summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:49:15 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:49:15 -0700
commit6d0bc2f6f931512d4669e33907da654486f0e2b9 (patch)
tree0bc4089770a63d5c62e69737fa2da26765026b6d
initial commit of ebook 16600HEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--16600-8.txt6290
-rw-r--r--16600-8.zipbin0 -> 136455 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h.zipbin0 -> 1017095 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h/16600-h.htm11008
-rw-r--r--16600-h/images/image00-th.jpgbin0 -> 26536 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h/images/image00.jpgbin0 -> 95020 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h/images/image01-th.jpgbin0 -> 42837 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h/images/image01.jpgbin0 -> 87693 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h/images/image02-th.jpgbin0 -> 34642 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h/images/image02.jpgbin0 -> 90615 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h/images/image03-th.jpgbin0 -> 33641 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h/images/image03.jpgbin0 -> 86788 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h/images/image04-th.jpgbin0 -> 27721 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h/images/image04.jpgbin0 -> 66540 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h/images/image05-th.jpgbin0 -> 32748 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h/images/image05.jpgbin0 -> 82467 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h/images/image06-th.jpgbin0 -> 28008 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h/images/image06.jpgbin0 -> 71023 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h/images/image07-th.jpgbin0 -> 30252 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600-h/images/image07.jpgbin0 -> 75254 bytes
-rw-r--r--16600.txt6290
-rw-r--r--16600.zipbin0 -> 136435 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
25 files changed, 23604 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/16600-8.txt b/16600-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..64c9700
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,6290 @@
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Cecil Rhodes, by Princess Catherine Radziwill
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Cecil Rhodes
+ Man and Empire-Maker
+
+
+Author: Princess Catherine Radziwill
+
+
+
+Release Date: August 26, 2005 [eBook #16600]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CECIL RHODES***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Dainis Millers, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net/)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 16600-h.htm or 16600-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/6/6/0/16600/16600-h/16600-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/6/6/0/16600/16600-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+CECIL RHODES
+
+Man and Empire-Maker
+
+by
+
+PRINCESS CATHERINE RADZIWILL
+(CATHERINE KOLB-DANVIN)
+
+With Eight Photogravure Plates
+
+Cassell & Company, Ltd
+London, New York, Toronto and Melbourne
+
+1918
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THE RT. HON. CECIL RHODES]
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+
+ 1. CECIL RHODES AND SIR ALFRED MILNER 1
+ 2. THE FOUNDATIONS OF FORTUNE 17
+ 3. A COMPLEX PERSONALITY 28
+ 4. MRS. VAN KOOPMAN 40
+ 5. RHODES AND THE RAID 50
+ 6. THE AFTERMATH OF THE RAID 69
+ 7. RHODES AND THE AFRIKANDER BOND 82
+ 8. THE INFLUENCE OF SIR ALFRED MILNER 104
+ 9. THE OPENING OF THE NEW CENTURY 120
+ 10. AN ESTIMATE OF SIR ALFRED MILNER 130
+ 11. CROSS CURRENTS 144
+ 12. THE CONCENTRATION CAMPS 157
+ 13. THE PRISONERS' CAMPS 170
+ 14. IN FLIGHT FROM THE RAND 191
+ 15. DEALING WITH THE REFUGEES 202
+ 16. UNDER MARTIAL LAW 214
+ CONCLUSION
+ INDEX
+
+
+
+
+ LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ THE RT. HON. CECIL RHODES Frontispiece
+
+ Facing page
+
+ THE RT. HON. W.P. SCHREINER 32
+ PRESIDENT KRUGER 68
+ THE HON. J.H. HOFMEYR 86
+ THE RT. HON. SIR W.F. HELY-HUTCHINSON 98
+ VISCOUNT MILNER 132
+ THE RT. HON. SIR LEANDER STARR JAMESON 148
+ THE RT. HON. SIR JOHN GORDON SPRIGG 224
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+The recent death of Sir Starr Jameson reminded the public of the South
+African War, which was such an engrossing subject to the British public at
+the close of the 'nineties and the first years of the present century. Yet
+though it may seem quite out of date to reopen the question when so many
+more important matters occupy attention, the relationship between South
+Africa and England is no small matter. It has also had its influence on
+actual events, if only by proving to the world the talent which Great
+Britain has displayed in the administration of her vast Colonies and the
+tact with which British statesmen have contrived to convert their foes of
+the day before into friends, sincere, devoted and true.
+
+No other country in the world could have achieved such a success as did
+England in the complicated and singularly difficult task of making itself
+popular among nations whose independence it had destroyed.
+
+The secret of this wonderful performance lies principally in the care
+which England has exercised to secure the welfare of the annexed
+population, and to do nothing likely to keep them in remembrance of the
+subordinate position into which they had been reduced. England never
+crushes those whom it subdues. Its inbred talent for colonisation has
+invariably led it along the right path in regard to its colonial
+development. Even in cases where Britain made the weight of its rule
+rather heavy for the people whom it had conquered, there still developed
+among them a desire to remain federated to the British Empire, and also a
+conviction that union, though it might be unpleasant to their personal
+feelings and sympathies, was, after all, the best thing which could have
+happened to them in regard to their material interests.
+
+Prosperity has invariably attended British rule wherever it has found
+scope to develop itself, and at the present hour British patriotism is far
+more demonstrative in India, Australia or South Africa than it is in
+England itself. The sentiments thus strongly expressed impart a certain
+zealotism to their feelings, which constitutes a strong link with the
+Mother Country. In any hour of national danger or calamity this trait
+provides her with the enthusiastic help of her children from across the
+seas.
+
+The Englishman, generally quiet at home and even subdued in the presence
+of strangers, is exuberant in the Colonies; he likes to shout his
+patriotism upon every possible occasion, even when it would be better to
+refrain. It is an aggressive patriotism which sometimes is quite uncouth
+in its manifestations, but it is real patriotism, disinterested and devoid
+of any mercenary or personal motives.
+
+It is impossible to know what England is if one has not had the
+opportunity of visiting her Dominions oversea. It is just as impossible to
+judge of Englishmen when one has only seen them at home amid the comforts
+of the easy and pleasant existence which one enjoys in Merrie England, and
+only there. It is not the country Squires, whose homes are such a definite
+feature of English life; nor the aristocratic members of the Peerage, with
+their influence and their wealth; nor even the political men who sit in
+St. Stephen's, who have spread abroad the fame and might and power of
+England. But it is these modest pioneers of "nations yet to be" who, in
+the wilds and deserts of South Africa, Australia and Asia, have
+demonstrated the realities of English civilisation and the English spirit
+of freedom.
+
+In the hour of danger we have seen all these members of the great Mother
+Country rush to its help. The spectacle has been an inspiring one, and in
+the case of South Africa especially it has been unique, inasmuch as it has
+been predicted far and wide that the memory of the Boer War would never
+die out, and that loyalty to Great Britain would never be found in the
+vast African veldt. Facts have belied this rash assertion, and the world
+has seldom witnessed a more impressive vindication of the triumph of true
+Imperialism than that presented by Generals Botha and Smuts. As the leader
+of a whole nation, General Botha defended its independence against
+aggression, yet became the faithful, devoted servant and the true adherent
+of the people whom he had fought a few years before, putting at their
+disposal the weight of his powerful personality and the strength of his
+influence over his partisans and countrymen.
+ CATHERINE RADZIWILL.
+ _December, 1917._
+
+
+
+
+CECIL RHODES
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+CECIL RHODES AND SIR ALFRED MILNER
+
+
+The conquest of South Africa is one of the most curious episodes in
+English history. Begun through purely mercenary motives, it yet acquired a
+character of grandeur which, as time went on, divested it of all sordid
+and unworthy suspicions. South Africa has certainly been the land of
+adventurers, and many of them found there either fame or disgrace,
+unheard-of riches or the most abject poverty, power or humiliation. At the
+same time the Colony has had amongst its rulers statesmen of unblemished
+reputation and high honour, administrators of rare integrity, and men who
+saw beyond the fleeting interests of the hour into the far more important
+vista of the future.
+
+When President Kruger was at its head the Transvaal Republic would have
+crumbled under the intrigues of some of its own citizens. The lust for
+riches which followed upon the discovery of the goldfields had, too, a
+drastic effect. The Transvaal was bound to fall into the hands of someone,
+and to be that Someone fell to the lot of England. This was a kindly throw
+of Fate, because England alone could administer all the wealth of the
+region without its becoming a danger, not only to the community at large,
+but also to the Transvaalers.
+
+That this is so can be proved by the eloquence of facts rather than by
+words. It is sufficient to look upon what South Africa was twenty-five
+years ago, and upon what it has become since under the protection of
+British rule, to be convinced of the truth of my assertion. From a land of
+perennial unrest and perpetual strife it has been transformed into a
+prosperous and quiet colony, absorbed only in the thought of its economic
+and commercial progress. Its population, which twenty years ago was
+wasting its time and energy in useless wrangles, stands to-day united to
+the Mother Country and absorbed by the sole thought of how best to prove
+its devotion.
+
+The Boer War has still some curious issues of which no notice has been
+taken by the public at large. One of the principal, perhaps indeed the
+most important of these, is that, though brought about by material
+ambitions of certain people, it ended by being fought against these very
+same people, and that its conclusion eliminated them from public life
+instead of adding to their influence and their power. The result is
+certainly a strange and an interesting one, but it is easily explained if
+one takes into account the fact that once England as a nation--and not as
+_the_ nation to which belonged the handful of adventurers through whose
+intrigues the war was brought about--entered into the possession of the
+Transvaal and organised the long-talked-of Union of South Africa, the
+country started a normal existence free from the unhealthy symptoms which
+had hindered its progress. It became a useful member of the vast British
+Empire, as well as a prosperous country enjoying a good government, and
+launched itself upon a career it could never have entered upon but for the
+war. Destructive as it was, the Boer campaign was not a war of
+annihilation. On the contrary, without it it would have been impossible
+for the vast South African territories to become federated into a Union of
+its own and at the same time to take her place as a member of another
+Empire from which it derived its prosperity and its welfare. The grandeur
+of England and the soundness of its leaders has never come out in a more
+striking manner than in this conquest of South Africa--a blood-stained
+conquest which has become a love match.
+
+During the concluding years of last century the possibility of union was
+seldom taken into consideration; few, indeed, were clever enough and wise
+enough to find out that it was bound to take place as a natural
+consequence of the South African War. The war cleared the air all over
+South Africa. It crushed and destroyed all the suspicious, unhealthy
+elements that had gathered around the gold mines of the Transvaal and the
+diamond fields of Cape Colony. It dispersed the coterie of adventurers who
+had hastened there with the intention of becoming rapidly rich at the
+expense of the inhabitants of the country. A few men had succeeded in
+building for themselves fortunes beyond the dreams of avarice, whilst the
+majority contrived to live more or less well at the expense of those naïve
+enough to trust to them in financial matters until the day when the war
+arrived to put an end to their plunderings.
+
+The struggle into which President Kruger was compelled to rush was
+expected by some of the powerful intriguers in South Africa to result in
+increasing the influence of certain of the millionaires, who up to the
+time when the war broke out had ruled the Transvaal and indirectly the
+Cape Colony by the strength and importance of their riches. Instead, it
+weakened and then destroyed their power. Without the war South Africa
+would have grown more wicked, and matters there were bound soon to come to
+a crisis of some sort. The crux of the situation was whether this crisis
+was going to be brought about by a few unscrupulous people for their own
+benefit, or was to arise in consequence of the clever and far-seeing
+policy of wise politicians.
+
+Happily for England, and I shall even say happily for the world at large,
+such a politician was found in the person of the then Sir Alfred Milner,
+who worked unselfishly toward the grand aim his far-sighted Imperialism
+saw in the distance.
+
+History will give Viscount Milner--as he is to-day--the place which is due
+to him. His is indeed a great figure; he was courageous enough, sincere
+enough, and brave enough to give an account of the difficulties of the
+task he had accepted. His experience of Colonial politics was principally
+founded on what he had seen and studied when in Egypt and in India, which
+was a questionable equipment in the entirely new areas he was called upon
+to administer when he landed in Table Bay. Used to Eastern shrewdness and
+Eastern duplicity, he had not had opportunity to fight against the
+unscrupulousness of men who were neither born nor brought up in the
+country, but who had grown to consider it as their own, and exploited its
+resources not only to the utmost, but also to the detriment of the
+principles of common honesty.
+
+The reader must not take my words as signifying a sweeping condemnation of
+the European population of South Africa. On the contrary, there existed in
+that distant part of the world many men of great integrity, high
+principles and unsullied honour who would never, under any condition
+whatsoever, have lent themselves to mean or dishonest action; men who held
+up high their national flag, and who gave the natives a splendid example
+of all that an Englishman could do or perform when called upon to maintain
+the reputation of his Mother Country abroad.
+
+Some of the early English settlers have left great remembrance of their
+useful activity in the matter of the colonisation of the new continent to
+which they had emigrated, and their descendants, of whom I am happy to say
+there are a great number, have not shown themselves in any way unworthy of
+their forbears. South Africa has its statesmen and politicians who, having
+been born there, understand perfectly well its necessities and its wants.
+Unfortunately, for a time their voices were crushed by the new-comers who
+had invaded the country, and who considered themselves better able than
+anyone else to administer its affairs. They brought along with them fresh,
+strange ambitions, unscrupulousness, determination to obtain power for the
+furtherance of their personal aims, and a greed which the circumstances in
+which they found themselves placed was bound to develop into something
+even worse than a vice, because it made light of human life as well as of
+human property.
+
+In any judgment on South Africa one must never forget that, after all,
+before the war did the work of a scavenger it was nothing else but a vast
+mining camp, with all its terrifying moods, its abject defects, and its
+indifference with regard to morals and to means. The first men who began
+to exploit the riches of that vast territory contrived in a relatively
+easy way to build up their fortunes upon a solid basis, but many of their
+followers, eager to walk in their steps, found difficulties upon which
+they had not reckoned or even thought about. In order to put them aside
+they used whatever means lay in their power, without hesitation as to
+whether these answered to the principles of honesty and
+straightforwardness. Their ruthless conduct was so far advantageous to
+their future schemes that it inspired disgust among those whose ancestors
+had sought a prosperity founded on hard work and conscientious toil. These
+good folk retired from the field, leaving it free to the adventurers who
+were to give such a bad name to England and who boasted loudly that they
+had been given full powers to do what they liked in the way of conquering
+a continent which, but for them, would have been only too glad to place
+itself under English protection and English rule. To these people, and to
+these alone, were due all the antagonisms which at last brought about the
+Boer War.
+
+It was with these people that Sir Alfred Milner found himself out of
+harmony; from the first moment that he had set his foot on African soil
+they tried to put difficulties in his way, after they had convinced
+themselves that he would never consent to lend himself to their schemes.
+
+Lord Milner has never belonged to the class of men who allow themselves to
+be influenced either by wealth or by the social position of anyone. He is
+perhaps one of the best judges of humanity it has been my fortune to meet,
+and though by no means an unkind judge, yet a very fair one. Intrigue is
+repulsive to him, and unless I am very much mistaken I venture to affirm
+that, in the 'nineties, because of the intrigues in which they indulged,
+he grew to loathe some of the men with whom he was thrown into contact.
+Yet he could not help seeing that these reckless speculators controlled
+public opinion in South Africa, and his political instinct compelled him
+to avail himself of their help, as without them he would not have been
+able to arrive at a proper understanding of the entanglements and
+complications of South African politics.
+
+Previous to Sir Alfred's appointment as Governor of the Cape of Good Hope
+the office had been filled by men who, though of undoubted integrity and
+high standing, were yet unable to gauge the volume of intrigue with which
+they had to cope from those who had already established an iron--or,
+rather, golden--rule in South Africa.
+
+Coteries of men whose sole aim was the amassing of quick fortunes were
+virtual rulers of Cape Colony, with more power than the Government to whom
+they simulated submission. All sorts of weird stories were in circulation.
+One popular belief was that the mutiny of the Dutch in Cape Colony just
+before the Boer War was at bottom due to the influence of money. This was
+followed by a feeling that, but for the aggressive operations of the
+outpost agents of certain commercial magnates, it would have been possible
+for England to realise the Union of South Africa by peaceful means instead
+of the bloody arbitrament of war.
+
+In the minds of many Dutchmen--and Dutchmen who were sincerely patriotic
+Transvaalers--the conviction was strong that the natural capabilities of
+Boers did not lie in the direction of developing, as they could be, the
+amazing wealth-producing resources of the Transvaal and of the Orange Free
+State. By British help alone, such men believed, could their country hope
+to thrive as it ought.
+
+Here, then, was the nucleus around which the peaceful union of Boer and
+English peoples in South Africa could be achieved without bloodshed.
+Indeed, had Queen Victoria been represented at the Cape by Sir Alfred
+Milner ten years before he was appointed Governor there, many things which
+had a disastrous influence on the Dutch elements in South Africa would not
+have occurred. The Jameson Raid would certainly not have been planned and
+attempted. To this incident can be ascribed much of the strife and
+unpleasantness which followed, by which was lost to the British Government
+the chance, then fast ripening, of bringing about without difficulty a
+reconciliation of Dutch and English all over South Africa. This
+reconciliation would have been achieved through Cecil Rhodes, and would
+have been a fitting crown to a great career.
+
+At one time the most popular man from the Zambesi to Table Mountain, the
+name of Cecil Rhodes was surrounded by that magic of personal power
+without which it is hardly possible for any conqueror to obtain the
+material or moral successes that give him a place in history; that win for
+him the love, the respect, and sometimes the hatred, of his
+contemporaries. Sir Alfred Milner would have known how to make the work of
+Cecil Rhodes of permanent value to the British Empire. It was a thousand
+pities that when Sir Alfred Milner took office in South Africa the
+influence of Cecil Rhodes, at one time politically dominant, had so
+materially shrunk as a definitive political factor.
+
+Sir Alfred Milner found himself in the presence of a position already
+compromised beyond redemption, and obliged to fight against evils which
+ought never to have been allowed to develop. Even at that time, however,
+it would have been possible for Sir Alfred Milner to find a way of
+disposing of the various difficulties connected with English rule in South
+Africa had he been properly seconded by Mr. Rhodes. Unfortunately for both
+of them, their antagonism to each other, in their conception of what ought
+or ought not to be done in political matters, was further aggravated by
+intrigues which tended to keep Rhodes apart from the Queen's High
+Commissioner in South Africa.
+
+It would not at all have suited certain people had Sir Alfred contrived to
+acquire a definite influence over Mr. Rhodes, and assuredly this would
+have happened had the two men have been allowed unhindered to appreciate
+the mental standard of each other. Mr. Rhodes was at heart a sincere
+patriot, and it was sufficient to make an appeal to his feelings of
+attachment to his Mother Country to cause him to look at things from that
+point of view. Had there existed any real intimacy between Groote Schuur
+and Government House at Cape Town, the whole course of South African
+politics might have been very different.
+
+Sir Alfred Milner arrived in Cape Town with a singularly free and unbiased
+mind, determined not to allow other people's opinions to influence his
+own, and also to use all the means at his disposal to uphold the authority
+of the Queen without entering into conflict with anyone. He had heard a
+deal about the enmity of English and Dutch, but though he perfectly well
+realised its cause he had made up his mind to examine the situation for
+himself. He was not one of those who thought that the raid alone was
+responsible; he knew very well that this lamentable affair had only fanned
+into an open blaze years-long smoulderings of discontent. The Raid had
+been a consequence, not an isolated spontaneous act. Little by little over
+a long span of years the ambitious and sordid overridings of various
+restless, and too often reckless, adventurers had come to be considered as
+representative of English rule, English opinions and, what was still more
+unfortunate, England's personality as an Empire and as a nation.
+
+On the other side of the matter, the Dutch--who were inconceivably
+ignorant--thought their little domain the pivot of the world. Blind to
+realities, they had no idea of the legitimate relative comparison between
+the Transvaal and the British Empire, and so grew arrogantly oppressive in
+their attitude towards British settlers and the powers at Cape Town.
+
+All this naturally tinctured native feeling. Suspicion was fostered among
+the tribes, guns and ammunition percolated through Boer channels, the
+blacks viewed with disdain the friendly advances made by the British, and
+the atmosphere was thick with mutual distrust. The knowledge that this was
+the situation could not but impress painfully a delicate and proud mind,
+and surely Lord Milner can be forgiven for the illusion which he at one
+time undoubtedly cherished that he would be able to dispel this false
+notion about his Mother Country that pervaded South Africa.
+
+The Governor had not the least animosity against the Dutch, and at first
+the Boers had no feeling that Sir Alfred was prejudiced against them. Such
+a thought was drilled into their minds by subtle and cunning people who,
+for their own avaricious ends, desired to estrange the High Commissioner
+from the Afrikanders. Sir Alfred was represented as a tyrannical,
+unscrupulous man, whose one aim in life was the destruction of every
+vestige of Dutch independence, Dutch self-government and Dutch influence
+in Africa. Those who thus maligned him applied themselves to make him
+unpopular and to render his task so very uncongenial and unpleasant for
+him that he would at last give it up of his own accord, or else become the
+object of such violent hatreds that the Home Government would feel
+compelled to recall him. Thus they would be rid of the presence of a
+personage possessed of a sufficient energy to oppose them, and they would
+no longer need to fear his observant eyes. Sir Alfred Milner saw himself
+surrounded by all sorts of difficulties, and every attempt he made to
+bring forward his own plans for the settlement of the South African
+question crumbled to the ground almost before he could begin to work at
+it. Small wonder, therefore, if he felt discouraged and began to form a
+false opinion concerning the persons or the facts with whom he had to
+deal. Those who might have helped him were constrained, without it being
+his fault. Mr. Rhodes became persuaded that the new Governor of Cape
+Colony had arrived there with preconceived notions in regard to himself.
+He was led to believe that Milner's firm determination was to crush him;
+that, moreover, he was jealous of him and of the work he had done in South
+Africa.
+
+Incredible as it appears, Rhodes believed this absurd fiction, and learned
+to look upon Sir Alfred Milner as a natural enemy, desirous of thwarting
+him at every step. The Bloemfontein Conference, at which the brilliant
+qualities and the conciliating spirit of the new Governor of Cape Colony
+were first made clearly manifest, was represented to Rhodes as a desire to
+present him before the eyes of the Dutch as a negligible quantity in South
+Africa. Rhodes was strangely susceptible and far too mindful of the
+opinions of people of absolutely no importance. He fell into the snare,
+and though he was careful to hide from the public his real feelings in
+regard to Sir Alfred Milner, yet it was impossible for anyone who knew him
+well not to perceive at once that he had made up his mind not to help the
+High Commissioner. There is such a thing as damning praise, and Rhodes
+poured a good deal of it on the head of Sir Alfred.
+
+Fortunately, Sir Alfred was sufficiently conscious of the rectitude of his
+intentions and far too superior to feelings of petty spite. He never
+allowed himself to be troubled by these unpleasantnesses, but went on his
+way without giving his enemies the pleasure of noticing the measure of
+success which, unhappily, attended their campaign. He remained inflexible
+in his conduct, and, disdaining any justification, went on doing what he
+thought was right, and which was right, as events proved subsequently.
+Although Milner had at last to give up, yet it is very largely due to him
+that the South African Union was ultimately constituted, and that the
+much-talked-of reconciliation of the Dutch and English in Cape Colony and
+in the Transvaal became an accomplished fact. Had Sir Alfred been listened
+to from the very beginning it might have taken place sooner, and perhaps
+the Boer War altogether avoided.
+
+It is a curious thing that England's colonising powers, which are so
+remarkable, took such a long time to work their way in South Africa. At
+least it would have been a curious thing if one did not remember that
+among the first white men who arrived there Englishmen were much in the
+minority. And of those Englishmen who were attracted by the enormous
+mineral wealth which the country contained, a good proportion were not of
+the best class of English colonists. Many a one who landed in Table Bay
+was an adventurer, drawn thither by the wish to make or retrieve his
+fortune. Few came, as did Rhodes, in search of health, and few, again,
+were drawn thither by the pure love of adventure. In Australia, or in New
+Zealand or other colonies, people arrived with the determination to begin
+a new life and to create for themselves new ties, new occupations, new
+duties, so as to leave to their children after them the result of their
+labours. In South Africa it was seldom that emigrants were animated by the
+desire to make their home in the solitudes of the vast and unexplored
+veldt. Those who got rich there, though they may have built for themselves
+splendid houses while they dwelt in the land, never looked upon South
+Africa as home, but aspired to spend their quickly gained millions in
+London and to forget all about Table Mountain or the shafts and factories
+of Johannesburg and Kimberley.
+
+To such men as these England was a pretext but never a symbol. Their
+strange conception of patriotism jarred the most unpleasantly on the
+straightforward nature of Sir Alfred Milner, who had very quickly
+discerned the egotism that lay concealed beneath its cloak. He understood
+what patriotism meant, what love for one's own country signified. He had
+arrived in South Africa determined to spare neither his person nor his
+strength in her service, and the man who was repeatedly accused both by
+the Dutch and by the English party in the Colony of labouring under a
+misconception of its real political situation was the one who had from the
+very first appreciated it as it deserved, and had recognised its damning
+as well as its redeeming points.
+
+Sir Alfred meant South Africa to become a member of the British Empire, to
+participate in its greatness, and to enjoy the benefits of its protection.
+He had absolutely no idea of exasperating the feelings of the Dutch part
+of its population. He had the best intentions in regard to President
+Kruger himself, and there was one moment, just at the time of the
+Bloemfontein Conference, when a _modus vivendi_ between President Kruger
+and the Court of St. James's might have been established, notwithstanding
+the difficult question of the Uitlanders. It was frustrated by none other
+than these very Uitlanders, who, fondly believing that a war with England
+would establish them as absolute masters in the Gold Fields, brought it
+about, little realising that thereby was to be accomplished the one thing
+which they dreaded--the firm, just and far-seeing rule of England over all
+South Africa.
+
+In a certain sense the Boer War was fought just as much against financiers
+as against President Kruger. It put an end to the arrogance of both.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE FOUNDATIONS OF FORTUNE
+
+
+It is impossible to speak of South Africa without awarding to Cecil Rhodes
+the tribute which unquestionably is due to his strong personality. Without
+him it is possible that the vast territory which became so thoroughly
+associated with his name and with his life would still be without
+political importance. Without him it is probable that both the Diamond
+Fields to which Kimberley owes its prosperity and the Gold Fields which
+have won for the Transvaal its renown would never have risen above the
+importance of those of Brazil or California or Klondyke.
+
+It was Rhodes who first conceived the thought of turning all these riches
+into a political instrument and of using it to the advantage of his
+country--the England to which he remained so profoundly attached amid all
+the vicissitudes of his life, and to whose possessions he was so eager to
+add.
+
+Cecil Rhodes was ambitious in a grand, strange manner which made a
+complete abstraction of his own personality under certain conditions, but
+which in other circumstances made him violent, brutal in manner, thereby
+procuring enemies without number and detractors without end. His nature
+was something akin to that of the Roman Emperors in its insensate desire
+to exercise unchallenged an unlimited power. Impatient of restraint, no
+matter in what shape it presented itself, he brooked no resistance to his
+schemes; his rage against contradiction, and his opposition to any
+independence of thought or action on the part of those who were around
+him, brought about a result of which he would have been the first to
+complain, had he suspected it--that of allowing him to execute all his
+fancies and of giving way to all his resentments. Herein lies the reason
+why so many of his schemes fell through. This unfortunate trait also
+thrust him very often into the hands of those who were clever enough to
+exploit it, and who, more often than proved good to Rhodes' renown,
+suggested to him their own schemes and encouraged him to appropriate them
+as his own. He had a very quick way of catching hold of any suggestions
+that tallied with his sympathies or echoed any of his secret thoughts or
+aspirations.
+
+Yet withal Rhodes was a great soul, and had he only been left to himself,
+or made longer sojourns in England, had he understood English political
+life more clearly, had he had to grapple with the difficulties which
+confront public existence in his Mother Country, he would most certainly
+have done far greater things. He found matters far too easy for him at
+first, and the obstacles which he encountered very often proved either of
+a trivial or else of a removable nature--by fair means or methods less
+commendable. A mining camp is not a school of morality, and just as
+diamonds lose of their value in the estimation of those who continually
+handle them, as is the case in Kimberley, so integrity and honour come to
+be looked upon from a peculiar point of view according to the code of the
+majority.
+
+Then again, it must not be forgotten that the first opponents of Cecil
+Rhodes were black men, of whom the European always has the conception that
+they are not his equals. It is likely that if, instead of Lobengula, he
+had found before him a European chief or monarch, Rhodes would have acted
+differently than history credits him to have done toward the dusky
+sovereign. It is impossible to judge of facts of which one has had no
+occasion to watch the developments, or which have taken place in lands
+where one has never been. Neither Fernando Cortez in Mexico nor Pizzaro
+Gonzalo in Peru proved themselves merciful toward the populations whose
+territory they conquered. The tragedy which sealed the fate of
+Matabeleland was neither a darker nor a more terrible one than those of
+which history speaks when relating to us the circumstances attending the
+discovery of America. Such events must be judged objectively and forgiven
+accordingly. When forming an opinion on the doings and achievements of
+Cecil Rhodes one must make allowance for all the temptations which were
+thrown in his way and remember that he was a man who, if ambitious, was
+not so in a personal sense, but in a large, lofty manner, and who, whilst
+appropriating to himself the good things which he thought he could grasp,
+was also eager to make others share the profit of his success.
+
+Cecil Rhodes, in all save name, was monarch over a continent almost as
+vast as his own fancy and imagination. He was always dreaming, always lost
+in thoughts which were wandering far beyond his actual surroundings,
+carrying him into regions where the common spirit of mankind seldom
+travelled. He was born for far better things than those which he
+ultimately attained, but he did not belong to the century in which he
+lived; his ruthless passions of anger and arrogance were more fitted for
+an earlier and cruder era. Had he possessed any disinterested friends
+capable of rousing the better qualities that slumbered beneath his
+apparent cynicism and unscrupulousness, most undoubtedly he would have
+become the most remarkable individual in his generation. Unfortunately, he
+found himself surrounded by creatures absolutely inferior to himself,
+whose deficiencies he was the first to notice, whom he despised either for
+their insignificance or for their mental and moral failings, but to whose
+influence he nevertheless succumbed.
+
+When Cecil Rhodes arrived at Kimberley he was a mere youth. He had come to
+South Africa in quest of health and because he had a brother already
+settled there, Herbert Rhodes, who was later on to meet with a terrible
+fate. Cecil, if one is to believe what one hears from those who knew him
+at the time, was a shy youth, of a retiring disposition, whom no one could
+ever have suspected would develop into the hardy, strong man he became in
+time. He was constantly sick, and more than once was on the point of
+falling a victim of the dreaded fever which prevails all over South Africa
+and then was far more virulent in its nature than it is to-day. Kimberley
+at that time was still a vast solitude, with here and there a few
+scattered huts of corrugated iron occupied by the handful of colonists.
+Water was rare: it is related, indeed, that the only way to get a wash was
+to use soda water.
+
+The beginning of Rhodes' fortune, if we are to believe what we are told,
+was an ice machine which he started in partnership with another settler.
+The produce they sold to their companions at an exorbitant price, but not
+for long; whereafter the enterprising young man proceeded to buy some
+plots of ground, of whose prolificacy in diamonds he had good reason to be
+aware. It must be here remarked that Rhodes was never a poor man; he could
+indulge in experiments as to his manner of investing his capital. And he
+was not slow to take advantage of this circumstance. Kimberley was a wild
+place at that time, and its distance from the civilised world, as well as
+the fact that nothing was controlled by public opinion, helped some to
+amass vast fortunes and put the weaker into the absolute power of the most
+unscrupulous. It is to the honour of Rhodes that, however he might have
+been tempted, he never listened to the advice which was given to him to do
+what the others did, and to despoil the men whose property he might have
+desired to acquire. He never gave way to the excesses of his daily
+companions, nor accepted their methods of enriching themselves at top
+speed so as soon to be able to return home with their gains.
+
+From the first moment that he set foot on African soil Rhodes succumbed to
+the strange charm the country offers for thinkers and dreamers. His
+naturally languid temperament found a source of untold satisfaction in
+watching the Southern Cross rise over the vast veldt where scarcely man's
+foot had trod, where the immensity of its space was equalled by its
+sublime, quiet grandeur. He liked to spend the night in the open air,
+gazing at the innumerable stars and listening to the voice of the desert,
+so full of attractions for those who have grown to discern somewhat of
+Nature's hidden joys and sorrows. South Africa became for him a second
+Motherland, and one which seemed to him to be more hospitable to his
+temperament than the land of his birth. In South Africa he felt he could
+find more satisfaction and more enjoyment than in England, whose
+conventionalities did not appeal to his rebellious, unsophisticated heart.
+He liked to roam about in an old coat and wideawake hat; to forget that
+civilisation existed; to banish from his mind all memory of cities where
+man must bow down to Mrs. Grundy and may not defy, unscathed, certain
+well-defined prejudices.
+
+Yet Cecil Rhodes neither cared for convention nor custom. His motto was to
+do what he liked and not to trouble about the judgments of the crowd. He
+never, however, lived up to this last part of his profession because, as I
+have shown already, he was keenly sensitive to praise and to blame, and
+hurt to the heart whenever he thought himself misjudged or condemned. Most
+of his mistakes proceeded from this over-sensitiveness which, in a certain
+sense, hardened him, inasmuch as it made him vindictive against those from
+whom he did not get the approval for which he yearned. In common with many
+another, too, Cecil Rhodes had that turn of mind which harbours resentment
+against anyone who has scored a point against its possessor. After the
+Jameson Raid Rhodes never forgave Mr. Schreiner for having found out his
+deceit, and tried to be revenged.
+
+Cecil Rhodes had little sympathy with other people's woes unless these
+found an echo in his own, and the callousness which he so often displayed
+was not entirely the affectation it was thought by his friends or even by
+his enemies. Great in so many things, there were circumstances when he
+could show himself unutterably small, and he seldom practised consistency.
+Frank by nature, he was an adept at dissimulation when he thought that his
+personal interest required it. But he could "face the music," however
+discordant, and, unfortunately for him as well as for his memory, it was
+often so.
+
+The means by which Cecil Rhodes contrived to acquire so unique a position
+in South Africa would require volumes to relate. Wealth alone could not
+have done so, nor could it have assured for him the popularity which he
+gained, not only among the European colonists, but also among the coloured
+people, notwithstanding the ruthlessness which he displayed in regard to
+them. There were millionaires far richer than himself in Kimberley and in
+Johannesburg. Alfred Beit, to mention only one, could dispose of a much
+larger capital than Rhodes ever possessed, but this did not give him an
+influence that could be compared with that of his friend, and not even the
+Life Governorship of De Beers procured for him any other fame than that of
+being a fabulously rich man. Barney Barnato and Joel were also familiar
+figures in the circle of wealthy speculators who lived under the shade of
+Table Mountain; but none among these men, some of whom were also
+remarkable in their way, could effect a tenth or even a millionth part of
+what Rhodes succeeded in performing. His was the moving spirit, without
+whom these men could never have conceived, far less done, all that they
+did. It was the magic of Rhodes' name which created that formidable
+organisation called the De Beers Company; which annexed to the British
+Empire the vast territory known now by the name of Rhodesia; and which
+attracted to the gold fields of Johannesburg all those whom they were to
+enrich or to ruin. Without the association and glamour of Rhodes' name,
+too, this area could never have acquired the political importance it
+possessed in the few years which preceded, and covered, the Boer War.
+Rhodes' was the mind which, after bringing about the famous Amalgamation
+of the diamond mines around Kimberley, then conceived the idea of turning
+a private company into a political instrument of a power which would
+control public opinion and public life all over South Africa more
+effectually even than the Government. This organisation had its own agents
+and spies and kept up a wide system of secret service. Under the pretext
+of looking out for diamond thieves, these emissaries in reality made it
+their duty to report on the private opinions and doings of those whose
+personality inspired distrust or apprehension.
+
+This organisation was more a dictatorship than anything else, and had
+about it something at once genial and Mephistophelian. The conquest of
+Rhodesia was nothing in comparison with the power attained by this
+combine, which arrogated to itself almost unchallenged the right to
+domineer over every white man and to subdue every coloured one in the
+whole of the vast South African Continent. Rhodesia, indeed, was only
+rendered possible through the power wielded in Cape Colony to bring the
+great Northward adventure to a successfully definite issue.
+
+In referring to Rhodesia, I am reminded of a curious fact which, so far as
+I am aware, has never been mentioned in any of the biographies of Mr.
+Rhodes, but which, on the contrary, has been carefully concealed from the
+public knowledge by his admirers and his satellites. The concession
+awarded by King Lobengula to Rhodes and to the few men who together with
+him took it upon themselves to add this piece of territory to the British
+Empire had, in reality, already been given by the dusky monarch--long
+before the ambitions of De Beers had taken that direction--to a Mr.
+Sonnenberg, a German Jew who had very quickly amassed a considerable
+fortune in various speculations. This Mr. Sonnenberg--who was subsequently
+to represent the Dutch party in the Cape Parliament, and who became one of
+the foremost members of the Afrikander Bond--during one of his journeys
+into the interior of the country from Basutoland, where he resided for
+some time, had taken the opportunity of a visit to Matabeleland to obtain
+a concession from the famous Lobengula. This covered the same ground and
+advantages which, later, were granted to Mr. Rhodes and his business
+associates.
+
+Owing in some measure to negligence and partly through the impossibility
+of raising the enormous capital necessary to make anything profitable out
+of the concession, Mr. Sonnenberg had put the document into his drawer
+without troubling any more about it. Subsequently, when Matabeleland came
+into possession of the Chartered Company, Mr. Sonnenberg ventured to speak
+mildly of his own concession, and the matter was mentioned to Mr. Rhodes.
+The latter's reply was typical: "Tell the ---- fool that if he was fool
+enough to lose this chance of making money he ought to take the
+consequences of it." And Mr. Sonnenberg had to content himself with this
+reply. Being a wise man in his generation he was clever enough to ignore
+the incident, and, realising the principle that might is stronger than
+right, he never again attempted to dispute the title of Cecil John Rhodes
+to the conquest which he had made, and, as I believe, pushed prudence to
+the extent of consigning his own concession to the flames. He knew but too
+well what his future prosperity would have been worth had he remembered
+the document.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+A COMPLEX PERSONALITY
+
+
+Rhodesia and its annexation was but the development of a vast scheme of
+conquest that had its start in the wonderful brain of the individual who
+by that time had become to be spoken of as the greatest man South Africa
+had ever known. Long before this Cecil Rhodes had entered political life
+as member of the Cape Parliament. He stood for the province of Barkly
+West, and his election, which was violently contested, made him master of
+this constituency for the whole of his political career. The entry into
+politics gave a decided aim to his ambitions and inspired him to a new
+activity, directing his wonderful organising faculties toward other than
+financial victories and instilling within him the desire to make for
+himself a name not solely associated with speculation, but one which would
+rank with those great Englishmen who had carried far and wide British
+renown and spread the fame of their Mother Country across the seas.
+
+Rhodes' ambitions were not as unselfish as those of Clive, to mention only
+that one name. He thought far more of himself than of his native land in
+the hours when he meditated on all the advantages which he might obtain
+from a political career. He saw the way to become at last absolutely free
+to give shape to his dreams of conquest, and to hold under his sway the
+vast continent which he had insensibly come to consider as his private
+property. And by this I do not mean Rhodesia only--which he always spoke
+of as "My country"--but he also referred to Cape Colony in the same way.
+With one distinction, however, which was remarkable: he called it "My old
+country," thus expressing his conviction that the new one possessed all
+his affections. It is probable that, had time and opportunity been granted
+him to bring into execution his further plans, thereby to establish
+himself at Johannesburg and at Pretoria as firmly as he had done at
+Kimberley and Buluwayo, the latter townships would have come to occupy the
+same secondary importance in his thoughts as that which Cape Colony had
+assumed. Mr. Rhodes may have had a penchant for old clothes, but he
+certainly preferred new countries to ones already explored. To give Rhodes
+his due, he was not the money-grubbing man one would think, judging by his
+companions. He was constantly planning, constantly dreaming of wider areas
+to conquer and to civilise. The possession of gold was for him a means,
+not an aim; he appreciated riches for the power they produced to do
+absolutely all that he wished, but not for the boast of having so many
+millions standing to his account at a bank. He meant to become a king in
+his way, and a king he unquestionably was for a time at least, until his
+own hand shattered his throne.
+
+His first tenure of the Cape Premiership was most successful, and even
+during the second term his popularity went on growing until the fatal
+Jameson Raid--an act of folly which nothing can explain, nothing can
+excuse. Until it broke his political career, transforming him from the
+respected statesman whom every party in South Africa looked up to into a
+kind of broken idol never more to be trusted, Rhodes had enjoyed the
+complete confidence of the Dutch party. They fully believed he was the
+only man capable of effecting the Union which at that time was already
+considered to be indispensable to the prosperity of South Africa. Often he
+had stood up for their rights as the oldest settlers and inhabitants of
+the country. Even in the Transvaal, notwithstanding the authority wielded
+then by President Kruger, the populace would gladly have taken advantage
+of his services and of his experience to help them settle favourably their
+everlasting quarrels with the Uitlanders, as the English colonists were
+called.
+
+Had Cecil Rhodes but had the patience to wait, and had he cared to enter
+into the details of a situation, the intricacies of which none knew better
+than he, it is probable that the annexation of the Transvaal to the
+British Empire would have taken place as a matter of course and the Boer
+War would never have broken out. Rhodes was not only popular among the
+Dutch, but also enjoyed their confidence, and it is no secret that he had
+courted them to the extent of exciting the suspicions of the ultra-English
+party, the Jingo elements of which had openly accused him of plotting with
+the Dutch against the authority of Queen Victoria and of wishing to get
+himself elected Life President of a Republic composed of the various South
+African States, included in which would be Cape Colony, and perhaps even
+Natal, in spite of the preponderance of the English element there.
+
+That Rhodes might have achieved such a success is scarcely to be doubted,
+and personally I feel sure that there had been moments in his life when
+the idea of it had seriously occurred to him. At least I was led to think
+so in the course of a conversation which we had together on this subject a
+few weeks before the Boer War broke out. At that moment Rhodes knew that
+war was imminent, but it would be wrong to interpret that knowledge in the
+sense that he had ever thought of or planned rebellion against the Queen.
+Those who accused him of harbouring the idea either did not know him or
+else wished to harm him. Rhodes was essentially an Englishman, and set his
+own country above everything else in the world. Emphatically this is so;
+but it is equally true that his strange conceptions of morality in matters
+where politics came into question made him totally oblivious of the fact
+that he thought far more of his own self than of his native land in the
+plans which he conceived and formulated for the supremacy of England in
+South Africa. He was absolutely convinced that his election as Life
+President of a South African Republic would not be in any way detrimental
+to the interests of Great Britain; on the contrary, he assured himself it
+would make the latter far more powerful than it had ever been before in
+the land over which he would reign. By nature something of an Italian
+_condottieri_, he considered his native land as a stepping-stone to his
+own grandeur.
+
+For a good many years he had chosen his best friends among Dutchmen of
+influence in the Cape Colony and in the Transvaal. He flattered, courted
+and praised them until he quite persuaded them that nowhere else would
+they find such a staunch supporter of their rights and of their claims.
+Men like Mr. Schreiner,[A] for instance, trusted him absolutely, and
+believed quite sincerely that in time he would be able to establish firm
+and friendly relations between the Cape Government and that of the
+Transvaal. Though the latter country had been, as it were, sequestrated by
+friends of Rhodes--much to their own profit--Mr. Schreiner felt convinced
+that the Colossus had never encouraged any plans which these people might
+have made against the independence of the Transvaal Republic. Rhodes had
+so completely fascinated him that even on the eve of the day when Jameson
+crossed the Border, Mr. Schreiner, when questioned by one of his friends
+about the rumours which had reached Cape Town concerning a projected
+invasion of the Transvaal by people connected with the Chartered Company,
+repudiated them with energy. Mr. Schreiner, indeed, declared that so long
+as Mr. Rhodes was Prime Minister nothing of the kind could or would
+happen, as neither Jameson nor any of his lieutenants would dare to risk
+such an adventure without the sanction of their Chief, and that it was
+more to the latter's interest than to that of anyone else to preserve the
+independence of the Transvaal Republic.
+
+ [A] Now High Commissioner for the Union of South Africa.
+
+[Illustration: THE RT. HON. W.G. SCHREINER.]
+
+Talking of Mr. Schreiner reminds me of his sister, the famous Olive
+Schreiner, the author of so many books which most certainly will long rank
+among the English classics. Olive Schreiner was once upon terms of great
+friendship with Mr. Rhodes, who extremely admired her great talents. She
+was an ardent Afrikander patriot, Dutch by sympathy and origin, gifted
+with singular intelligence and possessed of wide views, which strongly
+appealed to the soul and to the spirit of the man who at that time was
+considered as the greatest figure in South Africa.
+
+It is not remarkable, therefore, that Rhodes should fall into the habit
+of confiding in Miss Schreiner, whom he found was "miles above" the
+people about him. He used to hold long conversations with her and to
+initiate her into many of his plans for the future, plans in which the
+interests and the welfare of the Cape Dutch, as well as the Transvaalers,
+used always to play the principal part. His friendship with her, however,
+was viewed with great displeasure by many who held watch around him.
+Circumstances--intentionally brought about, some maintain--conspired to
+cause a cooling of the friendship between the two most remarkable
+personalities in South Africa. Later on, Miss Schreiner, who was an ardent
+patriot, having discovered what she termed and considered to be the
+duplicity of the man in whom she had so absolutely trusted, refused to
+meet Cecil Rhodes again. Her famous book, "Trooper Peter Halkett of
+Mashonaland," was the culminating point in their quarrel, and the break
+became complete.
+
+This, however, was but an incident in a life in which the feminine element
+never had any great influence, perhaps because it was always kept in check
+by people anxious and eager not to allow it to occupy a place in the
+thoughts or in the existence of a man whom they had confiscated as their
+own property. There are people who, having risen from nothing to the
+heights of a social position, are able to shake off former associations:
+this was not the case with Rhodes, who, on the contrary, as he advanced in
+power and in influence, found himself every day more embarrassed by the
+men who had clung to him when he was a diamond digger, and who, through
+his financial acumen, had built up their fortunes. They surrounded him day
+and night, eliminating every person likely to interfere; slandering,
+ridiculing and calumniating them in turns, they at last left him nothing
+in place of his shattered faiths and lost ideals, until Rhodes became as
+isolated amidst his greatness and his millions as the veriest beggar in
+his hovel.
+
+It was a sad sight to watch the ethical degradation of one of the most
+remarkable intelligences among the men of his generation; it was
+heartrending to see him fall every day more and more into the power of
+unscrupulous people who did nothing else but exploit him for their own
+benefit. South Africa has always been the land of adventurers, and many a
+queer story could be told. That of Cecil John Rhodes was, perhaps, the
+most wonderful and the most tragic.
+
+Whether he realised this retrogression himself it is difficult to say.
+Sometimes one felt that such might be the case, whilst at others it seemed
+as if he viewed his own fate only as something absolutely wonderful and
+bound to develop in the future even more prosperously than it had done in
+the past. There was always about him something of the "tragediante,
+comediante" applied to Napoleon by Pope Pius VII., and it is absolutely
+certain that he often feigned sentiments which he did not feel, anger
+which he did not experience, and pleasure that he did not have. He was a
+being of fits and starts, moods and fancies, who liked to pose in such a
+way as to give others an absolutely false idea of his personality when he
+considered it useful to his interests to do so. At times it was evident he
+experienced regret, but it is doubtful whether he knew the meaning of
+remorse. The natives seldom occupied his thoughts, and if he were reminded
+in later years that, after all, terrible cruelties had been practised in
+Mashonaland or in Matabeleland, he used simply to shrug his shoulders and
+to remark that it was impossible to make an omelette without breaking some
+eggs. It never occurred to him that there might exist people who objected
+to the breaking of a certain kind of eggs, and that humanity had a right
+to be considered even in conquest.
+
+And, after all, was this annexation of the dominions of poor Lobengula a
+conquest? If one takes into account the strength of the people who
+attacked the savage king, and his own weakness, can one do else but regret
+that those who slaughtered Lobengula did not remember the rights of mercy
+in regard to a fallen foe? There are dark deeds connected with the
+attachment of Rhodesia to the British Empire, deeds which would never have
+been performed by a regular English Army, but which seemed quite natural
+to the band of enterprising fellows who had staked their fortunes on an
+expedition which it was their interest to represent as a most dangerous
+and difficult affair. I do not want to disparage them or their courage,
+but I cannot help questioning whether they ever had to withstand any
+serious attack of the enemy. I have been told perfectly sickening details
+concerning this conquest of the territory now known by the name of
+Rhodesia. The cruel manner in which, after having wrung from them a
+concession which virtually despoiled them of every right over their native
+land and after having goaded these people into exasperation, the people
+themselves were exterminated was terrible beyond words. For instance,
+there occurred the incident mentioned by Olive Schreiner in "Trooper Peter
+Halkett of Mashonaland," when over one hundred savages were suffocated
+alive in a cave where they sought a refuge.
+
+Personally, I remain persuaded that these abominable deeds remained
+unknown to Mr. Rhodes and that he would not have tolerated them for one
+single instant. They were performed by people who were in possession of
+Rhodes' confidence, and who abused it by allowing the world to think that
+he encouraged such deeds. Later on it is likely that he became aware of
+the abuse that had been made of his name and of the manner in which it had
+been put forward as an excuse for inexcusable deeds, but he was far too
+indolent and far too indifferent to the blame of the world, at these
+particular moments to disavow those who, after all, had helped him in his
+schemes of expansion, and who had ministered to his longing to have a
+kingdom to himself. Apart from this, he had a curious desire to brave
+public opinion and to do precisely the very things that it would have
+disapproved. He loved to humiliate those whom he had at one moment thought
+he might have occasion to fear. This explains the callousness with which
+he made the son of Lobengula one of his gardeners, and did not hesitate to
+ask him one day before strangers who were visiting Groote Schuur in what
+year he "had killed his father." The incident is absolutely true; it
+occurred in my own presence.
+
+At times, such as that related in the paragraph above, Rhodes appeared a
+perfectly detestable and hateful creature, and yet he was never sincere
+whilst in such moods. A few moments later he would show himself under
+absolutely different colours and give proof of a compassionate heart.
+Generous to a fault, he liked to be able to oblige his friends, or those
+who passed as such, while the charitable acts which he was constantly
+performing are too numerous to be remembered. He had a supreme contempt
+for money, but he spoiled the best sides of his strange, eccentric
+character by enjoying a display of its worst facets with a "cussedness" as
+amusing as it was sometimes unpleasant. Is it remarkable, then, that many
+people who only saw him in the disagreeable moods should judge him from an
+entirely false and misleading point of view?
+
+Rhodes was a man for whom it was impossible to feel indifference; one
+either hated him or became fascinated by his curious and peculiar charm.
+This quality led many admirers to remain faithful to him even after
+disillusion had shattered their former friendship, and who, whilst
+refusing to speak to him any more, yet retained for him a deep affection
+which not even the conviction that it had been misplaced could alter. This
+is a remarkable and indisputable fact. After having rallied around him all
+that was honest in South Africa; after having been the petted child of all
+the old and influential ladies in Cape Town; after having been accepted as
+their leader by men like Mr. Schreiner and Mr. Hofmeyr, who, clever though
+they were, and convinced, as they must have been, of their personal
+influence on the Dutch party and the members of the Afrikander Bond, still
+preferred to subordinate their judgment to Rhodes'; after having enjoyed
+such unparalleled confidence, Rhodes had come to be spurned and rejected
+politically, but had always kept his place in their hearts. Fate and his
+own faults separated him from these people of real weight and influence,
+and left him in the hands of those who pretended that they were attached
+to him, but who, in reality, cared only for the material advantages that
+their constant attendance upon him procured to them. They poisoned his
+mind, they separated him from all those who might have been useful to him,
+and they profited by the circumstance that the Raid had estranged him from
+his former friends to strengthen their own influence upon him, and to
+persuade him that those who had deplored the rash act were personal
+enemies, wishful for his downfall and disgrace.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+MRS. VAN KOOPMAN
+
+
+Among those with whom Rhodes had been intimate from almost the first days
+of his establishment in Cape Town and his entrance into political life was
+a lady who, for something like half a century, had been enjoying an
+enviable position throughout almost the whole of South Africa. Mrs. van
+Koopman was a Dutchwoman of considerable means and of high character. She
+was clever, well read, and her quick intelligence allowed her to hold her
+own in discussion upon any subject against the most eminent men of her
+generation. She had never made a secret of her Dutch sympathies, nor of
+her desire to see her countrymen given equal rights with the English all
+over South Africa. She was on excellent terms with President Kruger, and
+with President Steyn, whose personality was a far more remarkable one than
+that of his old and crafty colleague.
+
+The leading South African political men used to meet at Mrs. van Koopman's
+to discuss the current events of the day. It is related that she was one
+of the first to bring to the notice of her friends the complications that
+were bound to follow upon the discovery of the gold fields, and to implore
+them to define, without delay, the position of the foreign element which
+was certain to move toward Johannesburg as soon as the news of the riches
+contained in that region became public property.
+
+If the English Government had considered the matter at once the
+complications which arose as soon as companies began to be formed would
+have been less acute. The directors of these concerns imagined themselves
+to be entitled to displace local government, and took all executive power
+into their own hands. This would never have happened if firm governmental
+action had been promptly taken. The example of Kimberley ought to have
+opened the eyes of the Mother Country, and measures should have been taken
+to prevent the purely commercial domain of the gold fields from assuming
+such strident political activities, and little by little dominating not
+only the Transvaal Republic, but also the rest of South Africa.
+
+Mrs. van Koopman had cherished a great affection for Rhodes. Her age--she
+was in the sixties--gave an almost maternal character to the tenderness
+with which she viewed him. He had made her his confidante, telling her all
+that he meant to do for the welfare of the land which she loved so dearly.
+She thought he looked upon South Africa with the same feelings of
+admiration as she did.
+
+The strength of her belief led Mrs. van Koopman to interest all her
+friends in the career of the young Englishman, who appealed to her
+imagination as the embodiment of all that was great and good. Her
+enthusiasm endowed him with many qualities that he did not possess, and
+magnified those which he really had. When he consulted her as to his
+future plans she entered closely into their details, discussed with him
+their chances of success, advised him and used all her influence, which
+was great, in winning him friends and adherents. She trusted him fully,
+and, on his part, whenever he returned to Cape Town after one of his
+yearly visits to Kimberley, or after a few months spent in the solitudes
+of Rhodesia, his first visit was always to the old and gentle lady, who
+welcomed him with open arms, words of affection, and sincere as well as
+devoted sympathy. She had always refused to listen to disparagement of her
+favourite, and would never allow any of the gruesome details connected
+with the annexation of Rhodesia to be recited in her presence.
+
+In Mrs. van Koopman's eyes there was only a glorious side to the Rhodesian
+expedition, and she rejoiced in the renown which it was destined to bring
+to the man who had conceived and planned it. She fully believed that
+Rhodes meant to bring English civilisation, English laws, the English
+sense of independence and respect for individual freedom into that distant
+land. The fact that lucre lay at the bottom of the expedition never
+crossed her mind; even if it had she would have rejected the thought with
+scorn and contempt.
+
+Although the attacks upon Cecil Rhodes increased day by day in intensity
+and in bitterness, Mrs. van Koopman never wavered in her allegiance. She
+attributed them to jealousy and envy, and strenuously defended his name.
+Mrs. van Koopman, too, rejoiced at any new success of Rhodes as if it had
+been her own. She was the first to congratulate him when the dignity of a
+Privy Councillor was awarded to him. After the Matabele Rebellion, during
+which occurred one of the most famous episodes in the life of Rhodes, Mrs.
+van Koopman had been loud in her praises of the man whom she had been the
+first to guess would do great things.
+
+The episode to which I refer, when he alone had had the courage to go
+unattended and unarmed to meet the savage chiefs assembled in the Matoppo
+Hills, had, by the way, done more than anything else to consolidate the
+position of the chairman of De Beers in South Africa.
+
+During the first administration of Cape Colony by Mr. Rhodes, when his
+accession to the premiership had been viewed with a certain suspicion by
+the Dutch party, Mrs. van Koopman made tremendous efforts to induce them
+to have full confidence in her protégé. And the attempt succeeded, because
+even the shrewd Mr. Hofmeyr had at last succumbed to the constant
+entreaties which she had poured upon him. Thenceforward Mr. Hofmeyr became
+one of Mr. Rhodes' firm admirers and strong partisans. Under the able
+guidance of Mrs. van Koopman the relations between the Dutch party and
+their future enemy became so cordial that at last a singular construction
+was put upon both sides of the alliance by the opponents of both. The
+accusation, already referred to, was made against Rhodes that he wished to
+make for himself in South Africa a position of such independence and
+strength that even the authority of the Queen might find itself
+compromised by it. As has been pointed out, the supposition was devoid of
+truth, but it is quite certain that the then Premier of Cape Colony would
+not have objected had the suzerainty been placed in his hands by England
+and British rule in South Africa vested solely in his person.
+
+During a brief interval in his political leadership Rhodes pursued his
+work in Rhodesia. In those days the famous British South Africa Company,
+which was to become known as the Chartered Company, was definitely
+constituted, and began its activity in the new territories which had come
+under its control. Ere long, though, the tide of events brought him again
+to the head of the Government. This time, however, though his appointment
+had been considered as a foregone conclusion, and though very few had
+opposed it, he no longer met the same sympathetic attention and
+co-operation which had characterised his first administration of public
+affairs. The Colony had begun to realise that Mr. Rhodes alone, and left
+free to do what he liked, or what he believed was right, was very
+different from Mr. Rhodes under the influence of the many so-called
+financiers and would-be politicians who surrounded him.
+
+An atmosphere of favouritism and of flattery had changed Rhodes, whom one
+would have thought far above such small things. Vague rumours, too, had
+begun to circulate concerning certain designs of the Chartered Company
+(one did not dare yet mention the name of its chief and chairman) on the
+Transvaal. Rhodes was directly questioned upon the subject by several of
+his friends, amongst others by Mr. Schreiner, to whom he energetically
+denied that such a thing had ever been planned. He added that Doctor
+Jameson, of whom the man in the street was already speaking as the man who
+was planning an aggression against the authority of President Kruger, was
+not even near the frontier of the neighbouring Republic. The mere idea of
+such a thing, Rhodes emphatically declared to Mr. Schreiner, was nothing
+but an ill-natured hallucination to create bad blood between the English
+and the Dutch. His tone seemed so sincere that Mr. Schreiner allowed
+himself to be convinced, and voluntarily assured his colleagues that he
+was convinced of the sincerity of the Prime Minister.
+
+The only person who was really alarmed at the persistent rumours which
+circulated in Cape Town in regard to a possible attack in common accord
+with the leaders of the Reform movement in Johannesburg against the
+independence of the Transvaal Republic was Mrs. van Koopman. She knew
+Rhodes' character too well not to fear that he might have been induced to
+listen to the misguided advice of people trying to persuade him that the
+Rhodesian adventure was susceptible of being repeated on a larger and far
+more important scale, with as much impunity and as little danger as the
+other one had been. Alarmed beyond words by all that she was hearing, she
+determined to find out for herself the true state of things, and, trusting
+to her knowledge of Rhodes' character, she asked him to call upon her.
+
+Rhodes came a few afternoons later, and Mrs. van Koopman closely
+questioned him on the subject, telling him of the tales which were being
+circulated not only in Cape Town, but also at Kimberley and Buluwayo and
+Johannesburg. Rhodes solemnly assured her that they were nothing but
+malicious gossip, and, taking her hands in his own, he repeated that all
+she had heard concerning the sinister designs he was supposed to be
+harbouring against the independence of the Transvaal had absolutely no
+foundation. To add force to his words, he continued that he respected her
+far too much to deceive her willingly, and that he would never have risked
+meeting her and talking with her upon such a subject had there been the
+slightest ground for the rumours which were disturbing the tranquillity of
+the inhabitants of Cape Town. When he left her Mrs. van Koopman felt quite
+reassured.
+
+Next morning Mrs. van Koopman told her anxious friends that she had
+received such assurances from Rhodes that she could not disbelieve him,
+and that the best thing which they could do would be to contradict all
+statements on the subject of a raid on the Transvaal that might come to
+their ears. This occurred on an after-Christmas evening of the year 1895.
+
+When the decisive conversation which I have just related was taking place
+between Mrs. van Koopman and Cecil Rhodes, Doctor Jameson and his handful
+of eager adventurers had already entered Transvaal territory. The Raid had
+become an accomplished fact. It was soon realised that it was the most
+deplorable affair that could have occurred for the reputation of Cecil
+Rhodes and for his political future. The rebound, indeed, was immediate;
+his political career came to an end that day.
+
+The person who was struck most painfully by this disgraceful and cryingly
+stupid adventure was Mrs. van Koopman. All her illusions--and she had
+nursed many concerning Rhodes--were destroyed at one blow. She never
+forgave him. All his attempts to bring about a reconciliation failed, and
+when later on he would fain have obtained her forgiveness, she absolutely
+refused all advances, and declared that she would never consent willingly
+to look upon his face or listen to his voice again. The proud old woman,
+whose ideals had been wrecked so cruelly, could not but feel a profound
+contempt for a man who had thus deliberately lied to her at the very time
+when she was appealing to his confidence. Her aristocratic instincts arose
+in indignation at the falsehoods which had been used to dupe her. She
+would not listen to any excuse, would not admit any extenuating
+circumstances; and perhaps because she knew in the secret of her heart
+that she would never be able to resist the pleadings of the man who had
+thus deceived her, she absolutely refused to see him.
+
+Rhodes never despaired of being restored to her favour, and would have
+given much to anyone able to induce her to relent in her judgment as to
+his conduct. Up to the last he made attempts to persuade her to reconsider
+her decision, but they all proved useless, and he died without having been
+able to win a forgiveness which he craved for many years.
