THE BOER WAR Adventures and Letters of Richard Harding Davis | ||
LADYSMITH, March 4th, 1900.
[DEAR, DEAR MOTHER:]
Today I got the first letter I have had from you since we left home. It was such happiness to see your
The Boers outplay them in intelligence every day. The whole army is officered by one class and that the dull one. It is like the House of Peers. You would not believe the mistakes they make, the awful way in which they sacrifice the lives of officers and men. And they let the Boers escape. I watched the Boers for four hours the other day escaping after the battle of Pieters and I asked, not because I wanted them captured but just as a military proposition "Why don't you send out your cavalry and light artillery and take those wagons?" The staff officer giggled and said "They might kill us." I don't know what he meant; neither did he. However, I'm sick of it but there's nothing else to talk of. I hate all the people
I mean to cut out of this soon but don't imagine I'm in any danger. I'm taking d — -d good care to keep out of danger. No one is more determined on that than I am. Dear Mother, this is such a dull letter but you must forgive me. I was never so homesick and bored in my life. It will be better when I go out tomorrow in my green tent and leave this beastly hole. I like the tent life, and the horses and being clean. I've really starved here for four days and haven't had a clean thing on me. God bless you all and dear Nora God bless her and Chas and the Lone Fisherman.
DICK.
THE BOER WAR Adventures and Letters of Richard Harding Davis | ||