The Boer in Peace and War eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 57 pages of information about The Boer in Peace and War.

The Boer in Peace and War eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 57 pages of information about The Boer in Peace and War.
and everything required at the time.  All this would seem to point to a plain fact, namely, that the vrouw not only excels in physical proportions, but also in the matter of brains.  There can be no doubt about the first mentioned, and there seems to be little question about the other as well.  It is authoritatively stated that at the time of the Boer War the women were so bitter against the English that they spurred on the men to do things which they themselves deemed foolhardy.  This anti-English feeling seems to have been intensified since then, and it is often jocularly remarked by Englishmen in the country that so long as an enemy makes things square with the womenfolk they need have no fear of the men.  The women may have the reputation of knowing and doing more than the men, but they are certainly not thrifty.  They are kind to travellers (provided they come on horseback and not on foot); but their kindness is too often spoiled by the dirt and general undesirability of the atmosphere within their dwellings.  A traveller can appreciate a cup of coffee after a long ride; but he likes to have it in a clean dish, and it rather damps his ardour when he finds that he is expected to take the mud along with it.

[Illustration:  Waggon on Pontoon over River.]

In this connection there is still another story.  This story is related by a commercial traveller, and in order to establish its authenticity it is only necessary to remark that it has been related by at least six different commercial travellers, and in every case the incident has occurred within the experience of each and all.

The commercial gentleman (no matter which one) having been overtaken on the road by a severe thunderstorm, and arriving at a spruit which he found he could not then cross with safety, put back to a small farmhouse near by.  After much parley on both sides, the Boer who owned the place agreed to give the traveller and his driver shelter for the night, provided they would sleep in an outhouse, where the horses could also be put up.  Being only too glad to obtain shelter of any sort, the traveller readily accepted the offer.  At this point each traveller who has told the story breaks into a graphic description of how he passed the night, and how many rats he and the driver killed, and how much of his clothes they devoured, and how he couldn’t sleep because of the presence of pigs and fowls in addition, which seemed to resent the invasion.  Then comes the dawn of another day, and, which is more important (before its appearance), breakfast.  A cloth was spread on a box in the mud-floor dwelling, and eggs and coffee placed thereon.  The commercial was evidently expected to eat the eggs anyhow, so long as he did eat them; for there was nothing visible in the shape of a spoon.  The Boer and his vrouw did not put in an appearance at breakfast, no doubt disdaining to look upon an Englishman any more than was absolutely necessary.  He had almost concluded this rude and somewhat unsatisfactory meal when the vrouw entered.  She was fat and dirty, and her clothing had apparently been renewed from time immemorial by much mending.  She now rested her great hands on her hips, and calmly surveyed the English party and the breakfast-table for a few seconds.  Then she spoke, in Dutch; but he understood—­too well: 

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The Boer in Peace and War from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.