+
+I used to know Mrs. van Koopman well and to see her often. I admired her
+much, not only on account of her great talents and of her powerful
+intellect, but also for the great dignity which she displayed all through
+the Boer War, when, suspected of favouring the Dutch cause to the extent
+of holding communications with the rebels all over the Cape Colony, she
+never committed any indiscretion or gave cause for any direct action
+against her. For some time, by order of the military authorities, she was
+placed under police supervision, and her house was searched for papers and
+documents which, however, were not found--as might have been foreseen.
+
+All through these trying months she never wavered in her attitude nor in
+her usual mode of life, except that she saw fewer people than
+formerly--not, as she used playfully to say, because she feared to be
+compromised, but because she did not wish to compromise others. More than
+once during my visits I spoke to her of Mr. Rhodes and tried to induce her
+to relent in her resolution. I even went so far as to tell her that her
+consent to meet him would, more than anything else, cause him to use all
+his influence, or what remained of it, in favour of a prompt settlement of
+the war in a peace honourable to both sides. Mrs. van Koopman smiled, but
+remained immovable. At last, seeing that I would not abandon the subject,
+she told me in tones which admitted of no discussion that she had far too
+much affection for Rhodes not to have been so entirely cut to the core by
+his duplicity in regard to her and by his whole conduct in that
+unfortunate matter of the Raid. She could trust him no longer, she told
+me, and, consequently, a meeting with him would only give her unutterable
+pain and revive memories that had better remain undisturbed. "Had I cared
+for him less I would not say so to you," she added, "but you must know
+that of all sad things the saddest is the destruction of idols one has
+built for oneself."
+
+This attitude on the part of the one friend he had the greatest affection
+for was one of the many episodes which embittered Rhodes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+RHODES AND THE RAID
+
+
+After the Raid, faithful to his usual tactics of making others responsible
+for his own misdeeds, Cecil Rhodes grew to hate with ferocity all those
+whose silence and quiet disapproval reminded him of the fatal error into
+which he had been led. He was loud in his expressions of resentment
+against Mr. Schreiner and the other members of the Afrikander party who
+had not been able to conceal from him their indignation at his conduct on
+the memorable occasion which ruined his own political life. They had
+compelled him--one judged by his demeanour--to resign his office of Prime
+Minister at the very time when he was about to transform it into something
+far more important--to use it as the stepping-stone to future grandeurs of
+which he already dreamt, although he had so far refrained from speaking
+about them to others. Curious to say, however, he never blamed the authors
+of this political mistake, and never, in public at least, reproached
+Jameson for the disaster he had brought upon him.
+
+What his secret thoughts were on this subject it is easy to guess.
+Circumstances used to occur now and then when a stray word spoken on
+impulse allowed one to discern that he deplored the moment of weakness
+into which he had been inveigled. For instance, during a dinner-party at
+Groote Schuur, when talking about the state of things prevailing in
+Johannesburg just before the war, he mentioned the names of five Reformers
+who, after the Raid, had been condemned to death by President Kruger, and
+added that he had paid their fine of twenty-five thousand pounds each.
+"Yes," he continued, with a certain grim accent of satire in his voice, "I
+paid £25,000 for each of these gentlemen." And when one of his guests
+tactlessly remarked, "But surely you need not have done so, Mr. Rhodes? It
+was tacitly admitting that you had been a party to their enterprise!" he
+retorted immediately, "And if I choose to allow the world to think that
+such was the case, what business is it of yours?" I thought the man was
+going to drop under the table, so utterly flabbergasted did he look.
+
+It is, of course, extremely difficult to know what was the actual part
+played by Rhodes in the Raid. He carried that secret to the grave, and it
+is not likely that his accomplices will ever reveal their own share in the
+responsibility for that wild adventure. My impression is that the idea of
+the Raid was started among the entourage of Rhodes and spoken of before
+him at length. He would listen in silence, as was his wont when he wished
+to establish the fact that he had nothing to do with a thing that had been
+submitted to him. Thus the Raid was tacitly encouraged by him, without his
+ever having pronounced himself either for or against it.
+
+Rhodes was an extremely able politician, and a far-seeing one into the
+bargain. He would never have committed himself into an open approval of an
+attempt which he knew perfectly well involved the rights of nations. On
+the other hand, he would have welcomed any circumstance which would result
+in the overthrow of the Transvaal Republic by friends of his. His former
+successes, and especially the facility with which had been carried out the
+attachment of Rhodesia to the British Empire, had refracted his vision,
+and he refused--or failed--to see the difficulties which he might
+encounter if he wanted to proceed for the second time on an operation of
+the same kind.
+
+On the other hand, he was worried by his friends to allow them to take
+decisive action, and was told that everyone in England would approve of
+his initiative in taking upon himself the responsibility of a step, out of
+which could only accrue solid advantage for the Mother Country.
+
+Rhodes had been too long away from England, and his sojourns there during
+the ten years or so immediately preceding 1895 had been far too short for
+him to have been able to come to a proper appreciation of the importance
+of public opinion in Great Britain, or of those principles in matters of
+Government which no sound English politician will ever dare to put aside
+if he wishes to retain his hold. He failed to understand and to appreciate
+the narrow limit which must not be overstepped; he forgot that when one
+wants to perform an act open to certain well-defined objections there must
+be a great aim in order eventually to explain and excuse the doing of it.
+The Raid had no such aim. No one made a mistake as to that point when
+passing judgment upon the Raid. The motives were too sordid, too mean, for
+anyone to do aught else but pass a sweeping condemnation upon the whole
+business.
+
+If he did not, Rhodes ought to have known that the public would most
+certainly pass this verdict on so dark and shameful an adventure, one that
+harmed England's prestige in South Africa far more than ever did the Boer
+War. But though perhaps he realised beforehand that this would be the
+verdict, he only felt a vague apprehension, more as a fancy than from any
+real sense of impending danger. He had grown so used to see success attend
+his every step that his imagination refused to admit the possibility of
+defeat.
+
+As for the people who engaged in the senseless adventure, their motives
+had none of the lofty ideals which influenced Rhodes himself. They simply
+wanted to obtain possession of the gold fields of the Transvaal and to
+oust the rightful owners. President Kruger represented an obstacle that
+had to be removed, and so they proceeded upon their mad quest without
+regard as to the possible consequences. Still less did they reflect that
+in his case they had not to deal with a native chief whose voice of
+protest had no chance to be heard, but with a very cute and determined man
+who had means at his disposal not only to defend himself, but also to
+appeal to European judgment to adjudge an unjustifiable aggression.
+
+Apart from all these considerations, which ought to have been seriously
+taken into account by Doctor Jameson and his companions, the whole
+expedition was planned in a stupid, careless manner. No wonder that it
+immediately came to grief. It is probable that if Rhodes had entered into
+its details and allowed others to consult him, matters might have taken a
+different turn. But, as I have already shown, he preferred to be able to
+say at a given moment that he had known nothing about it. At least, this
+must have been what he meant to do. But events proved too strong for him.
+The fiasco was too complete for Rhodes to escape from its
+responsibilities, though it must be conceded that he never tried to do so
+once the storm burst. He faced the music bravely enough, perhaps because
+of the knowledge that no denial would be believed, perhaps also because
+all the instincts of his, after all, great nature caused him to come
+forward to take his share in the disgrace of the whole deplorable affair.
+
+Whether he forgave Doctor Jameson for this act of folly remains a mystery.
+Personally I have always held that there must have _un cadavre entre eux_.
+No friendship could account for the strange relations which existed
+between these two men, one of whom had done so much to harm the other. At
+first it would have seemed as if an individual of the character of Cecil
+Rhodes would never have brought himself to forgive his confederate for the
+clumsiness with which he had handled a matter upon which the reputation of
+both of them depended, in the present as well as in the future. But far
+from abandoning the friend who had brought him into such trouble, he
+remained on the same terms of intimacy as before, with the difference,
+perhaps, that he saw even more of him than before the Raid. It seemed as
+if he wanted thus to affirm before the whole world his faith in the man
+through whom his whole political career had been wrecked.
+
+The attitude of Rhodes toward Jameson was commented upon far and wide. The
+Dutch party in Cape Town saw in it a mere act of bravado into which they
+read an acknowledgment that, strong as was the Colossus, he was too weak
+to tell his accomplices to withdraw from public sight until the
+ever-increasing difficulties with the Transvaal--which became more and
+more acute after the Raid--had been settled in some way or other between
+President Kruger and the British Government. Instead of this Rhodes seemed
+to take a particular pleasure in parading the trust he declared he had in
+Doctor Jameson, and to consult him publicly upon almost all the political
+questions which were submitted to him for consideration. This did not mean
+that he followed the advice which he received, because, so far as I was
+able to observe, this was seldom the case.
+
+To add to the contrariness of the situation, Rhodes always seemed more
+glad than anything else if he heard someone make an ill-natured remark
+about the Doctor, or when anything particularly disagreeable occurred to
+the latter. An ironic smile used to light up Rhodes' face and a sarcastic
+chuckle be heard. But still, whenever one attempted to explain to him that
+the Raid had been an unforgivable piece of imprudence, or hazarded that
+Jameson had never been properly punished for it, Rhodes invariably took
+the part of this friend of his younger days, and would never acknowledge
+that Doctor Jim's desire to enter public life as a member of the Cape
+Parliament ought not to be gratified.
+
+On his side, Doctor Jameson was determined that the opportunity to do so
+should be offered to him, and he used Rhodes' influence in order to obtain
+election. He knew very well that without it his candidature would have no
+chance.
+
+Later on, when judging the events which preceded the last two years of
+Rhodes' life, many people expressed the opinion that Jameson, being a
+physician of unusual ability, was perfectly well aware that his friend was
+not destined to live to a very old age, and therefore wished to obtain
+from him while he could all the political support he required to establish
+his career as the statesman he fully believed he was. In fact, Doctor
+Jameson had made up his mind to outlive the odium of the Raid, and to
+become rehabilitated in public opinion to the extent of being allowed to
+take up the leadership of the party which had once owned Rhodes as its
+chief. By a strange freak of Providence, helped no doubt by an iron will
+and opportunities made the most of, Jameson, who had been the great
+culprit in the mad adventure of the Raid, became the foremost man in Cape
+Colony for a brief period after the war, while Rhodes, who had been his
+victim, bore the full consequences of his weakness in having permitted
+himself to be persuaded to look through his fingers on the enterprise.
+
+Rhodes never recovered any real political influence, was distrusted by
+English and Dutch alike, looked upon with caution by the Cape Government,
+and with suspicion even among his followers. The poor man had no friends
+worthy of the name, and those upon whom he relied the most were the first
+to betray his confidence. Unfortunately for himself, he had a profound
+contempt for humanity, and imagined himself capable of controlling all
+those whom he had elected to rule. He imagined he could turn and twist
+anyone according to his own impulses. In support of this assertion let me
+relate an incident in which I played a part.
+
+When the Boer War showed symptoms of dragging on for a longer time than
+expected, some Englishmen proposed that Rhodes should be asked to stand
+again for Prime Minister, to do which he resolutely refused. Opinions,
+however, were very much divided. Some people declared that he was the only
+man capable of conciliating the Dutch and bringing the war to a happy
+issue. Others asserted that his again taking up the reins of Government
+would be considered by the Afrikander Bond--which was very powerful at the
+time--as an unjustifiable provocation which would only further embitter
+those who had never forgiven Rhodes for the Raid.
+
+A member of the Upper House of Legislature, whom I used to see often, and
+who was a strong partisan of Rhodes, determined to seek advice outside the
+House, and went to see an important political personage in Cape Town, one
+of those who frequented Groote Schuur and who posed as one of the
+strongest advocates of Rhodes again becoming the head of the Government
+presided over by Sir Alfred Milner. What was the surprise of my friend
+when, instead of finding a sympathising auditor, he heard him say that he
+considered that for the moment the return of Rhodes at the head of affairs
+would only complicate matters; that it was still too soon after the Raid;
+that his spirit of animosity in regard to certain people might not help to
+smooth matters at such a critical juncture; and that, moreover, Rhodes had
+grown very morose and tyrannical, and refused to brook any contradiction.
+Coming from a man who had no reason to be friendly with Rhodes, the
+remarks just reported would not have been important, but proceeding from a
+personage who was continually flattering Rhodes, they struck me as showing
+such considerable duplicity that I wrote warning Rhodes not to attach too
+much importance to the protestations of devotion to his person that the
+individual in question was perpetually pouring down upon him. The reply
+which I received was absolutely characteristic: "Thanks for your letter.
+Never mind what X---- says. He is a harmless donkey who can always make
+himself useful when required to do so."
+
+The foregoing incident is enlightening as to the real nature of Cecil
+Rhodes. His great mistake was precisely in this conviction that he could
+order men at will, and that men would never betray him or injure him by
+their false interpretation of the directions which it pleased him to give
+them. He considered himself so entirely superior to the rest of mankind
+that it never struck him that inferior beings could turn upon him and rend
+him, or forget the obedience to his orders which he expected them to
+observe. He did not appreciate people with independence, though he admired
+them in those rare moments when he would condescend to be sincere with
+himself and with others; but he preferred a great deal the miserable
+creatures who always said "yes" to all his vagaries; who never dared to
+criticise any of his instructions or to differ from any opinions which he
+expressed. Sometimes he uttered these opinions with a brutality that did
+him considerable harm, inasmuch as it could not fail to cause repugnance
+among any who listened to him, but were not sufficiently acquainted with
+the peculiarities of his character to discern that he wanted simply to
+scare his audience, and that he did not mean one single word of the
+ferocious things he said in those moments when he happened to be in a
+particularly perverse mood, and when it pleased him to give a totally
+false impression of himself and the nature of his convictions in political
+and public matters.
+
+It must not be lost sight of when judging Mr. Rhodes that he had been
+living for the best part of his life among people with whom he could not
+have anything in common except the desire to make money in the shortest
+time possible. He was by nature a thinker, a philosopher, a reader, a man
+who belonged to the best class of students, those who understand that
+one's mind wants continually improving and that it is apt to rust when not
+kept active. His companions in those first years which followed upon his
+arrival in South Africa would certainly not have appreciated any of the
+books the reading of which constituted the solace of the young man who
+still preserved in his mind the traditions of Oxford. They were his
+inferiors in everything: intelligence, instruction, comprehension of those
+higher problems of the soul and of the mind which always interested him
+even in the most troubled and anxious moments of his life. He understood
+and realised that this was the fact, and this did not tend to inspire him
+with esteem or even with consideration for the people with whom he was
+compelled to live and work.
+
+Men like Barney Barnato, to mention only this one name among the many,
+felt a kind of awe of Cecil Rhodes. This kind of thing, going on as it did
+for years, was bound to give Rhodes a wrong idea as to the faculty he had
+of bringing others to share his points of view, and he became so
+accustomed to be considered always right that he felt surprised and vexed
+whenever blind obedience was not given. Indeed, it so excited his
+displeasure that he would at once plunge into a course of conduct which he
+might never have adopted but for the fact that he had heard it condemned
+or criticised.
+
+It has been said that every rich man is generally surrounded by parasites,
+and Cecil Rhodes was not spared this infliction. Only in his case these
+parasites did not apply their strength to attacks upon his purse; they
+exploited him for his influence, for the importance which it gave them to
+be considered by the world as his friends, or even his dependants. They
+appeared wherever he went, telling the general public that their presence
+had been requested by the "Boss" in such warm terms that they could not
+refuse. It was curious to watch this systematic chase which followed him
+everywhere, even to England. Sometimes this persistency on the part of
+persons whom he did not tolerate more than was absolutely necessary bored
+him and put him out of patience; but most of the time he accepted it as a
+necessary evil, and even felt flattered by it. He also liked to have
+perpetually around him individuals whom he could bully to his heart's
+content, who never resented an insult and never minded an insolence--and
+Rhodes was often insolent.
+
+Another singular feature in a character as complex as it was interesting
+was the contempt in which he held all those who had risen under his very
+eyes, from comparative or absolute poverty, to the status of millionaires
+possessed of houses in Park Lane and shooting boxes in Scotland. He liked
+to relate all that he knew about them, and sometimes even to mention
+certain facts which the individuals themselves would probably have
+preferred to be consigned to oblivion. But--and here comes the singularity
+to which I have referred--Rhodes would not allow anyone else to speak of
+these things, and he always took the part of his so-called friends when
+outsiders hinted at dark episodes which did not admit of investigation. He
+almost gave a certificate of good conduct to people whom he might have
+been heard referring to a few hours before in a far more antagonistic
+spirit than that displayed by those whom he so sharply contradicted.
+
+I remember one amusing instance of the idiosyncrasy referred to. There was
+in Johannesburg a man who, having arrived there with twenty-five pounds in
+his pockets--as he liked to relate with evident pride in the fact--had, in
+the course of two years, amassed together a fortune of two millions
+sterling. One day during dinner at Groote Schuur he enlarged upon the
+subject with such offensiveness that an English lady, newly arrived in
+South Africa and not yet experienced in the things which at the time were
+better left unsaid, was so annoyed at his persistency that she interrupted
+the speaker with the remark:
+
+"Well, if I were you, I would not be so eager to let the world know that I
+had made two millions out of twenty-five pounds. It sounds exactly like
+the story of the man who says that in order to catch a train at six
+o'clock in the morning he gets up at ten minutes to six. You know at once
+that he cannot possibly have washed, whilst your story shows that you
+could not possibly have been honest."
+
+I leave the reader to imagine the consternation produced among those
+present by these words. But what were their feelings when they heard
+Rhodes say in reply:
+
+"Well, one does not always find water to wash in, and at Kimberley this
+happened oftener than one imagines; as for being honest, who cares for
+honesty nowadays?"
+
+"Those who have not lived in South Africa, Mr. Rhodes," was the retort
+which silenced the Colossus.
+
+This man of the get-rich-quick variety was one of those who had mastered
+the difficult operation of passing off to others the mines out of which he
+had already extracted most of the gold, an occupation which, in the early
+Johannesburg days, had been a favourite one with many of the inhabitants
+of this wonderful town. One must not forget that as soon as the fame of
+the gold fields of the Transvaal began to spread adventurers hastened
+there, together with a few honest pioneers, desirous of making a fortune
+out of the riches of a soil which, especially in prospectuses lavishly
+distributed on the London and Paris Stock Exchanges, was described as a
+modern Golconda. Concessions were bought and sold, companies were formed
+with a rapidity which savoured of the fabulous. Men made not only a
+living, but also large profits, by reselling plots of ground which they
+had bought but a few hours before, and one heard nothing but loud praises
+of this or that mine that could be had for a song, "owing to family
+circumstances" or other reasons which obliged their owner to part with it.
+
+The individual who had boasted of the intelligent manner with which he had
+transformed his twenty-five pounds into two solid millions had, early in
+his career, invested some of his capital in one of these mines. Its only
+merit was its high-sounding name. He tried for some time without success
+to dispose of it. At last he happened to meet a Frenchman, newly arrived
+in Johannesburg, who wanted to acquire some mining property there with the
+view of forming a company. Our hero immediately offered his own. The
+Frenchman responded to the appeal, but expressed the desire to go down
+himself into the shaft to examine the property and get some ore in order
+to test it before the purchase was completed. The condition was agreed to
+with eagerness, and a few days later the victim and his executioner
+proceeded together to the mine. The Frenchman went down whilst Mr. X----
+remained above. He walked about with his hands in his pockets, smoking
+cigarettes, the ashes of which he let fall with an apparent negligence
+into the baskets of ore which were being sent up by the Frenchman. When
+the latter came up, rather hot and dusty, the baskets were taken to
+Johannesburg and carefully examined: the ore was found to contain a
+considerable quantity of gold. The mine was bought, and not one scrap of
+gold was ever found in it. Mr. X---- had provided himself with cigarettes
+made for the purpose, which contained gold dust in lieu of tobacco, and
+the ashes which he had dropped were in reality the precious metal, the
+presence of which was to persuade the unfortunate Frenchman that he was
+buying a property of considerable value. He paid for it something like two
+hundred thousand pounds, whilst the fame of the man who had thus cleverly
+tricked him spread far and wide.
+
+The most amusing part of the story consists in its _dénouement_. The duped
+Frenchman, though full of wrath, was, nevertheless, quite up to the game.
+He kept silence, but proceeded to form his company as if nothing had been
+the matter. When it was about to be constituted and registered, he asked
+Mr. X---- to become one of its directors, a demand that the latter could
+not very well refuse with decency. He therefore allowed his name to figure
+among those of the members of the board, and he used his best endeavours
+to push forward the shares of the concern of which he was pompously
+described on the prospectus as having been once the happy owner. As his
+name was one to conjure with the scrip went up to unheard-of prices, when
+both he and his supposed victim, the Frenchman, realised and retired from
+the venture, the richer by several hundreds of thousands of pounds.
+History does not say what became of the shareholders. As for Mr. X----, he
+now lives in Europe, and has still a reputation in South Africa.
+
+This story is but one amongst hundreds, and it is little wonder that,
+surrounded as he was with men who indulged in this charming pastime of
+always trying to dupe their fellow creatures, Rhodes' moral sense relaxed.
+It is only surprising that he kept about him so much that was good and
+great, and that he did not succumb altogether to the contamination which
+affected everything and everybody around him. Happily for him he cherished
+his own ambitions, had his own dreams for companions, his absorption in
+the great work he had undertaken; these things were his salvation.
+Rhodesia became the principal field of Rhodes' activity, and the care with
+which he fostered its prosperity kept him too busy and interested to
+continue the quest for riches which had been his great, if not his
+principal, occupation during the first years of his stay in South Africa.
+
+Although Cecil Rhodes was so happily placed that he had no need to bother
+over wealth, he was not so aloof to the glamour of politics. He had always
+felt the irk of his retirement after the Raid, and the hankering after a
+leading political position became more pronounced as the episode which
+shut the Parliamentary door behind him after he had passed through its
+portals faded in the mind of the people.
+
+It was not surprising, therefore, to observe that politics once more took
+the upper hand amidst his preoccupations. It was, though, politics
+connected with the development of the country that bore his name more than
+with the welfare of the Cape Colony or of the Transvaal. It was only
+during the last two years of Rhodes' existence that his interest revived
+in the places connected with his first successes in life. Rhodes had been
+convinced that a war with the Boers would last only a matter of a few
+weeks--three months, as he prophesied when it broke out--and he was
+equally sure, though for what reason it is difficult to guess, that the
+war would restore him to his former position and power. The illusion
+lingered long enough to keep him in a state of excitement, during which,
+carried along by his natural enthusiasm, he indulged in several
+unconsidered steps, and when at last his hope was dispelled he accused
+everybody of being the cause of his disappointment. Never for a moment
+would he admit that he could have been mistaken, or that the war, which at
+a certain moment his intervention might possibly have avoided, had been
+the consequence of the mischievous act he had not prevented.
+
+When the Bloemfontein Conference failed Rhodes was not altogether
+displeased. He had felt the affront of not being asked to attend; and,
+though his common sense told him that it would have been altogether out of
+the question for him to take part in it, as this would have been
+considered in the light of a personal insult by President Kruger, he would
+have liked to have been consulted by Sir Alfred Milner, as well as by the
+English Government, as to the course to be adopted during its
+deliberations. He was fully persuaded in his own mind that Sir Alfred
+Milner, being still a new arrival in South Africa, had not been able to
+grasp its complicated problems, and so had not adopted the best means to
+baffle the intrigues of President Kruger and the diplomacy of his clever
+colleague, President Steyn. At every tale which reached Cecil Rhodes
+concerning the difficulties encountered by Sir Alfred, he declared that he
+was "glad to be out of this mess." Yet it was not difficult to see that he
+passionately regretted not being allowed to watch from a seat at the
+council table the vicissitudes of this last attempt by conference to
+smooth over difficulties arising from the recklessness displayed by people
+in arrogantly rushing matters that needed careful examination.
+
+[Illustration: PRESIDENT KRUGER]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE AFTERMATH OF THE RAID
+
+
+Toward the close of the last chapter I referred to the Raid passing from
+the forefront of public memory. But though, as a fact, it became blurred
+in the mind of the people, as a factor in South African history its
+influence by no means diminished. Indeed, the aftermath of the Raid
+assumed far greater proportions as time went on. It influenced so entirely
+the further destinies of South Africa, and brought about such enmities and
+such bitterness along with it, that nothing short of a war could have
+washed away its impressions. Up to that fatal adventure the Jingo English
+elements, always viewed with distrust and dislike in the Transvaal as well
+as at the Cape, had been more or less held back in their desire to gain an
+ascendancy over the Dutch population, whilst the latter had accepted the
+Jingo as a necessary evil devoid of real importance, and only annoying
+from time to time.
+
+After the Raid all the Jingoes who had hoped that its results would be to
+give them greater facilities of enrichment considered themselves
+personally aggrieved by its failure. They did just what Rhodes was always
+doing. The Boers and President Kruger had acted correctly in this
+enterprise of Doctor Jameson, but the Jingoes made them responsible for
+the results of its failure. They went about giving expression to feelings
+of the most violent hatred against the Boers, and railed at their
+wickedness in daring to stand up in defence of rights which the British
+Government had solemnly recognised. It became quite useless to tell those
+misguided individuals that the Cabinet at Westminster had from the very
+first blamed Rhodes for his share in what the English Press, with but few
+exceptions, had declared to be an entirely disgraceful episode. They
+pretended that people in London knew nothing about the true state of
+affairs in South Africa or the necessities of the country; that the
+British Government had always shown deplorable weakness in regard to the
+treatment meted out to its subjects in the Colonies, and that both Rhodes
+and Jameson were heroes whose names deserved to be handed down to
+posterity for the services which they had rendered to their country.
+
+It is true that these ardent Jingoes were but a small minority and that
+the right-minded elements among the English Colonials universally blamed
+the unwarranted attack that had been made against the independence of the
+Transvaal. But the truculent minority shouted loud enough to drown the
+censure, and as, with a few notable exceptions, the South African Press
+was under the influence of the magnates, it was not very easy to protest
+against the strange way in which the Raid was being excused. I am
+persuaded that, had the subject been allowed to drop, it would have died a
+natural death, or at worst been considered as an historical blunder. But
+the partisans of Rhodes, the friends of Jameson, and personages connected
+with the leading financial powers did their best to keep the remembrance
+of the expedition which wrecked the political life of Rhodes fresh before
+the public. The mere mention of it was soon sufficient to arouse a tempest
+of passions, especially among the Dutch party, and by and by the history
+of South Africa resolved itself into the Raid and its memories. You never
+heard people say, "This happened at such a time"; they merely declared,
+"This happened before, or after, the Raid." It became a landmark for the
+inhabitants of Cape Town and of the Transvaal, and I could almost believe
+that, in Kimberley at any rate, the very children in the schools were
+taught to date their knowledge of English history from the time of the
+Raid.
+
+The enemies of Cecil Rhodes, and their number was legion, always declared
+that the reason why he had faced the music and braved public opinion in
+England lay in the fact that, for some reason or other, he was afraid of
+Doctor Jameson. I have referred already to this circumstance. Whilst
+refusing to admit such a possibility, yet I must own that the influence,
+and even the authority exercised by the Doctor on his chief, had something
+uncanny about it. My own opinion has always been that Rhodes' attitude
+arose principally from his conviction that Jameson was the only one who
+understood his constitution, the sole being capable of looking after his
+health. Curious as it may seem, I am sure the Colossus had an inordinate
+fear of death and of illness of any kind. He knew that his life was not a
+sound one, but he always rebelled against the idea that, like other
+mortals, he was subject to death. I feel persuaded that one of the reasons
+why he chose to be buried in the Matoppo Hills was that, in selecting this
+lonely spot, he felt that he would not often be called upon to see the
+place where he would rest one day.
+
+This dread of the unknown, so rare in people of his calibre, remained with
+him until the end. It increased in acuteness as his health began to fail.
+Then, more than ever, did he entertain and plan new schemes, as if to
+persuade himself that he had unlimited time before him in which to execute
+them. His flatterers knew how to play upon his weakness, and they never
+failed to do so. Perhaps this foible explains the influence which Doctor
+Jameson undoubtedly exercised upon the mind of Rhodes. He believed himself
+to be in safety whenever Jameson was about him. And so in a certain sense
+he was, because, with all his faults, the Doctor had a real affection for
+the man to whom he had been bound by so many ties ever since the days when
+at Kimberley they had worked side by side, building their fortunes and
+their careers.
+
+By a curious freak of destiny, when the tide of events connected with the
+war had given to the Progressive English party a clear majority in the
+Cape Parliament, Jameson assumed its leadership as a matter of course,
+largely because he was the political next-of-kin to Rhodes. The fact that
+at that time he lived at Groote Schuur added to his popularity, and he
+continued whilst there the traditional hospitality displayed during the
+lifetime of Rhodes. That he ultimately became Prime Minister was not
+surprising; the office fell to his share as so many other good things had
+fallen before; and, having obtained this supreme triumph and enjoyed it
+for a time, he was tactful enough to retire at precisely the right moment.
+
+The Raid indirectly killed Rhodes and directly obliterated his political
+reputation. It lost him, too, the respect of all the men who could have
+helped him to govern South Africa wisely and well. It deprived him of the
+experience and popularity of Mr. Schreiner, Mr. Merriman, Mr. Sauer and
+other members of the Afrikander Bond who had once been upon terms of
+intimacy and affection with him.
+
+It must never be forgotten that at one period of his history Rhodes was
+considered to be the best friend of the Dutch party; and, secondly, that
+he had been the first to criticise the action of the British Government in
+regard to the Transvaal. At the very moment when the Raid was contemplated
+he was making the most solemn assurances to his friends--as they then
+believed themselves to be--that he would never tolerate any attack against
+the independence of the Boers. If his advice had been taken, Rhodes
+considered that the errors which culminated at Majuba with the defeat of
+the British troops would have been avoided. He caused the same assurances
+to be conveyed to President Kruger, and this duplicity, which in anyone
+less compromised than he was in regard to the Dutch party might have been
+blamed, was in his case considered as something akin to high treason, and
+roused against him sentiments not only of hatred, but also of disgust.
+When later on, at the time of the Boer War, Rhodes made attempts to
+ingratiate himself once more into the favour of the Dutch he failed to
+realise that while there are cases when animosity can give way before
+political necessity, it is quite impossible in private to shake hands with
+an individual whom one despises. And that such persons as Mrs. van Koopman
+or Mr. Schreiner, for instance, despised Rhodes there can be no doubt.
+
+They were wrong in doing so. Rhodes was essentially a man of moods, and
+also an opportunist in his strange, blunt way. Had the Dutch rallied round
+him during the last war it is certain that he would have given himself up
+body and soul to the task of trying to smooth over the difficulties which
+gave such an obstinate character to the war. He would have induced the
+English Government to grant to all rebel colonists who returned to their
+allegiance a generous pardon and reinstatement into their former rights.
+
+Even while the war lasted it is a fact that, in a certain sense, Rhodes'
+own party suspected him of betraying its interests. I feel almost sure
+that Sir Alfred Milner did not trust him, but, nevertheless, he would have
+liked Rhodes as a coadjutor. If the two men were never on sincerely
+cordial terms with one another it was not the fault of the High
+Commissioner, who, with that honesty of which he always and upon every
+occasion gave proof, tried to secure the co-operation of the great South
+African statesman in his difficult task. But Rhodes would not help Sir
+Alfred. But neither, too, would he help the Dutch unless they were willing
+to eat humble pie before him. In fact, it was this for which Rhodes had
+been waiting ever since the Raid. He wanted people to ask his forgiveness
+for the faults he himself had committed. He would have liked Sir Alfred
+Milner to beg of him as a favour to take the direction of public affairs,
+and he would have desired the whole of the Dutch party to come down _in
+corpore_ to Groote Schuur, to implore him to become their leader and to
+fight not only for them but also for the rights of President Kruger, whom
+he professed to ridicule and despise, but to whom he had caused assurances
+of sympathy to be conveyed.
+
+During the first period of the war, and especially during the siege, Cecil
+Rhodes was in Kimberley. He had gone with the secret hope that he might be
+able from that centre to retain a stronger hold on South African politics
+than could have been the case at Groote Schuur, in which region the only
+authority recognised by English and Dutch alike was that of Sir Alfred
+Milner. He waited for a sign telling him that his ambition was about to be
+realised in some way or other--and waited in vain. It is indisputable that
+whilst he was shut up in the Diamond City Rhodes entered into secret
+negotiations with some of the Dutch leaders. This, though it might have
+been construed in the sense of treason against his own Motherland had it
+reached the knowledge of the extreme Jingo party, was in reality the
+sincere effort of a true patriot to put an end to a struggle which was
+threatening to destroy the prosperity of a country for which he had
+laboured for so many years.
+
+In judging Rhodes one must not forget that though a leading personality in
+South Africa, and the chairman of a corporation which practically ruled
+the whole of the Cape Colony and, in part, also the Transvaal, he was,
+after all, at that time nothing but a private individual. He had the right
+to put his personal influence at the service of the State and of his
+country if he considered that by so doing he could bring to an end a war
+which threatened to bring destruction on a land that was just beginning to
+progress toward civilisation. It must be remembered that his was the only
+great personality in South Africa capable of opposing President Kruger and
+the other Dutch and Boer leaders. He was still popular among many
+people--feared by some, worshipped by others. He could rally round him
+many elements that would never coalesce with either Dutch or English
+unless he provided the impetus of his authority and approval. If only he
+had spoken frankly to the Boer leaders whom he had caused to be
+approached, called them to his side instead of having messages conveyed to
+them by people whom he could disavow later on and whom, in fact, he did
+disavow; and if, on the other hand, Rhodes had placed himself at the
+disposal of Sir Alfred Milner, and told him openly that he would try to
+see what he could do to help him, the tenseness of the situation would
+almost certainly have been eased.
+
+In a position as intermediary between two adversaries who required his
+advice and influence to smooth the way toward a settlement of the terrible
+South African question Rhodes could have done incalculable service and
+added lustre to his name. But he did not, and it is not without interest
+to seek the reason why the Colossus was not courageous enough to embark
+upon such a course. Whether through fear of his actions being wrongly
+interpreted, or else because he did not feel sure of his ground and was
+apprehensive lest he might be induced to walk into a trap, Cecil Rhodes
+never would pronounce himself upon one side or the other. He left to
+well-wishers the task of reconciliation between himself and his enemies,
+or, if not that, at least the possibility for both once more to take
+common action for the solution of South African difficulties. The
+unfortunate side of the whole affair lay in the fact that the Boer and
+Bond leaders each remained under the impression that in the Raid affair it
+was against their particular body that Rhodes had sinned, that it was
+their cause which he had betrayed. Accordingly they expected him to
+recognise this fact and to tell them of his regret.
+
+But this was not Rhodes' way: on the contrary, he looked to his
+adversaries to consider that they had wronged him. Both parties adhered
+firmly to their point of view; it was not an easy matter to persuade
+either of them to take the initiative. Each very well knew and felt it was
+an indispensable step, but each considered it should be taken by the
+other.
+
+This brings me to make a remark which probably has never yet found its way
+into print, though some have spoken about it in South Africa. It is that
+Cecil Rhodes, whilst being essentially an Empire Maker, was not an Empire
+Ruler. His conceptions were far too vast to allow him to take into
+consideration the smaller details of everyday life which, in the
+management of the affairs of the world, obliges one to consider possible
+ramifications of every great enterprise. Rhodes wanted simply to sweep
+away all obstacles without giving the slightest thought to the
+consequences likely to follow on so offhand a manner of getting rid of
+difficulties.
+
+In addition to this disregard of vital details, there was a tinge of
+selfishness in everything which Rhodes undertook and which gave a personal
+aspect to matters which ought to have been looked upon purely from the
+objective. The acquisition of Rhodesia, for instance, was considered by
+him as having been accomplished for the aggrandisement of the Empire and
+also for his own benefit. He sincerely believed that he had had nothing
+else in his mind when he founded the Chartered Company, than the desire to
+conquer a new country and to give it to England; but he would certainly
+have felt cruelly affronted if the British Government had ever taken its
+administration into its own hands and not allowed Rhodes to do exactly
+what he pleased there. He loved to go to Buluwayo, and would spend weeks
+watching all that was being done in the way of agriculture and mining. In
+particular, he showed considerable interest in the natives.
+
+The Colonial Office in London was treated by Cecil Rhodes with the utmost
+disdain on the rare occasions when it tried to put in a word concerning
+the establishment of British rule in the territories which he gloried in
+having presented to the Queen. It was sufficient to mention in his
+presence the possibility of the Charter being recalled to put Rhodes into
+a passion. No king or tyrant of old, indeed, treated his subjects with the
+severity which Rhodes showed in regard to the different civil officials
+and military defenders of the Rhodesia he loved so much and so unwisely.
+
+It is curious that Rhodes never allowed speculation a free hand in
+Rhodesia as he had done at Kimberley or at Johannesburg. He was most
+careful that outsiders should not hear about what was going on, and took
+endless precautions not to expose the companies that worked the old
+dominions of poor King Lobengula, to the sharp criticism of the European
+Stock Exchanges. Their shares remained in the hands of people on whose
+discretion Rhodes believed that he could rely, and no one ever heard of
+gambling in scrip exciting the minds of the inhabitants of Buluwayo or
+Salisbury to anything like the degree stocks in Transvaal concerns did.
+
+In Rhodesia Rhodes believed himself on his own ground and free from the
+criticisms which he guessed were constantly uttered in regard to him and
+to his conduct. In the new land which bore his name Rhodes was surrounded
+only by dependants, whilst in Cape Colony he now and then came across
+someone who would tell him and, what was worse, who would make him feel
+that, after all, he was not the only man in the world, and that he could
+not always have everything his own way. Moreover, in Cape Town there was
+the Governor, whose personality was more important than his own, and whom,
+whether he liked it or not, he had to take into consideration, and to
+whom, in a certain sense, he had to submit. And in Kimberley there was the
+De Beers Board which, though composed of men who were entirely in
+dependence upon him and whose careers he had made, yet had to be
+consulted. He could not entirely brush them aside, the less so that a
+whole army of shareholders stood behind them who, from time to time, were
+impudent enough to wish to see what was being done with their money.
+
+Nothing in the way of hampering critics or circumscribing authorities
+existed in Rhodesia. The Chartered Company, though administered by a
+Board, was in reality left entirely in the hands and under the control of
+Rhodes. Most of the directors were in England and came before public
+notice only at the annual general meeting, which was always a success,
+inasmuch as no one there had ever ventured to criticise, otherwise than in
+a mild way, the work of the men who were supposed to watch over the
+development of the resources of the country. Rhodes was master, and
+probably his power would have even increased had he lived long enough to
+see the completion of the Cape to Cairo Railway, which was his last hobby
+and the absorbing interest of the closing years of his life.
+
+The Cape to Cairo Railway was one of those vast schemes that can be
+ascribed to the same quality in his character as that which made him so
+essentially an Empire Maker. It was a project of world-wide importance,
+and destined to set the seal to the paramount influence of Great Britain
+over the whole of Africa. It was a work which, without Rhodes, would never
+have been accomplished. He was right to feel proud of having conceived it;
+and England, too, ought to be proud of having counted among her sons a man
+capable of starting such a vast enterprise and of going on with it despite
+the violent opposition and the many misgivings with which it was received
+by the general public.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+RHODES AND THE AFRIKANDER BOND
+
+
+To return to the subject of the negotiations which undoubtedly took place
+between Rhodes and the leaders of the Afrikander Bond during the war, I
+must say that, so far as I know, they can rank among the most
+disinterested actions of his life. For once there was no personal interest
+or possible material gain connected with his desire to bring the Dutch
+elements in South Africa to look upon the situation from the purely
+patriotic point of view, as he did himself.
+
+It would have been most certainly to the advantage of everybody if,
+instead of persisting in a resistance which was bound to collapse, no
+matter how successful it might appear to have been at its start, the
+Boers, together with the Dutch Afrikanders, had sent the olive branch to
+Cape Town. There would then have been some hope of compromise or of coming
+to terms with England before being crushed by her armies. It would have
+been favourable to English interests also had the great bitterness, which
+rendered the war such a long and such a rabid one, not had time to spread
+all over the country. Rhodes' intervention, which Sir Alfred Milner could
+not have refused had he offered it, backed by the Boers on one side and by
+the English Progressive party in the Colony on the other, might have
+brought about great results and saved many lives.
+
+No blame, therefore, ought to attach to Cecil Rhodes for wishing to
+present the Boer side of the case. It would, indeed, have been wiser on
+the part of Mr. Hofmeyr and other Bond leaders to have forgotten the past
+and given a friendly hand to the one man capable of unravelling the
+tangled skein of affairs.
+
+At that period, whilst the siege of Kimberley was in progress, it is
+certain that serious consideration was given to this question of common
+action on the part of Rhodes and of the two men who practically held the
+destinies of the Transvaal in their hands--de Wet and General Botha, with
+Mr. Hofmeyr as representative of the Afrikander Bond at their back. Why it
+failed would for ever remain a mystery if one did not remember that
+everywhere in South Africa lurked hidden motives of self-interest which
+interfered with the best intentions. The fruits of the seed of distrust
+sown by the Raid were not easy to eradicate.
+
+Perhaps if Mr. Rhodes had stood alone the attempt might have met with more
+success than was actually the case. But it was felt by all the leading men
+in the Transvaal that a peace concluded under his auspices would result in
+the subjection of the Boers to the foreign and German-Jew millionaires.
+This was the one thing they feared.
+
+The Boers attributed to the millionaires of the Rand all the misfortunes
+which had fallen upon them, and consequently the magnates were bitterly
+hated by the Boers. And not without reason. No reasonable Boer would have
+seriously objected to a union with England, provided it had been effected
+under conditions assuring them autonomy and a certain independence. But no
+one wanted to have liberty and fortune left at the mercy of adventurers,
+even though some of them had risen to reputation and renown, obtained
+titles, and bought their way into Society.
+
+Unfortunately for him, Rhodes was supposed to represent the class of
+people referred to, or, at any rate, to favour them. One thing is
+certain--the great financial interests which Rhodes possessed in the Gold
+Fields and other concerns of the same kind lent some credence to the idea.
+All these circumstances prevented public opinion from expressing full
+confidence in him, because no one could bring himself to believe what
+nevertheless would have come true.
+
+In the question of restoring peace to South Africa Rhodes most certainly
+would never have taken anyone's advice; he would have acted according to
+his own impulse, and more so because Doctor Jameson was not with him
+during the whole time Kimberley was besieged. Unfortunately for all the
+parties concerned, Rhodes let slip the opportunity to resume his former
+friendship with Mr. Hofmeyr, the only man in South Africa whose
+intelligence could measure itself with his own. And in the absence of this
+first step from Rhodes, a false pride--which was wounded vanity more than
+anything else--prevented the Bond from seeking the help of Rhodes. This
+attitude on the part of each man would simply have been ridiculous under
+ordinary circumstances, but at a time when such grave interests were at
+stake, and when the future of so many people was liable to be compromised,
+it became criminal.
+
+In sharp contrast to it stood the conduct of Sir Alfred Milner, who was
+never influenced by his personal feelings or by his vanity where the
+interests of his country were engaged. During the few months which
+preceded the war he was the object of virulent hatred on the part of most
+of the white population of the Colony. When the first disillusions of the
+war brought along with them their usual harvest of disappointments the
+personality of the High Commissioner appeared at last in its true light,
+and one began to realise that here was a man who possessed a singularly
+clear view on matters of politics, and that all his actions were guided by
+sound principles. His quiet determination not to allow himself to be
+influenced by the gossip of Cape Town was also realised, and amid all the
+spite shown it is to his honour that, instead of throwing up the sponge,
+he persevered, until at last he succeeded in the aim which he had kept
+before him from the day he had landed in Table Bay. He restored peace to
+the dark continent where no one had welcomed him, but where everybody
+mourned his departure when he bade it good-bye after the most anxious
+years he had ever known.
+
+When Sir Alfred accepted the post of Governor of the Cape Colony and
+English High Commissioner in South Africa, he had intended to study most
+carefully the local conditions of the new country whither fate and his
+duty were sending him, and then, after having gained the necessary
+experience capable of guiding him in the different steps he aspired to
+take, to proceed to the formidable task he had set for himself. His great
+object was to bring about a reconciliation between the two great political
+parties in the Colony--the South African League, with Rhodes as President,
+and the Afrikander Bond, headed by Messrs. Hofmeyr (the one most in
+popular favour with the Boer farmers), Sauer and Schreiner.
+
+In the gigantic task of welding together two materials which possessed
+little affinity and no love for each other, Sir Alfred was unable to be
+guided by his experience in the Motherland. In England a certain
+constitutional policy was the basis of every party. At the Cape the
+dominating factors were personal feelings, personal hatreds and
+affections, while in the case of the League it was money and money alone.
+I do not mean that every member of the League had been bought by De Beers
+or the Chartered Company; but what I do maintain is that the majority of
+its members had some financial or material reason to enrol themselves.
+
+In judging the politics of South Africa at the period of which I am
+writing, one must not forget that the greater number of those who then
+constituted the so-called Progressive party were men who had travelled to
+the Cape through love of adventure and the desire to enrich themselves
+quickly. It was only the first comers who had seen their hopes realised.
+Those who came after them found things far more difficult, and had
+perforce to make the best of what their predecessors left. On the other
+hand, it was relatively easy for them to find employment in the service of
+one or the other of the big companies that sprang up, and by whom most of
+the mining and industrial concerns were owned.
+
+[Illustration: THE HON. J.H. HOFMEYR]
+
+When the influence of the De Beers increased after its amalgamation with
+the other diamond companies around Kimberley, and when Rhodes made up his
+mind that only a political career could help him to achieve his vast
+plans, he struck upon the thought of using the money and the influence
+which were at his disposal to transform De Beers into one of the most
+formidable political instruments the world had ever seen. He succeeded in
+doing so in what would have been a wonderful manner if one did not
+remember the crowd of fortune-seeking men who were continually landing in
+South Africa. These soon found that it would advantage them to enrol under
+Rhodes' banner, for he was no ordinary millionaire. Here stood a man who
+was perpetually discovering new treasures, annexing new continents, and
+who had always at his disposal profitable posts to scatter among his
+followers.
+
+The reflex action upon Rhodes was that unconsciously he drifted into the
+conviction that every man could be bought, provided one knew what it was
+he wanted. He understood perfectly well the art of speculating in his
+neighbours' weaknesses, and thus liked to invite certain people to make
+long stays at his house, not because he liked them, but because he knew,
+if they did not, that they would soon discover that the mere fact of being
+the guest of Mr. Rhodes procured for them the reputation of being in his
+confidence. Being a guest at Groote Schuur endowed a man with a prestige
+such as no one who has not lived in South Africa can realise, and,
+furthermore, enabled him to catch here and there scraps of news respecting
+the money markets of the world, a proper understanding and use of which
+could be of considerable financial value. A cup of tea at Groote Schuur
+was sufficient to bring about more than one political conversion.
+
+Once started the South African League soon became a power in the land, not
+so strong by any means as the Afrikander Bond, but far more influential in
+official, and especially in financial, circles. Created for the apparent
+aim of supporting British government in Cape Colony, it found itself
+almost from the very first in conflict with it, if not outwardly, at least
+tacitly. After his rupture with the Bond consequent upon the Raid, Rhodes
+brought considerable energy to bear upon the development of the League. He
+caused it to exercise all over the Colony an occult power which more than
+once defied constituted authority, and proved a source of embarrassment to
+British representatives with greater frequency than they would have cared
+to own. Sir Alfred Milner, so far as I have been able to see, when taking
+the reins, had not reckoned upon meeting with this kind of government
+within a government, and in doing so perhaps did not appreciate its
+extent. But from the earliest days of his administration it confronted
+him, at first timidly, afterwards with persistence, and at last with such
+insolence that he found himself compelled to see what he could do to
+reduce to impotence this organisation which sought to devour him.
+
+The problem which a situation of the character described thrust upon Sir
+Alfred was easier to discuss than to solve. The League was a power so wide
+that it was almost impossible to get rid of its influence in the country.
+It was controlled by Rhodes, by De Beers, by the Chartered Company, by the
+members in both Houses who were affiliated to it, by all the great
+financial establishments throughout South Africa--with but a solitary
+exception--by the principal industrial and agricultural enterprises in the
+country. It comprised political men, landowners, doctors, merchants,
+ship-owners, practically all the colonists in Rhodesia, and most of the
+English residents of the Transvaal. It controlled elections, secured
+votes, disposed of important posts, and when it advised the Governor the
+Legislature had to take its remarks into consideration whether or not it
+approved of them. Under the regime of the days when the League was formed
+it had been able to develop itself with great facility, the dangers which
+lurked behind its encroachment on the privileges of the Crown not being
+suspected. But Sir Alfred Milner discovered the menace at once, and with
+the quiet firmness and the tact which he always displayed in everything
+that he undertook proceeded to cope with the organisation.
+
+Sir Alfred soon found himself confronted by the irritation of Rhodes, who
+had relied on his support for the schemes which he had nursed in regard to
+the Transvaal. I must here explain the reason why Rhodes had thrown his
+glances toward the Rand. One must remember the peculiar conditions in
+which he was placed in being always surrounded by creatures whom he could
+only keep attached to his person and to his ambition by satisfying their
+greed for gold. When he had annexed Matabeleland it had been principally
+in the expectation that one would find there the rich gold-bearing strata
+said to exist in that region. Unfortunately, this hope proved a fallacious
+one. Although thousands of pounds were spent in sinking and research, the
+results obtained were of so insignificant a nature, and the quantity of
+ore extracted so entirely insufficient to justify systematic exploitation,
+that the adventurers had perforce to turn their attention toward other
+fields.
+
+It was after this disillusion that the idea took hold of Rhodes, which he
+communicated to his friends, to acquire the gold fields of the Rand, and
+to transform the rich Transvaal into a region where the Chartered Company
+and the South African League would rule. Previous to this, if we are to
+believe President Kruger, Rhodes had tried to conclude an alliance with
+him, and once, upon his return from Beira to Cape Town, had stopped at
+Pretoria, where he paid a visit to the old Boer statesman.
+
+It is quite likely that on this occasion Rhodes put in a word suggesting
+that it would be an advantage to the Transvaal to become possessed of an
+outlet on the sea-board, but I hardly think that Kruger wrote the truth in
+his memoirs in stating that when mentioning Delagoa Bay Rhodes used the
+words, "We must simply take it," thus associating himself with Kruger.
+Cecil Rhodes was far too cute to do any such tiling, knowing that it would
+be interpreted in a sense inimical to his plans. But I should not be
+surprised if, when the President remarked that Delagoa was Portuguese, he
+had replied, "It does not matter, and you must simply take it." This would
+have been far more to the point, as it would have hinted to those who knew
+how to read between the lines that England, which Rhodes was persuaded was
+incarnated in himself, would not mind if the Transvaal did lay hands on
+Delagoa Bay. Such an act would furnish the British Government with a
+pretext for dabbling to some effect in the affairs of the Transvaal
+Republic.
+
+Such a move as this would have been just one of these things which Rhodes
+was fond of doing. He felt sometimes a kind of malicious pleasure in
+whispering to others the very things likely to get them into trouble
+should they be so foolish as to do them. In the case of President Kruger,
+however, he had to deal with a mind which, though uncouth, yet possessed
+all the "slimness" of which so many examples are to be found in South
+Africa.
+
+Kruger wrote, "Rhodes represented capital, no matter how base and
+contemptible, and whether by lying, bribery or treachery, all and every
+means were welcome to him if they led to the attainment of his ambitious
+desires." But Oom Paul was absolutely wrong in thinking that it was the
+personage he was thus describing who practised all these abominations. He
+ought to have remembered that it was his name only which was associated
+with all these basenesses, and the man himself, if left to his better
+self, would never have condescended to the many acts of doubtful morality
+with which his memory will remain associated in history.
+
+I am firmly convinced that on his own impulse he would never, for
+instance, have ventured on the Raid. But, unhappily, his habit, when
+something "not quite" was mentioned to him, was to say nothing and to
+trust to his good luck to avoid unpleasant consequences arising out of his
+silence. Had he ventured to oppose the plans of his confederates they
+would have immediately turned upon him, and ... There were, perhaps, past
+facts which he did not wish the world to remember. His frequent fits of
+raging temper arose from this irksome feeling, and was his way--a futile
+way--of revenging himself on his jailors for the durance in which they
+kept him. The man who believed himself to be omnipotent in South Africa,
+and who was considered so powerful by the world at large, was in reality
+in the hands of the very organisations he had helped to build.
+
+It was not Cecil John Rhodes' will which was paramount in the South
+African League. Kruger spoke absolutely the truth when he asserted that it
+was essential "to know something about the Chartered Company before it was
+possible to realise the true perspective of the history of South Africa
+during the closing years of the last century." Another of Kruger's
+sweeping assertions--and one which he never backed by anything
+tangible--was when he further wrote that Rhodes was "one of the most
+unscrupulous characters that ever existed, whose motto was 'the end
+justifies the means,' a motto that contains a creed which represents the
+whole man." Rhodes by nature was not half so unscrupulous as Kruger
+himself, but he was surrounded by unscrupulous people, whom he was too
+indolent to repulse. He was constantly paying the price of his former
+faults and errors in allowing his name to serve as a shield for the
+ambitions of those who were in no way worthy of him and who constantly
+abused his confidence.
+
+The habit became ingrained in the nature of Cecil Rhodes of always doing
+what he chose without regard to the feelings and sentiments of others. It
+persisted during the whole of the war, and would probably have proved a
+serious impediment to the conclusion of peace had he lived until it became
+accomplished. This characteristic led him, after all his intrigues with
+the Dutch party and the Bond, to throw himself once more into the arms of
+the English Progressive party and to start a campaign of his own against
+the rebel Colonials and the Dutch inhabitants of the Transvaal.
+
+While the siege of Kimberley lasted, even while he was seeking to become
+reconciled to the British element, Rhodes asserted himself in a strongly
+offensive manner. He sent to Sir Alfred Milner in Cape Town reports of his
+own as to the military authorities and dispositions, couched in such
+alarming tones that the High Commissioner became most uneasy concerning
+the possible fate of the Diamond City. These reports accused the officers
+in charge of the town of failing in the performance of their duties, and
+showing symptoms of abject fear in regard to the besieging Boer army. It
+was only after an explanation from Sir Redvers Buller, and after the
+latter had communicated to him the letters which he himself had received
+from Colonel Kekewich, the commander of the troops to whom had been
+entrusted the defence of Kimberley, that Sir Alfred was reassured.
+
+The fact was that Rhodes became very impatient to find that his movements
+were watched by the military authorities, and that sometimes even the
+orders which he gave for what he considered the greater security of the
+town, and gave with the superb assurance which distinguished him, were
+cancelled by the responsible officials. Disgraceful scenes followed.
+Rhodes was accused of wishing to come to an arrangement with Cronje, who
+was in charge of the besieging troops, in order to bring the war to an end
+by his own efforts.
+
+I never have been able to ascertain how much of real truth, if any, was in
+the various accusations made against Cecil Rhodes by the English General
+Officers, but they were embodied in the message which was alleged to have
+been flashed across to Kimberley after the battle of Modder River by Lord
+Methuen, but which was supposed by those whom it concerned to have been
+inspired by the Commander-in-Chief:
+
+"Tell Mr. Rhodes," the heliograph ran, "that on my entry into Kimberley he
+and his friends must take their immediate departure."
+
+Two years later, in November, 1902, Sir Redvers Buller, when speaking at
+the annual dinner of the Devonians in London, remarked that he must
+protest against the rumours which, during the siege of Kimberley, had been
+spread by some of its residents that the Imperial authorities had been in
+a perpetual state of "funk." The allusion was understood to refer to Mr.
+Rhodes by his partisans, who protested against the speech. Rhodes, indeed,
+during his whole life was never in greater disfavour with the English
+Government than after the siege of Kimberley; perhaps because he had
+always accused Whitehall of not understanding the real state of things in
+South Africa. The result of that imperative telegram, and Rhodes' belief
+as to its source, was bitter hatred against Sir Redvers Buller. It soon
+found expression in vindictive attacks by the whole Rhodesian Press
+against the strategy, the abilities, and even the personal honesty of Sir
+Redvers Buller.
+
+Whether Rhodes, upon his arrival in London, attempted to hurt the General
+I do not know, but it could be always taken for granted that Rhodes could
+be a very bad enemy when he chose.
+
+Upon his return to Groote Schuur he seemed more dissatisfied than ever
+with the Home Government. He was loud in his denunciations and unceasing
+in his criticisms. Sir Alfred, however, like the wise man he was,
+preferred to ignore these pinpricks, and invariably treated Rhodes with
+the utmost courtesy and attention. He always showed himself glad to listen
+to Rhodes and to discuss with him points which the Colossus thought it
+worth while to talk over. At that time Rhodes was in the most equivocal
+position he had ever been in his life. He could not return to Kimberley;
+he did not care to go to Rhodesia; and in Cape Colony he was always
+restive.
+
+At this period all kinds of discussions used to take place concerning the
+ultimate results of the war and the influence which it would have on the
+future development of affairs in the Transvaal. The financiers began to
+realise that after the British flag had once been raised at Pretoria they
+would not have such a good time of it as they had hoped at first, and now,
+having done their best to hurry on the war, regretted it more than anybody
+else. The fact was that everybody in South Africa, with the exception of
+the Boers themselves, who knew very well their own resources, had believed
+that the war would be over in three months, and that the Transvaal would
+be transferred into a Crown Colony where adventurers and gold-seekers
+would have a fine time.
+
+Rhodes himself had more than once expressed his conviction that the
+destruction of the Boers would not take more than three months at the
+most, and this assurance was accepted as gospel by most of the financiers
+of Johannesburg. An exception was Mr. F. Eckstein, the general manager and
+partner in the concern of Wernher, Beit & Co., and one of the ablest
+financiers in that city. From the first he was quite pessimistic in regard
+to the length of time the war would take.
+
+As the war dragged on without there seeming any chance of its being
+brought to a rapid conclusion, it became evident that England, after all
+the sacrifices which she was making, would never consent to leave the
+leaders of the movement--the ostensible object of which had been to grant
+to the Uitlanders certain privileges to which they had no right--as sole
+and absolute masters of the situation. In fact, the difficulties of the
+war made it evident that, once peace was proclaimed, public opinion at
+home would demand that the Transvaal, together with the Orange Free State,
+should be annexed to the British Empire in view of a future federation of
+the whole of South Africa, about which the English Press was already
+beginning to speak.
+
+That South Africa should not remain a sphere of exploitation sent shivers
+down the spines of the financiers. The South African League was observed
+to become quite active in discovering rebels. Their zeal in this direction
+was felt all over Cape Colony. Their aim was to reduce the register in
+order to bring about a considerable falling off of voters for the
+Afrikander Bond, and thereby substantially influence the results of the
+next election to the Cape Parliament.
+
+At this period certain overtures were made once again to the Bond party.
+They proceeded apparently from men supposed to act on their own
+initiative, but who were known to be in favour at Groote Schuur. These
+advances met with no response, but when the rumour that they had been made
+spread among the public owing to an indiscretion, Rhodes hastened to deny
+that he had been a party to the plan--as was his wont when he failed to
+achieve. All the same, it is a fact that members of the House of Assembly
+belonging to the Afrikander party visited Groote Schuur in the course of
+that last winter which Rhodes spent there, and were warmly welcomed.
+Rhodes showed himself unusually gracious. He hoped these forerunners would
+rally his former friends to his side once more. But Rhodes was expecting
+too much, considering ail the circumstances. Faithful to his usual
+tactics, even whilst his Afrikander guests were being persuaded to lend
+themselves to an intrigue from which they had hoped to win something,
+Rhodes was making himself responsible for another step likely to render
+the always strong hatred even more acute than ever. More than that, he was
+advocating, through certain underground channels, the suspension of the
+Constitution in Cape Colony.
+
+[Illustration: THE RT. HON. SIR W.F. HELY-HUTCHINSON]
+
+The particulars of this incident were only disclosed after the war was
+over. The whole thing was thrashed out in Parliament and its details
+communicated to the public by Mr. David de Waal, one of the truest friends
+Mr. Rhodes ever had. The discussion took place after Sir Alfred Milner had
+been transferred to Johannesburg and Sir Walter Hely-Hutchinson had taken
+his place in Cape Town. The South African League had become more active
+than ever, and was using all its influence to secure a majority for its
+members at the next general election. The Bond, on its side, had numerous
+adherents up country, and the stout Dutch farmers had remained faithful to
+their old allegiance, so there was no hope that they would be induced,
+even through the influence of money, to give their votes to the
+Progressives. The only things which remained were: a redistribution of
+seats, then a clearing out of the register, and, lastly, a suspension of
+the Constitution, which would have allowed the Governor a "free" hand in
+placing certain measures on the statute book. The most influential members
+among the executive of the South African League met at Cotswold Chambers,
+and Rhodes, who was present, drew up a petition which was to be presented
+to the Prime Minister. Sir Gordon Sprigg, who filled that office, was a
+man who, with all his defects, was absolutely incapable of lending himself
+to any mean trick in order to remain in power. When Sir Gordon became
+acquainted with the demands of the League he refused absolutely to take a
+part in what he maintained would have been an everlasting blot on the
+reputation of the Government.
+
+After Rhodes' death, when the question of the suspension of the
+Constitution was raised by the Progressives in the House of Assembly, it
+was discussed in all its details, and it was proved that the South African
+League, in trying throughout the country to obtain signatures to a monster
+petition on the matter, had resorted to some more than singular means to
+obtain these signatures. Mr. Sauer, who was the leader of the Bond party
+in the Chamber, revealed how the League had employed agents to induce
+women and sometimes young children to sign the petition, and that at the
+camp near Sea Point, a suburb of Cape Town, where soldiers were stationed
+previous to their departure for England, these same agents were engaged in
+getting them to sign it before they left under the inducement of a fixed
+salary up to a certain amount and a large percentage after it had been
+exceeded, according to the number of the names obtained in this way. When
+trustworthy people of unimpeachable character wrote to the papers
+denouncing this manoeuvre the subsidised papers in Cape Town, and the
+Rhodesian Press, refused to publish the affidavits sworn on the subject,
+but wrote columns of calumnies about the Dutch Colonials, and, as a
+finishing stroke, clamoured for the suspension of the Constitution.
+
+The speech of Mr. Sauer gave rise to a heated debate, during which the
+Progressive members indignantly denied his assertions. Then stepped in Mr.
