceful occupations
of husbandry, are such as to make me look on those
I have witnessed in a service of thirty years, ten
of which in the most eventful period of war, as trifles
to what I have now witnessed, and compel me to bring
under consideration, as forcibly as I am able, the
heartrending position in which a very large portion
of the inhabitants of this frontier are at present
placed, as well as their intense anxiety respecting
their future condition.”
Sir Benjamin D’Urban, arriving
soon afterwards, constituted a Board of Relief to
meet the necessities of the distressed; and relief
committees were established in Capetown, Stellenbosch,
Graaff-Reinet, and other principal towns, while subscriptions
were collected in Mauritius, Saint Helena, and India.
Soon after the arrival of Colonel
Smith, burgher forces were collected; troops arrived
with the Governor on the scene of action, and the work
of expelling the invader was begun in earnest.
Skirmishes by small bodies of farmers and detachments
of troops took place all over the land, in which the
Dutch-African colonists and English settlers with their
descendants vied with each other, and with the regulars,
in heroic daring. Justice requires it to be
added that they had a bold enemy to deal with, for
the Kafirs were physically splendid men; full of courage
and daring, although armed only with light spears.