cheer after cheer, waving their hats to Baden-Powell
standing on the gangway. Then the train glided
past camps and piles of stores, till the last little
outpost with its wood fire was past, and on into the
lonely bush. It was dark soon, and I lay on my
back among sacks, rifles, kit-bags, etc., looking
at the stars, and wondering how long this new move
would keep me from the front. We stopped many
times, and at Hamman’s Kraal took aboard some
companies of infantry. At intervals down the
line we passed little posts of a few men, sentries
moving up and down, and a figure or two poring over
a pot on a fire. About midnight, after a rather
uneasy slumber, I woke in Pretoria. Raining.
With the patient, sheep-like passivity that the private
soldier learns, we dragged ourselves and our kit from
place to place according to successive orders.
A friendly corporal carried my kit-sack, and being
very slow on my feet, we finally got lost, and found
ourselves sitting forlornly on our belongings in the
middle of an empty, silent square outside the station
(just where we bivouacked a fortnight ago). However,
the corporal made a reconnaissance, while I smoked
philosophical cigarettes. He found the rest in
a house near by, and soon we were sitting on the floor
of a room, in a dense crowd, drinking hot milk, and
in our right minds; sick or wounded men of many regiments
talking, sleeping, smoking, sighing, and all waiting
passively. A benevolent little Scotch officer,
with a shrewd, inscrutable face, and smoking endless
cigarettes, moved quietly about, counting us reflectively,
as though we were a valuable flock of sheep.
We sat here till about 2.30 A.M., when several waggons
drove up, into which we crowded, among a jumble of
kit and things. We drove about three miles, and
were turned out at last on a road-side, where lanterns
and some red-shawled phantoms were glimmering about.
We sat in rows for some time, while officers took
our names, and sorted us into medical and surgical
classes. Then a friendly orderly shouldered my
kit and led me into this tent. Here I stripped
off everything, packed all my kit in a bundle, washed,
put on a clean suit of pyjamas, and at about 4 A.M.
was lying in this delicious bed, dead-beat, but blissfully
comfortable. Oddly, I couldn’t sleep, but
lay in a dreamy trance, smoking cigarettes, with a
beatific red-caped vision hovering about in the half
light. Dawn and the morning stir came, with fat
soft slices of fresh bread and butter and tea.
I have been reading and writing all day with every
comfort. The utter relaxation of mind and limb
is a strange sensation, after roughing it on the veldt
and being tied eternally to two horses.