+David de Waal, that friend of Rhodes to whom I have already referred. He
+rose to bring his testimony to the facts revealed by Mr. Sauer, who was
+undoubtedly the most able leader which the Afrikander party possessed,
+with the exception, perhaps, of Mr. Merriman.
+
+"In February, 1902," he said, "there was a meeting in Cotswold Chambers
+consisting of the twenty-two members of the House of Assembly who went by
+the name of 'Rhodes' group.' It was at first discussed and ultimately
+decided to wait on the Prime Minister and to interview him concerning the
+expenditure of the war, which had reached the sum of £200,000 monthly.
+Then, after some further discussion, we came to the conclusion to meet
+once more. This was done on February 17th. You must remember that war was
+still raging at the time. At this second meeting it was agreed to
+formulate a scheme to be submitted to the Government which proposed the
+suspension of the Constitution in regard to five clauses. The first was to
+be this very suspension, then a new registration of voters, a
+redistribution of seats, the indemnity to be awarded to the faithful
+English Colonials, and, finally, the reestablishment of the Constitution.
+As to this last I must make a statement, and that is, that if I had known
+that it was meant to withdraw the Constitution for more than one month I
+would have objected to it, but I was told that it would be only a matter
+of a few days."
+
+At this point Mr. de Waal was interrupted by a Progressive member, who
+exclaimed that Dr. Jameson had denied that such a thing had ever been said
+or mentioned.
+
+"I know he has done so," replied Mr. de Waal, "but I will make a
+declaration on my oath. A committee was then appointed," he went on,
+"which waited on the Prime Minister and presented to him this very same
+petition. Sir Gordon Sprigg, however, said that he would not be ruled by
+anyone, because they had a responsible Government. The Committee reported,
+when it returned, that the Prime Minister was opposed to any movement
+started on the basis of the petition which they had presented to him, and
+that he would not move an inch from his declaration, saying energetically,
+'Never! I shall never do it!' Sir Gordon Sprigg had further pointed out
+that the result of such a step would be that the Cape would become a Crown
+Colony and would find itself in the same position as Rhodesia."
+
+Perhaps this was what Rhodes and the South African League had wished, but
+the publication of the details connected with this incident, especially
+proceeding from a man who had never made a secret of the ties which had
+bound him to Rhodes, and who, among the latter's Dutch friends, had been
+the only one who had never failed him, drove the first nail into the
+coffin of Rhodesian politics.
+
+It was common knowledge that de Waal had steadfastly stood by Rhodes even
+during the terrible time of the Raid. Moreover, he was a man of high
+integrity, who alone among those who had attached themselves to the
+destinies of the Empire Maker had never taken part in the financial
+schemes of a doubtful nature which marked the wonderful career of Rhodes.
+This declaration opened the eyes of many persons who, to that day, had
+denied the political intrigues which had been going on at Cotswold
+Chambers. Afterwards it became relatively easy for Sir Alfred Milner to
+clear the atmosphere in South Africa and to establish public life on
+sounder principles than the pure love of gain. It cannot be sufficiently
+regretted that he should not have done so before Rhodes' death and thus
+have given Rhodes--and, incidentally, the country for which Rhodes had
+done so much in the way of material development--the opportunity to shake
+off his parasites and become a real factor in solidifying the great area
+in which he was such an outstanding personality.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE INFLUENCE OF SIR ALFRED MILNER
+
+
+The occult power exercised by the League on the inner politics of South
+Africa could not fail to impress Sir Alfred Milner most unpleasantly.
+Frank himself, it must have often been absolutely repulsive to him to have
+to do with people whom he feared to trust and who believed that they could
+bring into political life the laxities of the mining camp. Though not
+aware of it, even before he landed in Cape Town the Progressives had made
+up their minds to represent him as determined to sweep the Dutch off the
+face of the earth.
+
+Believing Sir Alfred to be the confederate of Rhodes, the Boers, too,
+would have nothing to do with him. Whilst the Bloemfontein Conference was
+going on President Kruger, as well as the leaders of the Afrikander Bond,
+were overwhelmed with covert warnings to distrust the High Commissioner.
+Whence they emanated is not a matter of much doubt. Sir Alfred was accused
+of wanting to lay a trap for the Boer plenipotentiaries, who were told to
+beware of him as an accomplice of Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, whose very name
+produced at Pretoria the same effect as a red rag upon a bull. Under these
+circumstances the Conference was bound to fail, and the High Commissioner
+returned to Cape Town, very decidedly a sadder and most certainly a wiser
+man.
+
+Now that years have passed since the Boer War it is possible to secure a
+better perspective, in the light of which one can question whether it
+would have been possible to avoid the conflict by an arrangement of some
+kind with the Boer Republics, Personally, I believe that an understanding
+was not out of the question if the strong financial interests had not
+opposed its accomplishment; but at the same time a patched up affair would
+not have been a happy event for either South Africa or for England. It
+would have left matters in almost the same condition as they had been
+before, and the millionaires, who were the real masters on the Rand, would
+have found a dozen pretexts to provoke a new quarrel with the Transvaal
+Government. Had the Boer Executive attempted to do away with the power of
+the concerns which ruled the gold mines and diamond fields, it would have
+courted a resistance with which it would have been next to impossible to
+deal. The war would still have taken place, but it might have occurred at
+a far less favourable moment. No arrangement with President Kruger, even
+one most propitious to British interests, could have done away with the
+corruption and the bribery which, from the first moment of the discovery
+of the gold fields, invaded that portion of South Africa, and this
+corruption would always have stood in the way of the establishment of the
+South African Union.
+
+Sir Alfred Milner knew all this very well, and probably had an inward
+conviction, notwithstanding his efforts to prevent the war, that a
+conflict was the only means of breaking these chains of gold which
+shackled the wheels of progress. At so critical a time the support of
+Rhodes and his party would have been invaluable. And Sir Alfred would have
+welcomed it. Cecil Rhodes, of course, had declared himself officially in
+accord with the High Commissioner, and even praised him to a degree of
+fulsomeness. But the ulterior motive was simply to excite the Dutch party
+against him. The reputation of Sir Alfred Milner as a statesman and as a
+politician was constantly challenged by the very people who ought to have
+defended it. Rhodes himself had been persuaded that the Governor harboured
+the most sinister designs against his person. The innuendo was one of the
+most heinous untruths ever invented by his crowd of sycophants.
+
+An opportunity came my way, by which I was able to convince myself how
+false was the belief nourished by Rhodes against Milner. During the course
+of a conversation with Sir Alfred, I boldly asked him whether he was
+really such an enemy of Rhodes as represented. I was surprised by the
+moderate tone in which he replied to my, after all, impertinent question.
+The remarks which we then exchanged filled me with the greatest admiration
+for the man who so nobly, and so worthily, upheld British prestige in
+South Africa under the most trying circumstances. Milner was an entirely
+honest man--the rarest thing in the whole of Cape Town at that anxious
+period--and after one had had the advantage of discussing with him the
+political situation, one could only be filled with profound respect for
+him and for his opinions, actions and conduct. Far from working against
+Rhodes, as Sir Alfred had been represented to me as doing, I convinced
+myself that he was keenly anxious to be on good and, what is more
+important, on sincere terms with him. Sir Alfred had not the slightest
+feeling of animosity against the Dutch. On the contrary, he would have
+liked them to become persuaded of his desire to protect them against
+possible aggression by the Jingoes, whose offensive conduct none more than
+himself assessed at its true value.
+
+But what was the real situation? He found his every action misconstrued;
+whatever he did was interpreted in a wrong sense, and those who should
+have shared his aims were plotting against him. The position was truly
+tragic from whatever side it was viewed, and a weaker or less honest man
+would assuredly have given up the struggle.
+
+A few days after my conversation with Sir Alfred Milner, which took place
+during the course of a dinner at Government House, I took opportunity to
+mention it to Rhodes. I tried to clear his mind of the suspicions that I
+knew he entertained in regard to the High Commissioner. Cecil Rhodes
+listened to me with attention, then asked me in that sarcastic tone of
+his, which was so intensely disagreeable and offensive, whether I was in
+love with Sir Alfred, as I had so suddenly become his champion. Then he
+ended, "You are trying to make me believe the impossible." I did not allow
+him, however, to ruffle me, as evidently was his desire, but replied that
+when one came to know better those whom one had only met occasionally,
+without ever having talked with them seriously, it was natural to amend
+one's opinion accordingly. I told him, too, that my earlier
+misapprehension had been intensified by a certain lady who posed as
+Rhodes' greatest friend, and who had been loud in her denunciations of the
+High Commissioner, long before I had ever met him. But now, I added, I had
+come to the conclusion that Sir Alfred had been terribly maligned.
+
+At this point Rhodes interrupted me with the remark: "So you think that he
+is a paragon. Well, I won't contradict you, and, besides, you know that I
+have always defended him; but still, with all his virtues, he has not yet
+found out what he ought to do with me."
+
+"What can one do with you, Mr. Rhodes?" I asked with a smile.
+
+"Leave me alone," was the characteristic reply, in a tone which was
+sufficient for me to follow the advice, as it meant that the man was
+getting restive and might at any moment break out into one of those fits
+of rage which he so often used as a means to bring to an end a
+conversation in which he felt that he might not come out as victor.
+
+A few days later a rabid Rhodesian who happened to be staying at Groote
+Schuur approached me. "You have been trying to convert Mr. Rhodes to Sir
+Alfred," he remarked.
+
+"I have done nothing of the kind," I said. "I am not a preacher, but I
+have been telling Mr. Rhodes that he was mistaken if he thought that he
+had an enemy in the High Commissioner."
+
+"Had you any reason to suppose that he considered him one?" was the
+unexpected question.
+
+"Well, from what I have seen it seemed to me that you have all been doing
+your best to persuade him that such was the case," I retorted, "and why
+you should have done so passes my comprehension."
+
+The conversation dropped, but the incident confirmed me in my opinion that
+strong forces were at work to sow enmity between Rhodes and Sir Alfred
+Milner for fear the influence of the High Commissioner might bring Rhodes
+to look at things differently. As things stood at the moment, Rhodes was
+persuaded that the High Commissioner hated him, was jealous of him, wanted
+him out of his path, and never meant to allow him under any circumstances
+whatever to have any say in the settlement of South African affairs. This
+conviction, which was carefully nourished from the outside, evoked in his
+mind an absurd and silly rage to which no man of common sense, unblinded
+by vanity, could have fallen victim. I would not be so foolish as to deny
+to the famous Life Governor of De Beers either abundant common sense or
+outstanding intelligence, but here was a man gifted with genius who, under
+the impulse of passion, could act and speak like a child.
+
+Rhodes looked upon the High Commissioner as a nuisance unfortunately not
+to be set aside. What exasperated him, especially in regard to the High
+Commissioner, was the fact that he knew quite well that Sir Alfred Milner
+could assume the responsibility for concluding peace when that time
+arrived. Rhodes always hoped that his personal influence on the English,
+as well as among the Bond party, would enable him to persuade the leaders
+of the rebel movement in Cape Colony to lay down their arms and to leave
+their interests in his hands. Should such a thing have happened, Rhodes
+thought that such a success as this would efface the bad impression left
+by the Raid. He grudgingly admitted that that wild adventure had not
+pleased people, but he always refused to acknowledge that it was the one
+great and unredeemable mistake of his life. I remember once having quoted
+to him the old French motto which in the Middle Ages was the creed of
+every true knight:
+
+ "Mon âme à Dieu,
+ Mon bras au roi,
+ Mon coeur aux dames,
+ L'honneur à moi!"
+
+"Ah, yes! In those times one could still think about such things," he
+simply remarked, which proved to me that he had no comprehension of the
+real sense of the beautiful words. The higher attributes of mind did not
+trouble him either in the hours of his greatest triumphs or in the moments
+when Fortune ceased to smile upon him. He thought he had something far
+better: ambition, love of domination, the desire to eclipse everybody and
+everything around him. I do not mention money, because Rhodes did not care
+for money intrinsically.
+
+Yet the man was great in spite of all his defects. Particularly in the
+rein he gave to his thoughts during nights spent in the solitude of the
+karroo, when the stars were almost the only things which he could look
+upon, their immensity the only companion worthy of himself. One could
+almost believe Cecil Rhodes was possessed of a dual personality. At one
+moment he lived in the skies in regard to his own future prospects and the
+great deeds he wished to perform, about which he never ceased to think.
+The next he was on this earth, dabbling in the meannesses of humanity,
+taking a vicious pleasure in noticing the evil about him and too
+frequently succeeding, somehow, in wounding the feelings of those who
+liked him best, and then wondering how it happened that he had so few
+friends.
+
+On account of these characteristics, notwithstanding all his wonderful
+faculties, Cecil Rhodes will never remain an historical figure like the
+Count of Egmont during the Revolt of the Netherlands, or Mirabeau at the
+time of the French Revolution. Undoubtedly he achieved great things, but
+nothing truly beautiful. I do not think that even the warmest of his
+admirers can ever say that the organising and amalgamation of De Beers or
+the conquest of Matabeleland had anything beautiful about them. Still,
+they were triumphs which no one except himself could have achieved. He
+undoubtedly erected an edifice the like of which had never been seen in
+modern times, and he opened to the ambitions and to the greed of the world
+new prospects, new sources of riches, which caused very many to look upon
+him as truly the god of material success.
+
+Rhodes can be said to have revolutionised Society by bringing to the
+social horizon people who, but for the riches he placed within reach of
+their grasping fingers, would never have been able to emerge from their
+uncultured obscurity.
+
+People have said to me, "How generous was Rhodes!" Yes, but always with a
+shade of disdain in the giving which hurt the recipients of his charity.
+One of the legends in the Cape is that half those whom Rhodes helped had
+been his victims at one time or the other.
+
+It was no wonder that Cecil Rhodes was an embittered man when one reflects
+how many curses must have been showered upon his head. The conquest of
+Matabeleland had not gone by without evoking terrible enmities; and the
+amalgamation of De Beers, in consequence of which so many people who had
+spent thousands of pounds in acquiring plots of ground where they had
+hoped to find diamonds, and who had later to part from them for a mere
+song, were among the things never forgiven him by those whom the
+speculations had ruined. Later on came the famous Bill which he caused to
+be adopted in both Houses of Legislature concerning the illicit buying of
+diamonds, the I.D.B. Act.
+
+The I.D.B. enactment destroyed one of the fundamental principles in
+British legislature which always supposes a man to be innocent until he
+has been proved guilty. It practically put the whole of Cape Colony under
+the thumb of De Beers. The statute was not wisely framed. It could be
+invoked to remove persons whose presence in Kimberley was inconvenient.
+Therefore the I.D.B. Act drew on the head of Rhodes and of his colleagues
+torrents of abuse. It is, unfortunately, certain that cases happened where
+diamonds were hidden surreptitiously among the effects of certain persons
+who had had the imprudence to say too loudly that they meant to expose the
+state of things existing in Kimberley; and in consequence innocent men
+were sentenced to long terms of imprisonment.
+
+I heard one story in particular which, if true, throws a terrible light on
+the state of affairs in the Diamond City. A young man of good connections,
+who had arrived from England to seek his fortune in South Africa, was
+engaged in Kimberley at a small salary by one of the big diamond mining
+concerns. After about three or four months' sojourn he felt so disgusted
+that he declared quite loudly that as soon as he could put by sufficient
+money to pay his passage back to Europe he would do so, there to make it
+the business of his life to enlighten his compatriots as to what was going
+on in South Africa. He threatened, too, to warn his countrymen against
+those who used to deluge England with prospectuses praising, in exalted
+terms, the wonderful state of things existing in South Africa and dilating
+upon the future prospects of Cape Colony. Old residents warned him he
+would do better to restrain his wrath until he was out of reach of
+interested parties; he did not listen to them, with the result that one
+morning detectives appeared in the house where he lodged, searched his
+room, and--found some diamonds hidden in a flower pot of geraniums which
+was standing in his window and which the daughter of his landlady had
+given him that very morning. No protestations of the unhappy young fellow
+availed him. He was taken to Cape Town and condemned to seven years'
+imprisonment, the end of which he did not live to see, as he died a few
+months after he had been sentenced.
+
+The story was freely current in South Africa; and, true or not, it is
+unquestionable that a large number of persons suffered in consequence of
+the I.D.B. Act, no more serious proofs being offered that they had taken
+or concealed diamonds than the fact that the stones had been found in
+unlikely places in their rooms. Books without number have been written
+about the I.D.B. Act, a great number evidently evincing hatred or revenge
+against Mr. Rhodes and his lieutenants.
+
+The famous De Beers Company acquired a position of overwhelming strength
+in the social, economical and political life of South Africa, where
+practically it secured control of everything connected with finance and
+industry. De Beers built cold storage rooms, a dynamite factory, ice
+houses, interested itself in agriculture, fruit-growing, farming and
+cattle-breeding all over the Colony. It managed to acquire shares in all
+the new mining enterprises whether in the Transvaal or in Rhodesia.
+Politically it controlled the elections, and there were certain districts
+in the Cape Colony where no candidate unsupported by De Beers could hope
+to be elected to a seat in Parliament. The company had its own police,
+while its secret service was one of the most remarkable in the world,
+having among its archives a record of the private opinions of all the
+people enjoying any kind of eminence in the country. In presence of De
+Beers the Governor himself was overshadowed; indeed, I do not think that
+if the Home Government had tried to oppose the organisation it would have
+had much chance of coming out on top.
+
+Sir Alfred Milner was the first man who saw that it would be impossible
+for England to have the last word in South Africa unless those who, both
+in Cape Colony and in the Transvaal, were the real masters of the
+situation were broken, and financial concerns persuaded to occupy
+themselves solely with financial matters. Though Sir Alfred was wise
+enough, and prudent enough, not to allow his feelings on the subject to
+become public property, Rhodes was shrewd enough to guess that he would
+encounter a resolute adversary in the person of the High Commissioner.
+Perhaps had he kept his suspicions to himself instead of communicating
+them to others he might have been persuaded in time to recognise that
+there was a great deal in the opinions which Sir Alfred held as to the
+participation of financial organisations in political matters. If only
+each could have had a chance for a frank understanding, probably Milner
+would not have objected to Rhodes continuing to control the vast machine
+into which the diamond mines amalgamation had grown, so long as it
+confined its operations to commerce.
+
+If Government is exercised by a single person it is possible for it to
+possess the elements of justice and equity, and to be carried out with few
+mistakes of such gravity as would compromise the whole system. But,
+unfortunately, the South African autocracy meant an army of small
+autocrats, and it was they who compromised Rhodes and then sheltered
+themselves behind his gigantic personality from the unpopularity and
+detestation which their actions aroused in the whole of South Africa.
+
+I feel personally convinced that if, during the period which immediately
+followed upon the relief of Kimberley and of Lady smith, Rhodes had
+approached Sir Alfred and frankly told him that he wanted to try his luck
+with the Dutch party, and to see whether his former friends and colleagues
+of the Afrikander Bond could not be induced to listen to reason, the High
+Commissioner would have been only too glad to meet him and to explain his
+views on the whole question. Instead of doing so, Rhodes, carried away as
+he always was by this everlasting desire to be the first everywhere, did
+not even give a thought to the wisdom of confiding to anyone the efforts
+which he undoubtedly made to induce the Bond leaders to trust him again.
+
+There was a moment when things got very near to an understanding between
+Rhodes and Sir Alfred. This was when Mr. Sauer himself entertained the
+thought of letting Rhodes sway the future by making with the English
+Government conditions of a peace which would not wound to the quick the
+feelings of the Dutch part of the population of the Colony.
+
+A circumstance, apparently insignificant, destroyed all the hopes that had
+been entertained by several who wished the Colossus well. Certain papers
+were brought to Rhodes; these contained information likely to prove of use
+to him as well as to the English Government. After he had read them he
+asked that they should be left with him until the following day. The
+person in charge of the documents had been asked not to part with them
+even for a single hour, as it was important that no one should be able to
+copy documents which might seriously compromise certain people. Therefore,
+she refused. Rhodes thereupon flew into a terrible passion and demanded to
+know the reason for the apparent distrust. When told that it was not so
+much a question of distrust as the impossibility of breaking a promise
+once given, he exclaimed that he would have nothing more to do with the
+whole business, and started almost immediately afterwards his agitation
+for the suspension of the Constitution in Cape Colony. But--and this is an
+amusing detail to note--Rhodes used every possible effort to obtain
+possession of the papers he had been allowed to see, going so far as to
+have the house searched of the person who had refused to allow him to keep
+the documents--a revenge which was as mean as it was useless, because the
+papers in question had been at once returned to their rightful owners.
+
+The request made by Rhodes to keep these documents produced a very bad
+impression on those who had begun to entertain hopes that he might be
+induced to throw the weight of his personality into the scale of a
+settlement. It confirmed the suspicions held by the Afrikander party ever
+since the Raid.
+
+They say that everyone is afforded once the chance of one's lifetime. In
+the case of Rhodes, he certainly missed by that action the one opportunity
+of reinstating himself once again upon the pinnacle whence the adventure
+of Doctor Jameson had caused him to fall.
+
+I remember that whilst these events were going on a political man, well
+acquainted with all details of the endeavour to secure a reconciliation
+between the Afrikander Bond and Rhodes, came to see me one evening. We
+talked over the whole situation. He told me that there were people who
+thought it would be a good thing to inform Sir Alfred Milner of what was
+going on, in the hope that he might give Rhodes an inkling that he knew
+that intrigue was rife at Groote Schuur, and at the same time express to
+Rhodes with what satisfaction he personally would view the good offices of
+the Colossus to influence both the South African League and the Afrikander
+Bond. But we agreed that it was quite impossible. Such a course would not
+inspire the High Commissioner with an exalted idea as to our morality in
+matters of trust, and, besides, it would not be playing the game in regard
+to Rhodes and his group. So the matter dropped; but Rhodes suspected, and
+never forgave us or any of those whose thoughts ran on the same lines.
+
+Whether Sir Alfred Milner ever learned who had been trying to persuade the
+master of Groote Schuur to seek his co-operation in what would have been
+the noblest deed of Rhodes' life, I have not been able to ascertain to the
+present day. To tell the truth, I never tried to do so, the matter having
+lost all interest except as a matter of history.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE OPENING OF THE NEW CENTURY
+
+
+Such were the preoccupations, the intrigues and the emotions which, all
+through that monotonous winter of 1900-1901, agitated the inhabitants of
+and the visitors to Groote Schuur. Rhodes himself seemed to be the one man
+who thought the least about them. It is certain that he felt hurt in his
+pride and in his consciousness that the good which he had wanted to do
+failed to be appreciated by those whom he had intended to benefit. But
+outwardly he made no sign that the matter interested him otherwise than
+from a purely objective point of view, that of the statesman who thinks
+that it is part of his duty to put his services at the disposal of his
+country whenever required to do so. He felt also slightly surprised to
+find, once he had expressed his willingness to use the experience of South
+African affairs which he had acquired and which no one in the Cape
+possessed with such thoroughness, that the people who had appealed to him,
+and whom he had consented to meet half-way, would not give him the whole
+of their confidence; indeed, they showed some apprehension that he would
+use his knowledge to their detriment.
+
+When one reviews all the circumstances that cast such a tragic shade over
+the history of these eventful months, one cannot help coming to the
+conclusion that there was a good deal of misunderstanding on both sides
+and a deplorable lack of confidence everywhere. Rhodes had entirely lost
+ground among his former friends, and would not understand that it was more
+difficult, even on the part of those who believed in his good intentions,
+to efface the impression that he had been playing a double game ever since
+the Raid had deprived him of the confidence and support which previously
+were his all over Cape Colony.
+
+The whole situation, as the new century opened, was a game of cross
+purposes. Sir Alfred Milner might have unravelled the skein, but he was
+the one man whom no one interested in the business wished to ask for help.
+And what added to the tragedy was the curious but undisputable fact that
+even those who reviled Rhodes hoped he would return to power and assume
+the Premiership in place of Sir Gordon Sprigg.
+
+In spite of the respect which Sir Gordon Sprigg inspired, and of the
+esteem in which he was held by all parties, it was generally felt that if
+Rhodes were once more at the helm he might return to a more reasonable
+view of the whole situation. In such an office, too, it was believed that
+Rhodes would give the Colony the benefit of his remarkable gifts of
+statecraft, as well as wield the authority which he liked so much to
+exercise, for the greater good of the country in general and of the
+British Government in particular. I believe that if at that moment Cecil
+Rhodes had become the head of the Cabinet not one voice, even among the
+most fanatic of the Afrikander Bond, would have objected. Those most
+averse to such a possibility were Rhodes' own supporters, a small group of
+men whose names I shall refrain from mentioning.
+
+All true friends of Rhodes, however, must surely have felt a keen regret
+that he wasted his talents and his energy on those entangled and, after
+all, despicable Cape politics. The man was created for something better
+and healthier than that. He was an Empire Maker by nature, one who might
+have won for himself everlasting renown had he remained "King of
+Rhodesia," as he liked to call himself. There, in the vast solitudes which
+by his enterprise and foresight had become a part of the British Empire,
+he ought to have gone on uninterruptedly in the glorious task of bringing
+civilisation to that hitherto unknown land. For such work his big nature
+and strange character were well fitted, and his wide-ranging mind
+appreciated the extent of the task. As he used to say himself sometimes,
+he was never so happy and never felt so free and so much at peace with the
+world and with mankind as among the Matoppo Hills.
+
+The statesmanlike qualities which Cecil Rhodes undoubtedly possessed were
+weakened by contact with inferior people. It is impossible to create real
+politicians and sound ones at the same rapid pace as financial magnates
+sprang up at the Cape as well as in the Transvaal. The class who entered
+politics had as little real solidity about them as the houses and
+dwellings which were built at a moment's notice from corrugated iron and a
+few logs. They thought that they understood how to govern a nation because
+they had thoroughly mastered the mysteries of bookkeeping in problematical
+financial undertakings.
+
+I remember one afternoon when, talking with Rhodes in the grounds of
+Groote Schuur, he took me to the summer-house which he had built for
+himself, whence one had a beautiful view over the country toward Table
+Mountain. He leaned on the parapet of the little observatory which
+surmounted the summer-house and lost himself in a day dream which, though
+long, I felt I had better not interrupt. I can see his face and expression
+still as, with his arms crossed over his chest, he gazed into space,
+thinking, thinking, and forgetting all else but the vision which he was
+creating in that extraordinary brain of his. I am sure that he remained so
+for over twenty minutes. Then he slowly turned round to me and said, with
+an accent indescribable in its intensity and poignancy:
+
+"I have been looking at the North, at my own country--"
+
+"Why do you not always remain there?" I exclaimed almost involuntarily, so
+painfully did the words strike me.
+
+"Because they will not let me," he replied.
+
+"They? Who?" I asked again. "Surely you can do what you like?"
+
+"You think so," he said, "but you do not know; there are so many things;
+so many things. And they want me here too, and there is this place ..."
+
+He stopped, then relapsed once more into his deep meditation, leaving me
+wondering what was holding back this man who was reputed to do only what
+he chose. Surely there would have been a far better, far nobler work for
+him to do there in that distant North which, after all, in spite of the
+beauties of Groote Schuur, was the only place for which he really cared.
+There he could lead that absolutely free and untrammelled life which he
+loved; there his marvellous gifts could expand with the freedom necessary
+for them to shine in their best light for the good of others as well as
+for his own advantage. In Rhodesia he was at least free, to a certain
+extent, from the parasites.
+
+How could one help pitying him and regretting that his indomitable will
+did not extend to the courage of breaking from his past associations; that
+he did not carry his determination far enough to make up his mind to
+consecrate what was left of his life to the one task for which he was best
+fitted, that of making Rhodesia one of the most glorious possessions of
+the British crown. Rhodes had done so much, achieved so much, had
+conceived such great things--as, for instance, the daring inception of the
+Cape to Cairo Railway--that it surely could have been possible for him to
+rise above the shackling weaknesses of his environment.
+
+So many years have passed since the death of Rhodes that, now, one can
+judge him objectively. To me, knowing him so well as I did, it seem that
+as his figure recedes into the background of history, it acquires more
+greatness. He was a mystery to so many because few had been able to guess
+what it was that he really meant, or believed in, or hoped for. Not a
+religious man by any means, he yet possessed that religion of nature which
+pervades the soul of anyone who has ever lived for long face to face with
+grandeurs and solitudes where human passions have no entrance. It is the
+adoration of the Greatness Who created the beauty which no touch can
+defile, no tongue slander, and nobody destroy. Under the stars, to which
+he confided so much of the thoughts which he had kept for himself in his
+youth and early manhood, Rhodes became a different man. There in the
+silence of the night or the dawn of early morning, when he started for
+those long rides of which he was so fond, he became affectionate, kind,
+thoughtful and tender. There he thought, he dreamt, he planned, and the
+result of these wanderings of his mind into regions far beyond those where
+the people around him could stray was that he revealed himself as God had
+made him and such as man hardly ever saw him.
+
+Rhodes had always been a great reader; books, indeed, had a great
+influence over his mind, his actions and opinions. He used to read slowly,
+and what he had once assimilated he never forgot. Years after he would
+remember a passage treating of some historical fact, or of some social
+interest, and apply it to his own work. For instance, the idea of the Glen
+Grey Act was suggested to him by the famous book of Mackenzie Wallace
+dealing with Russia,[B] in which he described the conditions under which
+Russian peasants then held their land. When Rhodes met the author of the
+aforementioned volume at Sandringham, where both were staying with the
+then Prince and Princess of Wales, he told him at once, with evident
+pleasure at being able to do so, that it was his book which had suggested
+that particular bit of legislation.
+
+ [B] "Russia" (Cassell).
+
+Another occasion I remember when Rhodes spoke of the great impression
+produced upon his opinions by a book called "The Martyrdom of Man,"[C] the
+work of Winwood Reade, an author not very well known to the general
+public. The essay was an unusually powerful negation of the Divinity.
+Rhodes had, unfortunately for him, chanced across it just after he had
+left the University, and during the first months following upon his
+arrival in South Africa he read it in his moments of leisure between
+looking for diamonds in the sandy plains of Kimberley. It completely upset
+all the traditions in which he had been nurtured--it must be remembered
+that he was the son of a clergyman--and caused a revolt against the
+teachings of his former masters.
+
+ [C] Published in the U.S.A., 1875.
+
+The adventurous young man who had left his native country well stocked
+with principles which he was already beginning to find embarrassing, found
+in this volume an excuse for becoming the personage with whom the world
+was to become familiar later on, when he appeared on the horizon as an
+Empire Maker. He always kept this momentous book beside him, and used to
+read it when he wanted to strengthen himself in some hard resolution or
+when he was expected to steel his mind to the performance of some task
+against which his finest instincts revolted even whilst his sense of
+necessity urged him onward.
+
+Talking with me on the occasion I have referred to above, in respect to
+this volume which had left such weeds in his mind, he expressed to me his
+great enthusiasm about the ideas it contained, and spoke with unmeasured
+approval of its strong and powerful arguments against the existence of a
+Deity, and then exclaimed, "You can imagine the impression which it
+produced on me when I read it amid all the excitement of life at Kimberley
+not long after leaving Oxford University." And he added in a solemn tone,
+"That book has made me what I am."
+
+I think, however, that Rhodes exaggerated in attaching such influence to
+Reade's essay. He was very interested in the supernatural, a feature which
+more than once I have had occasion to observe in people who pretend that
+they believe in nothing. I suspect that, had he been able to air the
+doubts which must have assailed him sometimes when alone in the solitudes
+of Rhodesia, one would have discovered that a great deal of carelessness,
+of which he used to boast in regard to morality and to religion, was
+nothing but affectation. He treated God in the same offhand way he handled
+men, when, in order to terrify them, he exposed before their horrified
+eyes abominable theories, to which his whole life gave the lie. But in his
+inmost heart he knew very well that God existed. He would have felt quite
+content to render homage to the Almighty if only this could have been done
+incognito. In fact, he was quite ready to believe in God, but would have
+felt extremely sorry had anyone suspected that such could be the case. The
+ethical side of Cecil Rhodes' character remained all through his life in
+an unfinished state. It might perhaps have been the most beautiful side of
+his many-sided life had he not allowed too much of what was material, base
+and common to rule him. Unwillingly, perhaps, but nevertheless certainly,
+he gave the impression that his life was entirely dedicated to ignoble
+purposes. Perhaps the punishment of his existence lay precisely in the
+rapidity with which the words "Rhodesian finance" and "Rhodesian politics"
+came to signify corruption and bribery. Even though he may not have been
+actually guilty of either, he most certainly profited by both. He
+instituted in South Africa an utter want of respect for one's neighbour's
+property, which in time was a prime cause of the Transvaal War. Hated as
+he was by some, distrusted as he remained by almost everybody, yet there
+was nothing mean about Cecil Rhodes. Though one felt inclined to detest
+him at times, yet one could not help liking and even loving him when he
+allowed one to see the real man behind the veil of cynicism and irony
+which he constantly assumed.
+
+With Rhodes' death the whole system of Rhodesian politics perished. It
+then became relatively easy for Sir Alfred Milner to introduce the
+necessary reforms into the government of South Africa. The financial
+magnates who had ruled at Johannesburg and Kimberley ceased to interest
+themselves politically in the management of the affairs of the Government.
+They disappeared one after the other, bidding good-bye to a country which
+they had always hated, most of them sinking into an obscurity where they
+enjoy good dinners and forget the nightmare of the past.
+
+The Dutch and the English elements have become reconciled, and loyalty to
+England, which seemed at the time of the Boer War, and during the years
+that had preceded it, to have been confined to a small number of the
+English, has become the rule. British Imperialism is no mere phantom: the
+Union of South Africa has proved it to have a very virile body, and, what
+is more important, a lofty and clear-visioned soul.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+AN ESTIMATE OF SIR ALFRED MILNER
+
+
+The conditions under which Sir Alfred Milner found himself compelled to
+shape his policy of conciliation were beset with obstacles and
+difficulties. An understanding of these is indispensable to the one who
+would read aright the history of that period of Imperial evolution.
+
+The question of the refugees who overwhelmed Cape Colony with their
+lamentations, after they had been obliged to leave the Transvaal at
+the beginning of the hostilities--the claims of the Rand
+multi-millionaires--the indignation of the Dutch Colonists confined in
+concentration camps by order of the military authorities--the Jingoes
+who thought it would be only right to shoot down every Dutch
+sympathiser in the country: these were among the things agitating the
+South African public mind, and setting up conflicting claims
+impossible of adjustment without bitter censure on one hand or the
+other. The wonder is that, amid all these antagonistic elements, Sir
+Alfred Milner contrived to fulfil the larger part of the tasks which
+he had sketched out for himself before he left England.
+
+The programme which Sir Alfred planned to carry out proved, in the long
+run, to have been thoroughly sound in conception and practice, because it
+contained in embryo all the conditions under which South Africa became
+united. It is remarkable, indeed, that such a very short time after a war
+which seemed altogether to have compromised any hope of coalescing, the
+Union of South Africa should have become an accomplished fact.
+
+Yet, strange as it may appear, it is certain that up to his retirement
+from office Sir Alfred Milner was very little known in South Africa. He
+had been so well compelled by force of circumstances to lead an isolated
+life that very few had opportunity to study his character or gain insight
+into his personality. In Cape Town he was judged by his policy. People
+forgot that all the time he was at Government House, Cape Town, he was a
+man as well as a politician: a man whose efforts and work in behalf of his
+country deserved some kind of consideration even from his enemies. It is
+useless to discuss whether Sir Alfred did or did not make mistakes before
+the beginning of the war. Why waste words over events which cannot be
+helped, and about which there will always be two opinions? Personally, I
+think that his errors were essentially of the kind which could not have
+been avoided, and that none of them ever compromised ultimately the great
+work which he was to bring to a triumphant close.
+
+What I do think it is of value to point out is the calmness which he
+contrived always to preserve under circumstances which must have been
+particularly trying for him. Another outstanding characteristic was the
+quiet dignity with which he withstood unjustifiable attacks when dealing
+with not-to-be-foreseen difficulties which arose while carrying on his
+gigantic task. Very few would have had the courage to remain silent and
+undaunted whilst condemned or judged for things he had been unable to
+alter or to banish. And yet this was precisely the attitude to which Sir
+Alfred Milner faithfully adhered. It stands out among the many proofs
+which the present Viscount Milner has given of his strong character as one
+of its most characteristic features, for it affords a brilliant
+illustration of what will, mastered by reason, can do.
+
+Since those perilous days I have heard many differing criticisms of Lord
+Milner's administration as High Commissioner in South Africa. What those
+who express opinions without understanding that which lies under the
+surface of history fail to take into account is the peculiar, almost
+invidious position and the loneliness in which Sir Alfred had to stand
+from the very first day that he landed in Table Bay. He could not make
+friends, dared not ask anyone's advice, was forced always to rely entirely
+upon his own judgment. He would not have been human had he not sometimes
+felt misgivings as to the wisdom of what he was doing. He never had the
+help of a Ministry upon whom he could rely or with whom he could
+sympathise. The Cabinet presided over by Sir Gordon Sprigg was composed of
+very well-intentioned men. But, with perhaps one single exception, it did
+not possess any strongly individualistic personage capable of assisting
+Sir Alfred in framing a policy acceptable to all shades of public opinion
+in the Colony, or even to discuss with him whether such a policy could
+have been invented. As for the administration of which Mr. Schreiner was
+the head, it was distinctly hostile to the policy inaugurated by Mr.
+Joseph Chamberlain, which Sir Alfred represented. Its members, indeed, put
+every obstacle in the Governor's way, and this fact becoming known
+encouraged a certain spirit of rebellion among the Dutch section of the
+population. Neither one Ministry nor the other was able to be of any
+serious use to Milner, who, thus hampered, could neither frame a programme
+which accorded with his own judgment nor show himself in his true light.
+
+[Illustration: VISCOUNT MILNER]
+
+All these circumstances were never taken into consideration by friends or
+foes, and, in consequence, he was made responsible for blunders which he
+could not help and for mistakes which he was probably the first to
+deplore. The world forgot that Sir Alfred never really had a free hand,
+was always thwarted, either openly or in secret, by some kind of
+authority, be it civil or military, which was in conflict with his own.
+
+It was next to an impossibility to judge a man fairly under such
+conditions. All that one could say was that he deserved a good deal of
+praise for having, so successfully as he did, steered through the manifold
+difficulties and delicate susceptibilities with which he had to contend in
+unravelling a great tangle in the history of the British Empire.
+
+The Afrikander Bond hated him, that was a recognised fact, but this hatred
+did Sir Alfred more good than anything else. The attacks directed against
+him were so mean that they only won him friends among the very people to
+whom his policy had not been acceptable. The abuse showered by certain
+newspapers upon the High Commissioner not only strengthened his hands and
+his authority, but transformed what ought to have remained a personal
+question into one in which the dignity as well as the prestige of the
+Empire was involved. To have recalled him after he had been subjected to
+such treatment would have been equivalent to a confession that the State
+was in the wrong. I have never been able to understand how men of such
+undoubted perception as Mr. Sauer or Mr. Merriman, or other leaders of the
+Bond, did not grasp this fact. Sir Alfred himself put the aspect very
+cleverly before the public in an able and dignified speech which he made
+at the lunch offered to Lord Roberts by the Mayor and Corporation of Cape
+Town when he said, "To vilify her representative is a strange way to show
+one's loyalty to the Queen."
+
+A feature in Sir Alfred Milner's character, which was little known outside
+the extremely small circle of his personal friends, was that when he was
+in the wrong he never hesitated to acknowledge the fact with
+straightforward frankness. His judgments were sometimes hasty, but he was
+always willing to amend an opinion on just grounds. There was a good deal
+of dogged firmness in his character, but not a shred of stubbornness or
+obstinacy. He never yielded one inch of his ground when he believed
+himself to be in the right, but he was always amenable to reason, and he
+never refused to allow himself to be convinced, even though it may be that
+his natural sympathies were not on the side of those with whom he had got
+to deal. Very few statesmen could boast of such qualities, and they surely
+ought to weigh considerably in the balance of any judgment passed upon
+Viscount Milner.
+
+The welfare of South Africa and the reputation of Sir Alfred would have
+been substantially enhanced had he been able to assert his own authority
+according to his own judgment, without overrulings from Whitehall, and
+with absolute freedom as to choice of colleagues. His position was most
+difficult, and though he showed no outward sign of this fact, it is
+impossible to believe that he did not feel its crushing weight. Between
+the Bond, Mr. Hofmeyr, the race hatred which the Dutch accused him of
+fomenting, the question of the refugees, the clamours of the Jingo
+Colonials, and the extreme seriousness of the military situation at one
+time, it was perfectly marvellous that he did not break down. Instead, as
+very few men could have done, he kept a clear-headed shrewdness, owing to
+which the Empire most certainly contracted an immense debt of gratitude
+toward him for not having allowed himself to yield to the temptation of
+retaliating upon those who had made his task such a particularly hard one.
+His forbearance ought never to be lost sight of in judging the
+circumstances which brought about and attended the South African War.
+Whilst the war was going on it was not realised that Sir Alfred Milner was
+the only man who--when the time arrived--could allay the passions arising
+from the conflict. But, without vanity, he knew, and could well afford to
+wait for his reward until history rather than men had judged him.
+
+In the meanwhile Sir Alfred had to struggle against a sea of obstacles in
+which he was probably the only man clever enough not to drown himself--a
+danger which overtook others who had tried to plunge into the complicated
+politics of South Africa. A succession of administrators at Government
+House in Cape Town ended their political career there, and left, broken in
+spirit, damaged in reputation.
+
+As for the local politicians, they were mostly honest mediocrities or
+adventurous spirits, who used their influence for their personal
+advantage. An exception was Mr. Hofmeyr. But he was far too absorbed in
+securing the recognition of Dutch supremacy at the Cape to be able to work
+on the milder plane necessary to bring about the one great result. The
+popularity of Mr. Hofmeyr was immense and his influence indisputable; but
+it was not a broad influence. He shuddered at the mere possibility of the
+Transvaal falling into the hands of the British.
+
+Whilst touching upon the subject of the Transvaal, I may say a word
+concerning the strangely mixed population, for the sake of whom,
+officially, Britain went to war. The war was entirely the work of the
+Uitlanders, as they called themselves with a certain pride, but very few
+of whom possessed a drop of English blood. The British public at home was
+told that it was necessary to fight President Kruger because Englishmen in
+the Transvaal were being ill-treated and denied their legitimate rights.
+In reality, this was one of those conventional reasons, lacking common
+sense and veracity, upon which nations are so often fed. If we enter
+closely into the details of existence in the Transvaal, and examine who
+were those who shouted so loudly for the franchise, we find that the
+majority were either foreigners or Jews hailing from Frankfurt or Hamburg.
+Many of them had, to be sure, become naturalised British subjects, but I
+doubt very much whether, among all the magnates of Johannesburg or of
+Kimberley, more than one or two pure-blooded Englishmen could be found.
+Rhodes, of course, was an exception, but one which confirmed the rule.
+Those others whose names can still be conjured with in South Africa were
+Jews, mostly of Teutonic descent, who pretended that they were Englishmen
+or Colonials; nothing certain was known about their origin beyond the fact
+that such or such small shops in Grahamstown, Durban or Cape Town had
+witnessed their childish romps. The Beits, the Neumanns and the Wernhers
+were German Jews; Barney Barnato was supposed to have been born under the
+shade of a Portuguese synagogue, and considered the fact as being just as
+glorious a one as would have been that of having in his veins "all the
+blood of all the Howards." The Joels were Hebrews; the Rudds supposed to
+belong to the same race through some remote ancestor; the Mosenthals,
+Abrahams, Phillipps, and other notabilities of the Rand and Kimberley,
+were Jews, and one among the so-called Reformers, associated with the
+Jameson Raid, was an American engineer, John Hays Hammond.
+
+The war, which was supposed to win the franchise for Englishmen in the
+Transvaal, was in reality fought for the advantage of foreigners. Most
+people honestly believed that President Kruger was aiming at destroying
+English prestige throughout the vast dark continent, and would have been
+horrified had they known what was going on in that distant land. Fortunes
+were made on the Rand in a few days, but very few Englishmen were among
+the number of those who contrived to acquire millions. Englishmen, indeed,
+were not congenial to the Transvaal, whilst foreigners, claiming to be
+Englishmen because they murdered the English language, abounded and
+prospered, and in time came sincerely to believe that they were British
+subjects, owing to the fact that they continually kept repeating that
+Britain ought to possess the Rand.
+
+When Britain came really to rule the Rand the adventurers found it did not
+in the least secure the advantages which they had imagined would derive
+from a war they fostered. This question of the Uitlanders was as
+embarrassing for the English Government as it had been for that of the
+Transvaal. These adventurers, who composed the mass of the motley
+population which flourished on the Rand, would prove a source of annoyance
+to any State in the world. On the other hand, the importance acquired by
+the so-called financial magnates was daily becoming a public danger,
+inasmuch as it tended to substitute the reign of a particular class of
+individuals for the ruling of those responsible for the welfare of the
+country. These persons individually believed that they each understood
+better than the Government the conditions prevailing in South Africa, and
+perpetually accused Downing Street of not realising and never protecting
+British interests there.
+
+Amidst their recriminations and the publicity they could command from the
+Press, it is no wonder that Sir Alfred Milner felt bewildered. It is to
+his everlasting honour that he did not allow himself to be overpowered. He
+was polite to everybody; listened carefully to all the many wonderful
+tales that were being related to him, and, without compromising himself,
+proceeded to a work of quiet mental elimination that very soon made him
+thoroughly grasp the intricacies of any situation. He quickly came to the
+conclusion that President Kruger was not the principal obstacle to a
+peaceful development of British Imperialism in South Africa. If ever a
+conflict was foisted on two countries for mercenary motives it was the
+Transvaal War, and a shrewd and impartial mind like Milner's did not take
+long to discover that such was the case.
+
+He was not, however, a man capable of lending himself meekly to schemes of
+greed, however wilily they were cloaked. His was not the kind of nature
+that for the sake of peace submits to things of which it does not approve.
+This man, who was represented as an oppressor of the Dutch, was in reality
+their best friend, and perhaps the one who believed the most in their
+eventual loyalty to the English Crown. It is a thousand pities that when
+the famous Bloemfontein Conference took place Sir Alfred Milner, as he
+still was at that time, had not yet acquired the experience which later
+became his concerning the true state of things in the Transvaal. Had he at
+that time possessed the knowledge which he was later to gain, when the
+beginning of hostilities obliged so many of the ruling spirits of
+Johannesburg to migrate to the Cape, it is likely that he would have acted
+differently. It was not easy for the High Commissioner to shake off the
+influence of all that he heard, whether told with a good or bad intention,
+and it was still harder for him in those first days of his office to
+discern who was right or who was wrong among those who crowded their
+advice upon him--and never forgave him when he did not follow their
+ill-balanced counsels.
+
+Concerning the outstanding personality of Cecil Rhodes, the position of
+Sir Alfred Milner was even more difficult and entangled than in regard to
+anyone else. It is useless to deny that he had arrived at Cape Town with
+considerable prejudice against Rhodes. He could not but look
+interrogatively upon the political career of a man who at the very time he
+occupied the position of Prime Minister had lent himself to a conspiracy
+against the independence of another land. Moreover, Rhodes was supposed,
+perhaps not without reason, to be continually intriguing to return to
+power, and to be chafing in secret at the political inaction which had
+been imposed upon him, and for which he was himself responsible more than
+anyone else. The fact that after the Raid Rhodes had been abandoned by his
+former friends harmed him considerably as a political man by destroying
+his renown as a statesman to whom the destinies of an Empire might be
+entrusted with safety. One can truly say, when writing the story of those
+years, that it resolved _itself_, into the vain struggle of Rhodes to
+recover his lost prestige. Sir Alfred was continually being made
+responsible for things of which he had not only been innocent, but of
+which, also, he had disapproved most emphatically. To mention only
+one--the famous concentration camps. A great deal of fuss was made about
+them at the time, and it was generally believed that they had been
+instituted at the instigation of the High Commissioner. When consulted on
+the subject Sir Alfred Milner had, on the contrary, not at all shared the
+opinion of those who had believed that they were a necessity, although
+ultimately, for lack of earlier steps, they became so.
+
+The Colony at that time found its effective government vested in the hands
+of the military authorities, who not infrequently acted upon opinions
+which were not based upon experience or upon any local conditions. They
+believed, too, implicitly what they were told, and when they heard people
+protest, with tears in their eyes, their devotion to the British Crown,
+and lament over the leniency with which the Governor of Cape Colony looked
+upon rebellion, they could not possibly think that they were listening to
+a tissue of lies, told for a purpose, nor guess that they were being made
+use of. Under such conditions the only wonder is the few mistakes which
+were made. To come back to the Boers' concentration camps, Sir Alfred
+Milner was not a sanguinary man by any means, and his character was far
+too firm to use violence as a means of government. It is probable that,
+left alone, he would have found some other means to secure strict
+obedience from the refugees to orders which most never thought of
+resisting. Unfortunately for everybody concerned, he could do nothing
+beyond expressing his opinion, and the circumstance that, out of a feeling
+of duty, he made no protestations against things of which he could not
+approve was exploited against him, both by the Jingo English party and by
+the Dutch, all over South Africa. At Groote Schuur especially, no secret
+was made by the friends of Rhodes of their disgust at the state of things
+prevailing in concentration camps, and it was adroitly brought to the
+knowledge of all the partisans of the Boers that, had Rhodes been master
+of the situation, such an outrage on individual liberty would never have
+taken place. Sir Alfred Milner was subjected to unfair, ill-natured
+criticisms which were as cunning as they were bitter. The concentration
+camps afford only one instance of the secret antagonisms and injustices
+which Sir Alfred Milner had to bear and combat. No wonder thoughts of his
+days in South Africa are still, to him, a bitter memory!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+CROSS CURRENTS
+
+
+The intrigues which made Groote Schuur such a disagreeable place were
+always a source of intense wonder to me. I could never understand their
+necessity. Neither could I appreciate the kind of hypocrisy which induced
+Rhodes continually to affirm that he did not care to return to power,
+whilst in reality he longed to hold the reins again. It would have been
+fatally easy for Rhodes, even after the hideous mistake of the Raid, to
+regain his political popularity; a little sincerity and a little truth
+were all that was needed. Unfortunately, both these qualities were wanting
+in what was otherwise a really gifted nature. Rhodes, it seemed by his
+ways, could not be sincere, and though he seldom lied in the material
+sense of the word, yet he allowed others to think and act for him, even
+when he knew them to be doing so in absolute contradiction to what he
+ought to have done himself. He appeared to have insufficient energy to
+enforce his will on those whom he despised, yet allowed to dictate to him
+even in matters which he ought to have kept absolutely under his own
+control.
+
+I shall always maintain that Rhodes, without his so-called friends, would
+most certainly have been one of the greatest figures of his time and
+generation. He had a big soul, vast conceptions, and when he was not
+influenced by outward material details--upon which, unfortunately for
+himself as well as for his reputation in history, he allowed his mind to
+dwell too often--his thoughts were always directed toward some higher
+subject which absorbed his attention, inspired him, and moved him
+sometimes to actions that drew very near to the heroic. He might have gone
+to his grave not only with an unsullied, but also with a great reputation
+based on grounds that were noble and splendid had he shaken off the
+companions of former times. Unhappily, an atmosphere of flattery and
+adulation had become absolutely necessary to him, and he became so used to
+it that he did not perceive that his sycophants never left him alone for a
+moment. They watched over him like a policeman who took good care no
+foreign influence should venture to approach.
+
+The end of all this was that Rhodes resented the truth when it was told
+him, and detested any who showed independence of judgment or appreciation
+in matters concerning his affairs and projects. A man supposed to have an
+iron will, yet he was weak almost to childishness in regard to these
+flattering satellites. It amused him to have always at his beck and call
+people willing and ready to submit to his insults, to bear with his fits
+of bad temper, and to accept every humiliation which he chose to offer.
+
+Cecil Rhodes never saw, or affected never to see, the disastrous influence
+all this had on his life.
+
+I remember asking him how it came that he seldom showed the desire to go
+away somewhere quite alone, if even for a day or two, so as to remain
+really tête-à-tête with his own reflections. His reply was most
+characteristic: "What should I do with myself? One must have people about
+to play cards in the evening." I might have added "and to flatter one,"
+but refrained. This craving continually to have someone at hand to bully,
+scold, or to make use of, was certainly one of the failings of Rhodes'
+powerful mind. It also indicated in a way that thirst for power which
+never left him until the last moment of his life. He had within him the
+weakness of those dethroned kings who, in exile, still like to have a
+Court about them and to travel in state. Rhodes had a court, and also
+travelled with a suite who, under the pretence of being useful to him,
+effectually barred access to any stranger. But for his entourage it is
+likely that Rhodes might have outlived the odium of the Raid. But, as Mrs.
+van Koopman said to me, "What is the use of trying to help Rhodes when one
+is sure that he will never be allowed to perform all that he might
+promise?"
+
+The winter which followed upon the relief of Kimberley Rhodes spent almost
+entirely at Groote Schuur, going to Rhodesia only in spring. During these
+months negotiations between him and certain leaders of the Bond party went
+on almost uninterruptedly. These were either conducted openly by people
+like Mr. David de Waal, or else through other channels when not entrusted
+to persons whom it would be relatively easy later on to disavow. Once or
+twice these negotiations seemed to take a favourable turn at several
+points, but always at the last minute Rhodes withdrew under some pretext
+or other. What he would have liked would have been to have, as it were,
+the Dutch party, the Bond, the English Colonists, the South African
+League, President Kruger, and the High Commissioner, all rolled into one,
+fall at his feet and implore him to save South Africa. When he perceived
+that all these believed that there existed a possibility for matters to be
+settled without his intervention, he hated every man of them with a hatred
+such as only very absolute natures can feel. To hear him express his
+disgust with the military authorities, abuse in turns Lord Roberts, whom
+he used to call an old man in his dotage, Lord Kitchener, who was a
+particular antipathy, the High Commissioner, the Government at home, and
+the Bond, was an education in itself. He never hesitated before making use
+of an expression of a coarseness such as does not bear repeating, and in
+his private conversations he hurled insults at the heads of all. It is
+therefore no wonder that the freedom of speech which Rhodes exercised at
+Groote Schuur added to the difficulties of a situation the brunt of which
+not he, but Sir Alfred Milner, had to bear.
+
+More than once the High Commissioner caused a hint to be conveyed to Cecil
+Rhodes that he had better betake himself to Rhodesia, and remain there
+until there was a clearer sky in Cape Colony. These hints were always
+given in the most delicate manner, but Rhodes chose to consider them in
+the light of a personal affront, and poured down torrents of invective
+upon the British Government for what he termed their ingratitude. The
+truth of the matter was that he could not bring himself to understand that
+he was not the person alone capable of bringing about a permanent
+settlement of South Africa. The energy of his young days had left him, and
+perhaps the chronic disease from which he was suffering added to his
+constant state of irritation and obscured the clearness of his judgment in
+these post-raid days.
+
+I hope that my readers will not imagine from my reference that I have a
+grudge of any kind against Doctor Jameson.[D] On the contrary, truth
+compels me to say that I have seldom met a more delightful creature than
+this old friend and companion of Cecil Rhodes, and I do believe he held a
+sincere affection for his chief. But Jameson, as well as Rhodes, was under
+the influence of certain facts and of certain circumstances, and I do not
+think that he was, at that particular moment about which I am writing, the
+best adviser that Rhodes might have had. In one thing Doctor Jim was above
+suspicion: he had never dirtied his hands with any of the financial
+speculations which those about Rhodes indulged in, to the latter's
+detriment much more than his own, considering the fact that it was he who
+was considered as the father of their various "smart" schemes. Jameson
+always kept aloof from every kind of shady transaction in so far as money
+matters were concerned, and perhaps this was the reason why so many people
+detested him and kept advising Rhodes to brush him aside, or, at all
+events, not to keep him near him whilst the war was going on. His name was
+to the Dutch as a red rag to a very fierce and more than furious bull,
+while the Bond, as well as the burghers of the Transvaal, would rather
+have had dealings with the Evil One himself than with Doctor Jim. Their
+prejudices against him were not to be shaken. In reality others about
+Rhodes were far more dangerous than Jameson could ever have proved on the
+question of a South African settlement in which the rights of the Dutch
+elements in the Cape and Orange Free State would be respected and
+considered.
+
+ [D] Dr. Jameson died November 26th, 1917.
+
+[Illustration: THE RT. HON. SIR LEANDER STARR JAMESON]
+
+Whatever might have been his faults, Doctor Jameson was neither a rogue
+nor a fool. For Rhodes he had a sincere affection that made him keenly
+alive to the dangers that might threaten the latter, and anxious to avert
+them. But during those eventful months of the war the influence of the
+Doctor also had been weakened by the peculiar circumstances which had
+arisen in consequence of the length of the Boer resistance. Before the war
+broke out it had been generally supposed that three months would see the
+end of the Transvaal Republic, and Rhodes himself, more often than I care
+to remember, had prophesied that a few weeks would be the utmost that the
+struggle could last. That this did not turn out to be the case had been a
+surprise to the world at large and an intense disappointment to Cecil
+Rhodes. He had all along nourished a bitter animosity against Kruger, and
+in regard to him, as well as Messrs. Schreiner, Merriman, Hofmeyr, Sauer
+and other one-time colleagues, he carried his vindictiveness to an extent
+so terrible that more than once it led him into some of the most
+regrettable actions in his life.
+
+Cecil Rhodes possessed a curious shyness which gave to his character an
+appearance the more misleading in that it hid in reality a will of iron
+and a ruthlessness comparable to a _Condottiere_ of the Middle Ages. The
+fact was that his soul was thirsting for power, and he was inordinately
+jealous of successes which anyone but himself had or could achieve in
+South Africa. I am persuaded that one of the reasons why he always tried
+by inference to disparage Sir Alfred Milner was his annoyance at the
+latter's calm way of going on with the task which he had mapped out for
+himself without allowing his mind to be troubled by the outcries of a mob
+whom he despised from the height of his great integrity, unsullied honour,
+and consciousness of having his duty to perform. Neither could Rhodes ever
+see in political matters the necessities of the moment often made it the
+duty of a statesman to hurl certain facts into oblivion and to reconcile
+himself to new circumstances.
+
+That he did disparage Sir Alfred Milner is unfortunately certain. I
+sincerely believe that the war would never have dragged on so long had not
+Rhodes contrived to convey to the principal Boer leaders the impression
+that while Sir Alfred Milner remained in South Africa no settlement would
+be arrived at with the British Government, because the High Commissioner
+would always oppose any concessions that might bring it to a successful
+and prompt issue. Of course Cecil Rhodes never said this in so many words,
+but he allowed people to guess that such was his conviction, and it was
+only after Sir Alfred had I left the Cape for Pretoria that, by a closer
+contact with the Boers themselves, some of the latter's prejudices against
+him vanished.
+
+At last did the sturdy Dutch farmers realise that if there was one man
+devoid of animosity against them, and desirous of seeing the end of a
+struggle which was ruining a continent, it was Sir Alfred Milner. They
+also discovered another thing concerning his political views and
+opinions--that he desired just as much as they did to destroy the power
+and influence of those multi-millionaires who had so foolishly believed
+that after the war's end they would have at their disposal the riches
+which the Transvaal contained, so that, rather than becoming a part of the
+British Empire, it would in reality be an annexe of the London and Paris
+Stock Exchanges.
+
+As events turned out, by a just retribution of Providence, the magnates
+who had let greedy ambition master them lost most of the advantages which
+they had been able to snatch from President Kruger. Whether this would
+have happened had Rhodes not died before the conclusion of peace remains
+an open question. It is certain he would have objected to a limitation of
+the political power of the concerns in which he had got such tremendous
+interests; it is equally sure that it would have been for him a cruel
+disappointment had his name not figured as the outstanding signature on
+the treaty of peace. There were in this strange man moments when his
+patriotism assumed an entirely personal shape, but, improbable as it may
+appear to the reader, there was sincerity in the conviction which he had
+that the only man who understood what South Africa required was himself,
+and that in all that he had done he had been working for the benefit of
+the Empire. There was in him something akin to the feeling which had
+inspired the old Roman saying, "_Civis Romanum sum._" He understood far
+better than any of the individuals by whom he was surrounded the true
+meaning of the word Imperialism. Unfortunately, he was apt to apply it in
+the personal sense, until, indeed, it got quite confused in his mind with
+a selfish feeling which prompted him to put his huge personality before
+everything else. If one may do so, a reading of his mind would show that
+in his secret heart he felt he had not annexed Rhodesia to the Empire nor
+amalgamated the Kimberley mines and organised De Beers for the benefit of
+his native Britain, but in order to make himself the most powerful man in
+South Africa, and yet at the same time shrewdly realised that he could not
+be the king he wished to become unless England stood behind him to cover
+with her flag his heroic actions as well as his misdeeds.
+
+That Rhodes' death occurred at an opportune moment cannot be denied. It is
+a sad thing to say, but for South Africa true enough. It removed from the
+path of Sir Alfred Milner the principal obstacle that had stood in his way
+ever since his arrival at Cape Town. The Rhodesian party, deprived of its
+chief, was entirely harmless. Rhodesian politics, too, lost their strength
+when he was no longer there to impose them upon South Africa.
+
+One of the great secrets of the enormous influence which the Colossus had
+acquired lay in the fact that he had never spared his money when it was a
+question of thrusting his will in directions favourable to his interest.
+None of those who aspired to take his place could follow him on that road,
+because none were so superbly indifferent to wealth. Cecil Rhodes did not
+care for riches for the personal enjoyments they can purchase. He was
+frugal in his tastes, simple in his manners and belongings, and absolutely
+careless as to the comforts of life. The waste in his household was
+something fabulous, but it is a question whether he ever participated in
+luxuries showered upon others. His one hobby had been the embellishment of
+Groote Schuur, which he had really transformed into something absolutely
+fairylike as regards its exterior beauties and the loveliness of its
+grounds and gardens. Inside, too, the house, furnished after the old Dutch
+style, struck one by its handsomeness, though it was neither homelike nor
+comfortable. In its decoration he had followed the plans of a clever
+architect, to whose artistic education he had generously contributed by
+giving to him facilities to travel in Europe, but he had not lent anything
+of his own personality to the interior arrangements of his home, which had
+always kept the look of a show place, neither cared for nor properly
+looked after.
+
+Rhodes himself felt happier and more at his ease when rambling in his
+splendid park and gazing on Table Mountain from his stoep than amidst the
+luxury of his richly furnished rooms. Sometimes he would sit for hours
+looking at the landscape before him, lost in a meditation which but few
+cared to disturb, and after which he invariably showed himself at his best
+and in a softer mood than he had been before. Unfortunately, these moments
+never lasted long, and he used to revenge himself on those who had
+surprised him in such reveries by indulging in the most caustic and cruel
+remarks which he could devise in order to goad them out of all patience. A
+strange man with strange instincts; and it is no wonder that, once, a
+person who knew him well, and who had known him in the days of his youth
+when he had not yet developed his strength of character, had said of him
+that "One could not help liking him and one could not avoid hating him;
+and sometimes one hated him when one liked him most."
+
+Sir Alfred Milner had neither liked nor hated him, perhaps because his
+mind was too well balanced to allow him to view him otherwise than with
+impartiality and with a keen appreciation of his great qualities. He would
+have liked to work with Rhodes, and would gladly have availed himself of
+his experience of South Africa and of South African politicians. But Sir
+Alfred refused to be drawn into any compromises with his own conscience or
+to offend his own sense of right and wrong. He was always sincere, though
+he was never given credit for being so in South Africa. Sir Alfred Milner
+could not understand why Rhodes, instead of resolutely asserting that he
+wanted to enter into negotiations with the Bond in order to win its
+co-operation in the great work of organising the new existence of South
+Africa on a sound and solid basis, preferred to cause promises to be made
+to the Bond which he would never consent to acknowledge.
+
+These tortuous roads, which were so beloved by Rhodes, were absolutely
+abhorrent to the High Commissioner. When Rhodes started the agitation for
+the suspension of the Constitution, which occupied his thoughts during the
+last months of his life--an agitation which he had inaugurated out of
+spite against Mr. Sauer and Mr. Hofmeyr, who had refused to dance to
+Rhodes' tune--Sir Alfred Milner had at once seen through the underlying
+motives of the moment, and what he discerned had not increased his
+admiration for Rhodes. Sir Alfred had not opposed the plans, but he had
+never been sanguine as to their chance of success, and they were not in
+accordance with his own convictions. Had he thought they had the least
+chance of being adopted, most certainly he would have opposed them with
+just as much energy as Sir Gordon Sprigg had done. He saw quite well that
+it would not have been opportune or politic to put himself into open
+opposition to Rhodes. Sir Alfred therefore did not contradict the rumours
+which attributed to him the desire to reduce the Cape to the condition of
+a Crown Colony, but bent his energy to the far more serious task of
+negotiating a permanent peace with the leading men in the Transvaal, a
+peace for which he did not want the protection of Rhodes, and to which an
+association with Rhodes might have proved inimical to the end in view--the
+ideal of a South African Federation which Rhodes had been the first to
+visualise, but which Providence did not permit him to see accomplished.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE CONCENTRATION CAMPS
+
+
+It is impossible to speak or write about the South African War without
+mentioning the Concentration Camps. A great deal of fuss was made about
+them, not only abroad, where all the enemies of England took a particular
+and most vicious pleasure in magnifying the so-called cruelties which were
+supposed to take place, but also in the English Press, where long and
+heartrending accounts appeared concerning the iniquities and injustices
+practised by the military authorities on the unfortunate Boer families
+assembled in the Camps.
+
+In recurring to this long-forgotten theme, I must first of all say that I
+do not hold a brief for the English Government or for the administration
+which had charge of British interests in South Africa. But pure and simple
+justice compels me to protest, first against the use which was made for
+party purposes of certain regrettable incidents, and, more strongly still,
+against the totally malicious and ruthless way in which the incidents were
+interpreted.
+
+It is necessary before passing a judgment on the Concentration Camps to
+explain how it came about that these were organised. At the time of which
+I am writing people imagined that by Lord Kitchener's orders Boer women,
+children and old people were forcibly taken away from their homes and
+confined, without any reason for such an arbitrary proceeding, in
+unhealthy places where they were subjected to an existence of privation as
+well as of humiliation and suffering. Nothing of the kind had taken place.
+
+The idea of the Camps originated at first from the Boers themselves in an
+indirect way. When the English troops marched into the Orange Free State
+and the Transvaal, most of the farmers who composed the bulk of the
+population of the two Republics having taken to arms, there was no one
+left in the homes they had abandoned save women, children and old men no
+longer able to fight. These fled hurriedly as soon as English detachments
+and patrols were in sight, but most of the time they did not know where
+they could fly to, and generally assembled in camps somewhere on the
+veldt, where they hoped that the British troops would not discover them.
+There, however, they soon found their position intolerable owing to the
+want of food and to the lack of hygienic precautions.
+
+The British authorities became aware of this state of things and could not
+but try to remedy it. Unfortunately, this was easier said than done. To
+come to the help of several thousands of people in a country where
+absolutely no resources were to be found was a quite stupendous task, of a
+nature which might well have caused the gravest anxieties to the men
+responsible for the solution. It was then that the decision was reached to
+organise upon a reasonable scale camps after the style of those which
+already had been inaugurated by the Boers themselves.
+
+The idea, which was not a bad one, was carried out in an unfortunate
+manner, which gave to the world at large the idea that the burgher
+families who were confined in these camps were simply put into a prison
+which they had done nothing to deserve. The Bond Press, always on the
+alert to reproach England, seized hold of the establishment of the Camps
+to transform into martyrs the persons who had been transferred to them,
+and soon a wave of indignation swept over not only South Africa, but also
+over Britain. This necessary act of human civilisation was twisted to
+appear as an abuse of power on the part of Lord Roberts and especially of
+Lord Kitchener, who, in this affair, became the scapegoat for many sins he
+had never committed. The question of the Concentration Camps was made the
+subject of interpellations in the House of Commons, and indignation
+meetings were held in many parts of England. The Nonconformist Conscience
+was deeply stirred at what was thought to be conduct which not even the
+necessities of war could excuse. Torrents of ink were spilt to prove that
+at the end of the nineteenth century measures and methods worthy of the
+Inquisition were resorted to by British Government officials, who--so the
+ready writers and ready-tongued averred--with a barbarity such as the
+Middle Ages had not witnessed, wanted to be revenged on innocent women and
+children for the resistance their husbands and fathers were making against
+an aggression which in itself nothing could justify.
+
+So far as the Boers themselves were concerned, I think that a good many
+among them viewed the subject with far more equanimity than the English
+public. For one thing, the fact of their women and children being put in
+places where at least they would not die of hunger must have come to them
+rather in the light of a relief than anything else. Then, too, one must
+not lose sight of the conditions under which the Boer burghers and farmers
+used to exist in normal times. Cleanliness did not rank among their
+virtues; and, as a rule, hygiene was an unknown science. They were mostly
+dirty and neglected in their personal appearance, and their houses were
+certainly neither built nor kept in accordance with those laws of
+sanitation which in the civilised world have become a matter of course.
+Water was scarce, and the long and torrid summers, during which every bit
+of vegetation was dried up on the veldt, had inured the population to
+certain privations which would have been intolerable to Europeans. These
+things, and the unfortunate habits of the Boers, made it extremely
+difficult, if not impossible, to realise in the Camps any approach to the
+degree of cleanliness which was desirable.
+
+To say that the people in the Concentration Camps were happy would be a
+gross exaggeration, but to say that they were martyrs would convey an
+equally false idea. When judging of facts one ought always to remember the
+local conditions under which these facts have developed. A Russian moujik
+sent to Siberia does not find that his life there is very much different
+from what it was at home, but a highly civilised, well-educated man,
+condemned to banishment in those frozen solitudes, suffers acutely, being
+deprived of all that had made existence sweet and tolerable to him. I feel
+certain that an Englishman, confined in one of the Concentration Camps of
+South Africa, would have wished himself dead ten times a day, whilst the
+wife of a Boer farmer would not have suffered because of missing soap and
+water and clean towels and nicely served food, though she might have felt
+the place hot and unpleasant, and might have lamented over the loss of the
+home in which she had lived for years.
+
+The Concentration Camps were a necessity, because without them thousands
+of people, the whole white population of a country indeed, amounting to
+something over sixty thousand people, would have died of hunger and cold.
+
+The only means of existence the country Boers had was the produce of their
+farms. This taken away from them, they were left in the presence of
+starvation, and starvation only. This population, deprived of every means
+of subsistence, would have invaded Cape Colony, which already was overrun
+with white refugees from Johannesburg and the Rand, who had proved a
+prolific source of the greatest annoyance to the British Government. To
+allow this mass of miserable humanity to wander all over the Colony would
+have been inhuman, and I would like to know what those who, in England and
+upon the Continent, were so indignant over the Concentration Camps would
+have said had it turned out that some sixty thousand human creatures had
+been allowed to starve.
+
+The British Government, owing to the local conditions under which the
+South African War came to be fought, found itself in a dilemma, out of
+which the only escape was to try to relieve wholesale misery in the most
+practical manner possible. There was no time to plan out with deliberation
+what ought to be done; some means had to be devised to keep a whole
+population alive whom an administration would have been accused of
+murdering had there been delay in feeding it.
+
+There was also another danger to be faced had the veldt been allowed to
+become the scene of a long-continued migration of nations--that of
+allowing the movements of the British troops to become known, thereby
+lengthening a war of already intolerable length, to say nothing of
+exposing uselessly the lives of English detachments, which, in this
+guerrilla kind of warfare, would inevitably have occurred had the Boer
+leaders remained in constant communication with their wandering
+compatriots.
+
+Altogether the institution of the Concentration Camps was not such a bad
+one originally. Unfortunately, they were not organised with the
+seriousness which ought to have been brought to bear on such a delicate
+matter, and their care was entrusted to people who succeeded, unwittingly
+perhaps, in making life there less tolerable than it need have been.
+
+I visited some of the Concentration Camps, and looked into their interior
+arrangements with great attention. The result of my personal observations
+was invariably the same--that where English officials were in charge of
+these Camps everything possible was done to lighten the lot of their
+inmates. But where others were entrusted with surveillance, every kind of
+annoyance, indignity and insult was offered to poor people obliged to
+submit to their authority.
+
+In this question, as in many others connected with the Boer War, it was
+the local Jingoes who harmed the British Government more than anything
+else, and the Johannesburg Uitlanders, together with the various Volunteer
+Corps and Scouts, brought into the conduct of the enterprises with which
+they were entrusted an intolerance and a smallness of spirit which
+destroyed British prestige far more than would have done a dozen
+unfortunate wars. The very fact that one heard these unwise people openly
+say that every Boer ought to be killed, and that even women and children
+ought to be suppressed if one wanted to win the war, gave abroad the idea
+that England was a nation thirsting for the blood of the unfortunate
+Afrikanders. This mistaken licence furnished the Bond with the pretext to
+persuade the Dutch Colonists to rebel, and the Boer leaders with that of
+going on with their resistance until their last penny had been exhausted
+and their last gun had been captured.
+
+Without these detestable Jingoes, who would have done so much harm not
+only to South Africa, but also to their Mother Country, England, it is
+certain that an arrangement, which would have brought about an honourable
+peace for everybody, could have come much sooner than it did. A
+significant fact worth remembering--that the Boers did not attempt to
+destroy the mines on the Rand--goes far to prove that they were not at all
+so determined to hurt British property, or to ruin British residents, or
+to destroy the large shareholder concerns to which the Transvaal owed its
+celebrity, as was credited to them.
+
+When the first rumours that terrible things were going on in the
+Concentration Camps reached England there were found at once amateurs
+willing to start for South Africa to investigate the truth of the
+accusations. A great fuss was made over an appeal by Lady Maxwell, the
+wife of the Military Governor of Pretoria, in which she entreated America
+to assist her in raising a fund to provide warm clothing for the Boer
+women and children. Conclusions were immediately drawn, saddling the
+military authorities with responsibility for the destitution in which
+these women and children found themselves. But in the name of common
+sense, how could one expect that people who had run away before what they
+believed to be an invasion of barbarians determined to burn down and
+destroy all their belongings--how could one expect that these people in
+their flight would have thought about taking with them their winter
+clothes, which, in the hurry of a departure in a torrid summer, would only
+have proved a source of embarrassment to them? More recently we have seen
+in Belgium, France, Poland and the Balkans what occurred to the refugees
+who fled before foreign invasion. The very fact of Lady Maxwell's appeal
+proved the solicitude of the official English classes for the unfortunate
+Boers and their desire to do something to provide them with the
+necessaries of life.
+
+Everybody knows the amount of money which is required in cases of this
+kind, and--in addition to America's unstinting response--public and
+private charity in Britain flowed as generously as it always does upon
+every occasion when an appeal is made to it in cases of real misfortune.
+But when it comes to relieve the wants of about sixty-three thousand
+people, of all ages and conditions, this is not so easy to do as persons
+fond of criticising things which they do not understand are apt sweepingly
+to declare. Very soon the question of the Concentration Camps became a
+Party matter, and was made capital of for Party purposes without
+discrimination or restraint. Sham philanthropists filled the newspapers
+with their indignation, and a report was published in the form of a
+pamphlet by Miss Hobhouse, which, it is to be feared, contained some
+percentage of tales poured into her ears by people who were nurtured in
+the general contempt for truth which at that time existed in South Africa.
+
+If the question of Concentration Camps had been examined seriously, it
+would have been at once perceived what a tremendous burden the
+responsibility of having to find food and shelter for thousands of enemy
+people imposed on English officials. No one in Government circles
+attempted or wished to deny, sorrowful as it was to have to recognise it,
+that the condition of the Camps was not, and indeed could not be, nearly
+what one would have wished or desired. On the other hand, the British
+authorities were unremitting in their efforts to do everything which was
+compatible with prudence to improve the condition of these Camps.
+Notwithstanding, people were so excited in regard to the question, and it
+was so entirely a case of "Give a dog a bad name," that even the
+appointment of an Imperial Commission to report on the matter failed to
+bring them to anything approaching an impartial survey. Miss Hobhouse's
+report had excited an emotion only comparable to the publication of Mrs.
+Beecher Stowe's famous novel, "Uncle Tom's Cabin."
+
+Miss Hobhouse came to South Africa inspired by the most generous motives,
+but her lack of knowledge of the conditions of existence common to
+everyone in that country prevented her from forming a true opinion as to
+the real hardship of what she was called upon to witness. Her own
+interpretations of the difficulties and discomforts which she found
+herself obliged to face proved that she had not realised what South Africa
+really was. Her horror at the sight of a snake in one of the tents she
+visited could only evoke a smile from those who had lived for some time in
+that country, as a visitor of that particular kind was possible even in
+the suburbs of Cape Town, and certainly offered nothing wonderful in a
+tent on the high veldt. The same remark can be applied to the hotels,
+which Miss Hobhouse described as something quite ghastly. Everyone who
+knew what South Africa really was could only agree with her that the
+miserable places there were anything but pleasant residences, but the fuss
+which she made as to these trivial details could only make one sceptical
+as to the genuineness of the other scenes which she described at such
+length. No one who had had occasion to watch the development of the war or
+the circumstances which had preceded it could bring himself to believe
+with her that the British Government was guilty of premeditated cruelty.
+
+Of course, it was quite dreadful for those who had been taken to the
+Concentration Camps to find themselves detained there against their will,
+but at the same time, as I have already remarked, the question remains as
+to what these people would have done had they been left absolutely
+unprotected and unprovided for among the remnants of what had once been
+their homes. It was certain that Miss Hobhouse's pamphlet revealed a
+parlous state of things, but did she realise that wood, blankets, linen
+and food were not things which could be transported with the quickness
+that those responsible heartily desired? Did she remember that the British
+troops also had to do without the most elementary comforts, in spite of
+all the things which were constantly being sent from home for the benefit
+of the field forces? Both had in South Africa two enemies in common that
+could not be subdued--distance and difficulty of communication. With but a
+single line of railway, which half the time was cut in one place or
+another, it was but natural that the Concentration Camps were deprived of
+a good many things which those who were compelled to live within their
+limits would, under different circumstances or conditions, have had as a
+matter of course.
+
+Miss Hobhouse had to own that she met with the utmost courtesy from the
+authorities with whom she had to deal, a fact alone which proved that the
+Government was only too glad to allow people to see what was being done
+for the Boer women and children, and gratefully appreciated every useful
+suggestion likely to lighten the sad lot of those in the Camps.
+
+It is no use denying, and indeed no one, Sir Alfred Milner least of all,
+would have denied that some of the scenes witnessed by Miss Hobhouse,
+which were afterwards described with such tremulous indignation, were of a
+nature to shock public opinion both at home and abroad. But, at the same
+time, it was not fair to circumstances or to people to have a false
+sentimentality woven into what was written. Things ought to have been
+looked upon through the eyes of common sense and not through the
+refracting glasses of the indignation of the moment. It was a libel to
+suggest that the British authorities rendered themselves guilty of
+deliberate cruelty, because, on the contrary, they always and upon every
+occasion did everything they could to lighten the lot of the enemy peoples
+who had fallen into their hands.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE PRISONERS' CAMPS
+
+
+I went myself very carefully into the details of whatever information I
+was able to gather in regard to the treatment of Boer prisoners in the
+various Camps, notably at Green Point near Cape Town, and I always had to
+come to the conclusion that nothing could have been better. Is it likely
+that, when such an amount of care was bestowed upon the men, the women and
+children should have been made the objects of special persecution? No
+impartial person could believe such a thing to have been possible, and I
+feel persuaded that if the people who in England contributed to make the
+position of the British Government more difficult than already it was,
+could have glanced at some Prisoners' Camps, for instance, they would very
+quickly have recognised that an unbalanced sentimentality had exaggerated
+facts, and even in some cases distorted them.
+
+In Green Point the prisoners were housed in double-storied buildings which
+had balconies running round them. Here they used to spend many hours of
+the day, for not only could they see what was going on around the Camps
+but also have a good view of the sea and passing ships. Each room held six
+men, and there was besides a large mess-room downstairs in each building
+which held about ninety people. Each Boer officer had a room for himself.
+When, later on, the number of prisoners of war was increased, tents had to
+be erected to accommodate them; but this could hardly be considered
+hardship in the climate which prevails at the Cape, and cannot be compared
+to what at the present moment the soldiers of the Allies are enduring in
+the trenches. The tents were put in a line of twenty each, and each score
+had a building attached for the men in that line to use as a dormitory if
+they chose. Excellent bathrooms and shower-baths were provided, together
+with a plentiful supply of water. The feeding of the prisoners of war was
+on a substantial scale, the daily rations per man including:
+
+ Bread 1¼ lb.
+ Meat (fresh) 1 lb.
+ Sugar 3 oz.
+ Coal (or) 1 lb.
+ Wood (or) 2 lb.
+ Coal and wood 1½ lb.
+ Vegetables ½ lb.
+ Jam ¼ lb., or 6 oz. of
+ vegetables in lieu.
+
+Coffee, milk and other items were also in like generous apportionments.
+
+The clothing issued to the prisoners, as asked for by them, to give the
+month of June, 1901, as an instance, was:
+
+ Boots 143 pairs
+ Braces 59 pairs
+ Hats 164
+ Jackets 133
+ Shirts 251
+ Socks 222 pairs
+ Trousers 166
+ Waistcoats 87
+
+and other small sundries.
+
+At Green Point Camp ample hospital accommodation was provided for the
+sick, and there was a medical staff thoroughly acquainted with the Dutch
+language and Boer habits. There was electric light in every ward, as well
+as all other comforts compatible with discipline.
+
+In the first six months of 1901 only five men died in the Camps, the
+average daily strength of which was over 5,000 men. As for the sick, the
+average rarely surpassed 1 per cent., amongst which were included wounded
+men, the cripples, and the invalids left behind from the parties of war
+prisoners sent oversea to St. Helena or other places.
+
+The hospital diet included, as a matter of course, many things not forming
+part of the ordinary rations, such as extra milk, meat extracts, and
+brandy. A suggestive fact in that respect was that though the medical
+officers in charge of the Camps often appealed to Boer sympathisers to
+send them eggs, milk and other comforts for the sick prisoners, they
+hardly ever met with response; and in the rare cases when it happened, it
+was mostly British officials or officers' wives who provided these
+luxuries.
+
+The spiritual needs of the prisoners of war were looked after with
+consideration; there was a recreation room, and, during the time that a
+large number of very young Boers were in Camps, an excellent school, in
+which the headmaster and assistant teachers held teachers' certificates.
+Under the Orange River Colony this school was later transferred to the
+Prisoners of War Camp at Simonstown, and in both places it did a
+considerable amount of good. The younger Boers took very kindly and almost
+immediately to English games such as football, cricket, tennis and quoits,
+for which there was plenty of room, and the British authorities provided
+recreation huts, and goal posts and other implements. The Boers also
+amused themselves with amateur theatricals, club-swinging, and even formed
+a minstrel troup called the "Green Point Spreemos."
+
+In the Camps there was a shop where the Boers could buy anything that they
+required in reason at prices regulated by the Military Commandant. Beyond
+this, relatives and friends were allowed to send them fruit or anything
+else, with the exception of firearms. In the Boer laagers were coffee
+shops run by speculative young Boers. The prisoners used to meet there in
+order to drink coffee, eat pancakes and talk to heart's content. This
+particular spot was generally called Pan Koek Straat, and the wildest
+rumours concerning the war seemed to originate in it.
+
+Now as to the inner organisation of the Camps. The prisoners were allowed
+to choose a corporal from their midst and also to select a captain for
+each house. Over the whole Camp there reigned a Boer Commandant, assisted
+by a Court of "Heemraden" consisting of exlandrosts and lawyers appointed
+by the prisoners of war themselves. Any act of insubordination or
+inattention to the regulations, sanitary or otherwise, was brought before
+this court and the guilty party tried and sentenced. When the latter
+refused to abide by the judgment of the Boer court he was brought before
+the Military Commandant, but for this there was very seldom need.
+
+The prisoners of war had permission to correspond with their friends and
+relatives, and were allowed newspapers and books. The former, however,
+were rather too much censored, which fact constituted an annoyance which,
+with the exertion of a little tact, might easily have been avoided.
+
+As will be seen from the details, the fate of the Boer prisoners of war
+was not such a bad one after all. Nor, either, was life in the
+Concentration Camps, and I have endeavoured to throw some new light on the
+subject to rebut the old false rumours which, lately, the German
+Government revived when taxed with harsh treatment of their own prisoners
+of war, so as to draw comparisons advantageously to themselves.
+
+While adhering to my point, I quite realise that it would be foolish to
+assert that all the Concentration Camps were organised and administered on
+the model of the Green Point Camp, where its vicinity to Cape Town allowed
+the English authorities to control everything that was going on. In the
+interior of the country things could not be arranged upon such an
+excellent scale, but had there not existed such a state of irritation all
+over the whole of South Africa--an irritation for which the so-called
+English loyalists must also share the blame--matters would not have grown
+so sadly out of proportion to the truth, painful though the facts were in
+some cases.
+
+This question of the Camps was admittedly a most difficult one. It was the
+result of a method of warfare which was imposed upon England by
+circumstances, but for which no individual Minister or General was solely
+responsible. The matter was brought about by successive steps that turned
+out to be necessary, though they were deplorable in every respect. Failing
+the capture of the Boer commandoes, which was well-nigh impossible, the
+British troops were driven to strip the country, and stripping the country
+meant depriving not only the fighting men but also the women and children
+of the means of subsistence. Concentration, therefore, followed
+inevitably, and England found itself burdened with the immense
+responsibility of feeding, housing and clothing some sixty thousand women
+and children.
+
+In spite of the British officers in charge of the Concentration Camps
+struggling manfully with this crushing burden of anxiety, and doing all
+that lay within their power to alleviate the sufferings of this multitude,
+cruel and painful things happened. The food, which was sufficient and
+wholesome for soldiers, could not do for young people, and yet it was
+impossible to procure any other for them. If the opinion of the military
+had been allowed to be expressed openly, one would have found probably
+that they thought England ought never to have assumed this responsibility,
+but rather have chosen the lesser evil and left these people on their
+farms, running the risk of the Boers provisioning themselves therefrom.
+The risk would not, perhaps, have been so great as could have been
+supposed at first sight, but then this ought to have been done from the
+very beginning of the war, and the order to burn the Boer farms ought
+never to have been given. But once the Boer farms had been deprived of
+their military use to the enemy, these people could not be turned back to
+starve on the veldt; the British had to feed them or earn the reproach of
+having destroyed a nation by hunger. As things had developed it was
+impossible for Great Britain to have followed any other policy--adopted,
+perhaps, in a moment of rashness, but the consequences had to be accepted.
+It only remained to do the best toward mitigating as far as possible the
+sufferings of the mass of humanity gathered into the Camps, and this I
+must maintain that the English Government did better than could have been
+expected by any who knew South Africa and the immense difficulties which
+beset the British authorities.
+
+It must not be forgotten that when the war began it was looked upon in the
+light of a simple military promenade; and, who knows, it might have been
+that had not the Boers been just as mistaken concerning the intentions of
+England in respect of them as England was in regard to the Boer military
+strength and power of resistance. One must take into account that for the
+few years preceding the war, and especially since the fatal Jameson Raid,
+the whole of the Dutch population of the Transvaal and of the Orange Free
+State, as well as that of Cape Colony, was persuaded that England had made
+up its mind to destroy it and to give up their country, as well as their
+persons, into the absolute power of the millionaires who ruled the Rand.
+On their side the millionaires openly declared that the mines were their
+personal property, and that England was going to war to give the Rand to
+them, and thereafter they were to rule this new possession without any
+interference from anyone in the world, not even that of England. Such a
+state of things was absolutely abnormal, and one can but wonder how ideas
+of the kind could have obtained credence. But, strange as it may seem, it
+is an indisputable fact that the opinion was prevalent all over South
+Africa that the Rand was to be annexed to the British Empire just in the
+same way as Rhodesia had been and under the same conditions. Everyone in
+South Africa knew that the so-called conquest of the domain of King
+Lobengula had been effected only because it had been supposed that it was
+as rich in gold and diamonds as the Transvaal.
+
+When Rhodes had taken possession of the vast expanse of territory which
+was to receive his name, the fortune-seekers who had followed in his
+footsteps had high anticipations of speedy riches, and came in time to
+consider that they had a right to obtain that which they had come to look
+for. These victims of money-hunger made Rhodes personally responsible for
+the disappointments which their greed and unhealthy appetites encountered
+when at last they were forced to the conclusion that Rhodesia was a land
+barren of gold. In time, perhaps, and at enormous expense, it might be
+developed for the purpose of cattle breeding, but gold and diamonds either
+did not exist or could only be found in such small quantities that it was
+not worth while looking for them.
+
+As a result of this realisation, Rhodes found himself confronted by all
+these followers, who loudly clamoured around him their indignation at
+having believed in his assertions. What wonder, therefore, that the
+thoughts of these people turned toward the possibility of diverting the
+treasures of the Transvaal into their own direction. Rhodes was brought
+into contact with the idea that it was necessary to subdue President
+Kruger. With a man of Rhodes' impulsive character to begin wishing for a
+thing was sufficient to make him resort to every means at his disposal to
+obtain it. The Boer War was the work of the Rhodesian party, and long
+before it broke out it was expected, spoken of, and considered not only by
+the Transvaal Government, but also by the Burghers, who, having many
+opportunities of visiting the Cape as well as Rhodesia, had there heard
+expression of the determination of the South African League, and of those
+who called themselves followers and partisans of Rhodes, to get hold of
+the Rand, at the head of which, as an inevitable necessity, should be the
+Colossus himself. No denial of these plans ever came from Rhodes. By his
+attitude, even when relations between London and Pretoria were excellent,
+he gave encouragement to the people who were making all kinds of
+speculations as to what should happen when the Transvaal became a Crown
+Colony.
+
+The idea of a South African Federation had not at that time taken hold of
+public opinion, and, if Rhodes became its partisan later on, it was only
+after he had realised that the British Cabinet would never consent to put
+Johannesburg on the same footing as Bulawayo and Bechuanaland. Too large
+and important interests were at stake for Downing Street to look with
+favourable eyes on the Rand becoming only one vast commercial concern. A
+line had to be drawn, but, unfortunately, the precise demarcation was not
+conveyed energetically enough from London. On the other hand, Cecil
+Rhodes, as well as his friends and advisers, did not foresee that a war
+would not put them in power at the Transvaal, but would give that country
+to the Empire to rule, to use its riches and resources for the good of the
+community at large.
+
+The saddest feature of the South African episode was its sordidness. This
+robbed it of every dignity and destroyed every sympathy of those who
+looked at it impartially or from another point of view than that of
+pounds, shillings and pence. England has been cruelly abused for its
+conduct in South Africa, and abused most unjustly. Had that feeling of
+trust in the justice and in the straightforwardness of Great Britain only
+existed in the Dark Continent, as it did in the other Colonies and
+elsewhere, it would have proved the best solution to all the entangled
+questions which divided the Transvaal Republic from the Mother Country by
+reason of its manner of looking at the exploitation of the gold mines. On
+its side too, perhaps, England might have been brought to consider the
+Boers in a different light had she disbelieved a handful of people who had
+every interest in the world to mislead her and to keep her badly informed
+as to the truth of the situation.
+
+When war broke out it was not easy for the Command to come at once to a
+sane appreciation of the situation, and, unfortunately for all the parties
+concerned, the unjust prejudices which existed in South Africa against Sir
+Alfred Milner had to a certain extent tinctured the minds of people at
+home, exercising no small influence on the men who ought to have helped
+the High Commissioner to carry through his plans for the settlement of the
+situation subsequently to the war. The old saying, "Calumniate,
+calumniate, something will always remain after it," was never truer than
+in the case of this eminent statesman.
+
+It took some time for matters to be put on a sound footing, and before
+this actually occurred many mistakes had been made, neither easy to
+rectify nor possible to explain. Foremost among them was this question of
+the Concentration Camps. Not even the protestations of the women who
+subsequently went to the Cape and to the Transvaal to report officially on
+the question were considered sufficient to dissipate the prejudices which
+had arisen on this unfortunate question. The best reply that was made to
+Miss Hobhouse, and to the lack of prudence which spoiled her good
+intentions, was a letter which Mrs. Henry Fawcett addressed to the
+_Westminster Gazette_. In clear, lucid diction this letter re-established
+facts on their basis of reality, and explained with self-respect and
+self-control the inner details of a situation which the malcontents had
+not given themselves the trouble to examine.
+
+"First," says this forceful document, "I would note Miss Hobhouse's
+frequent acknowledgments that the various authorities were doing their
+best to make the conditions of Camp life as little intolerable as
+possible. The opening sentence of her report is, 'January 22.--I had a
+splendid truck given me at Cape Town through the kind co-operation of Sir
+Alfred Milner--a large double-covered one, capable of holding twelve
+tons.' In other places she refers to the help given to her by various
+officials. The commandant at Aliwal North had ordered £150 worth of
+clothing, and had distributed it; she undertook to forward some of it. At
+Springfontein 'the commandant was a kind man, and willing to help both the
+people and me as far as possible.' Other similar quotations might be made.
+Miss Hobhouse acknowledges that the Government recognise that they are
+responsible for providing clothes, and she appears rather to deprecate the
+making and sending of further supplies from England. I will quote her
+exact words on this point. The italics are mine. 'The demand for clothing
+is so huge that it is hopeless to think that the private charity of
+England and Colonial working parties combined can effectually cope with
+it. _The Government recognise that they must provide necessary clothes,_
+and I think we all agree that, having brought these people into this
+position, it is their duty to do so. _It is, of course, a question for
+English folk to decide how long they like to go on making and sending
+clothes._ There is no doubt they are immensely appreciated; besides, they
+are mostly made up, which the Government clothing won't be.' Miss Hobhouse
+says that many of the women in the Camp at Aliwal North had brought their
+sewing machines. If they were set to work to make clothes it might serve a
+double purpose of giving them occupation and the power of earning a little
+money, and it would also ensure the clothes being made sufficiently large.
+Miss Hobhouse says people in England have very incorrect notions of the
+magnificent proportions of the Boer women. Blouses which were sent from
+England intended for women could only be worn by girls of twelve and
+fourteen; they were much too small for the well-developed Boer maiden, who
+is really a fine creature. Could a woman's out-out size be procured? It
+must be remembered that when Miss Hobhouse saw the Camps for the first
+time it was in January, the hottest month in the South African year; the
+difficulty of getting supplies along a single line of rail, often broken
+by the enemy, was very great. The worst of the Camps she saw was at
+Bloemfontein, and the worst features of this worst Camp were:
+
+"1. Water supply was bad.
+
+"2. Fuel was very scarce.
+
+"3. Milk was very scarce.
+
+"4. Soap was not to be had.
+
+"5. Insufficient supply of trained nurses.
+
+"6. Insufficient supply of civilian doctors.
+
+"7. No ministers of religion.
+
+"8. No schools for children.
+
+"9. Exorbitant prices were demanded in the shops.
+
+"10. Parents had been separated from their children.
+
+"Within the Report itself, either in footnotes or in the main body of the
+Report, Miss Hobhouse mentions that active steps had already been taken to
+remedy these evils. Tanks had been ordered to boil all the water. She left
+money to buy another, and supplied every family with a pan to hold boiled
+water. Soap was given out with the rations. 'Moreover, the Dutch are so
+very full of resources and so clever they can make their own soap with fat
+and soda.' The milk supply was augmented; during the drought fifty cows
+only yielded four buckets of milk daily. 'After the rains the milk supply
+was better.' An additional supply of nurses were on their way. 'The Sister
+had done splendid work in her domain battling against incessant
+difficulties ... and to crown the work she has had the task of training
+Boer girls to nurse under her guidance.'
+
+"Ministers of religion are in residence, and schools under Mr. E.B.
+Sargant, the Educational Commissioner, are open for boys and girls.
+Children have been reunited to parents, except that some girls, through
+Miss Hobhouse's kind efforts, have been moved away from the Camps
+altogether into boarding schools. Even in this Bloemfontein Camp,
+notwithstanding all that Miss Hobhouse says of the absence of soap and the
+scarcity of water, she is able to write: 'All the tents I have been in are
+exquisitely neat and clean, except two, and they are ordinary.' Another
+important admission about this Camp is to be found in the last sentence of
+the account of Miss Hobhouse's second visit to Bloemfontein. She describes
+the iron huts which have been erected there at a cost of £2,500, and says:
+'It is so strange to think that every tent contains a family, and every
+family is in trouble--loss behind, poverty in front, privation and death
+in the present--but they have agreed to be cheerful and make the best of
+it all.'
+
+"There can be no doubt that the sweeping together of about 68,000 men,
+women and children into these Camps must have been attended by great
+suffering and misery, and if they are courageously borne it is greatly to
+the credit of the sufferers. The questions the public will ask, and will
+be justified in asking, are:
+
+"1. Was the creation of these Camps necessary from the military point of
+view?
+
+"2. Are our officials exerting themselves to make the conditions of the
+Camps as little oppressive as possible?
+
+"3. Ought the public at home to supplement the efforts of the officials,
+and supply additional comforts and luxuries?
+
+"The reply to the first question can only be given by the military
+authorities, and they have answered it in the affirmative. Put briefly,
+their statement is that the farms on the veldt were being used by small
+commandoes of the enemy as storehouses for food, arms and ammunition; and,
+above all, they have been centres for supplying false information to our
+men about the movements of the enemy, and correct information to the enemy
+about the movements of the British. No one blames the Boer women on the
+farms for this; they have taken an active part on behalf of their own
+people in the war, and they glory in the fact. But no one can take part in
+war without sharing in its risks, and the formation of the Concentration
+Camps is part of the fortune of war. In this spirit 'they have agreed,' as
+Miss Hobhouse says, 'to be cheerful and make the best of it.'
+
+"The second question--'Are our officials exerting themselves to make the
+Camps as little oppressive as possible?'--can also be answered in the
+affirmative, judging from the evidence supplied by Miss Hobhouse herself.
+This does not imply that at the date of Miss Hobhouse's visit, or at any
+time, there were not matters capable of improvement. But it is confessed
+even by hostile witnesses that the Government had a very difficult task,
+and that its officials were applying themselves to grapple with it with
+energy, kindness and goodwill. Miss Hobhouse complains again and again of
+the difficulty of procuring soap. May I quote, as throwing light upon the
+fact that the Boer women were no worse off than the English themselves,
+that Miss Brooke-Hunt, who was in Pretoria to organise soldiers'
+institutes a few months earlier than Miss Hobhouse was at Bloemfontein,
+says in her interesting book, 'A Woman's Memories of the War': 'Captain
+---- presented me with a piece of Sunlight soap, an act of generosity I
+did not fully appreciate till I found that soap could not be bought for
+love or money in the town.' A Boer woman of the working-class said to Miss
+Brooke-Hunt: 'You English are different from what I thought. They told us
+that if your soldiers got inside Pretoria they would rob us of everything,
+burn our houses, and treat us cruelly; but they have all been kind and
+respectable. It seems a pity we did not know this before.' Miss Hobhouse
+supplies some rather similar testimony. In her Report she says: 'The
+Mafeking Camp folk were very surprised to hear that English women cared a
+rap about them or their suffering. It has done them a lot of good to hear
+that real sympathy is felt for them at home, and I am so glad I fought my
+way here, if only for that reason.'
+
+"In what particular way Miss Hobhouse had to fight her way to the Camps
+does not appear, for she acknowledges the kindness of Lord Kitchener and
+Lord Milner in enabling her to visit them; we must therefore suppose that
+they provided her with a pass. But the sentence just quoted is enough in
+itself to furnish the answer to the third question--'Is it right for the
+public at home to supplement by gifts of additional comforts and luxuries
+the efforts of our officials to make Camp life as little intolerable as
+possible?' All kinds of fables have been told to the Boer men and women of
+the brutality and ferocity of the British. Let them learn by practical
+experience, as many of them have learnt already, that the British soldier
+is gentle and generous, and that his women-folk at home are ready to do
+all in their power to alleviate the sufferings of the innocent victims of
+the war. I know it will be said, 'Let us attend to the suffering loyalists
+first.' It is a very proper sentiment, and if British generosity were
+limited to the gift of a certain definite amount in money or in kind, I
+would be the first to say, 'Charity begins at home, and our people must
+come first.' But British generosity is not of this strictly measured kind.
+By all means let us help the loyal sufferers by the war; but let us also
+help the women and children of those who have fought against us, not with
+any ulterior political motive, but simply because they have suffered and
+are bound to suffer much, and wounded hearts are soothed and healed by
+kindness.
+
+"Mr. Rowntree has spoken quite publicly of the deep impression made on the
+Boer women by the kindness shown them by our men. One said she would be
+always glad to shake hands with a British soldier; it was because of the
+kindly devices they had invented to make over their own rations to the
+women and children during the long journey when all were suffering from
+severe privations. Another Boer girl, referring to an act of kindness
+shown her by a British officer, remarked quietly: 'When there is so much
+to make the heart ache it is well to remember deeds of kindness.' The more
+we multiply deeds of kindness between Boer and Briton in South Africa, the
+better for the future of the two races, who, we hope, will one day fuse
+into a united nation under the British flag."
+
+I hope the reader will forgive me for having quoted in such abundance from
+Mrs. Fawcett's letter, but it has seemed to me that this plain,
+unprejudiced and unsophisticated report, on a subject which could not but
+have been viewed with deep sorrow by every enlightened person in England,
+goes far to remove the doubts that might still linger in the minds of
+certain people ignorant of the real conditions of existence in South
+Africa.
+
+A point insufficiently realised in regard to South African affairs is the
+manner in which individuals comparatively devoid of education, and with
+only a hazy notion of politics, contrived to be taken into serious
+consideration not only by those who visited South Africa, but by a certain
+section of English society at home, and also in a more restricted measure
+by people at the Cape and in the Transvaal who had risen. These people
+professed to understand local politics better than the British
+authorities, and expected the officials, as well as public opinion in
+Great Britain, to adopt their advice, and to recognise their right to
+bring forward claims which they were always eager to prosecute.
+Unfortunately they had friends everywhere, to whom they confided their
+regrets that the British Government understood so very little the
+necessities of the moment. As these malcontents were just back from the
+Rand, there were plenty of people in Cape Town, and especially in Port
+Elizabeth, Grahamstown, and other English cities in Cape Colony, ready to
+listen to them, and to be influenced by the energetic tone in which they
+declared that the Boers were being helped all along by Dutch Colonials who
+were doing their best to betray the British.
+
+In reality, matters were absolutely different, and those who harmed
+England the most at that time were precisely the people who proclaimed
+that they, and they alone, were loyal to her, and knew what was necessary
+and essential to her interests and to her future at the Cape of Good Hope
+and the Rand. Foremost amongst them were the adherents of Rhodes, and this
+fact will always cling to his memory--most unfortunately and most
+unjustly, I hasten to say, because had he been left absolutely free to do
+what he liked, it is probable he would have been the first to get rid of
+these encumbrances, whose interferences could only sow animosity where
+kindness and good will ought to have been put forward. Cecil Rhodes wanted
+to have the last and definite word to say in the matter of a settlement of
+the South African difficulties, and as no one seemed willing to allow him
+to utter it, he thought that he would contrive to attain his wishes on the
+subject by seeming to support the exaggerations of his followers. Yet, at
+the same time, he had the leaders of the Dutch party approached with a
+view of inducing them to appeal to him to put himself at their head.
+
+This double game, which while it lasted constituted one of the most
+curious episodes in a series of events of which every detail was
+interesting, I shall refer to later in more detail, but before doing so
+must touch upon another, and perhaps just as instructive, question--the
+so-called refugees, whose misfortunes and subsequent arrogance caused so
+many anxious hours to Sir Alfred Milner during his tenure of office at the
+Cape and later on in Pretoria.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+IN FLIGHT FROM THE RAND
+
+
+One of the greatest difficulties with which the Imperial Government found
+themselves confronted when relations between Great Britain and the
+Transvaal became strained was the influx of refugees who at the first hint
+of impending trouble left Johannesburg and the Rand, and flocked to Cape
+Town.
+
+The greater number were aliens. From Russia in particular they had flocked
+to the Transvaal when they heard of its treasures. Adventurers from other
+parts of Europe, with a sprinkling of remittance men, also deserted
+Johannesburg. Only the few were real English residents who, from the time
+the Rand had begun to develop, had been living and toiling there in order
+to win sufficient for the maintenance of their families. All this mass of
+humanity, which passed unnoticed when scattered over wide areas in the
+vicinity of Pretoria or Johannesburg, had lived for many years in the
+expectation of the day when the power of the Transvaal Republic would be
+broken. They had discounted it perhaps more than they should have done had
+the dictates of prudence been allowed to take the lead against the wishes
+of their hearts.
+
+When war became imminent the big mining houses considered it wiser to
+close their offices and mines, and for these unfortunate beings, deprived
+of their means of existence, the position became truly a lamentable one.
+They could not very well remain where they were, because the Burghers, who
+had never taken kindly to them, made no secret of their hostility, and
+gave them to understand very clearly that as soon as war had been declared
+they would simply turn them out without warning and confiscate their
+property. Prudence advised no delay, and the consequence was that,
+beginning with the month of August, and, indeed, the very first days which
+followed upon the failure of the Bloemfontein Conference, a stream of
+people from the Transvaal began migrating toward Cape Colony, which was
+supposed to be the place where their sufferings would find a measure of
+relief that they vainly imagined would prove adequate to their needs. At
+the Cape, strangely enough, no one had ever given a thought to the
+possibility of such a thing happening. In consequence, the public were
+surprised by this persisting stream of humanity which was being poured
+into the Colony; the authorities, too, began to feel a despair as to what
+could be done. It is no exaggeration to say that for months many hundreds
+of people arrived daily from the north, and that so long as communications
+were kept open they continued to do so.
+
+At first the refugees inundated the lodging-houses in Cape Town, but these
+soon being full to overflowing, some other means had to be devised to
+house and feed them. Committees were formed, with whom the Government
+officials in the Colony worked with great zeal and considerable success
+toward alleviating the misery with which they found themselves confronted
+in such an unexpected manner. The Municipal Council, the various religious
+communities, the Medical men--one and all applied themselves to relief
+measures, even though they could not comprehend the reason of the blind
+rush to the Cape. Nor, in the main, could the refugees explain more
+lucidly than the one phrase which could, be heard on all sides, no matter
+what might have been the social position: "We had to go away because we
+did not feel safe on the Rand." In many cases it would have been far
+nearer to the truth to say that they had to go because they could no
+longer lead the happy-go-lucky existence they had been used to.
+
+The most to be pitied among these people were most certainly the Polish
+Jews, who originally had been expelled from Russia, and had come to seek
+their fortunes at Johannesburg. They had absolutely no one to whom they
+could apply, and, what was sadder still, no claim on anyone; on the
+English Government least of all. One could see them huddling together on
+the platform of Cape Town railway station, surrounded by bundles of rags
+which constituted the whole of their earthly belongings, not knowing at
+all what to do, or where to go to. Of course they were looked after,
+because English charity has never stopped before differences of race and
+creed, but still it was impossible to deny that their constantly
+increasing number added considerably to the difficulties of the situation.
+
+A Jewish Committee headed by the Chief Rabbi of Cape Town, the Rev. Dr.
+Bender, worked indefatigably toward the relief of these unfortunate
+creatures, and did wonders. A considerable number were sent to Europe, but
+a good many elected to remain where they were, and had to be provided for
+in some way till work could be found for them, which would at least allow
+them to exist without being entirely dependent on public charity. Among
+the aliens who showed a desire to remain in South Africa were many in
+possession of resources of their own; but they carefully concealed the
+fact, as, upon whatever it amounted to, they counted to rebuild their
+fortunes when Britain became sole and absolute mistress on the Rand.
+
+The most dangerous element in the situation was that group of easygoing
+loafers who lived on the fringe of finance and picked up a living by doing
+the odd things needed by the bigger speculators. When things began to be
+critical, these idlers were unable to make money without working, and
+while prating of their patriotism, made the British Government responsible
+for their present state of penury. These men had some kind of instruction,
+if not education, and pretended they understood all about politics, the
+government of nations, and last, but not least, the conduct of the war.
+Their free talk, inflamed with an enthusiasm got up for the occasion, gave
+to the stranger an entirely incorrect idea of the position, and was
+calculated to give rise to sharp and absolutely undeserved criticisms
+concerning the conduct of the administration at home, and of the
+authorities in the Colony. They also fomented hatred and spite between the
+English and the Dutch.
+
+The harm done by these people, at a moment when the efforts of the whole
+community ought to have been directed toward allaying race hatred, and
+smoothing down the differences which had arisen between the two white
+sections of the population, is almost impossible of realisation for one
+who was not in South Africa at the time, and who could not watch the slow
+and gradual growth of the atmosphere of lies and calumny which gradually
+divided like a crevasse the very people who, in unison, might have
+contributed more than anything else to bring the war to a close. One must
+not forget that among these refugees who poisoned the minds of their
+neighbours with foundationless tales of horror, there were people who one
+might have expected to display sound judgment in their appreciation of the
+situation, and whose relatively long sojourn in South Africa entitled them
+to be heard by those who found themselves for the first time in that
+country. They were mostly men who could talk well, even eloquently; and
+they discussed with such apparent knowledge all the circumstances which,
+according to them, had brought about the war, that it was next to
+impossible for the new-comers not to be impressed by their language--it
+seemed bubbling over with the most intense patriotism.
+
+The observer must take into account that among these people there happened
+to be a good many who, as the war went on, enrolled themselves in the
+various Volunteer Corps which were formed. These gave the benefit of their
+experience to the British officers, who relied on the knowledge and
+perception of their informants because of themselves, especially during
+the first months which followed upon their landing, they could not come to
+a clearly focused, impartial judgment of the difficulties with which they
+found their efforts confronted. One must also remember that these officers
+were mostly quite young men, full of enthusiasm, who flamed up whenever
+the word rebellion was mentioned in their presence, and who, having
+arrived in South Africa with the firm determination to win the war at all
+costs, must not be blamed if in some cases they allowed their minds to be
+poisoned by those who painted the plight of the country in such a
+lugubrious tint. If, therefore, acts of what appeared to be cruelty were
+committed by these officers, it would be very wrong to make them alone
+responsible, because they were mostly done out of a spirit of self-defence
+against an enemy whom they believed to be totally different from what he
+was in reality, and who if only he had not been exasperated, would have
+proved of better and healthier stuff than, superficially, his acts seemed
+to indicate.
+
+There was still another class of refugee, composed of what I would call
+the rich elements of the Rand: the financiers, directors of companies;
+managers and engineers of the different concerns to which Kimberley and
+Johannesburg owed their celebrity. From the very first these rightly
+weighed up the situation, and had been determined to secure all the
+advantages which it held for anyone who gave himself the trouble to
+examine it rationally. They came to Cape Town under the pretence of
+putting their families out of harm's way, but in reality because they
+wanted to be able to watch the development of the situation at its centre.
+They hired houses at exorbitant prices in Cape Town itself, or the
+suburbs, and lived the same kind of hospitable existence which had been
+theirs in Johannesburg. Their intention was to be at hand at the
+settlement, to put in their word when the question of the different
+financial interests with which they were connected would crop up--as it
+was bound to do.
+
+The well-to-do executive class forming the last group had the greatest
+cause to feel alarmed at the consequences which might follow upon the war.
+Although they hoped that they would be able to maintain themselves on the
+Rand in the same important positions which they had occupied previous to
+the war, yet they had enough common sense to understand that they would
+not be allowed under a British administration the same free hand that
+President Kruger had given, or which they had been able to obtain from him
+by means of "refreshers" administered in some shape or other. It is true
+that they had always the alternative of retiring from South Africa to Park
+Lane, whence they would be able to astonish Society, but they preferred to
+wait, in case the crash were still delayed for some little time.
+
+The big houses, such as Wernher, Beit and Co.--the head of which, at
+Johannesburg, was Mr. Fred Eckstein, a man of decided ability, who perhaps
+was one of those in South Africa who had judged the situation with
+accuracy--would have preferred to see the crisis delayed. Mr. Eckstein and
+other leading people knew very well that sooner or later the Transvaal was
+bound to fall to England, and they would have felt quite content to wait
+quietly until this event had been accomplished as a matter of course, by
+the force of circumstances, without violence. President Kruger was such an
+old man that one could, in a certain sense, discuss the consequences which
+his demise was bound to bring to South Africa. There was no real necessity
+to hurry on events, nor would they have been hurried had it not been for
+the efforts of the Rhodesians, whose complaints had had more than anything
+else to do with the failure of the Bloemfontein Conference, and all that
+followed upon that regrettable incident. It was the Rhodesians, and not
+the big houses of the Rand, who were most eager for the war.
+
+The exploitation of Rhodesia, the principal aim of which was the
+foundation of another Kimberley, had turned out to be a disappointment in
+that respect, and there remained nothing but making the best of it,
+particularly as countless companies had been formed all with a distinctly
+mineral character to their prospectuses. Now, if the Rand, with all its
+wealth and its still unexplored treasures, became an appanage of
+Kimberley, it would be relatively easy to effect an amalgamation between
+gold and diamond mines, which existed there, and the Rhodesian companies.
+Under these conditions it was but natural that despite an intelligent
+comprehension of the situation, Sir Alfred Milner was nevertheless unable
+to push forward his own plans in regard to the Transvaal and its aged
+President, Mr. Kruger.
+
+The misfortune of the whole situation, as I have already pointed out, was
+that the men who had attempted to play a high game of politics, in reality
+understood very little about them, and that instead of thinking of the
+interests of the Empire to which they professed themselves to be so deeply
+attached, they thought in terms of their personal outlook. Rhodes alone of
+those not in official position saw the ultimate aim of all these entangled
+politics. But unfortunately, though he had the capacities and experience
+of a statesman, he was not a patient man; indeed, throughout his life he
+had acted like a big spoiled child, to whom must be given at once whatever
+he desires. Too often he acted in the present, marring the future by
+thinking only of the immediate success of his plans, and brutally starting
+to work, regardless of consequences and of his personal reputation. Though
+his soul was essentially that of a financier and he would ride rough-shod
+over those who conducted their business affairs by gentler methods, yet at
+the same time, by a kind of curious contrast, he was always ready, nay,
+eager, to come to the material help of his neighbour--maybe out of
+affection for him; maybe out of that special sort of contempt which makes
+one sometimes throw a bone to a starving dog one has never seen before.
+The greatest misfortune in Rhodes' life was his faculty, too often applied
+upon occasions when it were best suppressed, of seeing the mean and sordid
+aspects of an action, and of imagining that every man could be bought,
+provided one knew the price. He was so entirely convinced of this latter
+fact that it always caused him a kind of impatience he did not even give
+himself the trouble to dissimulate, to find that he had been mistaken.
+This happened to him once or twice in the course of his career.
+
+The English party in the Colony regretted until the end of Rhodes' life
+the strange aberration that allowed the Raid, and made him sacrifice his
+reputation for the sake of hastening an event which, without his
+interference, would almost surely soon have come to pass. The salient
+feature of the Raid was its terrible stupidity; in that respect it was
+worse than a crime, for crime is forgotten, but nothing can efface from
+the memory of the world or the condemnation of history a colossally stupid
+political blunder.
+
+After the foolish attempt to seize hold of their country, the Boers
+distrusted British honour and British integrity; and doubting the word or
+promises of England, they made her responsible for this mistake of Cecil
+Rhodes. Rhodes, however, refused to recognise the sad fact. The big
+magnates of Johannesburg said that the wisest thing Rhodes could have done
+at this critical juncture would have been to go to Europe, there to remain
+until after the war, thus dissociating himself from the whole question of
+the settlement, instead of intriguing to be entrusted with it.
+
+The fact of Cecil Rhodes' absence would have cleared the whole situation,
+relieved Sir Alfred Milner, and given to the Boers a kind of political and
+financial security that peace would not be subject to the ambitions and
+prejudices of their enemies, but concluded with a view to the general
+interests of the country.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+DEALING WITH THE REFUGEES
+
+
+The refugees were a continual worry and annoyance to the English community
+at the Cape. As time went on it became extremely difficult to conciliate
+the differing interests which divided them, and to prevent them from
+committing foolish or rash acts likely to compromise British prestige in
+Africa. The refugees were for the most boisterous people. They insisted
+upon being heard, and expected the whole world to agree with their
+conclusions, however unstable these might be. It was absolutely useless to
+talk reason to a refugee; he refused to listen to you, but considered
+that, as he had been--as he would put it--compelled to leave that modern
+paradise, the Rand, and to settle at Cape Town, it became the
+responsibility of the inhabitants of Cape Town to maintain him. Table
+Mountain echoed with the sounds of their vain talk. They considered that
+they were the only people who knew anything about what the English
+Government ought to do, and who criticised it the most, threatening at
+every moment that they would write to their influential friends--even the
+poorest and most obscure had "influential friends"--revealing the
+abominable way in which English interests were neglected in Cape Colony,
+where the Government, according to them, only helped the rebels, and
+considered their wants and requirements in preference to those of their
+own people.
+
+At first, when they were not known as they deserved to be, some persons
+fresh from the Mother Country, to whom South African morals and intrigues
+were unknown, took to heart the position as well as the complaints of
+those refugees. Hearing them continually mention cases in which rebel
+Dutch had, in this way or that, shown their want of allegiance to the
+British Government, conclusions were jumped at that there must exist a
+reason for these recriminations and allegations, and that British
+officials were in reality too anxious to conciliate the anti-English
+elements in the Colony, to the detriment of the loyalists, whose feelings
+of patriotism they considered, as a matter of course, required no reward
+and scarcely any encouragement. These people, unequipped with the truth,
+took up with a warmth which it certainly did not deserve the cause of
+these loyalists, sought their advice, and formed a totally wrong and even
+absurd opinion both as to South African politics and the conduct of the
+representatives of the Queen in Cape Town.
+
+All the misrepresentation and misunderstanding which took place
+increasingly, led to animosity on the part of the Dutch. Rightly or
+wrongly, it was taken as a matter of course that Rhodes favoured the idea
+of a total annihilation of the Cape Dutch. And as he was considered a kind
+of demigod by so many the idea was widely circulated, and became at last
+deeply rooted in the minds of most of the white population of South
+Africa, who, without being able to say why, considered it in consequence a
+part of its duty to exaggerate in the direction of advocating severity
+toward the Dutch. This did not contribute to smoothen matters, and it grew
+into a very real danger, inimical to the conclusion of an honourable and
+permanent peace. Federation, which at one time had been ardently wished
+for almost everywhere, became a new cause for anxiety as soon as it was
+known that Rhodes was in favour of it. People fancied that his ambitions
+lay in the direction of a kind of dictatorship exercised by himself over
+the whole of South Africa, a dictatorship which would make him in effect
+master of the country.
+
+This, however, was the last thing which the financiers on the Rand wished.
+Indeed, they became quite alarmed at the thought that it might become
+possible, and hastened to explain to Sir Alfred Milner the peril which
+such a thing, if it ever happened, would constitute for the community at
+large. Their constant attendance upon Sir Alfred, however, gave rise to
+the idea that these financiers wanted to have it all their own way with
+him and with the Cabinet at home, and that they meant to confiscate the
+Transvaal to their own profit.
+
+The presence of the moneyed class at the Cape had also another drawback:
+it exasperated the poorer refugees, who could not forgive those who, too,
+had fled the Rand, for having so successfully saved their own belongings
+from the general ruin and remained rich, when so many of those who had
+directly or indirectly helped them to acquire their wealth were starving
+at their door. In reality the magnates of the Rand spent huge sums in the
+relief of their poorer brethren in misfortune. I know from personal
+experience, having often solicited them in favour of, say, some
+unfortunate Russian Jew or a destitute Englishman who had lost all his
+earthly belongings through the war. These millionaires, popularly accused
+of being so hardhearted, were always ready with their purses to help those
+who appealed to their charity. But the fact that they were able to live in
+large and luxurious houses whilst so many others were starving in hovels,
+that their wives wore diamonds and pearls, and that they seemed still to
+be able to gratify their every desire, exasperated the multitude of
+envious souls congregated at the Cape.
+
+A general feeling of uneasiness and of unpleasantness began to weigh on
+the whole atmosphere, and as it was hardly possible for anyone to attack
+openly those who had inexhaustible purses, it became the fashion to say
+that the Dutch were responsible for the general misfortune, and to
+discover means of causing them unpleasantness.
+
+On the other hand, as the war went on and showed no signs of subsiding,
+the resources of those who, with perfect confidence in its short duration,
+had left the Rand at a moment's notice, began to dwindle the more quickly
+insomuch as they had not properly economised in the beginning, when the
+general idea was prevalent that the English army would enter Pretoria for
+the Christmas following upon the beginning of the war, and that an era of
+unlimited prosperity was about to dawn in the Transvaal. I do believe that
+among certain circles the idea was rooted that once President Kruger had
+been expelled from the Rand its mines would become a sort of public
+property accessible to the whole community at large, and controlled by all
+those who showed any inclination for doing so.
+
+The mine owners themselves looked upon the situation from a totally
+different point of view. They had gathered far too much experience
+concerning the state of things in South Africa to nurse illusions as to
+the results of a war which was bound to put an end to the corruption of
+the Transvaal Republic. They would have preferred infinitely to let things
+remain in the condition into which they had drifted since the Raid,
+because they understood that a strong British Government would be
+interested in putting an end to the abuses which had transformed the Rand
+into an annexe of the Stock Exchange of almost every European capital.
+But, as the war had broken out, they preferred that it should end, in the
+establishment of a regular administration which could neither be bought
+nor persuaded to serve interests in preference to the public. They did not
+relish the possible triumph of a single man, backed by a powerful
+financial company, with whom they had never lived upon particularly
+affectionate terms.
+
+Rather than see South Africa continue under the influence which had
+hitherto held it in grip, the magnates preferred to associate themselves
+with Sir Alfred Milner to bring about as soon as possible a Federation of
+the different South African States, where there would be no place for the
+ambition of a single individual, and where the domination of one financial
+company would become an impossibility. These magnates were reasonable
+people after all, quite content, after they had taken the cream, to allow
+others to drink. The fever for gold had left them. The fact was that these
+people were not at all anxious to remain at Johannesburg; they preferred
+to gather dividends in London rather than to toil in South Africa; the
+merry, merry days of the Rand had come to an end.
+
+Altogether, indeed, things were beginning to slow down at Johannesburg, in
+spite of the fictitious agitation by the Rhodesian party. The war had come
+as a relief to everybody, and afforded the magnates the opportunity which
+they had been longing for, to enforce order and economy upon a stringent
+scale in their mines and to begin modelling their concerns after a
+European fashion, closing the door upon adventurers and cutting off the
+"financial fringe." The times when new fields of exploitation were
+discovered every day were at an end; the treasures which the Transvaal
+contained in the way of precious metals and stones had all been located;
+and very few surprises could be expected in that direction. It was time
+for the pioneers to retire upon their laurels and to give to themselves,
+as well as to their fortunes, the sedate appearance which they required in
+order to be able to take a place amid the most elegant and exclusive
+society of Europe. Had Rhodes remained alive he would have proved the one
+great obstacle which the magnates of the Rand would have to take into
+consideration, the disturbing element in a situation that required calm
+and quiet.
+
+If Cecil Rhodes had been allowed to decide alone as to the best course of
+action to pursue he also might have come to the same conclusion as these
+magnates. During those moments when he was alone with his own thoughts and
+impulses he would have realised his duty toward his country. He was
+conscious, if others were not, of how utterly he had lost ground in South
+Africa, and he understood that any settlement of the South African
+difficulties could only become permanent if his name were not associated
+with it. This, though undeniable, was a great misfortune, because Rhodes
+understood so perfectly the art of making the best of every situation, and
+using the resources to hand, that there is no doubt he would have brought
+forward a practical solution of the problems which had cropped up on every
+side. He might have proved of infinite use to Sir Alfred Milner by his
+thorough knowledge of the Dutch character and of the leaders of the Dutch
+party with whom he had worked. But Rhodes was not permitted to decide
+alone his line of conduct: there were his supporters to be consulted, his
+so-called friends to pacify, the English Jingoes to satisfy, and, most
+difficult of all, the Bond and Dutch party to please. Moreover, he had
+been indulging in various intrigues of his own, half of which had been
+conducted through others and half carried out alone, with what he believed
+was success. In reality they proved to be more of these disappointments he
+had courted with a carelessness which would have appeared almost
+incredible if one did not know Cecil Rhodes. The Rhodesians, who with
+intention had contrived to compromise him, never left him a moment to his
+own thoughts. Without the flatterers who surrounded him Rhodes would
+undoubtedly have risen to the height of the situation and frankly and
+disinterestedly put himself at the disposal of the High Commissioner. But
+they managed so to irritate him against the representative of the Queen,
+so to anger him against the Dutch party to which he had belonged formerly,
+and so to persuade him that everybody was jealous of his successes, his
+genius and his position in South Africa, that it became relatively easy
+with a man of Rhodes' character to make him smart under the sense of
+non-appreciation. Thus goaded, Rhodes acted often without premeditation.
+
+In contrast to this impatience and the sense of unsatisfied vanity, the
+coolness and greatness of character of Sir Alfred Milner appeared in
+strong contrast, even though many friends of earlier days, such as W.T.
+Stead, had turned their backs upon Sir Alfred, accusing him of being the
+cause of all the misfortunes which fell upon South Africa. But those who
+thus condemned Sir Alfred did not understand the peculiar features of the
+situation. He was credited with inspiring all the harsh measures which
+were employed on occasion by others, measures which he had stridently
+disapproved. Rhodes, in his place, would have killed somebody or destroyed
+something; Sir Alfred went slowly on with his work, disdained praise as
+well as blame, and looked toward the future. I leave it to the reader to
+decide which of the two showed himself the better patriot.
+
+The refugees did not take kindly to the High Commissioner. They had been
+full of illusions concerning the help they fondly imagined he would be
+glad to offer them, and when they discovered that, far from taking them to
+his bosom, he discouraged their intention of remaining in Cape Town until
+the end of the war, they grumbled and lied with freedom. Sir Alfred gave
+them very distinctly to understand that they had better not rely on the
+British Government to feed and clothe them. He said that they would be
+well advised to try to find some work which would allow them to keep
+themselves and their families. But especially he recommended them to go
+back to Europe, which, he gravely assured the refugees, was the best place
+for them and their talents. This did not please those refugees who posed
+as martyrs of their English patriotism and as victims of the hatred of
+Kruger and of the Dutch. They expected to be petted and flattered as those
+looked up to as the saviours of the Empire.
+
+All the foregoing applies to the middle-class section of the refugees. The
+poorer ones grumbled also, but in a different manner, and their irritation
+was rather directed towards the military authorities. As for the
+millionaires, with a few exceptions they also did not care for the High
+Commissioner for reasons elaborated in earlier pages of this volume. They
+even considered that it would be prejudicial to their interests to allow
+Rhodes to be upon too intimate terms with Sir Alfred Milner, so they kept
+a faithful watch at Government House as well as at Groote Schuur, and in
+doing so added to the tension which, up to the last moment of Sir Alfred's
+tenure of office at Cape Town, existed between him and Cecil Rhodes. Too
+courteous to tell his redoubtable adversary that he had better mind his
+own business, convinced, on the other hand, of the latter's great
+capacities and great patriotism, Sir Alfred was constantly doing all that
+he could do in reason to pacify him. Cecil Rhodes used to make most bitter
+and untrue remarks as to the stupidity of the Imperial Government at home
+and the incapacity of the men in charge of its armies in South Africa. All
+this was repeated right and left with the usual exaggeration, and reached,
+as perhaps was intended, those whom it concerned. The result was that
+Rhodes found himself tabooed at Pretoria. This he said was due to the
+great fear which his influence over public opinion in South Africa
+inspired among those in command there.
+
+The big trouble with Rhodes was that he would never own himself in the
+wrong. He quibbled, he hesitated, he postponed replies to questions
+submitted for his consideration. He wearied everybody around him with his
+constant prevarications in regard to facts he ought to have accepted
+without flinching if he wanted to regain some of his lost prestige.
+Unfortunately for himself and for the cause of peace in South Africa,
+Rhodes fancied himself immensely clever at "biding his time," as he used
+to say. He had ever lurking somewhere in his brain the conviction that one
+day the whole situation at Cape Town and Pretoria would become so
+entangled that they would have to send for him to beg him as a favour to
+step round and by his magic touch unravel all difficulties. His curious
+shyness, his ambition and his vanity battled with each other so long that
+those in authority at last came to the sad conclusion that it was far
+better to look elsewhere for support in their honest efforts at this
+important moment in the existence of the African Continent.
+
+One last attempt was made. It was backed up by people in London, among
+others by Stead. Stead liked the Great Imperialist as well as one man can
+like another, and had a great and justified confidence in Rhodes' good
+heart as well as in that indefinable nobility which manifested itself at
+times in his strange, wayward nature. Moreover, being gifted with a keen
+sense of intuition, the famous journalist realised quite well the immense
+work that might have been done by England through Rhodes had the latter
+consented to sweep away those men around him who were self-interested.
+
+But Rhodes preferred to maintain his waiting attitude, whilst trying at
+the same time to accumulate as many proofs as possible that people wanted
+him to assert himself at last. It was the fact that these proofs were
+denied to him at the very minute when he imagined he held them already in
+his hands which led to his suddenly turning once more against the persons
+he had been almost on the point of propitiating. It led him to begin the
+movement for the suspension of the Constitution in Cape Colony, out of
+which he expected so much and which he intended to use as his principal
+weapon against the enemies whom he suspected. That was the last great
+political venture in his life; it failed, but merciful Providence allowed
+him not to see the utter collapse of his latest house of cards.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+UNDER MARTIAL LAW
+
+
+It may be useful, or at any rate of interest, before I lay my pen aside,
+to refer to several things which, at the time they occurred, caused
+torrents of ink to flow both in England and in South Africa.
+
+The most important, perhaps, was the application of martial law in Cape
+Colony. I must repeat that I hold no brief for England. My affection and
+admiration for her does not go to the extent of remaining absolutely blind
+to faults she has made in the past, and perhaps is making in the present.
+I will not deny that martial law, which, unfortunately, is a necessity in
+wartime, was sometimes applied with severity in South Africa. But the
+odium rests principally on the loyalists; their spiteful information in
+many cases induced British officers to treat as rebels people who had
+never even dreamt of rebellion.
+
+It must not be forgotten that those to whom was entrusted the application
+of martial law had perforce to rely on local residents, whom they could
+not possibly suspect of using these officers to satisfy private
+animosities of further private interests. These British officers had never
+been used to see suspicion reign as master, or to watch a perfectly
+conscious twisting of the truth in order to condemn, or even destroy,
+innocent people. A young and probably inexperienced officer sent into a
+small place like Aliwal North or Uitenhage, for instance, found himself
+obliged to rely for information as to the loyalty of the inhabitants on
+some adventurer who, through capitalist influence, had obtained an
+executive post of some kind. How can one wonder, therefore, that many
+regrettable incidents occurred and were immediately made capital of by the
+Bond party further to embitter the feelings of the Dutch Colonists?
+
+Many illegal acts were performed under martial law; of some a mention was
+made in the Cape Town Parliament; these, therefore, do not admit of doubt.
+For instance, as Mr. Neethling said in the Legislative Council, a man of
+seventy was sent down from Paarl to Beaufort West without being allowed to
+say good-bye to his wife, who was left behind without means of support.
+Their house was searched for papers, but without result, and the man--a
+member of the Afrikander Bond--was sent back, after eighteen months'
+deportation, without any charge having been made against him. He was an
+auctioneer and shipping agent, and during his absence his business was
+annexed by a rival. One British Colonial, who held office at Stellenbosch,
+said to one family, without even making an inquiry as to their conduct,
+"You are rebels and I will take your mules"--which was done. The mules
+were afterwards sold to the Commissariat Department by the man who had
+commandeered them. Is it a matter of astonishment, therefore, that many
+people felt sore and bitter at all that they had undergone and were going
+through?
+
+The administration of martial law in the country districts was absolutely
+deplorable; but when one examines minutely the circumstances of the cases
+of injustice about which one could have no doubt, it always emerged that
+these never proceeded from British officers, who, on the contrary,
+wherever they found themselves in command, invariably acted with humanity.
+The great mistake of the military authorities was that they had far too
+much confidence in the Volunteer Corps and those members of it who were
+only anxious to make money out of existing circumstances. Unfortunately,
+certain officers in command of the different corps were extreme Jingoes,
+and this distorted their whole outlook. People said at the time of the war
+that some districts of Cape Colony had been turned into hells; some
+things, in truth, called for strong comment. No words could be energetic
+enough to describe the manner in which martial law had been
+administered--in the district of Graaf Reinet, for instance. The
+commandants--this justice must be rendered to them--generally meant well,
+but, unfortunately, they were assisted by men of less stable character as
+intelligence officers. These, in their turn, unwisely without due inquiry,
+engaged subordinates, upon whom they relied for their information. Graaf
+Reinet people had had to put up with something akin to the Spanish
+Inquisition. Men there were afraid to speak for fear of espionage, the
+most innocent remarks were distorted by spies recruited from an uncertain
+section of the community. A cattle inspector was deported without trial;
+in consequence, the Secretary for Agriculture decided not to employ him
+again; at Graaf Reinet a Colonial intelligence officer constantly declared
+in public that it was his intention to drive the people into rebellion;
+and so instances could be multiplied.
+
+The rebellion was not due to martial law. In Graaf Reinet the prison was
+frequently so crowded, often by men who did not in the least know why,
+that no more sleeping accommodation could be found in it. People were in
+durance vile because they would not join the town guard or defence force.
+So overcrowded the prison became that many persons contracted disease
+during their incarceration.
+
+For these sad occurrences the Cape Government was not initially to blame;
+more than once they had remonstrated with the local military authorities,
+but reports concerning their conduct were not allowed to reach the ears of
+Lord Roberts or of Lord Kitchener. Very often a Hottentot informed against
+respectable citizens to the intelligence officer, and by virtue of that
+they were imprisoned as long as the military authorities deemed fit. When
+released, a man would sometimes find that his house had been sacked and
+his most valuable property carried away. Persons were deported at an
+hour's notice without reasons being given, and thereafter scouts took
+possession of their farms and plundered and destroyed everything. Four
+wagon-loads of men, women and children were deported from their homes at
+Beaufort West. In vain did they ask what they had done. Everybody of the
+name of Van Zyl in the district of Graaf Reinet was deported! not a single
+person was left on their farms except those who had driven them out of
+them. And after these had done their work the victims were told, "Now you
+can return home." Some had to walk back many miles to their farms, to find
+only ruin left. Many white people were imprisoned on the mere evidence of
+coloured persons, the reputation for veracity of whom was well known all
+over South Africa, and whose evidence against a white man would never have
+been admitted in any court of law previous to the war.
+
+In Uitenhage the same kind of thing occurred. It was sufficient for a Boer
+column to pass near the farm of an Afrikander for the latter to be taken
+to prison without the slightest investigation. No one knew where the fines
+paid went, and certainly a good many of those which were imposed by the
+commanders of the scouts and volunteer corps never reached the coffers of
+the Government.
+
+At Cradock, Somerset East, Graaf Reinet and Middelburg people were
+compelled to eradicate prickly pears and do other hard labour simply
+because they had remained quietly at home, according to the proclamation
+issued by Sir Alfred Milner, and refused to join a volunteer corps of some
+sort or other. Many magistrates, acting on instructions, forced guiltless
+people to walk a four to six hours' drive under the pretence of subduing
+their spirits.
+
+One case especially was of such a flagrant nature that it illustrates how
+far the malice of these so-called loyalists went and the harm which their
+conduct did to the British Government. The act which I am going to relate
+would never have been committed by any genuine English officer, no matter
+under what provocation. There is also a detail which must be noticed: by a
+strange coincidence all the victims of oppression were, with but few
+exceptions, men of means, whom, therefore, it was worth while to plunder.
+The story is that a certain Mr. Schoeman, a man of wealth and position
+residing on Vlakteplaats, a farm in the division of Oudtshoorn, received,
+on August 28th, 1901, a message through his son from the military scouts
+who were stationed at De Jaeger's farm in the neighbourhood, instructing
+him to hand over his horses to their care. No written order from the
+Commandant was exhibited to Mr. Schoeman, either at that time or on his
+request, nor was any evidence adduced at his trial later on to prove that
+such an order had really been given by an officer administering martial
+law in the district. Nevertheless, Mr. Schoeman obeyed the order, and on
+the same afternoon sent his horses, three in number, to De Jaeger. The
+scouts refused to take his horses, and told them to bring them on the
+following morning, Thursday, August 29th. This Schoeman did; on coming to
+the place with them he found that the scouts had left, and was obliged to
+take the animals again back to his farm. On the afternoon of that same day
+he received a message from the scouts, and in reply told them to come and
+see him. He had meanwhile, for safety's sake, sent two horses to be
+concealed away from his stable, and kept one, a stallion, at the
+homestead.
+
+The next day, Friday, Boers appeared early in the afternoon. They took the
+stallion, and the following day they returned and asked where the other
+horses were. Mr. Schoeman declined to give any information, but they
+discovered and seized them. Immediately after the Boers had left, Mr.
+Schoeman dispatched one of his farm boys named Barry to De Jaeger, the
+nearest military post, to report the occurrence. The scouts had, however,
+disappeared, and he learned from De Jaeger that before leaving they had
+received a report of the presence of the Boers. On the return of Barry,
+Mr. Schoeman endeavoured to obtain another messenger. Owing to the state
+of the country, which was infested with the enemy, his efforts proved
+unavailing.
+
+During the next week Mr. Schoeman, with a considerable number of his
+neighbours, was ordered to Oudtshoorn. On his arrival he was arrested,
+without any charge or warrant, and confined for some three months, bail
+being refused. No preliminary examination was held as provided in the
+instructions on martial law issued May 1st, 1901. On Sunday, December 1st,
+it was notified to Mr. Schoeman that he would be tried on the following
+day, and the charges were for the first time communicated to him. On
+December 2nd the court assembled and Mr. Schoeman was charged with three
+offences:
+
+1. For not having handed his horses over to the proper military
+authorities, whereby they fell into the hands of the enemy.
+
+2. For having been on friendly terms with the enemy.
+
+3. For having failed to report the presence of the enemy.
+
+He was found guilty on the first and last charges and not guilty on the
+second count, being sentenced to six months' hard labour and to pay a fine
+of £500, or to suffer a further term of twelve months' hard labour in lieu
+of the fine. The sentence was confirmed, the fine was paid by Mr.
+Schoeman, and he underwent the imprisonment for one month with hard labour
+and for five months without hard labour, which was remitted upon order
+from Lord Kitchener, who, without even being fully instructed as to the
+circumstances of the case, of his own accord lightened the terrible
+sentence passed upon Mr. Schoeman.
+
+Later on Mr. Schoeman was cleared of the calumnies that had been the cause
+of his suffering. In this case, as in many others, the victim was the
+object of the private vengeance of a man who had had a grudge against him,
+and repaid it in that abominable manner.
+
+One of the worst mistakes among the many committed during the South
+African War was to allow residents to be invested with what was nothing
+less than unlimited authority over their fellow-citizens. The British
+Government, which was made responsible for these acts, would never have
+given its sanction to any one of them; mostly, it was unaware of the
+original facts. The English military authorities dealt in absolute good
+faith, which makes the more shameful the conduct of those who wilfully led
+them into error. Their one fault was not to realise that certain
+individuals were not fit to administer martial law. In one particular
+district the man in authority seemed to have as the single aim of his life
+the punishment of anyone with Dutch sympathies or of Dutch blood. It was
+useless to appeal to him, because whenever a complaint was brought by an
+inhabitant of the district he simply refused to listen to it, and poured a
+torrent of abuse at the head of the bringer. One of his most notorious
+actions was the treatment which, by his orders, was inflicted on an old
+man who enjoyed the general esteem of both the English and the Dutch
+community, a former member of the House of Assembly. His house was
+searched, the floors were taken up, and the whole garden was dug out of
+recognition in a search for documents that might have proved that his son,
+or himself, or any other member of his family had been in correspondence
+with the two Republics. All this kind of thing was done on hearsay
+evidence, behind which lay personal motives. Had the settlement of the
+country been left entirely in the hands of Lord Kitchener, nothing
+approaching what I have related could have occurred. Unfortunately for all
+concerned, this was precisely the thing which the Rhodesian and other
+interests opposed. Much of the loyalty, about which such a fuss was made
+at the Cape, was loyalty to the sovereign in the pocket, and not loyalty
+to the Sovereign on the throne. This concern for wealth was seen in many
+aspects of life in South Africa, and occasionally invaded drastically the
+realm of social well-being. A case in point was the opposition by the
+financial interests to a tax on brandy. In South Africa drunkenness was
+one of the worst evils, especially among the coloured race, yet the
+restrictive influence of a tax was withheld. The underlying motive was
+nothing but the desire to avoid the tax on diamonds, which every
+reasonable person claimed and considered to be a source of revenue of
+which the Government had no right to deprive itself. While Rhodes lived
+the legislation introduced and maintained by his powerful personality
+revealed the policy of compromise which he always pursued. He was
+eminently practical and businesslike. He said to the members of the Bond,
+"Don't you tax diamonds and I won't tax dop," as the Cape brandy is
+called. The compact was made and kept in his lifetime.
+
+When Rhodes was dead and a big democratic British element had come into
+the country after the war, those in power began wondering how it was that
+diamonds, which kept in luxury people who did not live in the country and
+consequently had no interest whatever in its prosperity, were not taxed.
+The Ministry presided over by Sir Gordon Sprigg shared this feeling, and
+in consequence found itself suddenly forsaken by its adherents of the day
+before, and the Rhodesian Press in full cry against the Government. Sir
+Gordon Sprigg was stigmatised as a tool of the Bond and as disloyal to the
+Empire after the fifty years he had worked for it, with rare
+disinterestedness and great integrity. Nevertheless, the Ministry declared
+that, as there existed an absolute necessity for finding new resources to
+liquidate the expenses contingent on the war, it would propose a tax on
+diamonds and another one on dop.
+
+The exasperation of the Rhodesian party, which was thus roused, was the
+principal reason why the agitation for the suspension of the Constitution
+in Cape Colony was started and pursued so vigorously in spite of the small
+chance it had to succeed. His support of this agitation may be called the
+death-bed effort of Rhodes. When he was no longer alive to lend them his
+strong hand, the Rhodesian party was bound to disperse. They tried in vain
+to continue his policy, but all their efforts to do so failed, because
+there was nothing really tangible for them to work upon.
+
+With Cecil Rhodes came to an end also what can be called the romantic
+period of the history of South Africa, that period during which fortunes
+were made and lost in a few days; when new lands were discovered and
+conquered with a facility and a recklessness that reminded one of the
+Middle Ages. The war established an equilibrium which but for it would
+have taken years to be reached. It sealed the past and heralded the dawn
+of a new day when civilisation was to assert itself, to brush away many
+abuses, much cruelty and more injustice. The race hatred which the
+personality of Rhodes had done so much to keep alive, collapsed very
+quickly after his death, and as time went on the work done with such
+unselfishness and such quiet resolution by Sir Alfred Milner began to bear
+fruit. It came gradually to be understood that the future would justify
+his aims.
+
+[Illustration: THE RT. HON. SIR JOHN GORDON SPRIGG]
+
+The war was one of those colossal crises which shake the foundations of a
+country and change the feelings of a whole generation of men and women in
+regard to each other. Whilst it lasted it roused the worst passions and
+showed up the worst aspects of the character of the people who played a
+part in it; but once it was over the false fabric upon which the
+animosities of the day before had been built fell. A serious and more
+enlightened appreciation of the events that had brought about the
+cataclysm which had cleared the air took the place of the furious outburst
+of hatred that had preceded it. People began to realise that it was not
+possible, on a continent where Europeans constituted but a small minority,
+that they could give the coloured races a terrible example of disunion and
+strife and still maintain dominance. Both the English and Dutch had at
+last recognised the necessity for working together at the great task of a
+Federation of the South African States, which would allow the whole of the
+vast Southern Continent to develop itself on a plane of higher progress
+under the protection of the British flag. This Union was conceived many,
+many years earlier by Cecil Rhodes. It was his great spirit that thought
+of making into one great nation the agglomeration of small nationalities,
+white and black, that lay over the veldt and impenetrable forests of South
+and Central Africa. For a long space of years Cecil Rhodes was South
+Africa.
+
+So long as Rhodes lived it would have been impossible for South Africa
+to escape the influence of his brain, which was always plotting and
+planning for the future whilst forgetting more often than was healthy or
+wise the preoccupations of the present. After the Queen's flag had been
+hoisted at Pretoria, Cecil Rhodes alive would have proved an anomaly in
+South Africa. Cecil Rhodes dead would still retain his position as a
+dreamer and a thinker, a man who always pushed forward without heeding the
+obstacles, forgetful of aught else but the end he was pursuing, the
+country which he loved so well, and, what he cared for even more, his own
+ambition. Men like Rhodes--with all their mistakes to mar their dazzling
+successes--cannot be replaced; it is just as difficult to take up their
+work as it is to fill the gap caused by their disappearance.
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+I have come to the end of what I intended at first to be a book of
+recollections but which has resolved itself into one of impressions. A
+more competent pen than mine will one day write the inner history of this
+South African War, which by an anomaly of destiny had quite different
+results from those expected. So many things have occurred since it
+happened that the whole sequence of events, including the war, is now
+looked upon by many people as a simple incident in a long story.
+
+In reality the episode was something more than that. It was a
+manifestation of the great strength of the British Empire and of the
+wonderful spirit of vitality which has carried England triumphantly
+through crises that would have wrecked any other nation. The incidents
+which followed the war proved the generosity that lies at the bottom of
+the English character and the grandeur that comes out of it in those grave
+moments when the welfare of a nation appears to be at stake and its rulers
+are unable to apply to a succession of evils and dangers the right remedy
+to bring about peace and contentment. No other nations possess this
+remarkable and distinctive feature. England very wisely refused to notice
+the bitterness which still persisted in the early days after the
+conclusion of peace, and devoted her energies to the one immense and
+immediate work of Federation.
+
+The colossal work of Union had been conceived in the shape which it was
+eventually to assume by Sir Alfred Milner, who, after having laid the
+foundations, was patriot enough to allow others to achieve its
+consummation, because he feared the unjust estimate of his character,
+disseminated by interested persons, might compromise the desired object
+and far-reaching possibilities of an enterprise which the most sanguine
+had never imagined could be accomplished within so short a space of time.
+He had toiled courageously toward the founding of a new State where the
+rights of every white as well as of every coloured man should be respected
+and taken into account, and where it would be impossible for a handful of
+rich men by the mere power of riches to control the lives and consciences
+of others.
+
+The time of Sir Alfred Milner's administration was the transitory period
+between the primitive and the civilised that no nation escapes, and this
+period Sir Alfred used in working toward the establishment of a strong and
+wise government. Whether the one which started its course of existence on
+the day when the Federation of South Africa became an accomplished fact
+was strong and wise it is not for me to say. At least it was a patriotic
+government, one which worked sincerely at the abolition of the race hatred
+which the war had not entirely killed, and also one which recognised that
+after all it was the principle of Imperial government that alone could
+bring back prosperity and security to unfortunate and bleeding South
+Africa.
+
+The war gave to the Empire the loyal support and co-operation of the Dutch
+population at the Cape and also in the Transvaal, and the fidelity with
+which General Botha fulfilled his duty toward the Mother Country in the
+difficult moments of 1914 proved the strong link forged in 1902 between
+the British Empire and South Africa. Now that years have passed it is
+possible to look with a less passionate eye upon the past and upon the men
+who took a leading part in the events which gave to the British Empire
+another fair dominion. They appear to us as they really were, and we can
+more justly accord them their proper valuation. The personality of Cecil
+Rhodes will always remain a great one; his merits and his defects will be
+reduced to their proper relative proportions, and the atmosphere of
+adulation or antagonism which, as the occasion suited, was poured upon
+him, be dissipated by time's clarifying influences. His real work
+consisted in the opening of new sources of wealth and new spheres of
+activity to a whole multitude of his fellow-countrymen, and of giving his
+native land an extension of its dominions in regions it had never
+penetrated before Cecil Rhodes' enterprising spirit of adventure and of
+conquest sent him into the wilderness of Africa to open a new and
+radiating centre of activity and development for his country. The
+conception of the Cape to Cairo Railway was one of those projects for
+which his country will ever remain grateful.
+
+Yes! Rhodes was a great Englishman in spite of his faults, and perhaps on
+account of his faults. Beside the genius of a Darwin or of a Pasteur, the
+talent of a Shakespeare or of a Milton, the science of a Newton or of a
+Lister, his figure seems a small one indeed, and it is absurd to raise him
+to the same level as these truly wonderful men. The fact that the activity
+of Cecil Rhodes lay in quite a different direction does not, however,
+diminish the real importance of the work which he did, nor of the services
+which he rendered to his country. The mistake is to judge him as a
+universal genius. His genius had a particular bent; it was always directed
+toward one point and one only, that of material advantages to be acquired
+for the nation to which he belonged and of which he was so proud to be the
+son. Without him South Africa would possibly have been lost for the
+British Empire, which owes him most certainly a great debt in that
+respect.
+
+The years which have gone by since his death have proved that in many
+things Rhodes had been absolutely mistaken. Always he was an attractive,
+and at times even a lovable, personality; a noble character marred by
+small acts, a generous man and an unscrupulous foe; violent in temper,
+unjust in his view of facts that displeased him, understanding chiefly his
+personal interests, true to those whom he considered his friends, but
+implacable toward the people whom he himself had wronged. He was a living
+enigma to which no one had ever found a solution; because he presented
+constantly new and unexpected sides that appeared suddenly and shattered
+the conclusion to which one had previously arrived.
+
+In Europe Rhodes would not only have been impossible, but he would never
+have found the opportunity to give full rein to his faculties of
+organisation and of conquest. He knew no obstacles and would admit none in
+his way; he was of the type of Pizarro and of Fernando Cortez, with fewer
+prejudices, far more knowledge, and that clear sense of civilisation which
+only an Englishman born and bred amid the traditions of liberty can
+possess. But he was lacking in the fine political conception of government
+which Sir Alfred Milner possessed, and whilst refusing to admit the
+thought of compromise in matters where a little yielding to the wishes and
+desires of others might have secured him considerable advantage, he yet
+allowed himself to become entangled in intrigues which he denied as soon
+as he perceived that they could not be successful, but for which the world
+always condemned and never forgave, and even in some cases despised him.
+
+Notwithstanding the great brilliance of his intelligence and the strength
+of his mind, Cecil Rhodes will always be found inferior to the present
+Viscount Milner as a statesman. Rhodes could not and would not wait.
+Milner spent his whole existence in waiting, and waited so successfully
+that he lived to see the realisation of the plans which he had made and
+which so many, even among his friends, had declared to be quite impossible
+for him to realise. Milner, about whose tact and mental greatness so many
+false notions existed in South Africa as well as elsewhere, had been the
+one man who had seen clearly the consequences of the war. As he told me
+one day when we were talking about the regrettable race-hatred which lent
+such animosity to the struggle: "It will cease sooner than one thinks."
+
+The wise administrator, who had studied human nature so closely as he had
+done politics, had based his judgments on the knowledge which he had
+acquired of the spirit of colonisation which makes Great Britain so
+superior to any other nation in the world, and his belief that her
+marvellous spirit of adaptation was bound to make itself felt in South
+Africa as it had elsewhere. Sir Alfred Milner knew that as time went on
+the Afrikanders would realise that their erstwhile enemies had given them
+the position to which they had always aspired, a position which entitled
+them to take a place among the other great nations of the world. He knew,
+too, that their natural spirit of pride and of vanity would make them
+cherish the Empire that had allowed them to realise their ambitions of the
+past. Until the war they had been proud of their gold and of their
+diamonds; after the war they would be proud of their country. And by the
+consciousness which would gradually come to them of the advantages which
+their Federation under the British flag had brought to them they would
+become also ardent British patriots--blessing the day when, in a passing
+fit of insanity, goaded into it by people who had never seen clearly the
+situation, President Kruger had declared war on England.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+Africa, South, charm of, 22
+ conquest of, 1
+ drunkenness in, 223
+ English colonists, 14
+ prior to Boer War, 6
+ Union of (_see_ Union)
+
+Afrikander Bond, 86, 99
+ and Rhodes, 73, 82, 84
+ and Sir A. Milner, 134
+
+Afrikander party compel Rhodes' resignation, 50
+Aliwal North concentration camp, 182
+America's response to concentration camp appeal, 165
+
+
+ B
+
+Barkly West, Rhodes elected for, 28
+Barnato, Barney, 24, 137
+ his awe of Rhodes, 60
+Beit, Alfred, 24
+Bender, Rev. Dr., Chief Rabbi of Cape Town, 194
+Bloemfontein, concentration camp at, 182, 184
+Bloemfontein Conference, the, 13, 16, 140
+ failure of, 67, 104
+Boer War, concentration camps, 157 _et seq._
+ not a war of annihilation, 3
+ prime cause of, 128, 137, 139, 178
+ Rhodes' prophecy, 67
+Boers, the, mistrust of England after the Raid, 200
+ pre-war hygienic conditions of, 160 (_Cf. also_ Dutch)
+Botha, General, 83
+ imperialism of, xii, 229
+British Empire, South Africa added to, 3
+British Government, the, a missed opportunity, 41
+ and Boer concentration camps, 162
+British South Africa Company, constitution of, 44
+ (_See also_ Chartered Company)
+Brooke-Hunt, Miss, in Pretoria, 186
+Buller, Sir Redvers, and siege of Kimberley, 94, 95
+
+
+ C
+
+Cape Colony, diamond fields, 3
+ loyalty to England, 129
+ martial law in, 214 _et seq._
+ mutiny of Dutch in, 8
+ overcrowded prisons, 217
+ Rhodes as Premier, 30, 43, 44
+ Sir Gordon Sprigg as Premier, 99, 121
+Cape to Cairo Railway, 81, 124, 229
+Cape Town, influx of refugees, 191 _et seq._
+Chamberlain, Joseph, 104
+ policy of, 133
+Chartered Company of South Africa, 25, 26, 78, 80
+ sinister rumours, 45
+Concentration camps, 141, 142, 157
+ hygienic conditions of, 160
+ inner organisation, 173
+ Miss Hobhouse's charges, and Mrs. Henry Fawcett's reply to, 165, 181
+ necessity for, 161
+ rations, 171
+Cronje, General, 94
+
+
+ D
+
+De Beers Consolidated Mines, 24, 80, 112
+ power of Company, 114
+Delagoa Bay, 91
+Dop tax, the, 223
+Dutch, the, and Dr. Jameson, 149
+ and Sir A. Milner, 151
+ enmity with English, 11
+ mutiny in Cape Colony, 8
+ popularity of Rhodes with, 30, 43, 73
+ reconciliation with English, 129 (_Cf. also_ Boers)
+
+
+ E
+
+Eckstein, F., 97, 197
+England acquires the Transvaal, 1
+ the question of concentration camps, 159
+English, the
+ as colonists, 14, 15
+ enmity with the Dutch, 11
+ reconciliation with the Dutch, 129
+
+
+ F
+
+Fawcett, Mrs. Henry, reply to Miss Hobhouse, 181
+Frenchman, a, and a Johannesburg mining property, 64
+
+
+ G
+
+Glen Grey Act, the, 126
+Graaf Reinet, martial law in, 216
+Green Point (Cape Town) concentration camp, 170
+Groote Schuur, the house and gardens, 153
+
+
+ H
+
+Hammond, John Hays, 138
+Hely-Hutchinson, Sir W.F., 99
+Hobhouse, Miss, pamphlet on concentration camps, 165 _et seq._
+Hofmeyr, Mr., 38, 43, 83, 84, 86, 135, 150, 155
+ popularity of, 136
+
+
+ I
+
+I.D.B. Act, the, unwisdom of, 113
+Imperial Commission report on concentration camps, 166
+
+
+ J
+
+Jameson, Dr., affection for Rhodes, 72, 148
+ becomes Prime Minister, 73
+ death of, 148 (note)
+ enters Transvaal territory, 47 (_see_ Jameson Raid)
+ political aspirations of, 56
+ Progressive leader, 72
+ relations with Rhodes after the raid, 54
+ rumours of his forthcoming raid, 45
+ the Dutch and, 149
+Jameson Raid, the, 9, 30
+ a colossal blunder, 200
+ aftermath of, 69
+ its aim, 53
+ tacitly encouraged by Rhodes, 51, 67
+Jews, Polish, plight of, 193
+Jingoes, the, 69, 107, 130, 135, 142, 163, 216
+Joel, S., 24
+Johannesburg, a shady operation in, 63
+ flight from, 191
+ goldfields of, 24
+
+
+ K
+
+Kekewich, Colonel, entrusted with defence of Kimberley, 94
+Kimberley, diamond mines in, 17, 24, 87
+ relief of, 116
+ Rhodes' purchase of plots in, 21
+ Rhodes' secret negotiations, 76
+ siege of, 75, 83, 94
+ the I.D.B. Act in operation, 113
+Kitchener, Lord, and Boer concentration camps, 159
+ intervenes in the Schoeman case, 221
+ Rhodes and, 147
+Koopman, Mrs. van, author's admiration for, 48
+ disillusionment of, 47, 74, 146
+ her alarm at raid rumours, 45
+ intimacy with Rhodes, 40
+ Rhodes denies raid projected, 46
+ under police supervision, 48
+Kruger, President, 30, 53, 198
+ and Mrs. van Koopman, 40
+ candid criticisms of Rhodes, 92, 93
+ death sentence for Reformers, 51
+ "refreshers" for, 197
+ Rhodes attempts alliance with, 90
+ Rhodes' _bête-noire_, 150
+ Rhodes' duplicity, 74
+ warned against Sir A. Milner, 104
+
+
+ L
+
+Ladysmith, relief of, 116
+Lobengula, King, 36
+ and Rhodesia, 25
+ Cecil Rhodes and, 19
+ his son becomes one of Rhodes' gardeners, 37
+Loyalists and concentration camps, 174
+
+
+ M
+
+Mafeking concentration camp, 186
+Majuba, defeat of British at, 73
+Martial law in Cape Colony, 214 _et seq._
+"Martyrdom of Man" (Reade's), its influence on Rhodes, 126
+Matabele Rebellion, the, Rhodes' courage in, 43
+Matabeleland, 19
+ acquired by the Chartered Company, 26, 90, 112
+Matoppo Hills, an historic meeting, 43
+ Rhodes' burial-place, 72
+Maxwell, Lady, an appeal by, 164
+Merriman, Mr., 134, 150
+ severs relations with Rhodes, 73
+Methuen, Lord, mandate to Rhodes, 95
+Milner, Sir (Viscount) Alfred, 4, 58
+ a hint to Rhodes, 147
+ and the Boers, 12, 85, 132
+ and Rhodes, 74, 140, 148
+ and the De Beers Company, 115
+ appointed Governor of Cape Colony, 8, 85
+ dignified speech, 134
+ efforts for peace, 156
+ his great object, 86
+ influence of, 104
+ misunderstood and misjudged 7, 12, 85, 104, 107, 108, 180, 228
+ overruled from Whitehall, 135
+ policy of conciliation, 130
+ reports from Rhodes on defence of Kimberley, 94
+ Rhodes' distrust of, 13, 75
+ the refugees and, 210
+ the South African League, 90
+ transferred to Johannesburg, 99
+
+
+ N
+
+Napoleon, Pius VII. on, 35
+Neethling, Mr., and martial law in Cape Colony, 215
+
+
+ O
+
+Orange Free State, flight of the populace, 158
+ illusions of the Dutch in, 176
+ resources of, 8
+
+
+ P
+
+Pius VII., Pope, on Napoleon, 35
+Polish Jews, plight of, 193
+Pretoria, British flag hoisted at, 226
+ Rhodes tabooed at, 211
+ Rhodes visits Kruger at, 91
+ soldiers' institutes at, 186
+
+
+ R
+
+Radziwill, Princess Catherine, and Rhodes, 110, 146
+ and Rhodes' suspicions of Sir A. Milner, 107
+ conversations with Sir A. Milner, 106, 232
+ Rhodes' characteristic note to, 59
+ talks with Rhodes on Reade's "Martyrdom of Man," 127
+ visits concentration camps, 163
+Rand, the, Downing Street and, 179
+ Dutch illusions as to Britain's intentions, 177
+ flight from, 191 _et seq._
+ gold fields of, 90
+ magnates of, 137 _el seq._, 197
+Reade, Winwood, influence of his
+ "Martyrdom of Man" on Rhodes, 126
+Rhodes, Cecil, agitates for suspension of constitution, 118, 155, 213, 224
+ beginning of his fortune, 21
+ created a Privy Councillor, 43
+ death, 129, 153, 224
+ end of his political career, 47, 50, 57, 73
+ enters political life, 28
+ patriotism of, 10,17, 31, 76, 82, 152, 230
+Rhodes, Herbert (brother of Cecil Rhodes), 20
+Rhodesia, annexation of, 24, 25, 28, 35, 36, 78
+ exploitation of, 198
+ question of its mineral wealth, 177
+ Rhodes as "King" of, 122
+Roberts, Lord, complimentary lunch to, 134
+ Rhodes' abuse of, 147
+Rowntree, Mr., and the concentration camps, 187
+Russia, Wallace's work on, 126
+
+
+ S
+
+Sandringham, Rhodes at, 126
+Sargent, E.B., 183
+Sauer, Mr., 86, 117, 134, 150, 155,
+ and Rhodes, 73
+ leader of Bond party, 100
+Schoeman, Mr., illegal arrest of, and Lord Kitchener's
+ intervention, 200, 201
+Schoeman, Mr., and Loyalists, 219
+Schreiner, Mr., 38, 86, 133, 150
+ confidence in Rhodes, 32
+ indignation with Rhodes, 50, 73
+ questions Rhodes, 45
+ Rhodes and, 23, 74
+Schreiner, Olive, on annexation of Rhodesia, 36
+ Rhodes and, 33
+Simonstown, camp for prisoners of war at, 172
+Smuts, General, Imperialism of, xii
+Sonnenberg, Mr., and Rhodes, 26
+South Africa (_see_ Africa, South)
+South African League, 86, 88, 97, 99
+ a petition to Sir Gordon Sprigg, 99, 102
+ and Sir A. Milner, 90
+Southern Cross, the, 22
+Sprigg, Sir Gordon, and the South African League, 99
+ diamond and dop taxes, 224
+ Premier of Cape Colony, 99, 121, 132
+Stead, W.T., admiration of Rhodes, 212
+ and Sir A. Milner, 209
+Steyn, President, and Mrs. van Koopman, 40
+
+
+ T
+
+Transvaal, the, flight of Boer inhabitants, 158
+ gold mines, 1, 3, 17
+ loyalty to England, 129
+ object of Jameson Raid, 53
+ racial qualifications, 137
+Transvaal Republic, intrigues in, 1
+
+
+ U
+
+Uitenhage, martial law in, 218
+Uitlanders, the, and concentration camps, 163
+ quarrel with, 30
+ their part in the Boer War, 16, 97, 137, 139
+Union of South Africa, 228
+ an accomplished fact, 131, 228
+ magnates' views, 207
+ organisation of, 2
+ Sir A. Milner's part in constitution, 14
+ united effort for, 225
+
+
+ W
+
+Wall, David de, 99, 101, 146
+Wales, Prince of (Edward VII.), 126
+Wallace, Mackenzie, meets Rhodes, 126
+Wernher, Beit and Company, 97, 197
+Wet, De, 83
+_Westminster Gazette,_ Mrs. Fawcett's reply to Miss Hobhouse in, 181
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CECIL RHODES***
+
+
+******* This file should be named 16600-8.txt or 16600-8.zip *******
+
+
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/6/6/0/16600
+
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://www.gutenberg.org/about/contact
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit:
+https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
diff --git a/16600-8.zip b/16600-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..aaee238
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h.zip b/16600-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c3ab290
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h/16600-h.htm b/16600-h/16600-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..fe18d1a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/16600-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,11008 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
+<html>
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Cecil Rhodes, by Princess Catherine Radziwill</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+ /* <![CDATA[ */
+@media print {
+ a:link, a:visited {color: black; background-color: transparent}
+ a:hover {color: black; background-color: transparent}
+ hr { display: none }
+}
+
+@media screen {
+ a:link, a:visited {color: #0000A0; background-color: transparent}
+ a:hover {color: #0000A0; background-color: transparent; text-decoration: underline;}
+}
+
+a:link, a:visited {text-decoration: none; background: transparent}
+a:hover {text-decoration: underline; background: transparent}
+
+img { border: none }
+
+body {
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ max-width: 50em;
+ color: black; background-color: white;
+}
+
+div#MAIN { page-break-before: always }
+
+div.chapter {
+ page-break-after: always;
+}
+
+h1 {
+ font-size: 280%;
+ text-align: center; margin-top: 6ex;
+}
+
+h1.pg {
+ font-size: 170%;
+ text-align: center; margin-top: 0ex;
+}
+
+h4.pg {
+ text-align: center;
+}
+
+p {
+ text-align: justify;
+ text-indent: 1.5em;
+ margin-top: 1ex;
+ margin-bottom: 1ex;
+ vertical-align: baseline;
+}
+
+p.continuation { text-indent: 0pt; margin-top: 0pt; }
+
+div.titlePage {
+ page-break-after: always;
+ margin-top: 2ex;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+ margin-bottom: 4ex;
+ padding-bottom: 2ex;
+ padding-top: 2ex;
+}
+
+div.title-main {
+ font-size: 400%; text-align: center; font-weight: normal;
+ margin-top: 2ex;
+ margin-bottom: 1ex;
+ text-align: center;
+}
+
+div.title-main+div.title-main {
+ font-size: 320%; text-align: center; font-weight: normal;
+ text-align: center;
+ margin-top: 0ex;
+ margin-bottom: 7ex;
+}
+
+div.title-description {
+ font-size: 120%; text-align: center; font-weight: normal;
+ margin-top: 0ex;
+ font-style: italic;
+}
+
+div.title-dedication {
+ font-size: 150%; text-align: center; font-weight: normal;
+ margin: 5ex 2em 2em 2ex;
+ line-height: 3ex;
+}
+
+div.byline {
+ font-size: 150%; text-align: center;
+ margin-top: 6ex; margin-bottom: 1ex;
+ line-height: 3ex;
+}
+
+div.docTitle+div.byline { margin-top: 0ex; margin-bottom: 0ex; }
+
+div.docTitle { margin-top: 0ex; margin-bottom: 0ex; }
+
+div.byline+div.byline { margin-top: 0ex; margin-bottom: 0ex }
+
+div.docEdition {
+ font-size: 150%; text-align: center; font-weight: normal;
+ margin-top: 3ex; margin-bottom: 3ex;
+}
+
+div.docAuthor {
+ font-size: 130%; text-align: center; font-weight: normal;
+ margin-top: 3ex; margin-bottom: 0ex;
+ text-transform: uppercase;
+}
+
+div.docImprint {
+ font-size: 150%; text-align: center; font-weight: normal;
+ margin-top: 20ex; margin-bottom: 4ex;
+}
+
+.toc-chapno, .toc-pageno {
+ text-align: right;
+}
+
+tr.tocheader td { font-size:80%; text-align:left; }
+
+div.contents {
+ page-break-after: always;
+ padding-bottom: 3ex;
+ }
+
+div.contents ul {
+ list-style-type: none;
+}
+
+.abs-right {
+ position: absolute;
+ right: 15em;
+ text-align: right;
+}
+
+table.figure {
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+ margin-bottom: 3ex;
+ margin-top: 3ex;
+}
+
+table.figure td {
+ text-align: center;
+ padding-top: 0px;
+ margin-left: 0pt;
+ padding-left: 0pt;
+}
+
+.figure-attribution, .figure-attribution p {
+ text-align:right; font-size: 80%; font-style:italic;
+ margin-top:0pt;padding-top:0pt;
+ margin-left: 0pt; margin-right:0pt;
+ text-indent: 0pt;
+}
+
+.figure-caption, .figure-caption p {
+ text-indent: 0;
+ text-align: center;
+ font-weight: bold;
+ margin-bottom: 0ex;
+ padding-bottom: 0ex;
+ margin-top: 0pt;
+ padding-top: 0pt;
+}
+
+p.continuation { text-indent: 0em; margin-left: 0em; }
+
+table {
+ margin-left: 6em; margin-right: 6em;
+ margin-top: 1ex;
+ margin-bottom: 1ex;
+}
+
+table td.data {
+ text-align: left;
+ padding-left: 0.75em;
+ padding-right: 0.75em;
+}
+
+table td.number {
+ text-align: right;
+ padding-left: 0.75em;
+ padding-right: 0.75em;
+}
+
+div.contents table {
+ width:35em
+}
+
+div.contents table td {
+ margin-left: 1em;
+ padding-left: 1em;
+ padding-bottom: 0.5ex;
+}
+
+div.contents table caption {
+ font-size: 150%;
+ font-weight: bold;
+ padding-bottom: 4ex;
+ text-align: center;
+}
+
+div.contents li {
+ font-variant: small-caps;
+ margin-top: 0.5ex;
+ margin-bottom: 0.5ex;
+ height: 3ex;
+}
+
+h2 { padding-bottom: 0; font-weight: bold; margin-bottom: 3ex; margin-top: 5ex; font-size: 130%;}
+
+h2.num { font-weight: bold; margin-bottom: 0ex; margin-top: 5ex; font-size: 130% }
+
+h2,h3 {text-align: center; font-weight: bold; font-size: 100%; margin-bottom: 1ex }
+
+hr { width: 95%; margin-bottom: 4ex; margin-top: 3ex;}
+
+.pagenum {
+ display:block;
+ margin-top: 0.5ex;
+ position: absolute; left: 1%; right: 100%;
+ font-size: 90%; text-align: left; color: #666;
+ font-style: normal; font-weight: normal;
+ font-variant: normal;
+}
+
+div.footnote {
+ text-align: justify; text-indent: -1.5em;
+ margin-left: 1.5em; margin-top: 1ex; margin-bottom: 1ex;
+}
+
+div.footnotes {
+ margin-left: 2em; margin-right: 0em; margin-top: 3ex; margin-bottom: 3ex;
+ font-size: 90%
+}
+
+.footnoteref {font-size: 80%; font-weight: bold;}
+
+div.lg {
+ margin-left: 9em;
+ margin-top: 3ex;
+ margin-bottom: 3ex;
+}
+
+div.index ul { list-style-type: none; margin-top: 0.5ex; margin-bottom: 0.5ex; }
+div.index ul li ul { margin-top: 0; margin-bottom: 0 }
+div.index h2 { text-align: center; margin-top: 3ex; font-weight: bold; font-size: 130%; }
+h3.index { text-align: left; margin-left: 9em; margin-top: 3ex; margin-bottom: 0ex; font-weight: bold }
+
+div.l {
+ text-indent: -2em; margin-left: 2em;
+ margin-top: 0.1ex; margin-bottom: 0em;
+}
+
+.sc { font-variant: small-caps }
+hr.full { width: 100%; }
+pre {font-size: 8pt;}
+ /* ]]> */
+ </style>
+</head>
+<body>
+<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Cecil Rhodes, by Princess Catherine Radziwill</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: Cecil Rhodes</p>
+<p> Man and Empire-Maker</p>
+<p>Author: Princess Catherine Radziwill</p>
+<p>Release Date: August 26, 2005 [eBook #16600]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CECIL RHODES***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h4 class="pg">E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Dainis Millers,<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (https://www.pgdp.net/)</h4>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" noshade="noshade" size="4" />
+
+
+<div style="text-align:center"><table class="figure" summary="THE RT. HON. CECIL RHODES" id="FIG.0"><tr><td><a href="images/image00.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="images/image00-th.jpg" title="THE RT. HON. CECIL RHODES" alt="THE RT. HON. CECIL RHODES" width="350" height="527" /></a></td></tr><tr><td class="figure-attribution"><p>Photo: E. H. Mills</p></td></tr><tr><td class="figure-caption"><p>THE RT. HON. CECIL RHODES</p></td></tr></table></div>
+
+
+<div class="titlePage">
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<div class="title-main">CECIL RHODES</div>
+<div class="title-main" style="font-size: 220%">MAN AND EMPIRE-MAKER</div>
+
+
+<div class="byline">BY<div class="docAuthor">Princess Catherine Radziwill</div>
+<div class="docAuthor" style="font-size: 100%">(CATHERINE KOLB-DANVIN)</div></div>
+
+<div class="title-description">
+ With Eight Photogravure Plates
+</div>
+
+<div class="docEdition">
+CASSELL &amp; COMPANY, LTD
+</div>
+<div class="docEdition">
+London, New York, Toronto and Melbourne
+</div>
+<div class="docEdition">
+1918
+</div>
+
+</div><hr />
+
+<div id="contents" class="contents">
+
+
+
+
+<table summary="Table of contents">
+<caption>
+CONTENTS
+</caption>
+
+
+<tr id="toc.1">
+ <td class="toc-chapno">1.</td>
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#chapter1">CECIL RHODES AND SIR ALFRED MILNER </a><a href="#page1" class="abs-right">1</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.2">
+ <td class="toc-chapno">2.</td>
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#chapter2">THE FOUNDATIONS OF FORTUNE </a><a href="#page17" class="abs-right">17</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.3">
+ <td class="toc-chapno">3.</td>
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#chapter3">A COMPLEX PERSONALITY </a><a href="#page28" class="abs-right">28</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.4">
+ <td class="toc-chapno">4.</td>
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#chapter4">MRS. VAN KOOPMAN </a><a href="#page40" class="abs-right">40</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.5">
+ <td class="toc-chapno">5.</td>
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#chapter5">RHODES AND THE RAID </a><a href="#page50" class="abs-right">50</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.6">
+ <td class="toc-chapno">6.</td>
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#chapter6">THE AFTERMATH OF THE RAID </a><a href="#page69" class="abs-right">69</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.7">
+ <td class="toc-chapno">7.</td>
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#chapter7">RHODES AND THE AFRIKANDER BOND </a><a href="#page82" class="abs-right">82</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.8">
+ <td class="toc-chapno">8.</td>
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#chapter8">THE INFLUENCE OF SIR ALFRED MILNER </a><a href="#page104" class="abs-right">104</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.9">
+ <td class="toc-chapno">9.</td>
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#chapter9">THE OPENING OF THE NEW CENTURY </a><a href="#page120" class="abs-right">120</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.10">
+ <td class="toc-chapno">10.</td>
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#chapter10">AN ESTIMATE OF SIR ALFRED MILNER </a><a href="#page130" class="abs-right">130</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.11">
+ <td class="toc-chapno">11.</td>
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#chapter11">CROSS CURRENTS </a><a href="#page144" class="abs-right">144</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.12">
+ <td class="toc-chapno">12.</td>
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#chapter12">THE CONCENTRATION CAMPS </a><a href="#page157" class="abs-right">157</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.13">
+ <td class="toc-chapno">13.</td>
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#chapter13">THE PRISONERS' CAMPS </a><a href="#page170" class="abs-right">170</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.14">
+ <td class="toc-chapno">14.</td>
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#chapter14">IN FLIGHT FROM THE RAND </a><a href="#page191" class="abs-right">191</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.15">
+ <td class="toc-chapno">15.</td>
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#chapter15">DEALING WITH THE REFUGEES </a><a href="#page202" class="abs-right">202</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.16">
+ <td class="toc-chapno">16.</td>
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#chapter16">UNDER MARTIAL LAW </a><a href="#page214" class="abs-right">214</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.CONCLUSION">
+ <td class="toc-chapno" />
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#CONCLUSION">CONCLUSION </a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="toc.INDEX">
+ <td class="toc-chapno" />
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#INDEX">INDEX </a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr /></div>
+
+<div id="illustrations" class="contents">
+
+
+
+
+<table summary="Table of illustrations">
+<caption>
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+</caption>
+
+
+<tr id="TOFIG.0">
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#FIG.0">THE RT. HON. CECIL RHODES <i><span class="abs-right">Frontispiece</span></i></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="TOFIG.1">
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#FIG.1">THE RT. HON. W.P. SCHREINER </a><a href="#page32" class="abs-right">32</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="TOFIG.2">
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#FIG.2">PRESIDENT KRUGER </a><a href="#page68" class="abs-right">68</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="TOFIG.3">
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#FIG.3">THE HON. J.H. HOFMEYR </a><a href="#page86" class="abs-right">86</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="TOFIG.4">
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#FIG.4">THE RT. HON. SIR W.F. HELY-HUTCHINSON </a><a href="#page98" class="abs-right">98</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="TOFIG.5">
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#FIG.5">VISCOUNT MILNER </a><a href="#page132" class="abs-right">132</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="TOFIG.6">
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#FIG.6">THE RT. HON. SIR LEANDER STARR JAMESON </a><a href="#page148" class="abs-right">148</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="TOFIG.7">
+ <td class="toc-name"><a href="#FIG.7">THE RT. HON. SIR JOHN GORDON SPRIGG </a><a href="#page224" class="abs-right">224</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr /></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="pageix">[ix]</span>
+
+
+<h2>
+INTRODUCTION
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+The recent death of Sir Starr Jameson reminded the
+public of the South African War, which was such an
+engrossing subject to the British public at the close of
+the 'nineties and the first years of the present century.
+Yet though it may seem quite out of date to reopen
+the question when so many more important matters
+occupy attention, the relationship between South Africa
+and England is no small matter. It has also had its
+influence on actual events, if only by proving to the
+world the talent which Great Britain has displayed in
+the administration of her vast Colonies and the tact with
+which British statesmen have contrived to convert their
+foes of the day before into friends, sincere, devoted
+and true.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+No other country in the world could have achieved
+such a success as did England in the complicated and
+singularly difficult task of making itself popular among
+nations whose independence it had destroyed.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The secret of this wonderful performance lies principally
+in the care which England has exercised to secure
+the welfare of the annexed population, and to do nothing
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="pagex">[x]</span>
+
+
+likely to keep them in remembrance of the subordinate
+position into which they had been reduced. England
+never crushes those whom it subdues. Its inbred talent
+for colonisation has invariably led it along the right path
+in regard to its colonial development. Even in cases
+where Britain made the weight of its rule rather heavy
+for the people whom it had conquered, there still developed
+among them a desire to remain federated to
+the British Empire, and also a conviction that union,
+though it might be unpleasant to their personal feelings
+and sympathies, was, after all, the best thing which
+could have happened to them in regard to their material
+interests.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Prosperity has invariably attended British rule wherever
+it has found scope to develop itself, and at the
+present hour British patriotism is far more demonstrative
+in India, Australia or South Africa than it is in
+England itself. The sentiments thus strongly expressed
+impart a certain zealotism to their feelings, which constitutes
+a strong link with the Mother Country. In
+any hour of national danger or calamity this trait provides
+her with the enthusiastic help of her children from
+across the seas.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The Englishman, generally quiet at home and even
+subdued in the presence of strangers, is exuberant in
+the Colonies; he likes to shout his patriotism upon every
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="pagexi">[xi]</span>
+
+
+possible occasion, even when it would be better to refrain.
+It is an aggressive patriotism which sometimes
+is quite uncouth in its manifestations, but it is real
+patriotism, disinterested and devoid of any mercenary
+or personal motives.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It is impossible to know what England is if one has
+not had the opportunity of visiting her Dominions oversea.
+It is just as impossible to judge of Englishmen
+when one has only seen them at home amid the
+comforts of the easy and pleasant existence which one
+enjoys in Merrie England, and only there. It is not
+the country Squires, whose homes are such a definite
+feature of English life; nor the aristocratic members
+of the Peerage, with their influence and their wealth;
+nor even the political men who sit in St. Stephen's,
+who have spread abroad the fame and might and power
+of England. But it is these modest pioneers of "nations
+yet to be" who, in the wilds and deserts of South Africa,
+Australia and Asia, have demonstrated the realities of
+English civilisation and the English spirit of freedom.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In the hour of danger we have seen all these members
+of the great Mother Country rush to its help. The
+spectacle has been an inspiring one, and in the case of
+South Africa especially it has been unique, inasmuch
+as it has been predicted far and wide that the memory
+of the Boer War would never die out, and that loyalty
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="pagexii">[xii]</span>
+
+
+to Great Britain would never be found in the vast
+African veldt. Facts have belied this rash assertion,
+and the world has seldom witnessed a more impressive
+vindication of the triumph of true Imperialism than that
+presented by Generals Botha and Smuts. As the leader
+of a whole nation, General Botha defended its independence
+against aggression, yet became the faithful,
+devoted servant and the true adherent of the people
+whom he had fought a few years before, putting at their
+disposal the weight of his powerful personality and the
+strength of his influence over his partisans and countrymen.
+</p>
+
+
+<p style="text-align: right">
+CATHERINE RADZIWILL.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>December, 1917.</i>
+</p>
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page1">[1]</span>
+
+
+<div id="MAIN" class="div1">
+<hr /><h1>
+CECIL RHODES
+</h1>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2 class="num" id="chapter1">CHAPTER I.</h2>
+<h2>
+CECIL RHODES AND SIR ALFRED MILNER
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+The conquest of South Africa is one of the most
+curious episodes in English history. Begun through
+purely mercenary motives, it yet acquired a character
+of grandeur which, as time went on, divested it of all
+sordid and unworthy suspicions. South Africa has certainly
+been the land of adventurers, and many of them
+found there either fame or disgrace, unheard-of riches or
+the most abject poverty, power or humiliation. At the
+same time the Colony has had amongst its rulers statesmen
+of unblemished reputation and high honour,
+administrators of rare integrity, and men who saw
+beyond the fleeting interests of the hour into the far
+more important vista of the future.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+When President Kruger was at its head the Transvaal
+Republic would have crumbled under the intrigues
+of some of its own citizens. The lust for riches which
+followed upon the discovery of the goldfields had, too,
+a drastic effect. The Transvaal was bound to fall into
+the hands of someone, and to be that Someone fell to
+the lot of England. This was a kindly throw of Fate,
+because England alone could administer all the wealth
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page2">[2]</span>
+
+
+of the region without its becoming a danger, not only
+to the community at large, but also to the Transvaalers.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+That this is so can be proved by the eloquence of
+facts rather than by words. It is sufficient to look upon
+what South Africa was twenty-five years ago, and upon
+what it has become since under the protection of British
+rule, to be convinced of the truth of my assertion. From
+a land of perennial unrest and perpetual strife it has
+been transformed into a prosperous and quiet colony,
+absorbed only in the thought of its economic and commercial
+progress. Its population, which twenty years
+ago was wasting its time and energy in useless wrangles,
+stands to-day united to the Mother Country and
+absorbed by the sole thought of how best to prove its
+devotion.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The Boer War has still some curious issues of which
+no notice has been taken by the public at large. One
+of the principal, perhaps indeed the most important of
+these, is that, though brought about by material ambitions
+of certain people, it ended by being fought against
+these very same people, and that its conclusion eliminated
+them from public life instead of adding to their influence
+and their power. The result is certainly a strange and
+an interesting one, but it is easily explained if one
+takes into account the fact that once England as a
+nation&#8212;and not as <i>the</i> nation to which belonged the
+handful of adventurers through whose intrigues the war
+was brought about&#8212;entered into the possession of the
+Transvaal and organised the long-talked-of Union of
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page3">[3]</span>
+
+
+South Africa, the country started a normal existence
+free from the unhealthy symptoms which had hindered
+its progress. It became a useful member of the vast
+British Empire, as well as a prosperous country enjoying
+a good government, and launched itself upon a career
+it could never have entered upon but for the war.
+Destructive as it was, the Boer campaign was not a
+war of annihilation. On the contrary, without it it
+would have been impossible for the vast South African
+territories to become federated into a Union of its own
+and at the same time to take her place as a member of
+another Empire from which it derived its prosperity
+and its welfare. The grandeur of England and the
+soundness of its leaders has never come out in a more
+striking manner than in this conquest of South Africa&#8212;a
+blood-stained conquest which has become a love
+match.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+During the concluding years of last century the
+possibility of union was seldom taken into consideration;
+few, indeed, were clever enough and wise enough to
+find out that it was bound to take place as a natural
+consequence of the South African War. The war
+cleared the air all over South Africa. It crushed and
+destroyed all the suspicious, unhealthy elements that
+had gathered around the gold mines of the Transvaal and
+the diamond fields of Cape Colony. It dispersed the
+coterie of adventurers who had hastened there with the
+intention of becoming rapidly rich at the expense of the
+inhabitants of the country. A few men had succeeded
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page4">[4]</span>
+
+
+in building for themselves fortunes beyond the dreams
+of avarice, whilst the majority contrived to live more or
+less well at the expense of those na&#239;ve enough to trust
+to them in financial matters until the day when the war
+arrived to put an end to their plunderings.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The struggle into which President Kruger was compelled
+to rush was expected by some of the powerful
+intriguers in South Africa to result in increasing the
+influence of certain of the millionaires, who up to the
+time when the war broke out had ruled the Transvaal
+and indirectly the Cape Colony by the strength and
+importance of their riches. Instead, it weakened and
+then destroyed their power. Without the war South
+Africa would have grown more wicked, and matters
+there were bound soon to come to a crisis of some sort.
+The crux of the situation was whether this crisis was
+going to be brought about by a few unscrupulous people
+for their own benefit, or was to arise in consequence of
+the clever and far-seeing policy of wise politicians.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Happily for England, and I shall even say happily
+for the world at large, such a politician was found in
+the person of the then Sir Alfred Milner, who worked
+unselfishly toward the grand aim his far-sighted Imperialism
+saw in the distance.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+History will give Viscount Milner&#8212;as he is to-day&#8212;the
+place which is due to him. His is indeed a great
+figure; he was courageous enough, sincere enough, and
+brave enough to give an account of the difficulties of
+the task he had accepted. His experience of Colonial
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page5">[5]</span>
+
+
+politics was principally founded on what he had seen
+and studied when in Egypt and in India, which was a
+questionable equipment in the entirely new areas he was
+called upon to administer when he landed in Table Bay.
+Used to Eastern shrewdness and Eastern duplicity, he
+had not had opportunity to fight against the unscrupulousness
+of men who were neither born nor brought up
+in the country, but who had grown to consider it as
+their own, and exploited its resources not only to the
+utmost, but also to the detriment of the principles of
+common honesty.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The reader must not take my words as signifying a
+sweeping condemnation of the European population of
+South Africa. On the contrary, there existed in that
+distant part of the world many men of great integrity,
+high principles and unsullied honour who would never,
+under any condition whatsoever, have lent themselves to
+mean or dishonest action; men who held up high their
+national flag, and who gave the natives a splendid example
+of all that an Englishman could do or perform when
+called upon to maintain the reputation of his Mother
+Country abroad.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Some of the early English settlers have left great
+remembrance of their useful activity in the matter of
+the colonisation of the new continent to which they had
+emigrated, and their descendants, of whom I am happy
+to say there are a great number, have not shown themselves
+in any way unworthy of their forbears. South
+Africa has its statesmen and politicians who, having been
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page6">[6]</span>
+
+
+born there, understand perfectly well its necessities and
+its wants. Unfortunately, for a time their voices were
+crushed by the new-comers who had invaded the country,
+and who considered themselves better able than anyone
+else to administer its affairs. They brought along with
+them fresh, strange ambitions, unscrupulousness, determination
+to obtain power for the furtherance of their
+personal aims, and a greed which the circumstances in
+which they found themselves placed was bound to develop
+into something even worse than a vice, because
+it made light of human life as well as of human
+property.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In any judgment on South Africa one must never
+forget that, after all, before the war did the work of a
+scavenger it was nothing else but a vast mining camp,
+with all its terrifying moods, its abject defects, and its indifference
+with regard to morals and to means. The first
+men who began to exploit the riches of that vast territory
+contrived in a relatively easy way to build up their
+fortunes upon a solid basis, but many of their followers,
+eager to walk in their steps, found difficulties upon
+which they had not reckoned or even thought about. In
+order to put them aside they used whatever means lay
+in their power, without hesitation as to whether these
+answered to the principles of honesty and straightforwardness.
+Their ruthless conduct was so far advantageous
+to their future schemes that it inspired disgust
+among those whose ancestors had sought a prosperity
+founded on hard work and conscientious toil. These good
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page7">[7]</span>
+
+
+folk retired from the field, leaving it free to the adventurers
+who were to give such a bad name to England
+and who boasted loudly that they had been given full
+powers to do what they liked in the way of conquering
+a continent which, but for them, would have been only
+too glad to place itself under English protection and
+English rule. To these people, and to these alone, were
+due all the antagonisms which at last brought about
+the Boer War.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It was with these people that Sir Alfred Milner
+found himself out of harmony; from the first moment
+that he had set his foot on African soil they tried to
+put difficulties in his way, after they had convinced
+themselves that he would never consent to lend himself
+to their schemes.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Lord Milner has never belonged to the class of men
+who allow themselves to be influenced either by wealth
+or by the social position of anyone. He is perhaps one
+of the best judges of humanity it has been my fortune
+to meet, and though by no means an unkind judge, yet
+a very fair one. Intrigue is repulsive to him, and unless
+I am very much mistaken I venture to affirm that, in
+the 'nineties, because of the intrigues in which they indulged,
+he grew to loathe some of the men with whom
+he was thrown into contact. Yet he could not help
+seeing that these reckless speculators controlled public
+opinion in South Africa, and his political instinct compelled
+him to avail himself of their help, as without them
+he would not have been able to arrive at a proper understanding
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page8">[8]</span>
+
+
+of the entanglements and complications of
+South African politics.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Previous to Sir Alfred's appointment as Governor
+of the Cape of Good Hope the office had been filled by
+men who, though of undoubted integrity and high standing,
+were yet unable to gauge the volume of intrigue
+with which they had to cope from those who had already
+established an iron&#8212;or, rather, golden&#8212;rule in South
+Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Coteries of men whose sole aim was the amassing of
+quick fortunes were virtual rulers of Cape Colony, with
+more power than the Government to whom they simulated
+submission. All sorts of weird stories were in
+circulation. One popular belief was that the mutiny of
+the Dutch in Cape Colony just before the Boer War
+was at bottom due to the influence of money. This was
+followed by a feeling that, but for the aggressive operations
+of the outpost agents of certain commercial magnates,
+it would have been possible for England to realise
+the Union of South Africa by peaceful means instead
+of the bloody arbitrament of war.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In the minds of many Dutchmen&#8212;and Dutchmen
+who were sincerely patriotic Transvaalers&#8212;the conviction
+was strong that the natural capabilities of Boers did not
+lie in the direction of developing, as they could be, the
+amazing wealth-producing resources of the Transvaal and
+of the Orange Free State. By British help alone, such
+men believed, could their country hope to thrive as it
+ought.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page9">[9]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+Here, then, was the nucleus around which the peaceful
+union of Boer and English peoples in South Africa
+could be achieved without bloodshed. Indeed, had
+Queen Victoria been represented at the Cape by Sir
+Alfred Milner ten years before he was appointed
+Governor there, many things which had a disastrous influence
+on the Dutch elements in South Africa would
+not have occurred. The Jameson Raid would certainly
+not have been planned and attempted. To this incident
+can be ascribed much of the strife and unpleasantness
+which followed, by which was lost to the British Government
+the chance, then fast ripening, of bringing about
+without difficulty a reconciliation of Dutch and English
+all over South Africa. This reconciliation would have
+been achieved through Cecil Rhodes, and would have
+been a fitting crown to a great career.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+At one time the most popular man from the Zambesi
+to Table Mountain, the name of Cecil Rhodes was surrounded
+by that magic of personal power without which
+it is hardly possible for any conqueror to obtain the
+material or moral successes that give him a place in
+history; that win for him the love, the respect, and
+sometimes the hatred, of his contemporaries. Sir Alfred
+Milner would have known how to make the work of
+Cecil Rhodes of permanent value to the British Empire.
+It was a thousand pities that when Sir Alfred Milner
+took office in South Africa the influence of Cecil Rhodes,
+at one time politically dominant, had so materially
+shrunk as a definitive political factor.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page10">[10]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+Sir Alfred Milner found himself in the presence of a
+position already compromised beyond redemption, and
+obliged to fight against evils which ought never to have
+been allowed to develop. Even at that time, however,
+it would have been possible for Sir Alfred Milner to find
+a way of disposing of the various difficulties connected
+with English rule in South Africa had he been properly
+seconded by Mr. Rhodes. Unfortunately for both of
+them, their antagonism to each other, in their conception
+of what ought or ought not to be done in political
+matters, was further aggravated by intrigues which
+tended to keep Rhodes apart from the Queen's High
+Commissioner in South Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It would not at all have suited certain people had
+Sir Alfred contrived to acquire a definite influence over
+Mr. Rhodes, and assuredly this would have happened
+had the two men have been allowed unhindered to appreciate
+the mental standard of each other. Mr. Rhodes
+was at heart a sincere patriot, and it was sufficient to
+make an appeal to his feelings of attachment to his
+Mother Country to cause him to look at things from that
+point of view. Had there existed any real intimacy between
+Groote Schuur and Government House at Cape
+Town, the whole course of South African politics might
+have been very different.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Sir Alfred Milner arrived in Cape Town with a singularly
+free and unbiased mind, determined not to allow
+other people's opinions to influence his own, and also
+to use all the means at his disposal to uphold the authority
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page11">[11]</span>
+
+
+of the Queen without entering into conflict with anyone.
+He had heard a deal about the enmity of English
+and Dutch, but though he perfectly well realised its
+cause he had made up his mind to examine the situation
+for himself. He was not one of those who thought that
+the raid alone was responsible; he knew very well that
+this lamentable affair had only fanned into an open blaze
+years-long smoulderings of discontent. The Raid had
+been a consequence, not an isolated spontaneous act.
+Little by little over a long span of years the ambitious
+and sordid overridings of various restless, and too often
+reckless, adventurers had come to be considered as representative
+of English rule, English opinions and, what
+was still more unfortunate, England's personality as an
+Empire and as a nation.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+On the other side of the matter, the Dutch&#8212;who
+were inconceivably ignorant&#8212;thought their little domain
+the pivot of the world. Blind to realities, they had no
+idea of the legitimate relative comparison between the
+Transvaal and the British Empire, and so grew arrogantly
+oppressive in their attitude towards British settlers
+and the powers at Cape Town.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+All this naturally tinctured native feeling. Suspicion
+was fostered among the tribes, guns and ammunition
+percolated through Boer channels, the blacks viewed
+with disdain the friendly advances made by the British,
+and the atmosphere was thick with mutual distrust.
+The knowledge that this was the situation could not but
+impress painfully a delicate and proud mind, and surely
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page12">[12]</span>
+
+
+Lord Milner can be forgiven for the illusion which he
+at one time undoubtedly cherished that he would be
+able to dispel this false notion about his Mother Country
+that pervaded South Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The Governor had not the least animosity against the
+Dutch, and at first the Boers had no feeling that Sir
+Alfred was prejudiced against them. Such a thought
+was drilled into their minds by subtle and cunning people
+who, for their own avaricious ends, desired to estrange
+the High Commissioner from the Afrikanders. Sir
+Alfred was represented as a tyrannical, unscrupulous
+man, whose one aim in life was the destruction of every
+vestige of Dutch independence, Dutch self-government
+and Dutch influence in Africa. Those who thus maligned
+him applied themselves to make him unpopular and to
+render his task so very uncongenial and unpleasant for
+him that he would at last give it up of his own accord,
+or else become the object of such violent hatreds that
+the Home Government would feel compelled to recall
+him. Thus they would be rid of the presence of a personage
+possessed of a sufficient energy to oppose them,
+and they would no longer need to fear his observant eyes.
+Sir Alfred Milner saw himself surrounded by all sorts
+of difficulties, and every attempt he made to bring forward
+his own plans for the settlement of the South
+African question crumbled to the ground almost before
+he could begin to work at it. Small wonder, therefore,
+if he felt discouraged and began to form a false opinion
+concerning the persons or the facts with whom he had
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page13">[13]</span>
+
+
+to deal. Those who might have helped him were constrained,
+without it being his fault. Mr. Rhodes became
+persuaded that the new Governor of Cape Colony had
+arrived there with preconceived notions in regard to himself.
+He was led to believe that Milner's firm determination
+was to crush him; that, moreover, he was
+jealous of him and of the work he had done in South
+Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Incredible as it appears, Rhodes believed this absurd
+fiction, and learned to look upon Sir Alfred Milner as
+a natural enemy, desirous of thwarting him at every
+step. The Bloemfontein Conference, at which the brilliant
+qualities and the conciliating spirit of the new
+Governor of Cape Colony were first made clearly manifest,
+was represented to Rhodes as a desire to present
+him before the eyes of the Dutch as a negligible quantity
+in South Africa. Rhodes was strangely susceptible and
+far too mindful of the opinions of people of absolutely
+no importance. He fell into the snare, and though he
+was careful to hide from the public his real feelings in
+regard to Sir Alfred Milner, yet it was impossible for
+anyone who knew him well not to perceive at once that
+he had made up his mind not to help the High Commissioner.
+There is such a thing as damning praise,
+and Rhodes poured a good deal of it on the head of Sir
+Alfred.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Fortunately, Sir Alfred was sufficiently conscious of
+the rectitude of his intentions and far too superior to
+feelings of petty spite. He never allowed himself to be
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page14">[14]</span>
+
+
+troubled by these unpleasantnesses, but went on his
+way without giving his enemies the pleasure of noticing
+the measure of success which, unhappily, attended their
+campaign. He remained inflexible in his conduct, and,
+disdaining any justification, went on doing what he
+thought was right, and which was right, as events
+proved subsequently. Although Milner had at last to
+give up, yet it is very largely due to him that the South
+African Union was ultimately constituted, and that the
+much-talked-of reconciliation of the Dutch and English
+in Cape Colony and in the Transvaal became an accomplished
+fact. Had Sir Alfred been listened to from the
+very beginning it might have taken place sooner, and
+perhaps the Boer War altogether avoided.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It is a curious thing that England's colonising powers,
+which are so remarkable, took such a long time to work
+their way in South Africa. At least it would have been
+a curious thing if one did not remember that among
+the first white men who arrived there Englishmen were
+much in the minority. And of those Englishmen who
+were attracted by the enormous mineral wealth which
+the country contained, a good proportion were not of
+the best class of English colonists. Many a one who
+landed in Table Bay was an adventurer, drawn thither
+by the wish to make or retrieve his fortune. Few came,
+as did Rhodes, in search of health, and few, again, were
+drawn thither by the pure love of adventure. In Australia,
+or in New Zealand or other colonies, people
+arrived with the determination to begin a new life and
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page15">[15]</span>
+
+
+to create for themselves new ties, new occupations, new
+duties, so as to leave to their children after them the
+result of their labours. In South Africa it was seldom
+that emigrants were animated by the desire to make
+their home in the solitudes of the vast and unexplored
+veldt. Those who got rich there, though they may have
+built for themselves splendid houses while they dwelt in
+the land, never looked upon South Africa as home, but
+aspired to spend their quickly gained millions in London
+and to forget all about Table Mountain or the shafts and
+factories of Johannesburg and Kimberley.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+To such men as these England was a pretext but
+never a symbol. Their strange conception of patriotism
+jarred the most unpleasantly on the straightforward
+nature of Sir Alfred Milner, who had very quickly discerned
+the egotism that lay concealed beneath its cloak.
+He understood what patriotism meant, what love for
+one's own country signified. He had arrived in South
+Africa determined to spare neither his person nor his
+strength in her service, and the man who was repeatedly
+accused both by the Dutch and by the English party
+in the Colony of labouring under a misconception of
+its real political situation was the one who had from
+the very first appreciated it as it deserved, and had recognised
+its damning as well as its redeeming points.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Sir Alfred meant South Africa to become a member
+of the British Empire, to participate in its greatness,
+and to enjoy the benefits of its protection. He had
+absolutely no idea of exasperating the feelings of the
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page16">[16]</span>
+
+
+Dutch part of its population. He had the best intentions
+in regard to President Kruger himself, and there
+was one moment, just at the time of the Bloemfontein
+Conference, when a <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">modus vivendi</i> between President
+Kruger and the Court of St. James's might have been
+established, notwithstanding the difficult question of
+the Uitlanders. It was frustrated by none other than
+these very Uitlanders, who, fondly believing that a war
+with England would establish them as absolute masters
+in the Gold Fields, brought it about, little realising that
+thereby was to be accomplished the one thing which
+they dreaded&#8212;the firm, just and far-seeing rule of England
+over all South Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In a certain sense the Boer War was fought just as
+much against financiers as against President Kruger.
+It put an end to the arrogance of both.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page17">[17]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="num" id="chapter2">CHAPTER II.</h2>
+<h2>
+THE FOUNDATIONS OF FORTUNE
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+It is impossible to speak of South Africa without
+awarding to Cecil Rhodes the tribute which unquestionably
+is due to his strong personality. Without him
+it is possible that the vast territory which became so
+thoroughly associated with his name and with his life
+would still be without political importance. Without
+him it is probable that both the Diamond Fields to which
+Kimberley owes its prosperity and the Gold Fields
+which have won for the Transvaal its renown would
+never have risen above the importance of those of Brazil
+or California or Klondyke.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It was Rhodes who first conceived the thought of
+turning all these riches into a political instrument and
+of using it to the advantage of his country&#8212;the England
+to which he remained so profoundly attached amid all
+the vicissitudes of his life, and to whose possessions he
+was so eager to add.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Cecil Rhodes was ambitious in a grand, strange
+manner which made a complete abstraction of his own
+personality under certain conditions, but which in other
+circumstances made him violent, brutal in manner,
+thereby procuring enemies without number and detractors
+without end. His nature was something akin to
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page18">[18]</span>
+
+
+that of the Roman Emperors in its insensate desire to
+exercise unchallenged an unlimited power. Impatient
+of restraint, no matter in what shape it presented itself,
+he brooked no resistance to his schemes; his rage against
+contradiction, and his opposition to any independence
+of thought or action on the part of those who were
+around him, brought about a result of which he would
+have been the first to complain, had he suspected it&#8212;that
+of allowing him to execute all his fancies and of
+giving way to all his resentments. Herein lies the
+reason why so many of his schemes fell through. This
+unfortunate trait also thrust him very often into the
+hands of those who were clever enough to exploit it, and
+who, more often than proved good to Rhodes' renown,
+suggested to him their own schemes and encouraged
+him to appropriate them as his own. He had a very
+quick way of catching hold of any suggestions that tallied
+with his sympathies or echoed any of his secret thoughts
+or aspirations.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Yet withal Rhodes was a great soul, and had he only
+been left to himself, or made longer sojourns in England,
+had he understood English political life more
+clearly, had he had to grapple with the difficulties which
+confront public existence in his Mother Country, he
+would most certainly have done far greater things. He
+found matters far too easy for him at first, and the
+obstacles which he encountered very often proved either
+of a trivial or else of a removable nature&#8212;by fair means
+or methods less commendable. A mining camp is not
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page19">[19]</span>
+
+
+a school of morality, and just as diamonds lose of their
+value in the estimation of those who continually handle
+them, as is the case in Kimberley, so integrity and
+honour come to be looked upon from a peculiar point
+of view according to the code of the majority.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Then again, it must not be forgotten that the first
+opponents of Cecil Rhodes were black men, of whom
+the European always has the conception that they are
+not his equals. It is likely that if, instead of Lobengula,
+he had found before him a European chief or monarch,
+Rhodes would have acted differently than history credits
+him to have done toward the dusky sovereign. It is
+impossible to judge of facts of which one has had no
+occasion to watch the developments, or which have taken
+place in lands where one has never been. Neither Fernando
+Cortez in Mexico nor Pizzaro Gonzalo in Peru
+proved themselves merciful toward the populations whose
+territory they conquered. The tragedy which sealed the
+fate of Matabeleland was neither a darker nor a more
+terrible one than those of which history speaks when
+relating to us the circumstances attending the discovery
+of America. Such events must be judged objectively
+and forgiven accordingly. When forming an opinion
+on the doings and achievements of Cecil Rhodes one
+must make allowance for all the temptations which were
+thrown in his way and remember that he was a man
+who, if ambitious, was not so in a personal sense, but in
+a large, lofty manner, and who, whilst appropriating to
+himself the good things which he thought he could
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page20">[20]</span>
+
+
+grasp, was also eager to make others share the profit of
+his success.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Cecil Rhodes, in all save name, was monarch over a
+continent almost as vast as his own fancy and imagination.
+He was always dreaming, always lost in thoughts
+which were wandering far beyond his actual surroundings,
+carrying him into regions where the common spirit
+of mankind seldom travelled. He was born for far
+better things than those which he ultimately attained,
+but he did not belong to the century in which he lived;
+his ruthless passions of anger and arrogance were more
+fitted for an earlier and cruder era. Had he possessed
+any disinterested friends capable of rousing the better
+qualities that slumbered beneath his apparent cynicism
+and unscrupulousness, most undoubtedly he would have
+become the most remarkable individual in his generation.
+Unfortunately, he found himself surrounded by creatures
+absolutely inferior to himself, whose deficiencies he was
+the first to notice, whom he despised either for their
+insignificance or for their mental and moral failings, but
+to whose influence he nevertheless succumbed.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+When Cecil Rhodes arrived at Kimberley he was a
+mere youth. He had come to South Africa in quest
+of health and because he had a brother already settled
+there, Herbert Rhodes, who was later on to meet with
+a terrible fate. Cecil, if one is to believe what one hears
+from those who knew him at the time, was a shy youth,
+of a retiring disposition, whom no one could ever have
+suspected would develop into the hardy, strong man he
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page21">[21]</span>
+
+
+became in time. He was constantly sick, and more
+than once was on the point of falling a victim of the
+dreaded fever which prevails all over South Africa and
+then was far more virulent in its nature than it is to-day.
+Kimberley at that time was still a vast solitude,
+with here and there a few scattered huts of corrugated
+iron occupied by the handful of colonists. Water was
+rare: it is related, indeed, that the only way to get a
+wash was to use soda water.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The beginning of Rhodes' fortune, if we are to believe
+what we are told, was an ice machine which he
+started in partnership with another settler. The produce
+they sold to their companions at an exorbitant price,
+but not for long; whereafter the enterprising young
+man proceeded to buy some plots of ground, of whose
+prolificacy in diamonds he had good reason to be aware.
+It must be here remarked that Rhodes was never a poor
+man; he could indulge in experiments as to his manner
+of investing his capital. And he was not slow to take
+advantage of this circumstance. Kimberley was a wild
+place at that time, and its distance from the civilised
+world, as well as the fact that nothing was controlled
+by public opinion, helped some to amass vast fortunes
+and put the weaker into the absolute power of the most
+unscrupulous. It is to the honour of Rhodes that, however
+he might have been tempted, he never listened to
+the advice which was given to him to do what the others
+did, and to despoil the men whose property he might
+have desired to acquire. He never gave way to the excesses
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page22">[22]</span>
+
+
+of his daily companions, nor accepted their
+methods of enriching themselves at top speed so as
+soon to be able to return home with their gains.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+From the first moment that he set foot on African
+soil Rhodes succumbed to the strange charm the country
+offers for thinkers and dreamers. His naturally languid
+temperament found a source of untold satisfaction in
+watching the Southern Cross rise over the vast veldt
+where scarcely man's foot had trod, where the immensity
+of its space was equalled by its sublime, quiet grandeur.
+He liked to spend the night in the open air, gazing at
+the innumerable stars and listening to the voice of the
+desert, so full of attractions for those who have grown
+to discern somewhat of Nature's hidden joys and sorrows.
+South Africa became for him a second Motherland, and
+one which seemed to him to be more hospitable to his
+temperament than the land of his birth. In South Africa
+he felt he could find more satisfaction and more enjoyment
+than in England, whose conventionalities did not
+appeal to his rebellious, unsophisticated heart. He liked
+to roam about in an old coat and wideawake hat; to
+forget that civilisation existed; to banish from his mind
+all memory of cities where man must bow down to Mrs.
+Grundy and may not defy, unscathed, certain well-defined
+prejudices.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Yet Cecil Rhodes neither cared for convention nor
+custom. His motto was to do what he liked and not to
+trouble about the judgments of the crowd. He never,
+however, lived up to this last part of his profession
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page23">[23]</span>
+
+
+because, as I have shown already, he was keenly sensitive
+to praise and to blame, and hurt to the heart whenever
+he thought himself misjudged or condemned. Most of
+his mistakes proceeded from this over-sensitiveness which,
+in a certain sense, hardened him, inasmuch as it made
+him vindictive against those from whom he did not get
+the approval for which he yearned. In common with
+many another, too, Cecil Rhodes had that turn of mind
+which harbours resentment against anyone who has
+scored a point against its possessor. After the Jameson
+Raid Rhodes never forgave Mr. Schreiner for having
+found out his deceit, and tried to be revenged.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Cecil Rhodes had little sympathy with other people's
+woes unless these found an echo in his own, and the
+callousness which he so often displayed was not entirely
+the affectation it was thought by his friends or even
+by his enemies. Great in so many things, there were
+circumstances when he could show himself unutterably
+small, and he seldom practised consistency. Frank by
+nature, he was an adept at dissimulation when he
+thought that his personal interest required it. But he
+could "face the music," however discordant, and, unfortunately
+for him as well as for his memory, it was
+often so.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The means by which Cecil Rhodes contrived to
+acquire so unique a position in South Africa would require
+volumes to relate. Wealth alone could not have
+done so, nor could it have assured for him the popularity
+which he gained, not only among the European colonists,
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page24">[24]</span>
+
+
+but also among the coloured people, notwithstanding the
+ruthlessness which he displayed in regard to them.
+There were millionaires far richer than himself in Kimberley
+and in Johannesburg. Alfred Beit, to mention
+only one, could dispose of a much larger capital than
+Rhodes ever possessed, but this did not give him an
+influence that could be compared with that of his
+friend, and not even the Life Governorship of De Beers
+procured for him any other fame than that of being a
+fabulously rich man. Barney Barnato and Joel were
+also familiar figures in the circle of wealthy speculators
+who lived under the shade of Table Mountain;
+but none among these men, some of whom were also
+remarkable in their way, could effect a tenth or even
+a millionth part of what Rhodes succeeded in performing.
+His was the moving spirit, without whom these
+men could never have conceived, far less done, all that
+they did. It was the magic of Rhodes' name which
+created that formidable organisation called the De Beers
+Company; which annexed to the British Empire the
+vast territory known now by the name of Rhodesia;
+and which attracted to the gold fields of Johannesburg
+all those whom they were to enrich or to ruin. Without
+the association and glamour of Rhodes' name, too,
+this area could never have acquired the political importance
+it possessed in the few years which preceded,
+and covered, the Boer War. Rhodes' was the mind
+which, after bringing about the famous Amalgamation
+of the diamond mines around Kimberley, then conceived
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page25">[25]</span>
+
+
+the idea of turning a private company into a
+political instrument of a power which would control
+public opinion and public life all over South Africa
+more effectually even than the Government. This
+organisation had its own agents and spies and kept up a
+wide system of secret service. Under the pretext of
+looking out for diamond thieves, these emissaries in
+reality made it their duty to report on the private
+opinions and doings of those whose personality inspired
+distrust or apprehension.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+This organisation was more a dictatorship than anything
+else, and had about it something at once genial and
+Mephistophelian. The conquest of Rhodesia was nothing
+in comparison with the power attained by this combine,
+which arrogated to itself almost unchallenged the right
+to domineer over every white man and to subdue every
+coloured one in the whole of the vast South African
+Continent. Rhodesia, indeed, was only rendered possible
+through the power wielded in Cape Colony to bring the
+great Northward adventure to a successfully definite
+issue.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In referring to Rhodesia, I am reminded of a curious
+fact which, so far as I am aware, has never been mentioned
+in any of the biographies of Mr. Rhodes, but
+which, on the contrary, has been carefully concealed
+from the public knowledge by his admirers and his
+satellites. The concession awarded by King Lobengula
+to Rhodes and to the few men who together with him
+took it upon themselves to add this piece of territory
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page26">[26]</span>
+
+
+to the British Empire had, in reality, already been given
+by the dusky monarch&#8212;long before the ambitions of
+De Beers had taken that direction&#8212;to a Mr. Sonnenberg,
+a German Jew who had very quickly amassed a
+considerable fortune in various speculations. This Mr.
+Sonnenberg&#8212;who was subsequently to represent the
+Dutch party in the Cape Parliament, and who became
+one of the foremost members of the Afrikander Bond&#8212;during
+one of his journeys into the interior of the
+country from Basutoland, where he resided for some
+time, had taken the opportunity of a visit to Matabeleland
+to obtain a concession from the famous Lobengula.
+This covered the same ground and advantages which,
+later, were granted to Mr. Rhodes and his business
+associates.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Owing in some measure to negligence and partly
+through the impossibility of raising the enormous capital
+necessary to make anything profitable out of the concession,
+Mr. Sonnenberg had put the document into his
+drawer without troubling any more about it. Subsequently,
+when Matabeleland came into possession of
+the Chartered Company, Mr. Sonnenberg ventured to
+speak mildly of his own concession, and the matter was
+mentioned to Mr. Rhodes. The latter's reply was
+typical: "Tell the &#8213; fool that if he was fool enough
+to lose this chance of making money he ought to take
+the consequences of it." And Mr. Sonnenberg had to
+content himself with this reply. Being a wise man in
+his generation he was clever enough to ignore the incident,
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page27">[27]</span>
+
+
+and, realising the principle that might is stronger
+than right, he never again attempted to dispute the title
+of Cecil John Rhodes to the conquest which he had
+made, and, as I believe, pushed prudence to the extent
+of consigning his own concession to the flames. He
+knew but too well what his future prosperity would have
+been worth had he remembered the document.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page28">[28]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="num" id="chapter3">CHAPTER III.</h2>
+<h2>
+A COMPLEX PERSONALITY
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+Rhodesia and its annexation was but the development
+of a vast scheme of conquest that had its start
+in the wonderful brain of the individual who by that
+time had become to be spoken of as the greatest man
+South Africa had ever known. Long before this Cecil
+Rhodes had entered political life as member of the Cape
+Parliament. He stood for the province of Barkly West,
+and his election, which was violently contested, made
+him master of this constituency for the whole of his
+political career. The entry into politics gave a decided
+aim to his ambitions and inspired him to a new activity,
+directing his wonderful organising faculties toward other
+than financial victories and instilling within him the
+desire to make for himself a name not solely associated
+with speculation, but one which would rank with those
+great Englishmen who had carried far and wide British
+renown and spread the fame of their Mother Country
+across the seas.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Rhodes' ambitions were not as unselfish as those of
+Clive, to mention only that one name. He thought far
+more of himself than of his native land in the hours
+when he meditated on all the advantages which he might
+obtain from a political career. He saw the way to become
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page29">[29]</span>
+
+
+at last absolutely free to give shape to his dreams
+of conquest, and to hold under his sway the vast continent
+which he had insensibly come to consider as his
+private property. And by this I do not mean Rhodesia
+only&#8212;which he always spoke of as "My country"&#8212;but
+he also referred to Cape Colony in the same way.
+With one distinction, however, which was remarkable:
+he called it "My old country," thus expressing his
+conviction that the new one possessed all his affections.
+It is probable that, had time and opportunity been
+granted him to bring into execution his further plans,
+thereby to establish himself at Johannesburg and at
+Pretoria as firmly as he had done at Kimberley and
+Buluwayo, the latter townships would have come to
+occupy the same secondary importance in his thoughts
+as that which Cape Colony had assumed. Mr. Rhodes
+may have had a penchant for old clothes, but he certainly
+preferred new countries to ones already explored.
+To give Rhodes his due, he was not the money-grubbing
+man one would think, judging by his companions. He
+was constantly planning, constantly dreaming of wider
+areas to conquer and to civilise. The possession of gold
+was for him a means, not an aim; he appreciated riches
+for the power they produced to do absolutely all that
+he wished, but not for the boast of having so many
+millions standing to his account at a bank. He meant
+to become a king in his way, and a king he unquestionably
+was for a time at least, until his own hand shattered
+his throne.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page30">[30]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+His first tenure of the Cape Premiership was most
+successful, and even during the second term his popularity
+went on growing until the fatal Jameson Raid&#8212;an
+act of folly which nothing can explain, nothing can
+excuse. Until it broke his political career, transforming
+him from the respected statesman whom every party
+in South Africa looked up to into a kind of broken idol
+never more to be trusted, Rhodes had enjoyed the complete
+confidence of the Dutch party. They fully believed
+he was the only man capable of effecting the
+Union which at that time was already considered to be
+indispensable to the prosperity of South Africa. Often
+he had stood up for their rights as the oldest settlers
+and inhabitants of the country. Even in the Transvaal,
+notwithstanding the authority wielded then by President
+Kruger, the populace would gladly have taken advantage
+of his services and of his experience to help them
+settle favourably their everlasting quarrels with the Uitlanders,
+as the English colonists were called.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Had Cecil Rhodes but had the patience to wait, and
+had he cared to enter into the details of a situation,
+the intricacies of which none knew better than he, it is
+probable that the annexation of the Transvaal to the
+British Empire would have taken place as a matter of
+course and the Boer War would never have broken out.
+Rhodes was not only popular among the Dutch, but
+also enjoyed their confidence, and it is no secret that
+he had courted them to the extent of exciting the suspicions
+of the ultra-English party, the Jingo elements
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page31">[31]</span>
+
+
+of which had openly accused him of plotting with the
+Dutch against the authority of Queen Victoria and of
+wishing to get himself elected Life President of a Republic
+composed of the various South African States,
+included in which would be Cape Colony, and perhaps
+even Natal, in spite of the preponderance of the English
+element there.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+That Rhodes might have achieved such a success is
+scarcely to be doubted, and personally I feel sure that
+there had been moments in his life when the idea of it
+had seriously occurred to him. At least I was led to
+think so in the course of a conversation which we had
+together on this subject a few weeks before the Boer
+War broke out. At that moment Rhodes knew that
+war was imminent, but it would be wrong to interpret
+that knowledge in the sense that he had ever thought
+of or planned rebellion against the Queen. Those who
+accused him of harbouring the idea either did not know
+him or else wished to harm him. Rhodes was essentially
+an Englishman, and set his own country above everything
+else in the world. Emphatically this is so; but it
+is equally true that his strange conceptions of morality
+in matters where politics came into question made him
+totally oblivious of the fact that he thought far more
+of his own self than of his native land in the plans
+which he conceived and formulated for the supremacy
+of England in South Africa. He was absolutely convinced
+that his election as Life President of a South
+African Republic would not be in any way detrimental
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page32">[32]</span>
+
+
+to the interests of Great Britain; on the contrary, he
+assured himself it would make the latter far more powerful
+than it had ever been before in the land over which
+he would reign. By nature something of an Italian
+<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">condottieri</i>, he considered his native land as a stepping-stone
+to his own grandeur.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div style="text-align:center"><table class="figure" summary="THE RT. HON. W.G. SCHREINER." id="FIG.1"><tr><td><a href="images/image01.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="images/image01-th.jpg" title="THE RT. HON. W.G. SCHREINER." alt="THE RT. HON. W.G. SCHREINER." width="350" height="522" /></a></td></tr><tr><td class="figure-attribution"><p>Photo: Elliott &amp; Fry</p></td></tr><tr><td class="figure-caption"><p>THE RT. HON. W.G. SCHREINER.</p></td></tr></table></div>
+
+<p>
+For a good many years he had chosen his best friends
+among Dutchmen of influence in the Cape Colony and
+in the Transvaal. He flattered, courted and praised
+them until he quite persuaded them that nowhere else
+would they find such a staunch supporter of their rights
+and of their claims. Men like Mr. Schreiner,<sup class="footnoteref"><a href="#chapter3.FNDEF.1" title="Now High Commissioner for the Union of South Africa." id="chapter3.FNREF.1">1</a></sup> for instance,
+trusted him absolutely, and believed quite sincerely
+that in time he would be able to establish firm
+and friendly relations between the Cape Government and
+that of the Transvaal. Though the latter country had
+been, as it were, sequestrated by friends of Rhodes&#8212;much
+to their own profit&#8212;Mr. Schreiner felt convinced
+that the Colossus had never encouraged any plans which
+these people might have made against the independence
+of the Transvaal Republic. Rhodes had so completely
+fascinated him that even on the eve of the day when
+Jameson crossed the Border, Mr. Schreiner, when questioned
+by one of his friends about the rumours which
+had reached Cape Town concerning a projected invasion
+of the Transvaal by people connected with the Chartered
+Company, repudiated them with energy. Mr. Schreiner,
+indeed, declared that so long as Mr. Rhodes was Prime
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page33">[33]</span>
+
+
+Minister nothing of the kind could or would happen, as
+neither Jameson nor any of his lieutenants would dare
+to risk such an adventure without the sanction of their
+Chief, and that it was more to the latter's interest than
+to that of anyone else to preserve the independence of
+the Transvaal Republic.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Talking of Mr. Schreiner reminds me of his sister,
+the famous Olive Schreiner, the author of so many books
+which most certainly will long rank among the English
+classics. Olive Schreiner was once upon terms of
+great friendship with Mr. Rhodes, who extremely admired
+her great talents. She was an ardent Afrikander patriot,
+Dutch by sympathy and origin, gifted with singular intelligence
+and possessed of wide views, which strongly
+appealed to the soul and to the spirit of the man who
+at that time was considered as the greatest figure in
+South Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It is not remarkable, therefore, that Rhodes should
+fall into the habit of confiding in Miss Schreiner, whom
+he found was "miles above" the people about him. He
+used to hold long conversations with her and to initiate
+her into many of his plans for the future, plans in which
+the interests and the welfare of the Cape Dutch, as well
+as the Transvaalers, used always to play the principal
+part. His friendship with her, however, was viewed
+with great displeasure by many who held watch around
+him. Circumstances&#8212;intentionally brought about, some
+maintain&#8212;conspired to cause a cooling of the friendship
+between the two most remarkable personalities in South
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page34">[34]</span>
+
+
+Africa. Later on, Miss Schreiner, who was an ardent
+patriot, having discovered what she termed and considered
+to be the duplicity of the man in whom she had
+so absolutely trusted, refused to meet Cecil Rhodes again.
+Her famous book, "Trooper Peter Halkett of Mashonaland,"
+was the culminating point in their quarrel, and
+the break became complete.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+This, however, was but an incident in a life in which
+the feminine element never had any great influence, perhaps
+because it was always kept in check by people
+anxious and eager not to allow it to occupy a place in
+the thoughts or in the existence of a man whom they
+had confiscated as their own property. There are people
+who, having risen from nothing to the heights of a social
+position, are able to shake off former associations: this
+was not the case with Rhodes, who, on the contrary, as
+he advanced in power and in influence, found himself
+every day more embarrassed by the men who had clung
+to him when he was a diamond digger, and who, through
+his financial acumen, had built up their fortunes. They
+surrounded him day and night, eliminating every person
+likely to interfere; slandering, ridiculing and calumniating
+them in turns, they at last left him nothing in place
+of his shattered faiths and lost ideals, until Rhodes became
+as isolated amidst his greatness and his millions
+as the veriest beggar in his hovel.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It was a sad sight to watch the ethical degradation
+of one of the most remarkable intelligences among the
+men of his generation; it was heartrending to see him
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page35">[35]</span>
+
+
+fall every day more and more into the power of unscrupulous
+people who did nothing else but exploit him
+for their own benefit. South Africa has always been
+the land of adventurers, and many a queer story could
+be told. That of Cecil John Rhodes was, perhaps, the
+most wonderful and the most tragic.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Whether he realised this retrogression himself it is
+difficult to say. Sometimes one felt that such might
+be the case, whilst at others it seemed as if he viewed
+his own fate only as something absolutely wonderful
+and bound to develop in the future even more prosperously
+than it had done in the past. There was always
+about him something of the "<span class="it" lang="it" xml:lang="it">tragediante, comediante</span>"
+applied to Napoleon by Pope Pius VII., and it is absolutely
+certain that he often feigned sentiments which
+he did not feel, anger which he did not experience, and
+pleasure that he did not have. He was a being of fits
+and starts, moods and fancies, who liked to pose in such
+a way as to give others an absolutely false idea of his
+personality when he considered it useful to his interests
+to do so. At times it was evident he experienced regret,
+but it is doubtful whether he knew the meaning of remorse.
+The natives seldom occupied his thoughts, and if
+he were reminded in later years that, after all, terrible
+cruelties had been practised in Mashonaland or in Matabeleland,
+he used simply to shrug his shoulders and to
+remark that it was impossible to make an omelette without
+breaking some eggs. It never occurred to him that
+there might exist people who objected to the breaking of
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page36">[36]</span>
+
+
+a certain kind of eggs, and that humanity had a right
+to be considered even in conquest.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+And, after all, was this annexation of the dominions
+of poor Lobengula a conquest? If one takes into
+account the strength of the people who attacked the
+savage king, and his own weakness, can one do else but
+regret that those who slaughtered Lobengula did not
+remember the rights of mercy in regard to a fallen foe?
+There are dark deeds connected with the attachment of
+Rhodesia to the British Empire, deeds which would never
+have been performed by a regular English Army, but
+which seemed quite natural to the band of enterprising
+fellows who had staked their fortunes on an expedition
+which it was their interest to represent as a most
+dangerous and difficult affair. I do not want to disparage
+them or their courage, but I cannot help questioning
+whether they ever had to withstand any serious
+attack of the enemy. I have been told perfectly sickening
+details concerning this conquest of the territory now
+known by the name of Rhodesia. The cruel manner
+in which, after having wrung from them a concession
+which virtually despoiled them of every right over their
+native land and after having goaded these people into
+exasperation, the people themselves were exterminated
+was terrible beyond words. For instance, there occurred
+the incident mentioned by Olive Schreiner in "Trooper
+Peter Halkett of Mashonaland," when over one hundred
+savages were suffocated alive in a cave where they sought
+a refuge.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page37">[37]</span>
+
+
+
+<p>
+Personally, I remain persuaded that these abominable
+deeds remained unknown to Mr. Rhodes and that
+he would not have tolerated them for one single instant.
+They were performed by people who were in possession
+of Rhodes' confidence, and who abused it by allowing
+the world to think that he encouraged such deeds. Later
+on it is likely that he became aware of the abuse that
+had been made of his name and of the manner in which
+it had been put forward as an excuse for inexcusable
+deeds, but he was far too indolent and far too indifferent
+to the blame of the world, at these particular moments
+to disavow those who, after all, had helped him in his
+schemes of expansion, and who had ministered to his
+longing to have a kingdom to himself. Apart from
+this, he had a curious desire to brave public opinion and
+to do precisely the very things that it would have disapproved.
+He loved to humiliate those whom he had
+at one moment thought he might have occasion to fear.
+This explains the callousness with which he made the
+son of Lobengula one of his gardeners, and did not
+hesitate to ask him one day before strangers who were
+visiting Groote Schuur in what year he "had killed his
+father." The incident is absolutely true; it occurred
+in my own presence.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+At times, such as that related in the paragraph above,
+Rhodes appeared a perfectly detestable and hateful
+creature, and yet he was never sincere whilst in such
+moods. A few moments later he would show himself
+under absolutely different colours and give proof of a
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page38">[38]</span>
+
+
+compassionate heart. Generous to a fault, he liked to
+be able to oblige his friends, or those who passed as
+such, while the charitable acts which he was constantly
+performing are too numerous to be remembered. He
+had a supreme contempt for money, but he spoiled the
+best sides of his strange, eccentric character by enjoying
+a display of its worst facets with a "cussedness"
+as amusing as it was sometimes unpleasant. Is it remarkable,
+then, that many people who only saw him in
+the disagreeable moods should judge him from an entirely
+false and misleading point of view?
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Rhodes was a man for whom it was impossible to feel
+indifference; one either hated him or became fascinated
+by his curious and peculiar charm. This quality led
+many admirers to remain faithful to him even after disillusion
+had shattered their former friendship, and who,
+whilst refusing to speak to him any more, yet retained
+for him a deep affection which not even the conviction
+that it had been misplaced could alter. This is a remarkable
+and indisputable fact. After having rallied
+around him all that was honest in South Africa; after
+having been the petted child of all the old and influential
+ladies in Cape Town; after having been accepted as their
+leader by men like Mr. Schreiner and Mr. Hofmeyr,
+who, clever though they were, and convinced, as they
+must have been, of their personal influence on the Dutch
+party and the members of the Afrikander Bond, still
+preferred to subordinate their judgment to Rhodes';
+after having enjoyed such unparalleled confidence,
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page39">[39]</span>
+
+
+Rhodes had come to be spurned and rejected politically,
+but had always kept his place in their hearts. Fate
+and his own faults separated him from these people of
+real weight and influence, and left him in the hands of
+those who pretended that they were attached to him,
+but who, in reality, cared only for the material advantages
+that their constant attendance upon him procured
+to them. They poisoned his mind, they separated him
+from all those who might have been useful to him, and
+they profited by the circumstance that the Raid had
+estranged him from his former friends to strengthen
+their own influence upon him, and to persuade him that
+those who had deplored the rash act were personal
+enemies, wishful for his downfall and disgrace.
+</p>
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote" id="chapter3.FNDEF.1">
+<a href="#chapter3.FNREF.1">[1]</a>&#160;Now High Commissioner for the Union of South Africa.
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page40">[40]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="num" id="chapter4">CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+<h2>
+MRS. VAN KOOPMAN
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+Among those with whom Rhodes had been intimate
+from almost the first days of his establishment in
+Cape Town and his entrance into political life was a
+lady who, for something like half a century, had been
+enjoying an enviable position throughout almost the
+whole of South Africa. Mrs. van Koopman was a Dutchwoman
+of considerable means and of high character.
+She was clever, well read, and her quick intelligence
+allowed her to hold her own in discussion upon any subject
+against the most eminent men of her generation.
+She had never made a secret of her Dutch sympathies,
+nor of her desire to see her countrymen given equal
+rights with the English all over South Africa. She was
+on excellent terms with President Kruger, and with
+President Steyn, whose personality was a far more
+remarkable one than that of his old and crafty colleague.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The leading South African political men used to
+meet at Mrs. van Koopman's to discuss the current
+events of the day. It is related that she was one of the
+first to bring to the notice of her friends the complications
+that were bound to follow upon the discovery of
+the gold fields, and to implore them to define, without
+delay, the position of the foreign element which was
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page41">[41]</span>
+
+
+certain to move toward Johannesburg as soon as the
+news of the riches contained in that region became
+public property.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+If the English Government had considered the matter
+at once the complications which arose as soon as companies
+began to be formed would have been less acute.
+The directors of these concerns imagined themselves to
+be entitled to displace local government, and took all
+executive power into their own hands. This would never
+have happened if firm governmental action had been
+promptly taken. The example of Kimberley ought to
+have opened the eyes of the Mother Country, and
+measures should have been taken to prevent the purely
+commercial domain of the gold fields from assuming
+such strident political activities, and little by little
+dominating not only the Transvaal Republic, but also
+the rest of South Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Mrs. van Koopman had cherished a great affection
+for Rhodes. Her age&#8212;she was in the sixties&#8212;gave an
+almost maternal character to the tenderness with which
+she viewed him. He had made her his confidante,
+telling her all that he meant to do for the welfare of
+the land which she loved so dearly. She thought he
+looked upon South Africa with the same feelings of
+admiration as she did.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The strength of her belief led Mrs. van Koopman to
+interest all her friends in the career of the young Englishman,
+who appealed to her imagination as the embodiment
+of all that was great and good. Her enthusiasm
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page42">[42]</span>
+
+
+endowed him with many qualities that he did not possess,
+and magnified those which he really had. When he
+consulted her as to his future plans she entered closely
+into their details, discussed with him their chances of
+success, advised him and used all her influence, which
+was great, in winning him friends and adherents. She
+trusted him fully, and, on his part, whenever he returned
+to Cape Town after one of his yearly visits to
+Kimberley, or after a few months spent in the solitudes
+of Rhodesia, his first visit was always to the old and
+gentle lady, who welcomed him with open arms, words
+of affection, and sincere as well as devoted sympathy.
+She had always refused to listen to disparagement of
+her favourite, and would never allow any of the gruesome
+details connected with the annexation of Rhodesia
+to be recited in her presence.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In Mrs. van Koopman's eyes there was only a
+glorious side to the Rhodesian expedition, and she rejoiced
+in the renown which it was destined to bring to
+the man who had conceived and planned it. She fully
+believed that Rhodes meant to bring English civilisation,
+English laws, the English sense of independence
+and respect for individual freedom into that distant land.
+The fact that lucre lay at the bottom of the expedition
+never crossed her mind; even if it had she would have
+rejected the thought with scorn and contempt.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Although the attacks upon Cecil Rhodes increased
+day by day in intensity and in bitterness, Mrs. van
+Koopman never wavered in her allegiance. She attributed
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page43">[43]</span>
+
+
+ them to jealousy and envy, and strenuously defended
+his name. Mrs. van Koopman, too, rejoiced at
+any new success of Rhodes as if it had been her own.
+She was the first to congratulate him when the dignity
+of a Privy Councillor was awarded to him. After the
+Matabele Rebellion, during which occurred one of the
+most famous episodes in the life of Rhodes, Mrs. van
+Koopman had been loud in her praises of the man whom
+she had been the first to guess would do great things.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The episode to which I refer, when he alone had had
+the courage to go unattended and unarmed to meet the
+savage chiefs assembled in the Matoppo Hills, had, by
+the way, done more than anything else to consolidate
+the position of the chairman of De Beers in South
+Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+During the first administration of Cape Colony by
+Mr. Rhodes, when his accession to the premiership had
+been viewed with a certain suspicion by the Dutch
+party, Mrs. van Koopman made tremendous efforts to
+induce them to have full confidence in her prot&#233;g&#233;.
+And the attempt succeeded, because even the shrewd
+Mr. Hofmeyr had at last succumbed to the constant
+entreaties which she had poured upon him. Thenceforward
+Mr. Hofmeyr became one of Mr. Rhodes'
+firm admirers and strong partisans. Under the able
+guidance of Mrs. van Koopman the relations between
+the Dutch party and their future enemy became so
+cordial that at last a singular construction was put upon
+both sides of the alliance by the opponents of both. The
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page44">[44]</span>
+
+
+accusation, already referred to, was made against Rhodes
+that he wished to make for himself in South Africa a
+position of such independence and strength that even
+the authority of the Queen might find itself compromised
+by it. As has been pointed out, the supposition
+was devoid of truth, but it is quite certain that the
+then Premier of Cape Colony would not have objected
+had the suzerainty been placed in his hands by England
+and British rule in South Africa vested solely in
+his person.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+During a brief interval in his political leadership
+Rhodes pursued his work in Rhodesia. In those days
+the famous British South Africa Company, which was
+to become known as the Chartered Company, was definitely
+constituted, and began its activity in the new
+territories which had come under its control. Ere long,
+though, the tide of events brought him again to the
+head of the Government. This time, however, though
+his appointment had been considered as a foregone conclusion,
+and though very few had opposed it, he no
+longer met the same sympathetic attention and co-operation
+which had characterised his first administration
+of public affairs. The Colony had begun to realise
+that Mr. Rhodes alone, and left free to do what he
+liked, or what he believed was right, was very different
+from Mr. Rhodes under the influence of the many so-called
+financiers and would-be politicians who surrounded
+him.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+An atmosphere of favouritism and of flattery had
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page45">[45]</span>
+
+
+changed Rhodes, whom one would have thought far
+above such small things. Vague rumours, too, had
+begun to circulate concerning certain designs of the
+Chartered Company (one did not dare yet mention the
+name of its chief and chairman) on the Transvaal.
+Rhodes was directly questioned upon the subject by
+several of his friends, amongst others by Mr. Schreiner,
+to whom he energetically denied that such a thing had
+ever been planned. He added that Doctor Jameson, of
+whom the man in the street was already speaking as the
+man who was planning an aggression against the authority
+of President Kruger, was not even near the frontier of
+the neighbouring Republic. The mere idea of such
+a thing, Rhodes emphatically declared to Mr. Schreiner,
+was nothing but an ill-natured hallucination to create
+bad blood between the English and the Dutch. His
+tone seemed so sincere that Mr. Schreiner allowed himself
+to be convinced, and voluntarily assured his colleagues
+that he was convinced of the sincerity of the
+Prime Minister.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The only person who was really alarmed at the persistent
+rumours which circulated in Cape Town in
+regard to a possible attack in common accord with the
+leaders of the Reform movement in Johannesburg
+against the independence of the Transvaal Republic was
+Mrs. van Koopman. She knew Rhodes' character too
+well not to fear that he might have been induced to
+listen to the misguided advice of people trying to persuade
+him that the Rhodesian adventure was susceptible
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page46">[46]</span>
+
+
+of being repeated on a larger and far more important
+scale, with as much impunity and as little danger
+as the other one had been. Alarmed beyond words by
+all that she was hearing, she determined to find out for
+herself the true state of things, and, trusting to her
+knowledge of Rhodes' character, she asked him to call
+upon her.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Rhodes came a few afternoons later, and Mrs. van
+Koopman closely questioned him on the subject, telling
+him of the tales which were being circulated not only
+in Cape Town, but also at Kimberley and Buluwayo and
+Johannesburg. Rhodes solemnly assured her that they
+were nothing but malicious gossip, and, taking her
+hands in his own, he repeated that all she had heard
+concerning the sinister designs he was supposed to be
+harbouring against the independence of the Transvaal
+had absolutely no foundation. To add force to his
+words, he continued that he respected her far too much
+to deceive her willingly, and that he would never have
+risked meeting her and talking with her upon such a
+subject had there been the slightest ground for the
+rumours which were disturbing the tranquillity of the
+inhabitants of Cape Town. When he left her Mrs. van
+Koopman felt quite reassured.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Next morning Mrs. van Koopman told her anxious
+friends that she had received such assurances from Rhodes
+that she could not disbelieve him, and that the best thing
+which they could do would be to contradict all statements
+on the subject of a raid on the Transvaal that might come
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page47">[47]</span>
+
+
+to their ears. This occurred on an after-Christmas evening
+of the year 1895.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+When the decisive conversation which I have just
+related was taking place between Mrs. van Koopman
+and Cecil Rhodes, Doctor Jameson and his handful of
+eager adventurers had already entered Transvaal territory.
+The Raid had become an accomplished fact. It
+was soon realised that it was the most deplorable affair
+that could have occurred for the reputation of Cecil
+Rhodes and for his political future. The rebound, indeed,
+was immediate; his political career came to an
+end that day.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The person who was struck most painfully by this
+disgraceful and cryingly stupid adventure was Mrs.
+van Koopman. All her illusions&#8212;and she had nursed
+many concerning Rhodes&#8212;were destroyed at one blow.
+She never forgave him. All his attempts to bring
+about a reconciliation failed, and when later on he would
+fain have obtained her forgiveness, she absolutely refused
+all advances, and declared that she would never
+consent willingly to look upon his face or listen to his
+voice again. The proud old woman, whose ideals had
+been wrecked so cruelly, could not but feel a profound
+contempt for a man who had thus deliberately lied to
+her at the very time when she was appealing to his
+confidence. Her aristocratic instincts arose in indignation
+at the falsehoods which had been used to dupe her.
+She would not listen to any excuse, would not admit
+any extenuating circumstances; and perhaps because
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page48">[48]</span>
+
+
+she knew in the secret of her heart that she would
+never be able to resist the pleadings of the man who
+had thus deceived her, she absolutely refused to see him.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Rhodes never despaired of being restored to her
+favour, and would have given much to anyone able to
+induce her to relent in her judgment as to his conduct.
+Up to the last he made attempts to persuade her to
+reconsider her decision, but they all proved useless, and
+he died without having been able to win a forgiveness
+which he craved for many years.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+I used to know Mrs. van Koopman well and to see
+her often. I admired her much, not only on account
+of her great talents and of her powerful intellect, but
+also for the great dignity which she displayed all through
+the Boer War, when, suspected of favouring the Dutch
+cause to the extent of holding communications with the
+rebels all over the Cape Colony, she never committed any
+indiscretion or gave cause for any direct action against
+her. For some time, by order of the military authorities,
+she was placed under police supervision, and her
+house was searched for papers and documents which,
+however, were not found&#8212;as might have been foreseen.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+All through these trying months she never wavered
+in her attitude nor in her usual mode of life, except
+that she saw fewer people than formerly&#8212;not, as she
+used playfully to say, because she feared to be compromised,
+but because she did not wish to compromise
+others. More than once during my visits I spoke to
+her of Mr. Rhodes and tried to induce her to relent
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page49">[49]</span>
+
+
+in her resolution. I even went so far as to tell her that
+her consent to meet him would, more than anything
+else, cause him to use all his influence, or what remained
+of it, in favour of a prompt settlement of the war in
+a peace honourable to both sides. Mrs. van Koopman
+smiled, but remained immovable. At last, seeing that
+I would not abandon the subject, she told me in tones
+which admitted of no discussion that she had far too
+much affection for Rhodes not to have been so entirely
+cut to the core by his duplicity in regard to her and
+by his whole conduct in that unfortunate matter of the
+Raid. She could trust him no longer, she told me, and,
+consequently, a meeting with him would only give her
+unutterable pain and revive memories that had better
+remain undisturbed. "Had I cared for him less I would
+not say so to you," she added, "but you must know
+that of all sad things the saddest is the destruction of
+idols one has built for oneself."
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+This attitude on the part of the one friend he had
+the greatest affection for was one of the many episodes
+which embittered Rhodes.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page50">[50]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="num" id="chapter5">CHAPTER V.</h2>
+<h2>
+RHODES AND THE RAID
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+After the Raid, faithful to his usual tactics of
+making others responsible for his own misdeeds,
+Cecil Rhodes grew to hate with ferocity all those whose
+silence and quiet disapproval reminded him of the fatal
+error into which he had been led. He was loud in his
+expressions of resentment against Mr. Schreiner and the
+other members of the Afrikander party who had not
+been able to conceal from him their indignation at his
+conduct on the memorable occasion which ruined his
+own political life. They had compelled him&#8212;one
+judged by his demeanour&#8212;to resign his office of Prime
+Minister at the very time when he was about to transform
+it into something far more important&#8212;to use it
+as the stepping-stone to future grandeurs of which he
+already dreamt, although he had so far refrained from
+speaking about them to others. Curious to say, however,
+he never blamed the authors of this political mistake,
+and never, in public at least, reproached Jameson
+for the disaster he had brought upon him.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+What his secret thoughts were on this subject it is
+easy to guess. Circumstances used to occur now and
+then when a stray word spoken on impulse allowed one to
+discern that he deplored the moment of weakness into
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page51">[51]</span>
+
+
+which he had been inveigled. For instance, during a
+dinner-party at Groote Schuur, when talking about the
+state of things prevailing in Johannesburg just before
+the war, he mentioned the names of five Reformers
+who, after the Raid, had been condemned to death by
+President Kruger, and added that he had paid their
+fine of twenty-five thousand pounds each. "Yes," he
+continued, with a certain grim accent of satire in his
+voice, "I paid &#163;25,000 for each of these gentlemen."
+And when one of his guests tactlessly remarked, "But
+surely you need not have done so, Mr. Rhodes? It
+was tacitly admitting that you had been a party to their
+enterprise!" he retorted immediately, "And if I choose
+to allow the world to think that such was the case, what
+business is it of yours?" I thought the man was going
+to drop under the table, so utterly flabbergasted did he
+look.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It is, of course, extremely difficult to know what
+was the actual part played by Rhodes in the Raid. He
+carried that secret to the grave, and it is not likely
+that his accomplices will ever reveal their own share in
+the responsibility for that wild adventure. My impression
+is that the idea of the Raid was started among the
+entourage of Rhodes and spoken of before him at length.
+He would listen in silence, as was his wont when he
+wished to establish the fact that he had nothing to do
+with a thing that had been submitted to him. Thus
+the Raid was tacitly encouraged by him, without his
+ever having pronounced himself either for or against it.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page52">[52]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+Rhodes was an extremely able politician, and a far-seeing
+one into the bargain. He would never have committed
+himself into an open approval of an attempt
+which he knew perfectly well involved the rights of
+nations. On the other hand, he would have welcomed
+any circumstance which would result in the overthrow
+of the Transvaal Republic by friends of his. His former
+successes, and especially the facility with which had
+been carried out the attachment of Rhodesia to the
+British Empire, had refracted his vision, and he refused&#8212;or
+failed&#8212;to see the difficulties which he might encounter
+if he wanted to proceed for the second time
+on an operation of the same kind.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+On the other hand, he was worried by his friends to
+allow them to take decisive action, and was told that
+everyone in England would approve of his initiative in
+taking upon himself the responsibility of a step, out of
+which could only accrue solid advantage for the Mother
+Country.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Rhodes had been too long away from England, and
+his sojourns there during the ten years or so immediately
+preceding 1895 had been far too short for him to have
+been able to come to a proper appreciation of the
+importance of public opinion in Great Britain, or of
+those principles in matters of Government which no
+sound English politician will ever dare to put aside if
+he wishes to retain his hold. He failed to understand
+and to appreciate the narrow limit which must not be
+overstepped; he forgot that when one wants to perform
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page53">[53]</span>
+
+
+an act open to certain well-defined objections there must
+be a great aim in order eventually to explain and excuse
+the doing of it. The Raid had no such aim. No
+one made a mistake as to that point when passing judgment
+upon the Raid. The motives were too sordid,
+too mean, for anyone to do aught else but pass a sweeping
+condemnation upon the whole business.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+If he did not, Rhodes ought to have known that the
+public would most certainly pass this verdict on so dark
+and shameful an adventure, one that harmed England's
+prestige in South Africa far more than ever did the
+Boer War. But though perhaps he realised beforehand
+that this would be the verdict, he only felt a vague
+apprehension, more as a fancy than from any real sense
+of impending danger. He had grown so used to see
+success attend his every step that his imagination refused
+to admit the possibility of defeat.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+As for the people who engaged in the senseless
+adventure, their motives had none of the lofty ideals
+which influenced Rhodes himself. They simply wanted
+to obtain possession of the gold fields of the Transvaal
+and to oust the rightful owners. President Kruger
+represented an obstacle that had to be removed, and
+so they proceeded upon their mad quest without regard
+as to the possible consequences. Still less did they
+reflect that in his case they had not to deal with a native
+chief whose voice of protest had no chance to be heard,
+but with a very cute and determined man who had
+means at his disposal not only to defend himself, but
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page54">[54]</span>
+
+
+also to appeal to European judgment to adjudge an unjustifiable
+aggression.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Apart from all these considerations, which ought to
+have been seriously taken into account by Doctor Jameson
+and his companions, the whole expedition was
+planned in a stupid, careless manner. No wonder that
+it immediately came to grief. It is probable that if
+Rhodes had entered into its details and allowed others
+to consult him, matters might have taken a different
+turn. But, as I have already shown, he preferred to
+be able to say at a given moment that he had known
+nothing about it. At least, this must have been what
+he meant to do. But events proved too strong for him.
+The fiasco was too complete for Rhodes to escape from
+its responsibilities, though it must be conceded that he
+never tried to do so once the storm burst. He faced
+the music bravely enough, perhaps because of the knowledge
+that no denial would be believed, perhaps also because
+all the instincts of his, after all, great nature
+caused him to come forward to take his share in the
+disgrace of the whole deplorable affair.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Whether he forgave Doctor Jameson for this act of
+folly remains a mystery. Personally I have always held
+that there must have <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">un cadavre entre eux</i>. No friendship
+could account for the strange relations which existed
+between these two men, one of whom had done
+so much to harm the other. At first it would have
+seemed as if an individual of the character of Cecil
+Rhodes would never have brought himself to forgive his
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page55">[55]</span>
+
+
+confederate for the clumsiness with which he had handled
+a matter upon which the reputation of both of them
+depended, in the present as well as in the future. But
+far from abandoning the friend who had brought him
+into such trouble, he remained on the same terms of
+intimacy as before, with the difference, perhaps, that
+he saw even more of him than before the Raid. It
+seemed as if he wanted thus to affirm before the whole
+world his faith in the man through whom his whole
+political career had been wrecked.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The attitude of Rhodes toward Jameson was commented
+upon far and wide. The Dutch party in Cape
+Town saw in it a mere act of bravado into which they
+read an acknowledgment that, strong as was the
+Colossus, he was too weak to tell his accomplices to withdraw
+from public sight until the ever-increasing difficulties
+with the Transvaal&#8212;which became more and
+more acute after the Raid&#8212;had been settled in some
+way or other between President Kruger and the British
+Government. Instead of this Rhodes seemed to take a
+particular pleasure in parading the trust he declared he
+had in Doctor Jameson, and to consult him publicly
+upon almost all the political questions which were submitted
+to him for consideration. This did not mean that
+he followed the advice which he received, because, so
+far as I was able to observe, this was seldom the case.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+To add to the contrariness of the situation, Rhodes
+always seemed more glad than anything else if he heard
+someone make an ill-natured remark about the Doctor,
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page56">[56]</span>
+
+
+or when anything particularly disagreeable occurred to
+the latter. An ironic smile used to light up Rhodes'
+face and a sarcastic chuckle be heard. But still, whenever
+one attempted to explain to him that the Raid
+had been an unforgivable piece of imprudence, or
+hazarded that Jameson had never been properly punished
+for it, Rhodes invariably took the part of this friend
+of his younger days, and would never acknowledge that
+Doctor Jim's desire to enter public life as a member
+of the Cape Parliament ought not to be gratified.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+On his side, Doctor Jameson was determined that
+the opportunity to do so should be offered to him, and he
+used Rhodes' influence in order to obtain election. He
+knew very well that without it his candidature would
+have no chance.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Later on, when judging the events which preceded
+the last two years of Rhodes' life, many people expressed
+the opinion that Jameson, being a physician of
+unusual ability, was perfectly well aware that his friend
+was not destined to live to a very old age, and therefore
+wished to obtain from him while he could all the
+political support he required to establish his career as
+the statesman he fully believed he was. In fact, Doctor
+Jameson had made up his mind to outlive the odium
+of the Raid, and to become rehabilitated in public
+opinion to the extent of being allowed to take up the
+leadership of the party which had once owned Rhodes
+as its chief. By a strange freak of Providence, helped
+no doubt by an iron will and opportunities made the
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page57">[57]</span>
+
+
+most of, Jameson, who had been the great culprit in
+the mad adventure of the Raid, became the foremost
+man in Cape Colony for a brief period after the war,
+while Rhodes, who had been his victim, bore the full
+consequences of his weakness in having permitted himself
+to be persuaded to look through his fingers on the
+enterprise.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Rhodes never recovered any real political influence,
+was distrusted by English and Dutch alike, looked upon
+with caution by the Cape Government, and with suspicion
+even among his followers. The poor man had
+no friends worthy of the name, and those upon whom
+he relied the most were the first to betray his confidence.
+Unfortunately for himself, he had a profound contempt
+for humanity, and imagined himself capable of controlling
+all those whom he had elected to rule. He imagined
+he could turn and twist anyone according to his own
+impulses. In support of this assertion let me relate an
+incident in which I played a part.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+When the Boer War showed symptoms of dragging
+on for a longer time than expected, some Englishmen
+proposed that Rhodes should be asked to stand again
+for Prime Minister, to do which he resolutely refused.
+Opinions, however, were very much divided. Some
+people declared that he was the only man capable of
+conciliating the Dutch and bringing the war to a happy
+issue. Others asserted that his again taking up the
+reins of Government would be considered by the
+Afrikander Bond&#8212;which was very powerful at the time&#8212;as
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page58">[58]</span>
+
+
+ an unjustifiable provocation which would only
+further embitter those who had never forgiven Rhodes
+for the Raid.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+A member of the Upper House of Legislature, whom
+I used to see often, and who was a strong partisan of
+Rhodes, determined to seek advice outside the House,
+and went to see an important political personage in Cape
+Town, one of those who frequented Groote Schuur and
+who posed as one of the strongest advocates of Rhodes
+again becoming the head of the Government presided
+over by Sir Alfred Milner. What was the surprise of
+my friend when, instead of finding a sympathising
+auditor, he heard him say that he considered that for
+the moment the return of Rhodes at the head of affairs
+would only complicate matters; that it was still too soon
+after the Raid; that his spirit of animosity in regard
+to certain people might not help to smooth matters at
+such a critical juncture; and that, moreover, Rhodes
+had grown very morose and tyrannical, and refused to
+brook any contradiction. Coming from a man who had
+no reason to be friendly with Rhodes, the remarks just
+reported would not have been important, but proceeding
+from a personage who was continually flattering
+Rhodes, they struck me as showing such considerable
+duplicity that I wrote warning Rhodes not to attach
+too much importance to the protestations of devotion
+to his person that the individual in question was perpetually
+pouring down upon him. The reply which I
+received was absolutely characteristic:
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page59">[59]</span>
+
+
+"Thanks for your letter. Never mind what X&#8213;
+says. He is a harmless donkey who can always make
+himself useful when required to do so."
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The foregoing incident is enlightening as to the real
+nature of Cecil Rhodes. His great mistake was precisely
+in this conviction that he could order men at will,
+and that men would never betray him or injure him
+by their false interpretation of the directions which it
+pleased him to give them. He considered himself so
+entirely superior to the rest of mankind that it never
+struck him that inferior beings could turn upon him and
+rend him, or forget the obedience to his orders which
+he expected them to observe. He did not appreciate
+people with independence, though he admired them in
+those rare moments when he would condescend to be
+sincere with himself and with others; but he preferred
+a great deal the miserable creatures who always said
+"yes" to all his vagaries; who never dared to criticise
+any of his instructions or to differ from any opinions
+which he expressed. Sometimes he uttered these
+opinions with a brutality that did him considerable
+harm, inasmuch as it could not fail to cause repugnance
+among any who listened to him, but were not sufficiently
+acquainted with the peculiarities of his character to discern
+that he wanted simply to scare his audience, and
+that he did not mean one single word of the ferocious
+things he said in those moments when he happened to
+be in a particularly perverse mood, and when it pleased
+him to give a totally false impression of himself and
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page60">[60]</span>
+
+
+the nature of his convictions in political and public
+matters.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It must not be lost sight of when judging Mr.
+Rhodes that he had been living for the best part of his
+life among people with whom he could not have anything
+in common except the desire to make money in
+the shortest time possible. He was by nature a thinker,
+a philosopher, a reader, a man who belonged to the best
+class of students, those who understand that one's mind
+wants continually improving and that it is apt to rust
+when not kept active. His companions in those first
+years which followed upon his arrival in South Africa
+would certainly not have appreciated any of the books
+the reading of which constituted the solace of the young
+man who still preserved in his mind the traditions of
+Oxford. They were his inferiors in everything: intelligence,
+instruction, comprehension of those higher
+problems of the soul and of the mind which always interested
+him even in the most troubled and anxious
+moments of his life. He understood and realised that
+this was the fact, and this did not tend to inspire him
+with esteem or even with consideration for the people
+with whom he was compelled to live and work.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Men like Barney Barnato, to mention only this one
+name among the many, felt a kind of awe of Cecil
+Rhodes. This kind of thing, going on as it did for
+years, was bound to give Rhodes a wrong idea as to
+the faculty he had of bringing others to share his points
+of view, and he became so accustomed to be considered
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page61">[61]</span>
+
+
+always right that he felt surprised and vexed whenever
+blind obedience was not given. Indeed, it so excited his
+displeasure that he would at once plunge into a course
+of conduct which he might never have adopted but for
+the fact that he had heard it condemned or criticised.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It has been said that every rich man is generally
+surrounded by parasites, and Cecil Rhodes was not
+spared this infliction. Only in his case these parasites
+did not apply their strength to attacks upon his purse;
+they exploited him for his influence, for the importance
+which it gave them to be considered by the world as
+his friends, or even his dependants. They appeared
+wherever he went, telling the general public that their
+presence had been requested by the "Boss" in such
+warm terms that they could not refuse. It was curious
+to watch this systematic chase which followed him
+everywhere, even to England. Sometimes this persistency
+on the part of persons whom he did not tolerate
+more than was absolutely necessary bored him and put
+him out of patience; but most of the time he accepted
+it as a necessary evil, and even felt flattered by it. He
+also liked to have perpetually around him individuals
+whom he could bully to his heart's content, who never
+resented an insult and never minded an insolence&#8212;and
+Rhodes was often insolent.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Another singular feature in a character as complex
+as it was interesting was the contempt in which he held
+all those who had risen under his very eyes, from comparative
+or absolute poverty, to the status of millionaires
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page62">[62]</span>
+
+
+possessed of houses in Park Lane and shooting boxes
+in Scotland. He liked to relate all that he knew about
+them, and sometimes even to mention certain facts
+which the individuals themselves would probably have
+preferred to be consigned to oblivion. But&#8212;and here
+comes the singularity to which I have referred&#8212;Rhodes
+would not allow anyone else to speak of these things,
+and he always took the part of his so-called friends when
+outsiders hinted at dark episodes which did not admit
+of investigation. He almost gave a certificate of good
+conduct to people whom he might have been heard
+referring to a few hours before in a far more antagonistic
+spirit than that displayed by those whom he so sharply
+contradicted.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+I remember one amusing instance of the idiosyncrasy
+referred to. There was in Johannesburg a man who,
+having arrived there with twenty-five pounds in his
+pockets&#8212;as he liked to relate with evident pride in the
+fact&#8212;had, in the course of two years, amassed together
+a fortune of two millions sterling. One day during
+dinner at Groote Schuur he enlarged upon the subject
+with such offensiveness that an English lady, newly
+arrived in South Africa and not yet experienced in the
+things which at the time were better left unsaid, was
+so annoyed at his persistency that she interrupted the
+speaker with the remark:
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"Well, if I were you, I would not be so eager to
+let the world know that I had made two millions out of
+twenty-five pounds. It sounds exactly like the story
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page63">[63]</span>
+
+
+of the man who says that in order to catch a train at
+six o'clock in the morning he gets up at ten minutes
+to six. You know at once that he cannot possibly have
+washed, whilst your story shows that you could not possibly
+have been honest."
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+I leave the reader to imagine the consternation produced
+among those present by these words. But what
+were their feelings when they heard Rhodes say in
+reply:
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"Well, one does not always find water to wash in,
+and at Kimberley this happened oftener than one
+imagines; as for being honest, who cares for honesty
+nowadays?"
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"Those who have not lived in South Africa, Mr.
+Rhodes," was the retort which silenced the Colossus.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+This man of the get-rich-quick variety was one of
+those who had mastered the difficult operation of passing
+off to others the mines out of which he had already
+extracted most of the gold, an occupation which, in the
+early Johannesburg days, had been a favourite one with
+many of the inhabitants of this wonderful town. One
+must not forget that as soon as the fame of the gold
+fields of the Transvaal began to spread adventurers
+hastened there, together with a few honest pioneers,
+desirous of making a fortune out of the riches of a soil
+which, especially in prospectuses lavishly distributed on
+the London and Paris Stock Exchanges, was described
+as a modern Golconda. Concessions were bought and
+sold, companies were formed with a rapidity which
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page64">[64]</span>
+
+
+savoured of the fabulous. Men made not only a living,
+but also large profits, by reselling plots of ground which
+they had bought but a few hours before, and one heard
+nothing but loud praises of this or that mine that could
+be had for a song, "owing to family circumstances"
+or other reasons which obliged their owner to part
+with it.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The individual who had boasted of the intelligent
+manner with which he had transformed his twenty-five
+pounds into two solid millions had, early in his career,
+invested some of his capital in one of these mines.
+Its only merit was its high-sounding name. He tried
+for some time without success to dispose of it. At last
+he happened to meet a Frenchman, newly arrived in
+Johannesburg, who wanted to acquire some mining
+property there with the view of forming a company.
+Our hero immediately offered his own. The Frenchman
+responded to the appeal, but expressed the desire
+to go down himself into the shaft to examine the property
+and get some ore in order to test it before the
+purchase was completed. The condition was agreed to
+with eagerness, and a few days later the victim and his
+executioner proceeded together to the mine. The
+Frenchman went down whilst Mr. X&#8213; remained
+above. He walked about with his hands in his pockets,
+smoking cigarettes, the ashes of which he let fall with
+an apparent negligence into the baskets of ore which
+were being sent up by the Frenchman. When the
+latter came up, rather hot and dusty, the baskets were
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page65">[65]</span>
+
+
+taken to Johannesburg and carefully examined: the ore
+was found to contain a considerable quantity of gold.
+The mine was bought, and not one scrap of gold was
+ever found in it. Mr. X&#8213; had provided himself
+with cigarettes made for the purpose, which contained
+gold dust in lieu of tobacco, and the ashes which he
+had dropped were in reality the precious metal, the
+presence of which was to persuade the unfortunate
+Frenchman that he was buying a property of considerable
+value. He paid for it something like two hundred
+thousand pounds, whilst the fame of the man who had
+thus cleverly tricked him spread far and wide.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The most amusing part of the story consists in its
+<i>d&#233;nouement</i>. The duped Frenchman, though full of
+wrath, was, nevertheless, quite up to the game. He
+kept silence, but proceeded to form his company as if
+nothing had been the matter. When it was about to
+be constituted and registered, he asked Mr. X&#8213; to
+become one of its directors, a demand that the latter
+could not very well refuse with decency. He therefore
+allowed his name to figure among those of the members
+of the board, and he used his best endeavours to push
+forward the shares of the concern of which he was pompously
+described on the prospectus as having been once
+the happy owner. As his name was one to conjure with
+the scrip went up to unheard-of prices, when both he
+and his supposed victim, the Frenchman, realised and
+retired from the venture, the richer by several hundreds
+of thousands of pounds. History does not say what became
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page66">[66]</span>
+
+
+ of the shareholders. As for Mr. X&#8213;, he now
+lives in Europe, and has still a reputation in South
+Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+This story is but one amongst hundreds, and it is
+little wonder that, surrounded as he was with men who
+indulged in this charming pastime of always trying to
+dupe their fellow creatures, Rhodes' moral sense relaxed.
+It is only surprising that he kept about him so
+much that was good and great, and that he did not
+succumb altogether to the contamination which affected
+everything and everybody around him. Happily for
+him he cherished his own ambitions, had his own dreams
+for companions, his absorption in the great work he
+had undertaken; these things were his salvation. Rhodesia
+became the principal field of Rhodes' activity,
+and the care with which he fostered its prosperity kept
+him too busy and interested to continue the quest for
+riches which had been his great, if not his principal, occupation
+during the first years of his stay in South Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Although Cecil Rhodes was so happily placed that
+he had no need to bother over wealth, he was not so
+aloof to the glamour of politics. He had always felt
+the irk of his retirement after the Raid, and the hankering
+after a leading political position became more pronounced
+as the episode which shut the Parliamentary
+door behind him after he had passed through its portals
+faded in the mind of the people.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It was not surprising, therefore, to observe that
+politics once more took the upper hand amidst his preoccupations.
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page67">[67]</span>
+
+
+It was, though, politics connected with
+the development of the country that bore his name
+more than with the welfare of the Cape Colony or of
+the Transvaal. It was only during the last two years
+of Rhodes' existence that his interest revived in the
+places connected with his first successes in life. Rhodes
+had been convinced that a war with the Boers would
+last only a matter of a few weeks&#8212;three months, as he
+prophesied when it broke out&#8212;and he was equally sure,
+though for what reason it is difficult to guess, that the
+war would restore him to his former position and power.
+The illusion lingered long enough to keep him in a state
+of excitement, during which, carried along by his natural
+enthusiasm, he indulged in several unconsidered steps,
+and when at last his hope was dispelled he accused everybody
+of being the cause of his disappointment. Never
+for a moment would he admit that he could have been
+mistaken, or that the war, which at a certain moment
+his intervention might possibly have avoided, had been
+the consequence of the mischievous act he had not
+prevented.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+When the Bloemfontein Conference failed Rhodes
+was not altogether displeased. He had felt the affront
+of not being asked to attend; and, though his common
+sense told him that it would have been altogether out
+of the question for him to take part in it, as this would
+have been considered in the light of a personal insult by
+President Kruger, he would have liked to have been
+consulted by Sir Alfred Milner, as well as by the English
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page68">[68]</span>
+
+
+Government, as to the course to be adopted during
+its deliberations. He was fully persuaded in his own
+mind that Sir Alfred Milner, being still a new arrival
+in South Africa, had not been able to grasp its complicated
+problems, and so had not adopted the best means
+to baffle the intrigues of President Kruger and the diplomacy
+of his clever colleague, President Steyn. At
+every tale which reached Cecil Rhodes concerning the
+difficulties encountered by Sir Alfred, he declared that
+he was "glad to be out of this mess." Yet it was not
+difficult to see that he passionately regretted not being
+allowed to watch from a seat at the council table
+the vicissitudes of this last attempt by conference to
+smooth over difficulties arising from the recklessness displayed
+by people in arrogantly rushing matters that
+needed careful examination.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div style="text-align:center"><table class="figure" summary="PRESIDENT KRUGER" id="FIG.2"><tr><td><a href="images/image02.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="images/image02-th.jpg" title="PRESIDENT KRUGER" alt="PRESIDENT KRUGER" width="350" height="521" /></a></td></tr><tr><td class="figure-attribution"><p>Photo: Ferneyhough</p></td></tr><tr><td class="figure-caption"><p>PRESIDENT KRUGER</p></td></tr></table></div>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page69">[69]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="num" id="chapter6">CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+<h2>
+THE AFTERMATH OF THE RAID
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+Toward the close of the last chapter I referred
+to the Raid passing from the forefront of public
+memory. But though, as a fact, it became blurred in
+the mind of the people, as a factor in South African
+history its influence by no means diminished. Indeed,
+the aftermath of the Raid assumed far greater proportions
+as time went on. It influenced so entirely the
+further destinies of South Africa, and brought about
+such enmities and such bitterness along with it, that
+nothing short of a war could have washed away its impressions.
+Up to that fatal adventure the Jingo English
+elements, always viewed with distrust and dislike in the
+Transvaal as well as at the Cape, had been more or less
+held back in their desire to gain an ascendancy over the
+Dutch population, whilst the latter had accepted the
+Jingo as a necessary evil devoid of real importance, and
+only annoying from time to time.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+After the Raid all the Jingoes who had hoped that
+its results would be to give them greater facilities of
+enrichment considered themselves personally aggrieved
+by its failure. They did just what Rhodes was always
+doing. The Boers and President Kruger had acted correctly
+in this enterprise of Doctor Jameson, but the
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page70">[70]</span>
+
+
+Jingoes made them responsible for the results of its
+failure. They went about giving expression to feelings
+of the most violent hatred against the Boers, and railed
+at their wickedness in daring to stand up in defence of
+rights which the British Government had solemnly
+recognised. It became quite useless to tell those misguided
+individuals that the Cabinet at Westminster had
+from the very first blamed Rhodes for his share in what
+the English Press, with but few exceptions, had declared
+to be an entirely disgraceful episode. They pretended
+that people in London knew nothing about the true
+state of affairs in South Africa or the necessities of the
+country; that the British Government had always shown
+deplorable weakness in regard to the treatment meted
+out to its subjects in the Colonies, and that both Rhodes
+and Jameson were heroes whose names deserved to be
+handed down to posterity for the services which they
+had rendered to their country.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It is true that these ardent Jingoes were but a small
+minority and that the right-minded elements among the
+English Colonials universally blamed the unwarranted
+attack that had been made against the independence of
+the Transvaal. But the truculent minority shouted loud
+enough to drown the censure, and as, with a few notable
+exceptions, the South African Press was under the influence
+of the magnates, it was not very easy to protest
+against the strange way in which the Raid was being
+excused. I am persuaded that, had the subject been
+allowed to drop, it would have died a natural death, or
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page71">[71]</span>
+
+
+at worst been considered as an historical blunder. But
+the partisans of Rhodes, the friends of Jameson, and personages
+connected with the leading financial powers did
+their best to keep the remembrance of the expedition
+which wrecked the political life of Rhodes fresh before
+the public. The mere mention of it was soon sufficient
+to arouse a tempest of passions, especially among the
+Dutch party, and by and by the history of South Africa
+resolved itself into the Raid and its memories. You
+never heard people say, "This happened at such a
+time"; they merely declared, "This happened before,
+or after, the Raid." It became a landmark for the inhabitants
+of Cape Town and of the Transvaal, and I
+could almost believe that, in Kimberley at any rate, the
+very children in the schools were taught to date their
+knowledge of English history from the time of the Raid.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The enemies of Cecil Rhodes, and their number was
+legion, always declared that the reason why he had faced
+the music and braved public opinion in England lay in
+the fact that, for some reason or other, he was afraid of
+Doctor Jameson. I have referred already to this circumstance.
+Whilst refusing to admit such a possibility,
+yet I must own that the influence, and even the authority
+exercised by the Doctor on his chief, had something
+uncanny about it. My own opinion has always been that
+Rhodes' attitude arose principally from his conviction
+that Jameson was the only one who understood his constitution,
+the sole being capable of looking after his
+health. Curious as it may seem, I am sure the Colossus
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page72">[72]</span>
+
+
+had an inordinate fear of death and of illness of any
+kind. He knew that his life was not a sound one, but
+he always rebelled against the idea that, like other
+mortals, he was subject to death. I feel persuaded that
+one of the reasons why he chose to be buried in the
+Matoppo Hills was that, in selecting this lonely spot, he
+felt that he would not often be called upon to see the
+place where he would rest one day.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+This dread of the unknown, so rare in people of his
+calibre, remained with him until the end. It increased
+in acuteness as his health began to fail. Then, more
+than ever, did he entertain and plan new schemes, as
+if to persuade himself that he had unlimited time before
+him in which to execute them. His flatterers knew how
+to play upon his weakness, and they never failed to do
+so. Perhaps this foible explains the influence which
+Doctor Jameson undoubtedly exercised upon the mind
+of Rhodes. He believed himself to be in safety whenever
+Jameson was about him. And so in a certain sense
+he was, because, with all his faults, the Doctor had a
+real affection for the man to whom he had been bound
+by so many ties ever since the days when at Kimberley
+they had worked side by side, building their fortunes and
+their careers.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+By a curious freak of destiny, when the tide of events
+connected with the war had given to the Progressive
+English party a clear majority in the Cape Parliament,
+Jameson assumed its leadership as a matter of course,
+largely because he was the political next-of-kin to
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page73">[73]</span>
+
+
+Rhodes. The fact that at that time he lived at Groote
+Schuur added to his popularity, and he continued whilst
+there the traditional hospitality displayed during the
+lifetime of Rhodes. That he ultimately became Prime
+Minister was not surprising; the office fell to his share
+as so many other good things had fallen before; and,
+having obtained this supreme triumph and enjoyed it
+for a time, he was tactful enough to retire at precisely
+the right moment.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The Raid indirectly killed Rhodes and directly
+obliterated his political reputation. It lost him, too,
+the respect of all the men who could have helped him
+to govern South Africa wisely and well. It deprived
+him of the experience and popularity of Mr. Schreiner,
+Mr. Merriman, Mr. Sauer and other members of the
+Afrikander Bond who had once been upon terms of intimacy
+and affection with him.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It must never be forgotten that at one period of
+his history Rhodes was considered to be the best friend
+of the Dutch party; and, secondly, that he had been
+the first to criticise the action of the British Government
+in regard to the Transvaal. At the very moment
+when the Raid was contemplated he was making the
+most solemn assurances to his friends&#8212;as they then believed
+themselves to be&#8212;that he would never tolerate
+any attack against the independence of the Boers. If
+his advice had been taken, Rhodes considered that the
+errors which culminated at Majuba with the defeat of
+the British troops would have been avoided. He caused
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page74">[74]</span>
+
+
+the same assurances to be conveyed to President Kruger,
+and this duplicity, which in anyone less compromised
+than he was in regard to the Dutch party might have
+been blamed, was in his case considered as something
+akin to high treason, and roused against him sentiments
+not only of hatred, but also of disgust. When later
+on, at the time of the Boer War, Rhodes made attempts
+to ingratiate himself once more into the favour of the
+Dutch he failed to realise that while there are cases
+when animosity can give way before political necessity,
+it is quite impossible in private to shake hands with an
+individual whom one despises. And that such persons
+as Mrs. van Koopman or Mr. Schreiner, for instance,
+despised Rhodes there can be no doubt.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+They were wrong in doing so. Rhodes was essentially
+a man of moods, and also an opportunist in his
+strange, blunt way. Had the Dutch rallied round him
+during the last war it is certain that he would have given
+himself up body and soul to the task of trying to
+smooth over the difficulties which gave such an obstinate
+character to the war. He would have induced the English
+Government to grant to all rebel colonists who
+returned to their allegiance a generous pardon and reinstatement
+into their former rights.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Even while the war lasted it is a fact that, in a
+certain sense, Rhodes' own party suspected him of betraying
+its interests. I feel almost sure that Sir Alfred
+Milner did not trust him, but, nevertheless, he would
+have liked Rhodes as a coadjutor. If the two men were
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page75">[75]</span>
+
+
+never on sincerely cordial terms with one another it was
+not the fault of the High Commissioner, who, with that
+honesty of which he always and upon every occasion
+gave proof, tried to secure the co-operation of the great
+South African statesman in his difficult task. But
+Rhodes would not help Sir Alfred. But neither, too,
+would he help the Dutch unless they were willing to
+eat humble pie before him. In fact, it was this for
+which Rhodes had been waiting ever since the Raid. He
+wanted people to ask his forgiveness for the faults he
+himself had committed. He would have liked Sir Alfred
+Milner to beg of him as a favour to take the direction of
+public affairs, and he would have desired the whole of
+the Dutch party to come down <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">in corpore</i> to Groote
+Schuur, to implore him to become their leader and to
+fight not only for them but also for the rights of President
+Kruger, whom he professed to ridicule and despise,
+but to whom he had caused assurances of sympathy to
+be conveyed.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+During the first period of the war, and especially
+during the siege, Cecil Rhodes was in Kimberley. He
+had gone with the secret hope that he might be able
+from that centre to retain a stronger hold on South
+African politics than could have been the case at Groote
+Schuur, in which region the only authority recognised
+by English and Dutch alike was that of Sir Alfred
+Milner. He waited for a sign telling him that his ambition
+was about to be realised in some way or other&#8212;and
+waited in vain.
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page76">[76]</span>
+
+
+It is indisputable that whilst he was shut up in the
+Diamond City Rhodes entered into secret negotiations
+with some of the Dutch leaders. This, though it might
+have been construed in the sense of treason against his
+own Motherland had it reached the knowledge of the
+extreme Jingo party, was in reality the sincere effort
+of a true patriot to put an end to a struggle which was
+threatening to destroy the prosperity of a country for
+which he had laboured for so many years.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In judging Rhodes one must not forget that though
+a leading personality in South Africa, and the chairman
+of a corporation which practically ruled the whole
+of the Cape Colony and, in part, also the Transvaal,
+he was, after all, at that time nothing but a private
+individual. He had the right to put his personal influence
+at the service of the State and of his country
+if he considered that by so doing he could bring to an
+end a war which threatened to bring destruction on a
+land that was just beginning to progress toward civilisation.
+It must be remembered that his was the only
+great personality in South Africa capable of opposing
+President Kruger and the other Dutch and Boer leaders.
+He was still popular among many people&#8212;feared by
+some, worshipped by others. He could rally round him
+many elements that would never coalesce with either
+Dutch or English unless he provided the impetus of his
+authority and approval. If only he had spoken frankly
+to the Boer leaders whom he had caused to be approached,
+called them to his side instead of having messages conveyed
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page77">[77]</span>
+
+
+ to them by people whom he could disavow later
+on and whom, in fact, he did disavow; and if, on
+the other hand, Rhodes had placed himself at the disposal
+of Sir Alfred Milner, and told him openly that he
+would try to see what he could do to help him, the
+tenseness of the situation would almost certainly have
+been eased.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In a position as intermediary between two adversaries
+who required his advice and influence to smooth
+the way toward a settlement of the terrible South African
+question Rhodes could have done incalculable service
+and added lustre to his name. But he did not, and it
+is not without interest to seek the reason why the
+Colossus was not courageous enough to embark upon such
+a course. Whether through fear of his actions being
+wrongly interpreted, or else because he did not feel sure
+of his ground and was apprehensive lest he might be induced
+to walk into a trap, Cecil Rhodes never would
+pronounce himself upon one side or the other. He left
+to well-wishers the task of reconciliation between himself
+and his enemies, or, if not that, at least the possibility
+for both once more to take common action for the
+solution of South African difficulties. The unfortunate
+side of the whole affair lay in the fact that the Boer
+and Bond leaders each remained under the impression
+that in the Raid affair it was against their particular
+body that Rhodes had sinned, that it was their cause
+which he had betrayed. Accordingly they expected him
+to recognise this fact and to tell them of his regret.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page78">[78]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+But this was not Rhodes' way: on the contrary, he
+looked to his adversaries to consider that they had
+wronged him. Both parties adhered firmly to their
+point of view; it was not an easy matter to persuade
+either of them to take the initiative. Each very well
+knew and felt it was an indispensable step, but each
+considered it should be taken by the other.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+This brings me to make a remark which probably
+has never yet found its way into print, though some
+have spoken about it in South Africa. It is that Cecil
+Rhodes, whilst being essentially an Empire Maker,
+was not an Empire Ruler. His conceptions were far
+too vast to allow him to take into consideration the
+smaller details of everyday life which, in the management
+of the affairs of the world, obliges one to consider
+possible ramifications of every great enterprise. Rhodes
+wanted simply to sweep away all obstacles without giving
+the slightest thought to the consequences likely to
+follow on so offhand a manner of getting rid of difficulties.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In addition to this disregard of vital details, there
+was a tinge of selfishness in everything which Rhodes
+undertook and which gave a personal aspect to matters
+which ought to have been looked upon purely from the
+objective. The acquisition of Rhodesia, for instance,
+was considered by him as having been accomplished for
+the aggrandisement of the Empire and also for his own
+benefit. He sincerely believed that he had had nothing
+else in his mind when he founded the Chartered Company,
+than the desire to conquer a new country and to
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page79">[79]</span>
+
+
+give it to England; but he would certainly have felt
+cruelly affronted if the British Government had ever
+taken its administration into its own hands and not
+allowed Rhodes to do exactly what he pleased there.
+He loved to go to Buluwayo, and would spend weeks
+watching all that was being done in the way of agriculture
+and mining. In particular, he showed considerable
+interest in the natives.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The Colonial Office in London was treated by Cecil
+Rhodes with the utmost disdain on the rare occasions
+when it tried to put in a word concerning the establishment
+of British rule in the territories which he gloried
+in having presented to the Queen. It was sufficient to
+mention in his presence the possibility of the Charter
+being recalled to put Rhodes into a passion. No king
+or tyrant of old, indeed, treated his subjects with the
+severity which Rhodes showed in regard to the different
+civil officials and military defenders of the Rhodesia he
+loved so much and so unwisely.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It is curious that Rhodes never allowed speculation
+a free hand in Rhodesia as he had done at Kimberley
+or at Johannesburg. He was most careful that outsiders
+should not hear about what was going on, and took
+endless precautions not to expose the companies that
+worked the old dominions of poor King Lobengula,
+to the sharp criticism of the European Stock Exchanges.
+Their shares remained in the hands of people on whose
+discretion Rhodes believed that he could rely, and no
+one ever heard of gambling in scrip exciting the minds
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page80">[80]</span>
+
+
+of the inhabitants of Buluwayo or Salisbury to anything
+like the degree stocks in Transvaal concerns did.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In Rhodesia Rhodes believed himself on his own
+ground and free from the criticisms which he guessed
+were constantly uttered in regard to him and to his
+conduct. In the new land which bore his name Rhodes
+was surrounded only by dependants, whilst in Cape
+Colony he now and then came across someone who would
+tell him and, what was worse, who would make him feel
+that, after all, he was not the only man in the world,
+and that he could not always have everything his own
+way. Moreover, in Cape Town there was the Governor,
+whose personality was more important than his own,
+and whom, whether he liked it or not, he had to take
+into consideration, and to whom, in a certain sense, he
+had to submit. And in Kimberley there was the De
+Beers Board which, though composed of men who were
+entirely in dependence upon him and whose careers he
+had made, yet had to be consulted. He could not
+entirely brush them aside, the less so that a whole army
+of shareholders stood behind them who, from time to
+time, were impudent enough to wish to see what was
+being done with their money.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Nothing in the way of hampering critics or circumscribing
+authorities existed in Rhodesia. The Chartered
+Company, though administered by a Board, was in
+reality left entirely in the hands and under the control
+of Rhodes. Most of the directors were in England and
+came before public notice only at the annual general
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page81">[81]</span>
+
+
+meeting, which was always a success, inasmuch as no
+one there had ever ventured to criticise, otherwise than
+in a mild way, the work of the men who were supposed
+to watch over the development of the resources of the
+country. Rhodes was master, and probably his power
+would have even increased had he lived long enough to
+see the completion of the Cape to Cairo Railway, which
+was his last hobby and the absorbing interest of the
+closing years of his life.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The Cape to Cairo Railway was one of those vast
+schemes that can be ascribed to the same quality in his
+character as that which made him so essentially an
+Empire Maker. It was a project of world-wide importance,
+and destined to set the seal to the paramount
+influence of Great Britain over the whole of
+Africa. It was a work which, without Rhodes, would
+never have been accomplished. He was right to feel
+proud of having conceived it; and England, too, ought
+to be proud of having counted among her sons a man
+capable of starting such a vast enterprise and of going
+on with it despite the violent opposition and the many
+misgivings with which it was received by the general
+public.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page82">[82]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="num" id="chapter7">CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+<h2>
+RHODES AND THE AFRIKANDER BOND
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+To return to the subject of the negotiations which
+undoubtedly took place between Rhodes and the
+leaders of the Afrikander Bond during the war, I must
+say that, so far as I know, they can rank among the
+most disinterested actions of his life. For once there
+was no personal interest or possible material gain connected
+with his desire to bring the Dutch elements in
+South Africa to look upon the situation from the purely
+patriotic point of view, as he did himself.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It would have been most certainly to the advantage
+of everybody if, instead of persisting in a resistance
+which was bound to collapse, no matter how successful
+it might appear to have been at its start, the Boers,
+together with the Dutch Afrikanders, had sent the olive
+branch to Cape Town. There would then have been
+some hope of compromise or of coming to terms with
+England before being crushed by her armies. It would
+have been favourable to English interests also had the
+great bitterness, which rendered the war such a long
+and such a rabid one, not had time to spread all over
+the country. Rhodes' intervention, which Sir Alfred
+Milner could not have refused had he offered it, backed
+by the Boers on one side and by the English Progressive
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page83">[83]</span>
+
+
+party in the Colony on the other, might have brought
+about great results and saved many lives.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+No blame, therefore, ought to attach to Cecil
+Rhodes for wishing to present the Boer side of the case.
+It would, indeed, have been wiser on the part of Mr.
+Hofmeyr and other Bond leaders to have forgotten the
+past and given a friendly hand to the one man capable
+of unravelling the tangled skein of affairs.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+At that period, whilst the siege of Kimberley was
+in progress, it is certain that serious consideration was
+given to this question of common action on the part of
+Rhodes and of the two men who practically held the
+destinies of the Transvaal in their hands&#8212;de Wet and
+General Botha, with Mr. Hofmeyr as representative of
+the Afrikander Bond at their back. Why it failed
+would for ever remain a mystery if one did not remember
+that everywhere in South Africa lurked hidden
+motives of self-interest which interfered with the best
+intentions. The fruits of the seed of distrust sown by
+the Raid were not easy to eradicate.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Perhaps if Mr. Rhodes had stood alone the attempt
+might have met with more success than was actually the
+case. But it was felt by all the leading men in the
+Transvaal that a peace concluded under his auspices
+would result in the subjection of the Boers to the foreign
+and German-Jew millionaires. This was the one thing
+they feared.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The Boers attributed to the millionaires of the Rand
+all the misfortunes which had fallen upon them, and
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page84">[84]</span>
+
+
+consequently the magnates were bitterly hated by the
+Boers. And not without reason. No reasonable Boer
+would have seriously objected to a union with England,
+provided it had been effected under conditions assuring
+them autonomy and a certain independence. But no
+one wanted to have liberty and fortune left at the mercy
+of adventurers, even though some of them had risen to
+reputation and renown, obtained titles, and bought their
+way into Society.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Unfortunately for him, Rhodes was supposed to represent
+the class of people referred to, or, at any rate,
+to favour them. One thing is certain&#8212;the great financial
+interests which Rhodes possessed in the Gold Fields
+and other concerns of the same kind lent some credence
+to the idea. All these circumstances prevented public
+opinion from expressing full confidence in him, because
+no one could bring himself to believe what nevertheless
+would have come true.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In the question of restoring peace to South Africa
+Rhodes most certainly would never have taken anyone's
+advice; he would have acted according to his own impulse,
+and more so because Doctor Jameson was not with
+him during the whole time Kimberley was besieged.
+Unfortunately for all the parties concerned, Rhodes let
+slip the opportunity to resume his former friendship
+with Mr. Hofmeyr, the only man in South Africa
+whose intelligence could measure itself with his own.
+And in the absence of this first step from Rhodes, a
+false pride&#8212;which was wounded vanity more than anything
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page85">[85]</span>
+
+
+ else&#8212;prevented the Bond from seeking the help
+of Rhodes. This attitude on the part of each man
+would simply have been ridiculous under ordinary circumstances,
+but at a time when such grave interests were
+at stake, and when the future of so many people was
+liable to be compromised, it became criminal.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In sharp contrast to it stood the conduct of Sir
+Alfred Milner, who was never influenced by his personal
+feelings or by his vanity where the interests of his
+country were engaged. During the few months which
+preceded the war he was the object of virulent hatred
+on the part of most of the white population of the
+Colony. When the first disillusions of the war brought
+along with them their usual harvest of disappointments
+the personality of the High Commissioner appeared at
+last in its true light, and one began to realise that here
+was a man who possessed a singularly clear view on
+matters of politics, and that all his actions were guided
+by sound principles. His quiet determination not to
+allow himself to be influenced by the gossip of Cape
+Town was also realised, and amid all the spite shown it
+is to his honour that, instead of throwing up the sponge,
+he persevered, until at last he succeeded in the aim which
+he had kept before him from the day he had landed in
+Table Bay. He restored peace to the dark continent
+where no one had welcomed him, but where everybody
+mourned his departure when he bade it good-bye after
+the most anxious years he had ever known.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+When Sir Alfred accepted the post of Governor of
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page86">[86]</span>
+
+
+the Cape Colony and English High Commissioner in
+South Africa, he had intended to study most carefully
+the local conditions of the new country whither fate and
+his duty were sending him, and then, after having
+gained the necessary experience capable of guiding him
+in the different steps he aspired to take, to proceed to
+the formidable task he had set for himself. His great
+object was to bring about a reconciliation between the
+two great political parties in the Colony&#8212;the South
+African League, with Rhodes as President, and the
+Afrikander Bond, headed by Messrs. Hofmeyr (the one
+most in popular favour with the Boer farmers), Sauer
+and Schreiner.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In the gigantic task of welding together two materials
+which possessed little affinity and no love for each other,
+Sir Alfred was unable to be guided by his experience in
+the Motherland. In England a certain constitutional
+policy was the basis of every party. At the Cape the
+dominating factors were personal feelings, personal
+hatreds and affections, while in the case of the League
+it was money and money alone. I do not mean that
+every member of the League had been bought by De
+Beers or the Chartered Company; but what I do maintain
+is that the majority of its members had some
+financial or material reason to enrol themselves.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div style="text-align:center"><table class="figure" summary="THE HON. J.H. HOFMEYR" id="FIG.3"><tr><td><a href="images/image03.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="images/image03-th.jpg" title="THE HON. J.H. HOFMEYR" alt="THE HON. J.H. HOFMEYR" width="350" height="520" /></a></td></tr><tr><td class="figure-attribution"><p>Photo: Elliott &amp; Fry</p></td></tr><tr><td class="figure-caption"><p>THE HON. J.H. HOFMEYR</p></td></tr></table></div>
+
+<p>
+In judging the politics of South Africa at the period
+of which I am writing, one must not forget that the
+greater number of those who then constituted the so-called
+Progressive party were men who had travelled to
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page87">[87]</span>
+
+
+the Cape through love of adventure and the desire to
+enrich themselves quickly. It was only the first comers
+who had seen their hopes realised. Those who came after
+them found things far more difficult, and had perforce
+to make the best of what their predecessors left. On
+the other hand, it was relatively easy for them to find
+employment in the service of one or the other of the
+big companies that sprang up, and by whom most of
+the mining and industrial concerns were owned.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+When the influence of the De Beers increased after
+its amalgamation with the other diamond companies
+around Kimberley, and when Rhodes made up his mind
+that only a political career could help him to achieve
+his vast plans, he struck upon the thought of using the
+money and the influence which were at his disposal to
+transform De Beers into one of the most formidable
+political instruments the world had ever seen. He succeeded
+in doing so in what would have been a wonderful
+manner if one did not remember the crowd of fortune-seeking
+men who were continually landing in South
+Africa. These soon found that it would advantage them
+to enrol under Rhodes' banner, for he was no ordinary
+millionaire. Here stood a man who was perpetually discovering
+new treasures, annexing new continents, and
+who had always at his disposal profitable posts to scatter
+among his followers.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The reflex action upon Rhodes was that unconsciously
+he drifted into the conviction that every man
+could be bought, provided one knew what it was he
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page88">[88]</span>
+
+
+wanted. He understood perfectly well the art of speculating
+in his neighbours' weaknesses, and thus liked to
+invite certain people to make long stays at his house,
+not because he liked them, but because he knew, if they
+did not, that they would soon discover that the mere
+fact of being the guest of Mr. Rhodes procured for
+them the reputation of being in his confidence. Being
+a guest at Groote Schuur endowed a man with a prestige
+such as no one who has not lived in South Africa can
+realise, and, furthermore, enabled him to catch here and
+there scraps of news respecting the money markets of
+the world, a proper understanding and use of which
+could be of considerable financial value. A cup of tea
+at Groote Schuur was sufficient to bring about more than
+one political conversion.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Once started the South African League soon became
+a power in the land, not so strong by any means as the
+Afrikander Bond, but far more influential in official, and
+especially in financial, circles. Created for the apparent
+aim of supporting British government in Cape Colony,
+it found itself almost from the very first in conflict with
+it, if not outwardly, at least tacitly. After his rupture
+with the Bond consequent upon the Raid, Rhodes
+brought considerable energy to bear upon the development
+of the League. He caused it to exercise all over
+the Colony an occult power which more than once defied
+constituted authority, and proved a source of embarrassment
+to British representatives with greater frequency
+than they would have cared to own. Sir Alfred Milner,
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page89">[89]</span>
+
+
+so far as I have been able to see, when taking the reins,
+had not reckoned upon meeting with this kind of government
+within a government, and in doing so perhaps
+did not appreciate its extent. But from the earliest
+days of his administration it confronted him, at first
+timidly, afterwards with persistence, and at last with
+such insolence that he found himself compelled to see
+what he could do to reduce to impotence this organisation
+which sought to devour him.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The problem which a situation of the character described
+thrust upon Sir Alfred was easier to discuss
+than to solve. The League was a power so wide that it
+was almost impossible to get rid of its influence in the
+country. It was controlled by Rhodes, by De Beers,
+by the Chartered Company, by the members in both
+Houses who were affiliated to it, by all the great financial
+establishments throughout South Africa&#8212;with but
+a solitary exception&#8212;by the principal industrial and
+agricultural enterprises in the country. It comprised
+political men, landowners, doctors, merchants, ship-owners,
+practically all the colonists in Rhodesia, and
+most of the English residents of the Transvaal. It controlled
+elections, secured votes, disposed of important
+posts, and when it advised the Governor the Legislature
+had to take its remarks into consideration whether or
+not it approved of them. Under the regime of the days
+when the League was formed it had been able to develop
+itself with great facility, the dangers which lurked behind
+its encroachment on the privileges of the Crown
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page90">[90]</span>
+
+
+not being suspected. But Sir Alfred Milner discovered
+the menace at once, and with the quiet firmness and
+the tact which he always displayed in everything that
+he undertook proceeded to cope with the organisation.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Sir Alfred soon found himself confronted by the irritation
+of Rhodes, who had relied on his support for the
+schemes which he had nursed in regard to the Transvaal.
+I must here explain the reason why Rhodes had thrown
+his glances toward the Rand. One must remember the
+peculiar conditions in which he was placed in being
+always surrounded by creatures whom he could only keep
+attached to his person and to his ambition by satisfying
+their greed for gold. When he had annexed Matabeleland
+it had been principally in the expectation that one
+would find there the rich gold-bearing strata said to exist
+in that region. Unfortunately, this hope proved a fallacious
+one. Although thousands of pounds were spent
+in sinking and research, the results obtained were of so
+insignificant a nature, and the quantity of ore extracted
+so entirely insufficient to justify systematic exploitation,
+that the adventurers had perforce to turn their attention
+toward other fields.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It was after this disillusion that the idea took hold
+of Rhodes, which he communicated to his friends, to
+acquire the gold fields of the Rand, and to transform the
+rich Transvaal into a region where the Chartered Company
+and the South African League would rule. Previous
+to this, if we are to believe President Kruger,
+Rhodes had tried to conclude an alliance with him, and
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page91">[91]</span>
+
+
+once, upon his return from Beira to Cape Town, had
+stopped at Pretoria, where he paid a visit to the old
+Boer statesman.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It is quite likely that on this occasion Rhodes put in
+a word suggesting that it would be an advantage to the
+Transvaal to become possessed of an outlet on the sea-board,
+but I hardly think that Kruger wrote the truth
+in his memoirs in stating that when mentioning Delagoa
+Bay Rhodes used the words, "We must simply take
+it," thus associating himself with Kruger. Cecil Rhodes
+was far too cute to do any such tiling, knowing that it
+would be interpreted in a sense inimical to his plans.
+But I should not be surprised if, when the President
+remarked that Delagoa was Portuguese, he had replied,
+"It does not matter, and you must simply take it."
+This would have been far more to the point, as it would
+have hinted to those who knew how to read between
+the lines that England, which Rhodes was persuaded
+was incarnated in himself, would not mind if the Transvaal
+did lay hands on Delagoa Bay. Such an act would
+furnish the British Government with a pretext for
+dabbling to some effect in the affairs of the Transvaal
+Republic.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Such a move as this would have been just one of
+these things which Rhodes was fond of doing. He felt
+sometimes a kind of malicious pleasure in whispering to
+others the very things likely to get them into trouble
+should they be so foolish as to do them. In the case
+of President Kruger, however, he had to deal with a
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page92">[92]</span>
+
+
+mind which, though uncouth, yet possessed all the
+"slimness" of which so many examples are to be found
+in South Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Kruger wrote, "Rhodes represented capital, no
+matter how base and contemptible, and whether by
+lying, bribery or treachery, all and every means were
+welcome to him if they led to the attainment of his ambitious
+desires." But Oom Paul was absolutely wrong in
+thinking that it was the personage he was thus describing
+who practised all these abominations. He ought to have
+remembered that it was his name only which was associated
+with all these basenesses, and the man himself,
+if left to his better self, would never have condescended
+to the many acts of doubtful morality with which his
+memory will remain associated in history.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+I am firmly convinced that on his own impulse he
+would never, for instance, have ventured on the Raid.
+But, unhappily, his habit, when something "not quite"
+was mentioned to him, was to say nothing and to trust
+to his good luck to avoid unpleasant consequences arising
+out of his silence. Had he ventured to oppose the
+plans of his confederates they would have immediately
+turned upon him, and &#8230; There were, perhaps, past
+facts which he did not wish the world to remember. His
+frequent fits of raging temper arose from this irksome
+feeling, and was his way&#8212;a futile way&#8212;of revenging
+himself on his jailors for the durance in which they kept
+him. The man who believed himself to be omnipotent
+in South Africa, and who was considered so powerful by
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page93">[93]</span>
+
+
+the world at large, was in reality in the hands of the
+very organisations he had helped to build.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It was not Cecil John Rhodes' will which was paramount
+in the South African League. Kruger spoke
+absolutely the truth when he asserted that it was
+essential "to know something about the Chartered
+Company before it was possible to realise the true perspective
+of the history of South Africa during the closing
+years of the last century." Another of Kruger's sweeping
+assertions&#8212;and one which he never backed by anything
+tangible&#8212;was when he further wrote that Rhodes
+was "one of the most unscrupulous characters that ever
+existed, whose motto was 'the end justifies the means,'
+a motto that contains a creed which represents the whole
+man." Rhodes by nature was not half so unscrupulous
+as Kruger himself, but he was surrounded by unscrupulous
+people, whom he was too indolent to repulse. He
+was constantly paying the price of his former faults and
+errors in allowing his name to serve as a shield for the
+ambitions of those who were in no way worthy of him
+and who constantly abused his confidence.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The habit became ingrained in the nature of Cecil
+Rhodes of always doing what he chose without regard
+to the feelings and sentiments of others. It persisted
+during the whole of the war, and would probably have
+proved a serious impediment to the conclusion of peace
+had he lived until it became accomplished. This characteristic
+led him, after all his intrigues with the Dutch
+party and the Bond, to throw himself once more into
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page94">[94]</span>
+
+
+the arms of the English Progressive party and to start
+a campaign of his own against the rebel Colonials and
+the Dutch inhabitants of the Transvaal.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+While the siege of Kimberley lasted, even while he
+was seeking to become reconciled to the British element,
+Rhodes asserted himself in a strongly offensive manner.
+He sent to Sir Alfred Milner in Cape Town reports of
+his own as to the military authorities and dispositions,
+couched in such alarming tones that the High Commissioner
+became most uneasy concerning the possible
+fate of the Diamond City. These reports accused the
+officers in charge of the town of failing in the performance
+of their duties, and showing symptoms of abject
+fear in regard to the besieging Boer army. It was only
+after an explanation from Sir Redvers Buller, and after
+the latter had communicated to him the letters which
+he himself had received from Colonel Kekewich, the commander
+of the troops to whom had been entrusted the
+defence of Kimberley, that Sir Alfred was reassured.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The fact was that Rhodes became very impatient to find
+that his movements were watched by the military authorities,
+and that sometimes even the orders which he gave
+for what he considered the greater security of the town,
+and gave with the superb assurance which distinguished
+him, were cancelled by the responsible officials. Disgraceful
+scenes followed. Rhodes was accused of wishing
+to come to an arrangement with Cronje, who was
+in charge of the besieging troops, in order to bring the
+war to an end by his own efforts.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page95">[95]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+I never have been able to ascertain how much of
+real truth, if any, was in the various accusations made
+against Cecil Rhodes by the English General Officers,
+but they were embodied in the message which was
+alleged to have been flashed across to Kimberley after
+the battle of Modder River by Lord Methuen, but which
+was supposed by those whom it concerned to have been
+inspired by the Commander-in-Chief:
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"Tell Mr. Rhodes," the heliograph ran, "that on
+my entry into Kimberley he and his friends must take
+their immediate departure."
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Two years later, in November, 1902, Sir Redvers
+Buller, when speaking at the annual dinner of the
+Devonians in London, remarked that he must protest
+against the rumours which, during the siege of Kimberley,
+had been spread by some of its residents that the
+Imperial authorities had been in a perpetual state of
+"funk." The allusion was understood to refer to Mr.
+Rhodes by his partisans, who protested against the speech.
+Rhodes, indeed, during his whole life was never in
+greater disfavour with the English Government than
+after the siege of Kimberley; perhaps because he had
+always accused Whitehall of not understanding the real
+state of things in South Africa. The result of that imperative
+telegram, and Rhodes' belief as to its source,
+was bitter hatred against Sir Redvers Buller. It soon
+found expression in vindictive attacks by the whole Rhodesian
+Press against the strategy, the abilities, and even
+the personal honesty of Sir Redvers Buller.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page96">[96]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+Whether Rhodes, upon his arrival in London,
+attempted to hurt the General I do not know, but it
+could be always taken for granted that Rhodes could be
+a very bad enemy when he chose.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Upon his return to Groote Schuur he seemed more
+dissatisfied than ever with the Home Government. He
+was loud in his denunciations and unceasing in his criticisms.
+Sir Alfred, however, like the wise man he was,
+preferred to ignore these pinpricks, and invariably treated
+Rhodes with the utmost courtesy and attention. He
+always showed himself glad to listen to Rhodes and to
+discuss with him points which the Colossus thought
+it worth while to talk over. At that time Rhodes was
+in the most equivocal position he had ever been in his
+life. He could not return to Kimberley; he did not
+care to go to Rhodesia; and in Cape Colony he was
+always restive.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+At this period all kinds of discussions used to take
+place concerning the ultimate results of the war and the
+influence which it would have on the future development
+of affairs in the Transvaal. The financiers began to
+realise that after the British flag had once been raised
+at Pretoria they would not have such a good time of it
+as they had hoped at first, and now, having done their
+best to hurry on the war, regretted it more than anybody
+else. The fact was that everybody in South Africa,
+with the exception of the Boers themselves, who knew
+very well their own resources, had believed that the war
+would be over in three months, and that the Transvaal
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page97">[97]</span>
+
+
+would be transferred into a Crown Colony where adventurers
+and gold-seekers would have a fine time.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Rhodes himself had more than once expressed his
+conviction that the destruction of the Boers would not
+take more than three months at the most, and this assurance
+was accepted as gospel by most of the financiers of
+Johannesburg. An exception was Mr. F. Eckstein, the
+general manager and partner in the concern of Wernher,
+Beit &amp; Co., and one of the ablest financiers in that city.
+From the first he was quite pessimistic in regard to the
+length of time the war would take.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+As the war dragged on without there seeming any
+chance of its being brought to a rapid conclusion, it became
+evident that England, after all the sacrifices which
+she was making, would never consent to leave the leaders
+of the movement&#8212;the ostensible object of which had
+been to grant to the Uitlanders certain privileges to
+which they had no right&#8212;as sole and absolute masters
+of the situation. In fact, the difficulties of the war made
+it evident that, once peace was proclaimed, public
+opinion at home would demand that the Transvaal, together
+with the Orange Free State, should be annexed
+to the British Empire in view of a future federation of
+the whole of South Africa, about which the English
+Press was already beginning to speak.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+That South Africa should not remain a sphere of exploitation
+sent shivers down the spines of the financiers.
+The South African League was observed to become quite
+active in discovering rebels. Their zeal in this direction
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page98">[98]</span>
+
+
+was felt all over Cape Colony. Their aim was to reduce
+the register in order to bring about a considerable falling
+off of voters for the Afrikander Bond, and thereby substantially
+influence the results of the next election to the
+Cape Parliament.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+At this period certain overtures were made once again
+to the Bond party. They proceeded apparently from
+men supposed to act on their own initiative, but who
+were known to be in favour at Groote Schuur. These
+advances met with no response, but when the rumour
+that they had been made spread among the public owing
+to an indiscretion, Rhodes hastened to deny that he had
+been a party to the plan&#8212;as was his wont when he
+failed to achieve. All the same, it is a fact that members
+of the House of Assembly belonging to the Afrikander
+party visited Groote Schuur in the course of that
+last winter which Rhodes spent there, and were warmly
+welcomed. Rhodes showed himself unusually gracious.
+He hoped these forerunners would rally his former
+friends to his side once more. But Rhodes was expecting
+too much, considering ail the circumstances. Faithful
+to his usual tactics, even whilst his Afrikander guests were
+being persuaded to lend themselves to an intrigue from
+which they had hoped to win something, Rhodes was
+making himself responsible for another step likely to
+render the always strong hatred even more acute than
+ever. More than that, he was advocating, through certain
+underground channels, the suspension of the Constitution
+in Cape Colony.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<div style="text-align:center"><table class="figure" summary="THE RT. HON. SIR W.F. HELY-HUTCHINSON" id="FIG.4"><tr><td><a href="images/image04.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="images/image04-th.jpg" title="THE RT. HON. SIR W.F. HELY-HUTCHINSON" alt="THE RT. HON. SIR W.F. HELY-HUTCHINSON" width="350" height="521" /></a></td></tr><tr><td class="figure-attribution"><p>Photo: Elliott &amp; Fry</p></td></tr><tr><td class="figure-caption"><p>THE RT. HON. SIR W.F. HELY-HUTCHINSON</p></td></tr></table></div>
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page99">[99]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+The particulars of this incident were only disclosed
+after the war was over. The whole thing was thrashed
+out in Parliament and its details communicated to the
+public by Mr. David de Waal, one of the truest friends
+Mr. Rhodes ever had. The discussion took place after
+Sir Alfred Milner had been transferred to Johannesburg
+and Sir Walter Hely-Hutchinson had taken his place
+in Cape Town. The South African League had become
+more active than ever, and was using all its influence
+to secure a majority for its members at the next general
+election. The Bond, on its side, had numerous adherents
+up country, and the stout Dutch farmers had remained
+faithful to their old allegiance, so there was no hope that
+they would be induced, even through the influence of
+money, to give their votes to the Progressives. The
+only things which remained were: a redistribution of
+seats, then a clearing out of the register, and, lastly, a
+suspension of the Constitution, which would have allowed
+the Governor a "free" hand in placing certain measures
+on the statute book. The most influential members
+among the executive of the South African League met
+at Cotswold Chambers, and Rhodes, who was present,
+drew up a petition which was to be presented to the
+Prime Minister. Sir Gordon Sprigg, who filled that
+office, was a man who, with all his defects, was absolutely
+incapable of lending himself to any mean trick in
+order to remain in power. When Sir Gordon became
+acquainted with the demands of the League he refused
+absolutely to take a part in what he maintained would
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page100">[100]</span>
+
+
+have been an everlasting blot on the reputation of the
+Government.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+After Rhodes' death, when the question of the suspension
+of the Constitution was raised by the Progressives
+in the House of Assembly, it was discussed
+in all its details, and it was proved that the South
+African League, in trying throughout the country to
+obtain signatures to a monster petition on the matter,
+had resorted to some more than singular means to obtain
+these signatures. Mr. Sauer, who was the leader of the
+Bond party in the Chamber, revealed how the League
+had employed agents to induce women and sometimes
+young children to sign the petition, and that at the
+camp near Sea Point, a suburb of Cape Town, where
+soldiers were stationed previous to their departure for
+England, these same agents were engaged in getting
+them to sign it before they left under the inducement
+of a fixed salary up to a certain amount and a large
+percentage after it had been exceeded, according to the
+number of the names obtained in this way. When
+trustworthy people of unimpeachable character wrote to
+the papers denouncing this manoeuvre the subsidised
+papers in Cape Town, and the Rhodesian Press, refused
+to publish the affidavits sworn on the subject, but wrote
+columns of calumnies about the Dutch Colonials, and,
+as a finishing stroke, clamoured for the suspension of
+the Constitution.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The speech of Mr. Sauer gave rise to a heated
+debate, during which the Progressive members indignantly
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page101">[101]</span>
+
+
+ denied his assertions. Then stepped in Mr.
+David de Waal, that friend of Rhodes to whom I have
+already referred. He rose to bring his testimony to
+the facts revealed by Mr. Sauer, who was undoubtedly
+the most able leader which the Afrikander party possessed,
+with the exception, perhaps, of Mr. Merriman.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"In February, 1902," he said, "there was a meeting
+in Cotswold Chambers consisting of the twenty-two
+members of the House of Assembly who went by the
+name of 'Rhodes' group.' It was at first discussed and
+ultimately decided to wait on the Prime Minister and
+to interview him concerning the expenditure of the war,
+which had reached the sum of &#163;200,000 monthly. Then,
+after some further discussion, we came to the conclusion
+to meet once more. This was done on February
+17th. You must remember that war was still
+raging at the time. At this second meeting it was
+agreed to formulate a scheme to be submitted to the
+Government which proposed the suspension of the Constitution
+in regard to five clauses. The first was to be
+this very suspension, then a new registration of voters,
+a redistribution of seats, the indemnity to be awarded
+to the faithful English Colonials, and, finally, the reestablishment
+of the Constitution. As to this last I
+must make a statement, and that is, that if I had known
+that it was meant to withdraw the Constitution for
+more than one month I would have objected to it, but
+I was told that it would be only a matter of a few
+days."
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page102">[102]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+At this point Mr. de Waal was interrupted by a
+Progressive member, who exclaimed that Dr. Jameson
+had denied that such a thing had ever been said or
+mentioned.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"I know he has done so," replied Mr. de Waal,
+"but I will make a declaration on my oath. A committee
+was then appointed," he went on, "which waited
+on the Prime Minister and presented to him this very
+same petition. Sir Gordon Sprigg, however, said that
+he would not be ruled by anyone, because they had a
+responsible Government. The Committee reported, when
+it returned, that the Prime Minister was opposed to
+any movement started on the basis of the petition which
+they had presented to him, and that he would not move
+an inch from his declaration, saying energetically,
+'Never! I shall never do it!' Sir Gordon Sprigg had
+further pointed out that the result of such a step would
+be that the Cape would become a Crown Colony and
+would find itself in the same position as Rhodesia."
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Perhaps this was what Rhodes and the South African
+League had wished, but the publication of the details
+connected with this incident, especially proceeding from
+a man who had never made a secret of the ties which
+had bound him to Rhodes, and who, among the latter's
+Dutch friends, had been the only one who had never
+failed him, drove the first nail into the coffin of
+Rhodesian politics.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It was common knowledge that de Waal had steadfastly
+stood by Rhodes even during the terrible time of
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page103">[103]</span>
+
+
+the Raid. Moreover, he was a man of high integrity,
+who alone among those who had attached themselves to
+the destinies of the Empire Maker had never taken part
+in the financial schemes of a doubtful nature which
+marked the wonderful career of Rhodes. This declaration
+opened the eyes of many persons who, to that
+day, had denied the political intrigues which had been
+going on at Cotswold Chambers. Afterwards it became
+relatively easy for Sir Alfred Milner to clear the atmosphere
+in South Africa and to establish public life on
+sounder principles than the pure love of gain. It cannot
+be sufficiently regretted that he should not have done
+so before Rhodes' death and thus have given Rhodes&#8212;and,
+incidentally, the country for which Rhodes had
+done so much in the way of material development&#8212;the
+opportunity to shake off his parasites and become a real
+factor in solidifying the great area in which he was such
+an outstanding personality.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page104">[104]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="num" id="chapter8">CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+<h2>
+THE INFLUENCE OF SIR ALFRED MILNER
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+The occult power exercised by the League on the
+inner politics of South Africa could not fail to impress
+Sir Alfred Milner most unpleasantly. Frank himself,
+it must have often been absolutely repulsive to him
+to have to do with people whom he feared to trust and
+who believed that they could bring into political life the
+laxities of the mining camp. Though not aware of it,
+even before he landed in Cape Town the Progressives
+had made up their minds to represent him as determined
+to sweep the Dutch off the face of the earth.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Believing Sir Alfred to be the confederate of Rhodes,
+the Boers, too, would have nothing to do with him.
+Whilst the Bloemfontein Conference was going on
+President Kruger, as well as the leaders of the Afrikander
+Bond, were overwhelmed with covert warnings
+to distrust the High Commissioner. Whence they
+emanated is not a matter of much doubt. Sir Alfred
+was accused of wanting to lay a trap for the Boer
+plenipotentiaries, who were told to beware of him as
+an accomplice of Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, whose very
+name produced at Pretoria the same effect as a red rag
+upon a bull. Under these circumstances the Conference
+was bound to fail, and the High Commissioner returned
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page105">[105]</span>
+
+
+to Cape Town, very decidedly a sadder and most certainly
+a wiser man.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Now that years have passed since the Boer War it
+is possible to secure a better perspective, in the light of
+which one can question whether it would have been possible
+to avoid the conflict by an arrangement of some
+kind with the Boer Republics, Personally, I believe
+that an understanding was not out of the question if
+the strong financial interests had not opposed its accomplishment;
+but at the same time a patched up affair
+would not have been a happy event for either South
+Africa or for England. It would have left matters in
+almost the same condition as they had been before, and
+the millionaires, who were the real masters on the Rand,
+would have found a dozen pretexts to provoke a new
+quarrel with the Transvaal Government. Had the Boer
+Executive attempted to do away with the power of the
+concerns which ruled the gold mines and diamond fields,
+it would have courted a resistance with which it would
+have been next to impossible to deal. The war would
+still have taken place, but it might have occurred at a
+far less favourable moment. No arrangement with President
+Kruger, even one most propitious to British interests,
+could have done away with the corruption and
+the bribery which, from the first moment of the discovery
+of the gold fields, invaded that portion of South
+Africa, and this corruption would always have stood in
+the way of the establishment of the South African
+Union.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page106">[106]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+Sir Alfred Milner knew all this very well, and probably
+had an inward conviction, notwithstanding his efforts
+to prevent the war, that a conflict was the only means
+of breaking these chains of gold which shackled the
+wheels of progress. At so critical a time the support of
+Rhodes and his party would have been invaluable. And
+Sir Alfred would have welcomed it. Cecil Rhodes, of
+course, had declared himself officially in accord with the
+High Commissioner, and even praised him to a degree
+of fulsomeness. But the ulterior motive was simply to
+excite the Dutch party against him. The reputation of
+Sir Alfred Milner as a statesman and as a politician was
+constantly challenged by the very people who ought to
+have defended it. Rhodes himself had been persuaded
+that the Governor harboured the most sinister designs
+against his person. The innuendo was one of the most
+heinous untruths ever invented by his crowd of
+sycophants.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+An opportunity came my way, by which I was able
+to convince myself how false was the belief nourished by
+Rhodes against Milner. During the course of a conversation
+with Sir Alfred, I boldly asked him whether he
+was really such an enemy of Rhodes as represented. I
+was surprised by the moderate tone in which he replied
+to my, after all, impertinent question. The remarks
+which we then exchanged filled me with the greatest
+admiration for the man who so nobly, and so worthily,
+upheld British prestige in South Africa under the most
+trying circumstances. Milner was an entirely honest
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page107">[107]</span>
+
+
+man&#8212;the rarest thing in the whole of Cape Town at
+that anxious period&#8212;and after one had had the advantage
+of discussing with him the political situation, one could
+only be filled with profound respect for him and for
+his opinions, actions and conduct. Far from working
+against Rhodes, as Sir Alfred had been represented to
+me as doing, I convinced myself that he was keenly
+anxious to be on good and, what is more important, on
+sincere terms with him. Sir Alfred had not the slightest
+feeling of animosity against the Dutch. On the contrary,
+he would have liked them to become persuaded
+of his desire to protect them against possible aggression
+by the Jingoes, whose offensive conduct none more than
+himself assessed at its true value.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+But what was the real situation? He found his every
+action misconstrued; whatever he did was interpreted
+in a wrong sense, and those who should have shared his
+aims were plotting against him. The position was truly
+tragic from whatever side it was viewed, and a weaker
+or less honest man would assuredly have given up the
+struggle.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+A few days after my conversation with Sir Alfred
+Milner, which took place during the course of a dinner
+at Government House, I took opportunity to mention
+it to Rhodes. I tried to clear his mind of the suspicions
+that I knew he entertained in regard to the High Commissioner.
+Cecil Rhodes listened to me with attention,
+then asked me in that sarcastic tone of his, which was
+so intensely disagreeable and offensive, whether I was
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page108">[108]</span>
+
+
+in love with Sir Alfred, as I had so suddenly become
+his champion. Then he ended, "You are trying to
+make me believe the impossible." I did not allow him,
+however, to ruffle me, as evidently was his desire, but
+replied that when one came to know better those whom
+one had only met occasionally, without ever having
+talked with them seriously, it was natural to amend one's
+opinion accordingly. I told him, too, that my earlier
+misapprehension had been intensified by a certain lady
+who posed as Rhodes' greatest friend, and who had been
+loud in her denunciations of the High Commissioner,
+long before I had ever met him. But now, I added, I
+had come to the conclusion that Sir Alfred had been
+terribly maligned.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+At this point Rhodes interrupted me with the remark:
+"So you think that he is a paragon. Well, I
+won't contradict you, and, besides, you know that I
+have always defended him; but still, with all his virtues,
+he has not yet found out what he ought to do with me."
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"What can one do with you, Mr. Rhodes?" I asked
+with a smile.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"Leave me alone," was the characteristic reply, in
+a tone which was sufficient for me to follow the advice,
+as it meant that the man was getting restive and might
+at any moment break out into one of those fits of rage
+which he so often used as a means to bring to an end
+a conversation in which he felt that he might not come
+out as victor.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+A few days later a rabid Rhodesian who happened
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page109">[109]</span>
+
+
+to be staying at Groote Schuur approached me. "You
+have been trying to convert Mr. Rhodes to Sir Alfred,"
+he remarked.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"I have done nothing of the kind," I said. "I am
+not a preacher, but I have been telling Mr. Rhodes that
+he was mistaken if he thought that he had an enemy
+in the High Commissioner."
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"Had you any reason to suppose that he considered
+him one?" was the unexpected question.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"Well, from what I have seen it seemed to me that
+you have all been doing your best to persuade him that
+such was the case," I retorted, "and why you should
+have done so passes my comprehension."
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The conversation dropped, but the incident confirmed
+me in my opinion that strong forces were at work to
+sow enmity between Rhodes and Sir Alfred Milner for
+fear the influence of the High Commissioner might
+bring Rhodes to look at things differently. As things
+stood at the moment, Rhodes was persuaded that the
+High Commissioner hated him, was jealous of him,
+wanted him out of his path, and never meant to allow
+him under any circumstances whatever to have any say
+in the settlement of South African affairs. This conviction,
+which was carefully nourished from the outside,
+evoked in his mind an absurd and silly rage to which no
+man of common sense, unblinded by vanity, could have
+fallen victim. I would not be so foolish as to deny to
+the famous Life Governor of De Beers either abundant
+common sense or outstanding intelligence, but here was
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page110">[110]</span>
+
+
+a man gifted with genius who, under the impulse of
+passion, could act and speak like a child.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Rhodes looked upon the High Commissioner as a
+nuisance unfortunately not to be set aside. What exasperated
+him, especially in regard to the High Commissioner,
+was the fact that he knew quite well that Sir
+Alfred Milner could assume the responsibility for concluding
+peace when that time arrived. Rhodes always
+hoped that his personal influence on the English, as well
+as among the Bond party, would enable him to persuade
+the leaders of the rebel movement in Cape Colony to
+lay down their arms and to leave their interests in his
+hands. Should such a thing have happened, Rhodes
+thought that such a success as this would efface the bad
+impression left by the Raid. He grudgingly admitted
+that that wild adventure had not pleased people, but he
+always refused to acknowledge that it was the one great
+and unredeemable mistake of his life. I remember once
+having quoted to him the old French motto which in
+the Middle Ages was the creed of every true knight:
+</p>
+
+
+<div class="lg" lang="fr" xml:lang="fr" style="font-style: italic">
+<div class="l">"Mon &#226;me &#224; Dieu,</div>
+<div class="l">Mon bras au roi,</div>
+<div class="l">Mon coeur aux dames,</div>
+<div class="l">L'honneur &#224; moi!"</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+"Ah, yes! In those times one could still think
+about such things," he simply remarked, which proved
+to me that he had no comprehension of the real sense
+of the beautiful words. The higher attributes of mind
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page111">[111]</span>
+
+
+did not trouble him either in the hours of his greatest
+triumphs or in the moments when Fortune ceased to
+smile upon him. He thought he had something far
+better: ambition, love of domination, the desire to
+eclipse everybody and everything around him. I do not
+mention money, because Rhodes did not care for money
+intrinsically.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Yet the man was great in spite of all his defects.
+Particularly in the rein he gave to his thoughts during
+nights spent in the solitude of the karroo, when the stars
+were almost the only things which he could look upon,
+their immensity the only companion worthy of himself.
+One could almost believe Cecil Rhodes was possessed of
+a dual personality. At one moment he lived in the skies
+in regard to his own future prospects and the great
+deeds he wished to perform, about which he never ceased
+to think. The next he was on this earth, dabbling in
+the meannesses of humanity, taking a vicious pleasure
+in noticing the evil about him and too frequently succeeding,
+somehow, in wounding the feelings of those
+who liked him best, and then wondering how it happened
+that he had so few friends.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+On account of these characteristics, notwithstanding
+all his wonderful faculties, Cecil Rhodes will never remain
+an historical figure like the Count of Egmont during
+the Revolt of the Netherlands, or Mirabeau at the time
+of the French Revolution. Undoubtedly he achieved
+great things, but nothing truly beautiful. I do not think
+that even the warmest of his admirers can ever say that
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page112">[112]</span>
+
+
+the organising and amalgamation of De Beers or the conquest
+of Matabeleland had anything beautiful about
+them. Still, they were triumphs which no one except
+himself could have achieved. He undoubtedly erected
+an edifice the like of which had never been seen in
+modern times, and he opened to the ambitions and to
+the greed of the world new prospects, new sources of
+riches, which caused very many to look upon him as truly
+the god of material success.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Rhodes can be said to have revolutionised Society by
+bringing to the social horizon people who, but for the
+riches he placed within reach of their grasping fingers,
+would never have been able to emerge from their uncultured
+obscurity.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+People have said to me, "How generous was
+Rhodes!" Yes, but always with a shade of disdain in
+the giving which hurt the recipients of his charity. One
+of the legends in the Cape is that half those whom
+Rhodes helped had been his victims at one time or the
+other.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It was no wonder that Cecil Rhodes was an embittered
+man when one reflects how many curses must have
+been showered upon his head. The conquest of Matabeleland
+had not gone by without evoking terrible
+enmities; and the amalgamation of De Beers, in consequence
+of which so many people who had spent
+thousands of pounds in acquiring plots of ground where
+they had hoped to find diamonds, and who had later to
+part from them for a mere song, were among the things
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page113">[113]</span>
+
+
+never forgiven him by those whom the speculations had
+ruined. Later on came the famous Bill which he caused
+to be adopted in both Houses of Legislature concerning
+the illicit buying of diamonds, the I.D.B. Act.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The I.D.B. enactment destroyed one of the fundamental
+principles in British legislature which always
+supposes a man to be innocent until he has been proved
+guilty. It practically put the whole of Cape Colony
+under the thumb of De Beers. The statute was not
+wisely framed. It could be invoked to remove persons
+whose presence in Kimberley was inconvenient. Therefore
+the I.D.B. Act drew on the head of Rhodes and
+of his colleagues torrents of abuse. It is, unfortunately,
+certain that cases happened where diamonds were hidden
+surreptitiously among the effects of certain persons
+who had had the imprudence to say too loudly that they
+meant to expose the state of things existing in Kimberley;
+and in consequence innocent men were sentenced
+to long terms of imprisonment.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+I heard one story in particular which, if true, throws
+a terrible light on the state of affairs in the Diamond
+City. A young man of good connections, who had
+arrived from England to seek his fortune in South Africa,
+was engaged in Kimberley at a small salary by one of
+the big diamond mining concerns. After about three
+or four months' sojourn he felt so disgusted that he declared
+quite loudly that as soon as he could put by
+sufficient money to pay his passage back to Europe he
+would do so, there to make it the business of his life
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page114">[114]</span>
+
+
+to enlighten his compatriots as to what was going on in
+South Africa. He threatened, too, to warn his countrymen
+against those who used to deluge England with
+prospectuses praising, in exalted terms, the wonderful
+state of things existing in South Africa and dilating
+upon the future prospects of Cape Colony. Old residents
+warned him he would do better to restrain his
+wrath until he was out of reach of interested parties; he
+did not listen to them, with the result that one morning
+detectives appeared in the house where he lodged,
+searched his room, and&#8212;found some diamonds hidden
+in a flower pot of geraniums which was standing
+in his window and which the daughter of his landlady
+had given him that very morning. No protestations of
+the unhappy young fellow availed him. He was taken
+to Cape Town and condemned to seven years' imprisonment,
+the end of which he did not live to see, as he
+died a few months after he had been sentenced.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The story was freely current in South Africa; and,
+true or not, it is unquestionable that a large number of
+persons suffered in consequence of the I.D.B. Act, no
+more serious proofs being offered that they had taken
+or concealed diamonds than the fact that the stones had
+been found in unlikely places in their rooms. Books
+without number have been written about the I.D.B. Act,
+a great number evidently evincing hatred or revenge
+against Mr. Rhodes and his lieutenants.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The famous De Beers Company acquired a position
+of overwhelming strength in the social, economical and
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page115">[115]</span>
+
+
+political life of South Africa, where practically it secured
+control of everything connected with finance and industry.
+De Beers built cold storage rooms, a dynamite
+factory, ice houses, interested itself in agriculture, fruit-growing,
+farming and cattle-breeding all over the Colony.
+It managed to acquire shares in all the new mining
+enterprises whether in the Transvaal or in Rhodesia.
+Politically it controlled the elections, and there were
+certain districts in the Cape Colony where no candidate
+unsupported by De Beers could hope to be elected to a
+seat in Parliament. The company had its own police,
+while its secret service was one of the most remarkable
+in the world, having among its archives a record of the
+private opinions of all the people enjoying any kind of
+eminence in the country. In presence of De Beers the
+Governor himself was overshadowed; indeed, I do not
+think that if the Home Government had tried to oppose
+the organisation it would have had much chance of
+coming out on top.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Sir Alfred Milner was the first man who saw that it
+would be impossible for England to have the last word
+in South Africa unless those who, both in Cape Colony
+and in the Transvaal, were the real masters of the situation
+were broken, and financial concerns persuaded to
+occupy themselves solely with financial matters. Though
+Sir Alfred was wise enough, and prudent enough, not
+to allow his feelings on the subject to become public
+property, Rhodes was shrewd enough to guess that he
+would encounter a resolute adversary in the person of
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page116">[116]</span>
+
+
+the High Commissioner. Perhaps had he kept his suspicions
+to himself instead of communicating them to
+others he might have been persuaded in time to recognise
+that there was a great deal in the opinions which
+Sir Alfred held as to the participation of financial organisations
+in political matters. If only each could have had
+a chance for a frank understanding, probably Milner
+would not have objected to Rhodes continuing to control
+the vast machine into which the diamond mines
+amalgamation had grown, so long as it confined its operations
+to commerce.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+If Government is exercised by a single person it is
+possible for it to possess the elements of justice and
+equity, and to be carried out with few mistakes of such
+gravity as would compromise the whole system. But,
+unfortunately, the South African autocracy meant an
+army of small autocrats, and it was they who compromised
+Rhodes and then sheltered themselves behind his gigantic
+personality from the unpopularity and detestation which
+their actions aroused in the whole of South Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+I feel personally convinced that if, during the period
+which immediately followed upon the relief of Kimberley
+and of Lady smith, Rhodes had approached Sir
+Alfred and frankly told him that he wanted to try his
+luck with the Dutch party, and to see whether his former
+friends and colleagues of the Afrikander Bond could not
+be induced to listen to reason, the High Commissioner
+would have been only too glad to meet him and to
+explain his views on the whole question. Instead of
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page117">[117]</span>
+
+
+doing so, Rhodes, carried away as he always was by this
+everlasting desire to be the first everywhere, did not
+even give a thought to the wisdom of confiding to anyone
+the efforts which he undoubtedly made to induce
+the Bond leaders to trust him again.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+There was a moment when things got very near to
+an understanding between Rhodes and Sir Alfred. This
+was when Mr. Sauer himself entertained the thought
+of letting Rhodes sway the future by making with the
+English Government conditions of a peace which would
+not wound to the quick the feelings of the Dutch part
+of the population of the Colony.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+A circumstance, apparently insignificant, destroyed
+all the hopes that had been entertained by several who
+wished the Colossus well. Certain papers were brought
+to Rhodes; these contained information likely to prove
+of use to him as well as to the English Government.
+After he had read them he asked that they should be
+left with him until the following day. The person in
+charge of the documents had been asked not to part with
+them even for a single hour, as it was important that
+no one should be able to copy documents which might
+seriously compromise certain people. Therefore, she refused.
+Rhodes thereupon flew into a terrible passion
+and demanded to know the reason for the apparent distrust.
+When told that it was not so much a question
+of distrust as the impossibility of breaking a promise
+once given, he exclaimed that he would have nothing
+more to do with the whole business, and started almost
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page118">[118]</span>
+
+
+immediately afterwards his agitation for the suspension
+of the Constitution in Cape Colony. But&#8212;and this is
+an amusing detail to note&#8212;Rhodes used every possible
+effort to obtain possession of the papers he had been
+allowed to see, going so far as to have the house searched
+of the person who had refused to allow him to keep the
+documents&#8212;a revenge which was as mean as it was useless,
+because the papers in question had been at once
+returned to their rightful owners.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The request made by Rhodes to keep these documents
+produced a very bad impression on those who
+had begun to entertain hopes that he might be induced
+to throw the weight of his personality into the scale of
+a settlement. It confirmed the suspicions held by the
+Afrikander party ever since the Raid.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+They say that everyone is afforded once the chance
+of one's lifetime. In the case of Rhodes, he certainly
+missed by that action the one opportunity of reinstating
+himself once again upon the pinnacle whence the adventure
+of Doctor Jameson had caused him to fall.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+I remember that whilst these events were going on
+a political man, well acquainted with all details of the
+endeavour to secure a reconciliation between the Afrikander
+Bond and Rhodes, came to see me one evening.
+We talked over the whole situation. He told me that
+there were people who thought it would be a good
+thing to inform Sir Alfred Milner of what was going on,
+in the hope that he might give Rhodes an inkling that
+he knew that intrigue was rife at Groote Schuur, and at
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page119">[119]</span>
+
+
+the same time express to Rhodes with what satisfaction
+he personally would view the good offices of the Colossus
+to influence both the South African League and the
+Afrikander Bond. But we agreed that it was quite impossible.
+Such a course would not inspire the High Commissioner
+with an exalted idea as to our morality in
+matters of trust, and, besides, it would not be playing
+the game in regard to Rhodes and his group. So the
+matter dropped; but Rhodes suspected, and never forgave
+us or any of those whose thoughts ran on the same
+lines.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Whether Sir Alfred Milner ever learned who had been
+trying to persuade the master of Groote Schuur to seek
+his co-operation in what would have been the noblest
+deed of Rhodes' life, I have not been able to ascertain to
+the present day. To tell the truth, I never tried to do
+so, the matter having lost all interest except as a matter
+of history.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page120">[120]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="num" id="chapter9">CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+<h2>
+THE OPENING OF THE NEW CENTURY
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+Such were the preoccupations, the intrigues and the
+emotions which, all through that monotonous winter
+of 1900-1901, agitated the inhabitants of and the visitors
+to Groote Schuur. Rhodes himself seemed to be
+the one man who thought the least about them. It is
+certain that he felt hurt in his pride and in his consciousness
+that the good which he had wanted to do
+failed to be appreciated by those whom he had intended
+to benefit. But outwardly he made no sign that the
+matter interested him otherwise than from a purely
+objective point of view, that of the statesman who thinks
+that it is part of his duty to put his services at the disposal
+of his country whenever required to do so. He
+felt also slightly surprised to find, once he had expressed
+his willingness to use the experience of South African
+affairs which he had acquired and which no one in the
+Cape possessed with such thoroughness, that the people
+who had appealed to him, and whom he had consented to
+meet half-way, would not give him the whole of their
+confidence; indeed, they showed some apprehension that
+he would use his knowledge to their detriment.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+When one reviews all the circumstances that cast
+such a tragic shade over the history of these eventful
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page121">[121]</span>
+
+
+months, one cannot help coming to the conclusion that
+there was a good deal of misunderstanding on both sides
+and a deplorable lack of confidence everywhere. Rhodes
+had entirely lost ground among his former friends, and
+would not understand that it was more difficult, even on
+the part of those who believed in his good intentions,
+to efface the impression that he had been playing a double
+game ever since the Raid had deprived him of the confidence
+and support which previously were his all over
+Cape Colony.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The whole situation, as the new century opened, was
+a game of cross purposes. Sir Alfred Milner might
+have unravelled the skein, but he was the one man whom
+no one interested in the business wished to ask for help.
+And what added to the tragedy was the curious but undisputable
+fact that even those who reviled Rhodes hoped
+he would return to power and assume the Premiership in
+place of Sir Gordon Sprigg.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In spite of the respect which Sir Gordon Sprigg inspired,
+and of the esteem in which he was held by all
+parties, it was generally felt that if Rhodes were once
+more at the helm he might return to a more reasonable
+view of the whole situation. In such an office, too, it
+was believed that Rhodes would give the Colony the
+benefit of his remarkable gifts of statecraft, as well as
+wield the authority which he liked so much to exercise,
+for the greater good of the country in general and of
+the British Government in particular. I believe that if
+at that moment Cecil Rhodes had become the head of
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page122">[122]</span>
+
+
+the Cabinet not one voice, even among the most fanatic
+of the Afrikander Bond, would have objected. Those
+most averse to such a possibility were Rhodes' own supporters,
+a small group of men whose names I shall
+refrain from mentioning.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+All true friends of Rhodes, however, must surely have
+felt a keen regret that he wasted his talents and his
+energy on those entangled and, after all, despicable Cape
+politics. The man was created for something better and
+healthier than that. He was an Empire Maker by
+nature, one who might have won for himself everlasting
+renown had he remained "King of Rhodesia," as he
+liked to call himself. There, in the vast solitudes which
+by his enterprise and foresight had become a part of
+the British Empire, he ought to have gone on uninterruptedly
+in the glorious task of bringing civilisation
+to that hitherto unknown land. For such work his big
+nature and strange character were well fitted, and his wide-ranging
+mind appreciated the extent of the task. As
+he used to say himself sometimes, he was never so happy
+and never felt so free and so much at peace with the
+world and with mankind as among the Matoppo Hills.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The statesmanlike qualities which Cecil Rhodes undoubtedly
+possessed were weakened by contact with
+inferior people. It is impossible to create real politicians
+and sound ones at the same rapid pace as financial
+magnates sprang up at the Cape as well as in the
+Transvaal. The class who entered politics had as little
+real solidity about them as the houses and dwellings
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page123">[123]</span>
+
+
+which were built at a moment's notice from corrugated
+iron and a few logs. They thought that they understood
+how to govern a nation because they had thoroughly
+mastered the mysteries of bookkeeping in problematical
+financial undertakings.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+I remember one afternoon when, talking with Rhodes
+in the grounds of Groote Schuur, he took me to the
+summer-house which he had built for himself, whence
+one had a beautiful view over the country toward Table
+Mountain. He leaned on the parapet of the little
+observatory which surmounted the summer-house and
+lost himself in a day dream which, though long, I felt
+I had better not interrupt. I can see his face and expression
+still as, with his arms crossed over his chest,
+he gazed into space, thinking, thinking, and forgetting
+all else but the vision which he was creating in that
+extraordinary brain of his. I am sure that he remained
+so for over twenty minutes. Then he slowly turned round
+to me and said, with an accent indescribable in its intensity
+and poignancy:
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"I have been looking at the North, at my own
+country&#8212;"
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"Why do you not always remain there?" I exclaimed
+almost involuntarily, so painfully did the words
+strike me.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"Because they will not let me," he replied.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"They? Who?" I asked again. "Surely you can
+do what you like?"
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"You think so," he said, "but you do not know;
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page124">[124]</span>
+
+
+there are so many things; so many things. And they
+want me here too, and there is this place &#8230;"
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+He stopped, then relapsed once more into his deep
+meditation, leaving me wondering what was holding
+back this man who was reputed to do only what he
+chose. Surely there would have been a far better, far
+nobler work for him to do there in that distant North
+which, after all, in spite of the beauties of Groote Schuur,
+was the only place for which he really cared. There he
+could lead that absolutely free and untrammelled life
+which he loved; there his marvellous gifts could expand
+with the freedom necessary for them to shine in their best
+light for the good of others as well as for his own
+advantage. In Rhodesia he was at least free, to a
+certain extent, from the parasites.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+How could one help pitying him and regretting that
+his indomitable will did not extend to the courage of
+breaking from his past associations; that he did not
+carry his determination far enough to make up his mind
+to consecrate what was left of his life to the one task
+for which he was best fitted, that of making Rhodesia
+one of the most glorious possessions of the British
+crown. Rhodes had done so much, achieved so much,
+had conceived such great things&#8212;as, for instance, the
+daring inception of the Cape to Cairo Railway&#8212;that it
+surely could have been possible for him to rise above
+the shackling weaknesses of his environment.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+So many years have passed since the death of Rhodes
+that, now, one can judge him objectively. To me,
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page125">[125]</span>
+
+
+knowing him so well as I did, it seem that as his
+figure recedes into the background of history, it acquires
+more greatness. He was a mystery to so many because
+few had been able to guess what it was that he really
+meant, or believed in, or hoped for. Not a religious
+man by any means, he yet possessed that religion of
+nature which pervades the soul of anyone who has ever
+lived for long face to face with grandeurs and solitudes
+where human passions have no entrance. It is the
+adoration of the Greatness Who created the beauty
+which no touch can defile, no tongue slander, and nobody
+destroy. Under the stars, to which he confided so
+much of the thoughts which he had kept for himself in
+his youth and early manhood, Rhodes became a different
+man. There in the silence of the night or the dawn of
+early morning, when he started for those long rides of
+which he was so fond, he became affectionate, kind,
+thoughtful and tender. There he thought, he dreamt,
+he planned, and the result of these wanderings of his
+mind into regions far beyond those where the people
+around him could stray was that he revealed himself as
+God had made him and such as man hardly ever saw
+him.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Rhodes had always been a great reader; books, indeed,
+had a great influence over his mind, his actions
+and opinions. He used to read slowly, and what he
+had once assimilated he never forgot. Years after he
+would remember a passage treating of some historical
+fact, or of some social interest, and apply it to his own
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page126">[126]</span>
+
+
+work. For instance, the idea of the Glen Grey Act
+was suggested to him by the famous book of Mackenzie
+Wallace dealing with Russia,<sup class="footnoteref"><a href="#chapter9.FNDEF.1" title="&quot;Russia&quot; (Cassell)." id="chapter9.FNREF.1">1</a></sup> in which he described the
+conditions under which Russian peasants then held their
+land. When Rhodes met the author of the aforementioned
+volume at Sandringham, where both were staying
+with the then Prince and Princess of Wales, he told him
+at once, with evident pleasure at being able to do so,
+that it was his book which had suggested that particular
+bit of legislation.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Another occasion I remember when Rhodes spoke
+of the great impression produced upon his opinions by
+a book called "The Martyrdom of Man,"<sup class="footnoteref"><a href="#chapter9.FNDEF.2" title="Published in the U.S.A., 1875." id="chapter9.FNREF.2">2</a></sup> the work of
+Winwood Reade, an author not very well known to the
+general public. The essay was an unusually powerful
+negation of the Divinity. Rhodes had, unfortunately
+for him, chanced across it just after he had left the
+University, and during the first months following upon
+his arrival in South Africa he read it in his moments
+of leisure between looking for diamonds in the sandy
+plains of Kimberley. It completely upset all the traditions
+in which he had been nurtured&#8212;it must be remembered
+that he was the son of a clergyman&#8212;and caused
+a revolt against the teachings of his former masters.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The adventurous young man who had left his
+native country well stocked with principles which he
+was already beginning to find embarrassing, found in
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page127">[127]</span>
+
+
+this volume an excuse for becoming the personage with
+whom the world was to become familiar later on, when
+he appeared on the horizon as an Empire Maker. He
+always kept this momentous book beside him, and used
+to read it when he wanted to strengthen himself in some
+hard resolution or when he was expected to steel his
+mind to the performance of some task against which
+his finest instincts revolted even whilst his sense of
+necessity urged him onward.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Talking with me on the occasion I have referred to
+above, in respect to this volume which had left such
+weeds in his mind, he expressed to me his great enthusiasm
+about the ideas it contained, and spoke with unmeasured
+approval of its strong and powerful arguments
+against the existence of a Deity, and then exclaimed,
+"You can imagine the impression which it produced
+on me when I read it amid all the excitement of life
+at Kimberley not long after leaving Oxford University."
+And he added in a solemn tone, "That book has made
+me what I am."
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+I think, however, that Rhodes exaggerated in attaching
+such influence to Reade's essay. He was very interested
+in the supernatural, a feature which more than
+once I have had occasion to observe in people who
+pretend that they believe in nothing. I suspect that,
+had he been able to air the doubts which must have
+assailed him sometimes when alone in the solitudes of
+Rhodesia, one would have discovered that a great deal of
+carelessness, of which he used to boast in regard to
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page128">[128]</span>
+
+
+morality and to religion, was nothing but affectation.
+He treated God in the same offhand way he handled
+men, when, in order to terrify them, he exposed before
+their horrified eyes abominable theories, to which his
+whole life gave the lie. But in his inmost heart he knew
+very well that God existed. He would have felt quite
+content to render homage to the Almighty if only this
+could have been done incognito. In fact, he was quite
+ready to believe in God, but would have felt extremely
+sorry had anyone suspected that such could be the case.
+The ethical side of Cecil Rhodes' character remained
+all through his life in an unfinished state. It might
+perhaps have been the most beautiful side of his many-sided
+life had he not allowed too much of what was
+material, base and common to rule him. Unwillingly,
+perhaps, but nevertheless certainly, he gave the impression
+that his life was entirely dedicated to ignoble purposes.
+Perhaps the punishment of his existence lay precisely
+in the rapidity with which the words "Rhodesian
+finance" and "Rhodesian politics" came to signify
+corruption and bribery. Even though he may not have
+been actually guilty of either, he most certainly profited
+by both. He instituted in South Africa an utter want
+of respect for one's neighbour's property, which in time
+was a prime cause of the Transvaal War. Hated as he
+was by some, distrusted as he remained by almost everybody,
+yet there was nothing mean about Cecil Rhodes.
+Though one felt inclined to detest him at times, yet one
+could not help liking and even loving him when he
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page129">[129]</span>
+
+
+allowed one to see the real man behind the veil of cynicism
+and irony which he constantly assumed.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+With Rhodes' death the whole system of Rhodesian
+politics perished. It then became relatively easy for Sir
+Alfred Milner to introduce the necessary reforms into
+the government of South Africa. The financial magnates
+who had ruled at Johannesburg and Kimberley
+ceased to interest themselves politically in the management
+of the affairs of the Government. They disappeared
+one after the other, bidding good-bye to a country which
+they had always hated, most of them sinking into an
+obscurity where they enjoy good dinners and forget the
+nightmare of the past.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The Dutch and the English elements have become
+reconciled, and loyalty to England, which seemed at the
+time of the Boer War, and during the years that had
+preceded it, to have been confined to a small number of
+the English, has become the rule. British Imperialism
+is no mere phantom: the Union of South Africa has
+proved it to have a very virile body, and, what is more
+important, a lofty and clear-visioned soul.
+</p>
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote" id="chapter9.FNDEF.1">
+<a href="#chapter9.FNREF.1">[1]</a>&#160;"Russia" (Cassell).
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote" id="chapter9.FNDEF.2">
+<a href="#chapter9.FNREF.2">[2]</a>&#160;Published in the U.S.A., 1875.
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page130">[130]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="num" id="chapter10">CHAPTER X.</h2>
+<h2>
+AN ESTIMATE OF SIR ALFRED MILNER
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+The conditions under which Sir Alfred Milner
+found himself compelled to shape his policy of conciliation
+were beset with obstacles and difficulties. An
+understanding of these is indispensable to the one who
+would read aright the history of that period of Imperial
+evolution.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The question of the refugees who overwhelmed Cape
+Colony with their lamentations, after they had been
+obliged to leave the Transvaal at the beginning of the
+hostilities&#8212;the claims of the Rand multi-millionaires&#8212;the
+indignation of the Dutch Colonists confined in
+concentration camps by order of the military authorities&#8212;the
+Jingoes who thought it would be only right
+to shoot down every Dutch sympathiser in the country:
+these were among the things agitating the South
+African public mind, and setting up conflicting claims
+impossible of adjustment without bitter censure on one
+hand or the other. The wonder is that, amid all these
+antagonistic elements, Sir Alfred Milner contrived to
+fulfil the larger part of the tasks which he had sketched
+out for himself before he left England.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The programme which Sir Alfred planned to carry
+out proved, in the long run, to have been thoroughly
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page131">[131]</span>
+
+
+sound in conception and practice, because it contained
+in embryo all the conditions under which South Africa
+became united. It is remarkable, indeed, that such a
+very short time after a war which seemed altogether to
+have compromised any hope of coalescing, the Union of
+South Africa should have become an accomplished fact.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Yet, strange as it may appear, it is certain that up
+to his retirement from office Sir Alfred Milner was very
+little known in South Africa. He had been so well
+compelled by force of circumstances to lead an isolated
+life that very few had opportunity to study his character
+or gain insight into his personality. In Cape Town he
+was judged by his policy. People forgot that all the
+time he was at Government House, Cape Town, he was
+a man as well as a politician: a man whose efforts and
+work in behalf of his country deserved some kind of
+consideration even from his enemies. It is useless to
+discuss whether Sir Alfred did or did not make mistakes
+before the beginning of the war. Why waste words over
+events which cannot be helped, and about which there
+will always be two opinions? Personally, I think that
+his errors were essentially of the kind which could not
+have been avoided, and that none of them ever compromised
+ultimately the great work which he was to bring
+to a triumphant close.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+What I do think it is of value to point out is the
+calmness which he contrived always to preserve under
+circumstances which must have been particularly trying
+for him. Another outstanding characteristic was the
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page132">[132]</span>
+
+
+quiet dignity with which he withstood unjustifiable attacks
+when dealing with not-to-be-foreseen difficulties which
+arose while carrying on his gigantic task. Very few
+would have had the courage to remain silent and undaunted
+whilst condemned or judged for things he had
+been unable to alter or to banish. And yet this was
+precisely the attitude to which Sir Alfred Milner faithfully
+adhered. It stands out among the many proofs
+which the present Viscount Milner has given of his strong
+character as one of its most characteristic features, for it
+affords a brilliant illustration of what will, mastered by
+reason, can do.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div style="text-align:center"><table class="figure" summary="VISCOUNT MILNER" id="FIG.5"><tr><td><a href="images/image05.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="images/image05-th.jpg" title="VISCOUNT MILNER" alt="VISCOUNT MILNER" width="350" height="519" /></a></td></tr><tr><td class="figure-attribution"><p>Photo: Russell</p></td></tr><tr><td class="figure-caption"><p>VISCOUNT MILNER</p></td></tr></table></div>
+
+<p>
+Since those perilous days I have heard many differing
+criticisms of Lord Milner's administration as High Commissioner
+in South Africa. What those who express
+opinions without understanding that which lies under the
+surface of history fail to take into account is the peculiar,
+almost invidious position and the loneliness in which Sir
+Alfred had to stand from the very first day that he
+landed in Table Bay. He could not make friends, dared
+not ask anyone's advice, was forced always to rely entirely
+upon his own judgment. He would not have been human
+had he not sometimes felt misgivings as to the wisdom
+of what he was doing. He never had the help of a
+Ministry upon whom he could rely or with whom he
+could sympathise. The Cabinet presided over by Sir
+Gordon Sprigg was composed of very well-intentioned
+men. But, with perhaps one single exception, it did not
+possess any strongly individualistic personage capable of
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page133">[133]</span>
+
+
+assisting Sir Alfred in framing a policy acceptable to all
+shades of public opinion in the Colony, or even to discuss
+with him whether such a policy could have been invented.
+As for the administration of which Mr. Schreiner was
+the head, it was distinctly hostile to the policy inaugurated
+by Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, which Sir Alfred
+represented. Its members, indeed, put every obstacle in
+the Governor's way, and this fact becoming known
+encouraged a certain spirit of rebellion among the Dutch
+section of the population. Neither one Ministry nor the
+other was able to be of any serious use to Milner, who,
+thus hampered, could neither frame a programme which
+accorded with his own judgment nor show himself in his
+true light.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+All these circumstances were never taken into consideration
+by friends or foes, and, in consequence, he
+was made responsible for blunders which he could not help
+and for mistakes which he was probably the first to deplore.
+The world forgot that Sir Alfred never really
+had a free hand, was always thwarted, either openly or
+in secret, by some kind of authority, be it civil or
+military, which was in conflict with his own.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It was next to an impossibility to judge a man fairly
+under such conditions. All that one could say was that
+he deserved a good deal of praise for having, so successfully
+as he did, steered through the manifold difficulties
+and delicate susceptibilities with which he had to contend
+in unravelling a great tangle in the history of the
+British Empire.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page134">[134]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+The Afrikander Bond hated him, that was a recognised
+fact, but this hatred did Sir Alfred more good
+than anything else. The attacks directed against him
+were so mean that they only won him friends among
+the very people to whom his policy had not been acceptable.
+The abuse showered by certain newspapers upon
+the High Commissioner not only strengthened his hands
+and his authority, but transformed what ought to have
+remained a personal question into one in which the
+dignity as well as the prestige of the Empire was involved.
+To have recalled him after he had been subjected
+to such treatment would have been equivalent
+to a confession that the State was in the wrong. I
+have never been able to understand how men of such
+undoubted perception as Mr. Sauer or Mr. Merriman,
+or other leaders of the Bond, did not grasp this fact. Sir
+Alfred himself put the aspect very cleverly before the
+public in an able and dignified speech which he made
+at the lunch offered to Lord Roberts by the Mayor and
+Corporation of Cape Town when he said, "To vilify her
+representative is a strange way to show one's loyalty to
+the Queen."
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+A feature in Sir Alfred Milner's character, which was
+little known outside the extremely small circle of his
+personal friends, was that when he was in the wrong he
+never hesitated to acknowledge the fact with straightforward
+frankness. His judgments were sometimes hasty,
+but he was always willing to amend an opinion on just
+grounds. There was a good deal of dogged firmness in
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page135">[135]</span>
+
+
+his character, but not a shred of stubbornness or obstinacy.
+He never yielded one inch of his ground when he believed
+himself to be in the right, but he was always
+amenable to reason, and he never refused to allow himself
+to be convinced, even though it may be that his
+natural sympathies were not on the side of those with
+whom he had got to deal. Very few statesmen could
+boast of such qualities, and they surely ought to weigh
+considerably in the balance of any judgment passed upon
+Viscount Milner.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The welfare of South Africa and the reputation of
+Sir Alfred would have been substantially enhanced had
+he been able to assert his own authority according to
+his own judgment, without overrulings from Whitehall,
+and with absolute freedom as to choice of colleagues.
+His position was most difficult, and though he showed
+no outward sign of this fact, it is impossible to believe
+that he did not feel its crushing weight. Between the
+Bond, Mr. Hofmeyr, the race hatred which the Dutch
+accused him of fomenting, the question of the refugees,
+the clamours of the Jingo Colonials, and the extreme
+seriousness of the military situation at one time, it was
+perfectly marvellous that he did not break down. Instead,
+as very few men could have done, he kept a clear-headed
+shrewdness, owing to which the Empire most
+certainly contracted an immense debt of gratitude toward
+him for not having allowed himself to yield to the temptation
+of retaliating upon those who had made his task
+such a particularly hard one. His forbearance ought
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page136">[136]</span>
+
+
+never to be lost sight of in judging the circumstances
+which brought about and attended the South African
+War. Whilst the war was going on it was not realised
+that Sir Alfred Milner was the only man who&#8212;when
+the time arrived&#8212;could allay the passions arising from
+the conflict. But, without vanity, he knew, and could
+well afford to wait for his reward until history rather
+than men had judged him.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In the meanwhile Sir Alfred had to struggle against
+a sea of obstacles in which he was probably the only
+man clever enough not to drown himself&#8212;a danger which
+overtook others who had tried to plunge into the complicated
+politics of South Africa. A succession of administrators
+at Government House in Cape Town ended
+their political career there, and left, broken in spirit,
+damaged in reputation.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+As for the local politicians, they were mostly honest
+mediocrities or adventurous spirits, who used their influence
+for their personal advantage. An exception was
+Mr. Hofmeyr. But he was far too absorbed in securing
+the recognition of Dutch supremacy at the Cape to be
+able to work on the milder plane necessary to bring
+about the one great result. The popularity of Mr. Hofmeyr
+was immense and his influence indisputable; but
+it was not a broad influence. He shuddered at the mere
+possibility of the Transvaal falling into the hands of the
+British.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Whilst touching upon the subject of the Transvaal,
+I may say a word concerning the strangely mixed population,
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page137">[137]</span>
+
+
+for the sake of whom, officially, Britain went to
+war. The war was entirely the work of the Uitlanders,
+as they called themselves with a certain pride, but very
+few of whom possessed a drop of English blood. The
+British public at home was told that it was necessary to
+fight President Kruger because Englishmen in the Transvaal
+were being ill-treated and denied their legitimate
+rights. In reality, this was one of those conventional
+reasons, lacking common sense and veracity, upon which
+nations are so often fed. If we enter closely into the
+details of existence in the Transvaal, and examine who
+were those who shouted so loudly for the franchise, we
+find that the majority were either foreigners or Jews
+hailing from Frankfurt or Hamburg. Many of them
+had, to be sure, become naturalised British subjects, but
+I doubt very much whether, among all the magnates of
+Johannesburg or of Kimberley, more than one or two
+pure-blooded Englishmen could be found. Rhodes, of
+course, was an exception, but one which confirmed the
+rule. Those others whose names can still be conjured
+with in South Africa were Jews, mostly of Teutonic
+descent, who pretended that they were Englishmen or
+Colonials; nothing certain was known about their origin
+beyond the fact that such or such small shops in Grahamstown,
+Durban or Cape Town had witnessed their childish
+romps. The Beits, the Neumanns and the Wernhers
+were German Jews; Barney Barnato was supposed to
+have been born under the shade of a Portuguese synagogue,
+and considered the fact as being just as glorious
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page138">[138]</span>
+
+
+a one as would have been that of having in his veins
+"all the blood of all the Howards." The Joels were
+Hebrews; the Rudds supposed to belong to the same
+race through some remote ancestor; the Mosenthals,
+Abrahams, Phillipps, and other notabilities of the Rand
+and Kimberley, were Jews, and one among the so-called
+Reformers, associated with the Jameson Raid, was an
+American engineer, John Hays Hammond.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The war, which was supposed to win the franchise
+for Englishmen in the Transvaal, was in reality fought
+for the advantage of foreigners. Most people honestly
+believed that President Kruger was aiming at destroying
+English prestige throughout the vast dark continent,
+and would have been horrified had they known
+what was going on in that distant land. Fortunes were
+made on the Rand in a few days, but very few Englishmen
+were among the number of those who contrived to
+acquire millions. Englishmen, indeed, were not congenial
+to the Transvaal, whilst foreigners, claiming to
+be Englishmen because they murdered the English
+language, abounded and prospered, and in time came
+sincerely to believe that they were British subjects, owing
+to the fact that they continually kept repeating that
+Britain ought to possess the Rand.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+When Britain came really to rule the Rand the
+adventurers found it did not in the least secure the
+advantages which they had imagined would derive
+from a war they fostered. This question of the
+Uitlanders was as embarrassing for the English Government
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page139">[139]</span>
+
+
+ as it had been for that of the Transvaal. These
+adventurers, who composed the mass of the motley population
+which flourished on the Rand, would prove a
+source of annoyance to any State in the world. On the
+other hand, the importance acquired by the so-called
+financial magnates was daily becoming a public danger,
+inasmuch as it tended to substitute the reign of a particular
+class of individuals for the ruling of those responsible
+for the welfare of the country. These persons
+individually believed that they each understood better
+than the Government the conditions prevailing in South
+Africa, and perpetually accused Downing Street of not
+realising and never protecting British interests there.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Amidst their recriminations and the publicity they
+could command from the Press, it is no wonder that Sir
+Alfred Milner felt bewildered. It is to his everlasting
+honour that he did not allow himself to be overpowered.
+He was polite to everybody; listened carefully to all the
+many wonderful tales that were being related to him,
+and, without compromising himself, proceeded to a work
+of quiet mental elimination that very soon made him
+thoroughly grasp the intricacies of any situation. He
+quickly came to the conclusion that President Kruger
+was not the principal obstacle to a peaceful development
+of British Imperialism in South Africa. If ever a conflict
+was foisted on two countries for mercenary motives
+it was the Transvaal War, and a shrewd and impartial
+mind like Milner's did not take long to discover that such
+was the case.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page140">[140]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+He was not, however, a man capable of lending himself
+meekly to schemes of greed, however wilily they
+were cloaked. His was not the kind of nature that for
+the sake of peace submits to things of which it does not
+approve. This man, who was represented as an
+oppressor of the Dutch, was in reality their best friend,
+and perhaps the one who believed the most in their
+eventual loyalty to the English Crown. It is a thousand
+pities that when the famous Bloemfontein Conference
+took place Sir Alfred Milner, as he still was at that
+time, had not yet acquired the experience which later
+became his concerning the true state of things in the
+Transvaal. Had he at that time possessed the knowledge
+which he was later to gain, when the beginning
+of hostilities obliged so many of the ruling spirits of
+Johannesburg to migrate to the Cape, it is likely that
+he would have acted differently. It was not easy for
+the High Commissioner to shake off the influence of all
+that he heard, whether told with a good or bad intention,
+and it was still harder for him in those first days
+of his office to discern who was right or who was wrong
+among those who crowded their advice upon him&#8212;and
+never forgave him when he did not follow their ill-balanced
+counsels.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Concerning the outstanding personality of Cecil
+Rhodes, the position of Sir Alfred Milner was even more
+difficult and entangled than in regard to anyone else. It
+is useless to deny that he had arrived at Cape Town with
+considerable prejudice against Rhodes. He could not
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page141">[141]</span>
+
+
+but look interrogatively upon the political career of a
+man who at the very time he occupied the position of
+Prime Minister had lent himself to a conspiracy against
+the independence of another land. Moreover, Rhodes
+was supposed, perhaps not without reason, to be continually
+intriguing to return to power, and to be chafing
+in secret at the political inaction which had been imposed
+upon him, and for which he was himself responsible
+more than anyone else. The fact that after the
+Raid Rhodes had been abandoned by his former friends
+harmed him considerably as a political man by destroying
+his renown as a statesman to whom the destinies of
+an Empire might be entrusted with safety. One can
+truly say, when writing the story of those years, that it
+resolved <i>itself</i>, into the vain struggle of Rhodes to
+recover his lost prestige. Sir Alfred was continually
+being made responsible for things of which he had not
+only been innocent, but of which, also, he had disapproved
+most emphatically. To mention only one&#8212;the
+famous concentration camps. A great deal of fuss
+was made about them at the time, and it was generally
+believed that they had been instituted at the instigation
+of the High Commissioner. When consulted on the
+subject Sir Alfred Milner had, on the contrary, not at
+all shared the opinion of those who had believed that
+they were a necessity, although ultimately, for lack of
+earlier steps, they became so.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The Colony at that time found its effective government
+vested in the hands of the military authorities, who
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page142">[142]</span>
+
+
+not infrequently acted upon opinions which were not
+based upon experience or upon any local conditions.
+They believed, too, implicitly what they were told, and
+when they heard people protest, with tears in their
+eyes, their devotion to the British Crown, and lament
+over the leniency with which the Governor of Cape
+Colony looked upon rebellion, they could not possibly
+think that they were listening to a tissue of lies, told
+for a purpose, nor guess that they were being made use
+of. Under such conditions the only wonder is the few
+mistakes which were made. To come back to the
+Boers' concentration camps, Sir Alfred Milner was not
+a sanguinary man by any means, and his character was
+far too firm to use violence as a means of government.
+It is probable that, left alone, he would have found
+some other means to secure strict obedience from the
+refugees to orders which most never thought of resisting.
+Unfortunately for everybody concerned, he could
+do nothing beyond expressing his opinion, and the
+circumstance that, out of a feeling of duty, he made
+no protestations against things of which he could not
+approve was exploited against him, both by the Jingo
+English party and by the Dutch, all over South Africa.
+At Groote Schuur especially, no secret was made by
+the friends of Rhodes of their disgust at the state
+of things prevailing in concentration camps, and
+it was adroitly brought to the knowledge of all the
+partisans of the Boers that, had Rhodes been master of
+the situation, such an outrage on individual liberty
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page143">[143]</span>
+
+
+would never have taken place. Sir Alfred Milner was
+subjected to unfair, ill-natured criticisms which were as
+cunning as they were bitter. The concentration camps
+afford only one instance of the secret antagonisms and
+injustices which Sir Alfred Milner had to bear and
+combat. No wonder thoughts of his days in South
+Africa are still, to him, a bitter memory!
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page144">[144]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="num" id="chapter11">CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+<h2>
+CROSS CURRENTS
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+The intrigues which made Groote Schuur such a
+disagreeable place were always a source of intense
+wonder to me. I could never understand their necessity.
+Neither could I appreciate the kind of hypocrisy which
+induced Rhodes continually to affirm that he did not
+care to return to power, whilst in reality he longed to
+hold the reins again. It would have been fatally easy
+for Rhodes, even after the hideous mistake of the Raid,
+to regain his political popularity; a little sincerity and
+a little truth were all that was needed. Unfortunately,
+both these qualities were wanting in what was otherwise
+a really gifted nature. Rhodes, it seemed by his
+ways, could not be sincere, and though he seldom lied
+in the material sense of the word, yet he allowed others
+to think and act for him, even when he knew them to
+be doing so in absolute contradiction to what he ought
+to have done himself. He appeared to have insufficient
+energy to enforce his will on those whom he despised,
+yet allowed to dictate to him even in matters which he
+ought to have kept absolutely under his own control.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+I shall always maintain that Rhodes, without his so-called
+friends, would most certainly have been one of
+the greatest figures of his time and generation. He had
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page145">[145]</span>
+
+
+a big soul, vast conceptions, and when he was not influenced
+by outward material details&#8212;upon which,
+unfortunately for himself as well as for his reputation
+in history, he allowed his mind to dwell too often&#8212;his
+thoughts were always directed toward some higher subject
+which absorbed his attention, inspired him, and
+moved him sometimes to actions that drew very near to
+the heroic. He might have gone to his grave not only
+with an unsullied, but also with a great reputation
+based on grounds that were noble and splendid had he
+shaken off the companions of former times. Unhappily,
+an atmosphere of flattery and adulation had become
+absolutely necessary to him, and he became so used
+to it that he did not perceive that his sycophants
+never left him alone for a moment. They watched over
+him like a policeman who took good care no foreign
+influence should venture to approach.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The end of all this was that Rhodes resented the
+truth when it was told him, and detested any who showed
+independence of judgment or appreciation in matters
+concerning his affairs and projects. A man supposed
+to have an iron will, yet he was weak almost to childishness
+in regard to these flattering satellites. It amused
+him to have always at his beck and call people willing
+and ready to submit to his insults, to bear with his fits
+of bad temper, and to accept every humiliation which
+he chose to offer.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Cecil Rhodes never saw, or affected never to see, the
+disastrous influence all this had on his life.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page146">[146]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+I remember asking him how it came that he seldom
+showed the desire to go away somewhere quite alone,
+if even for a day or two, so as to remain really t&#234;te-&#224;-t&#234;te
+with his own reflections. His reply was most characteristic:
+"What should I do with myself? One must
+have people about to play cards in the evening." I
+might have added "and to flatter one," but refrained.
+This craving continually to have someone at hand to
+bully, scold, or to make use of, was certainly one of
+the failings of Rhodes' powerful mind. It also indicated
+in a way that thirst for power which never left him
+until the last moment of his life. He had within him
+the weakness of those dethroned kings who, in exile,
+still like to have a Court about them and to travel in
+state. Rhodes had a court, and also travelled with a
+suite who, under the pretence of being useful to him,
+effectually barred access to any stranger. But for his
+entourage it is likely that Rhodes might have outlived
+the odium of the Raid. But, as Mrs. van Koopman
+said to me, "What is the use of trying to help Rhodes
+when one is sure that he will never be allowed to perform
+all that he might promise?"
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The winter which followed upon the relief of Kimberley
+Rhodes spent almost entirely at Groote Schuur,
+going to Rhodesia only in spring. During these months
+negotiations between him and certain leaders of the
+Bond party went on almost uninterruptedly. These
+were either conducted openly by people like Mr. David
+de Waal, or else through other channels when not
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page147">[147]</span>
+
+
+entrusted to persons whom it would be relatively easy
+later on to disavow. Once or twice these negotiations
+seemed to take a favourable turn at several points, but
+always at the last minute Rhodes withdrew under some
+pretext or other. What he would have liked would have
+been to have, as it were, the Dutch party, the Bond,
+the English Colonists, the South African League, President
+Kruger, and the High Commissioner, all rolled into
+one, fall at his feet and implore him to save South
+Africa. When he perceived that all these believed that
+there existed a possibility for matters to be settled without
+his intervention, he hated every man of them with
+a hatred such as only very absolute natures can feel.
+To hear him express his disgust with the military
+authorities, abuse in turns Lord Roberts, whom he used
+to call an old man in his dotage, Lord Kitchener, who
+was a particular antipathy, the High Commissioner,
+the Government at home, and the Bond, was an education
+in itself. He never hesitated before making use
+of an expression of a coarseness such as does not bear
+repeating, and in his private conversations he hurled
+insults at the heads of all. It is therefore no wonder
+that the freedom of speech which Rhodes exercised at
+Groote Schuur added to the difficulties of a situation
+the brunt of which not he, but Sir Alfred Milner, had
+to bear.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+More than once the High Commissioner caused a
+hint to be conveyed to Cecil Rhodes that he had better
+betake himself to Rhodesia, and remain there until there
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page148">[148]</span>
+
+
+was a clearer sky in Cape Colony. These hints were
+always given in the most delicate manner, but Rhodes
+chose to consider them in the light of a personal affront,
+and poured down torrents of invective upon the British
+Government for what he termed their ingratitude. The
+truth of the matter was that he could not bring himself
+to understand that he was not the person alone
+capable of bringing about a permanent settlement of
+South Africa. The energy of his young days had left
+him, and perhaps the chronic disease from which he was
+suffering added to his constant state of irritation and
+obscured the clearness of his judgment in these post-raid
+days.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div style="text-align:center"><table class="figure" summary="THE RT. HON. SIR LEANDER STARR JAMESON" id="FIG.6"><tr><td><a href="images/image06.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="images/image06-th.jpg" title="THE RT. HON. SIR LEANDER STARR JAMESON" alt="THE RT. HON. SIR LEANDER STARR JAMESON" width="350" height="519" /></a></td></tr><tr><td class="figure-attribution"><p>Photo: Ball</p></td></tr><tr><td class="figure-caption"><p>THE RT. HON. SIR LEANDER STARR JAMESON</p></td></tr></table></div>
+
+<p>
+I hope that my readers will not imagine from my
+reference that I have a grudge of any kind against
+Doctor Jameson.<sup class="footnoteref"><a href="#chapter11.FNDEF.1" title="Dr. Jameson died November 26th, 1917." id="chapter11.FNREF.1">1</a></sup> On the contrary, truth compels me
+to say that I have seldom met a more delightful creature
+than this old friend and companion of Cecil Rhodes,
+and I do believe he held a sincere affection for his chief.
+But Jameson, as well as Rhodes, was under the influence
+of certain facts and of certain circumstances, and
+I do not think that he was, at that particular moment
+about which I am writing, the best adviser that Rhodes
+might have had. In one thing Doctor Jim was above
+suspicion: he had never dirtied his hands with any of
+the financial speculations which those about Rhodes
+indulged in, to the latter's detriment much more than
+his own, considering the fact that it was he who was
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page149">[149]</span>
+
+
+considered as the father of their various "smart"
+schemes. Jameson always kept aloof from every kind
+of shady transaction in so far as money matters were
+concerned, and perhaps this was the reason why so
+many people detested him and kept advising Rhodes
+to brush him aside, or, at all events, not to keep him
+near him whilst the war was going on. His name was
+to the Dutch as a red rag to a very fierce and more than
+furious bull, while the Bond, as well as the burghers of
+the Transvaal, would rather have had dealings with the
+Evil One himself than with Doctor Jim. Their prejudices
+against him were not to be shaken. In reality
+others about Rhodes were far more dangerous than
+Jameson could ever have proved on the question of a
+South African settlement in which the rights of the
+Dutch elements in the Cape and Orange Free State
+would be respected and considered.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Whatever might have been his faults, Doctor Jameson
+was neither a rogue nor a fool. For Rhodes he
+had a sincere affection that made him keenly alive to
+the dangers that might threaten the latter, and anxious
+to avert them. But during those eventful months of
+the war the influence of the Doctor also had been
+weakened by the peculiar circumstances which had
+arisen in consequence of the length of the Boer resistance.
+Before the war broke out it had been generally
+supposed that three months would see the end of the
+Transvaal Republic, and Rhodes himself, more often
+than I care to remember, had prophesied that a few
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page150">[150]</span>
+
+
+weeks would be the utmost that the struggle could last.
+That this did not turn out to be the case had been a
+surprise to the world at large and an intense disappointment
+to Cecil Rhodes. He had all along nourished a
+bitter animosity against Kruger, and in regard to him,
+as well as Messrs. Schreiner, Merriman, Hofmeyr,
+Sauer and other one-time colleagues, he carried his
+vindictiveness to an extent so terrible that more than
+once it led him into some of the most regrettable
+actions in his life.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Cecil Rhodes possessed a curious shyness which gave
+to his character an appearance the more misleading in
+that it hid in reality a will of iron and a ruthlessness
+comparable to a <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Condottiere</i> of the Middle Ages. The
+fact was that his soul was thirsting for power, and he
+was inordinately jealous of successes which anyone but
+himself had or could achieve in South Africa. I am
+persuaded that one of the reasons why he always tried
+by inference to disparage Sir Alfred Milner was his
+annoyance at the latter's calm way of going on with the
+task which he had mapped out for himself without allowing
+his mind to be troubled by the outcries of a mob
+whom he despised from the height of his great integrity,
+unsullied honour, and consciousness of having his duty
+to perform. Neither could Rhodes ever see in political
+matters the necessities of the moment often made it the
+duty of a statesman to hurl certain facts into oblivion
+and to reconcile himself to new circumstances.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+That he did disparage Sir Alfred Milner is unfortunately
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page151">[151]</span>
+
+
+ certain. I sincerely believe that the war would
+never have dragged on so long had not Rhodes contrived
+to convey to the principal Boer leaders the impression
+that while Sir Alfred Milner remained in South Africa
+no settlement would be arrived at with the British
+Government, because the High Commissioner would
+always oppose any concessions that might bring it
+to a successful and prompt issue. Of course Cecil
+Rhodes never said this in so many words, but he allowed
+people to guess that such was his conviction, and it was
+only after Sir Alfred had I left the Cape for Pretoria that,
+by a closer contact with the Boers themselves, some of
+the latter's prejudices against him vanished.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+At last did the sturdy Dutch farmers realise that if
+there was one man devoid of animosity against them,
+and desirous of seeing the end of a struggle which was
+ruining a continent, it was Sir Alfred Milner. They
+also discovered another thing concerning his political
+views and opinions&#8212;that he desired just as much as
+they did to destroy the power and influence of those
+multi-millionaires who had so foolishly believed that
+after the war's end they would have at their disposal
+the riches which the Transvaal contained, so that, rather
+than becoming a part of the British Empire, it would
+in reality be an annexe of the London and Paris Stock
+Exchanges.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+As events turned out, by a just retribution of Providence,
+the magnates who had let greedy ambition master
+them lost most of the advantages which they had been
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page152">[152]</span>
+
+
+able to snatch from President Kruger. Whether this
+would have happened had Rhodes not died before the
+conclusion of peace remains an open question. It is
+certain he would have objected to a limitation of the
+political power of the concerns in which he had got
+such tremendous interests; it is equally sure that it would
+have been for him a cruel disappointment had his name
+not figured as the outstanding signature on the treaty
+of peace. There were in this strange man moments
+when his patriotism assumed an entirely personal shape,
+but, improbable as it may appear to the reader, there
+was sincerity in the conviction which he had that the
+only man who understood what South Africa required
+was himself, and that in all that he had done he had
+been working for the benefit of the Empire. There was
+in him something akin to the feeling which had inspired
+the old Roman saying, "<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Civis Romanum sum.</i>" He
+understood far better than any of the individuals by
+whom he was surrounded the true meaning of the word
+Imperialism. Unfortunately, he was apt to apply it in
+the personal sense, until, indeed, it got quite confused
+in his mind with a selfish feeling which prompted him
+to put his huge personality before everything else. If
+one may do so, a reading of his mind would show that
+in his secret heart he felt he had not annexed Rhodesia
+to the Empire nor amalgamated the Kimberley mines
+and organised De Beers for the benefit of his native
+Britain, but in order to make himself the most powerful
+man in South Africa, and yet at the same time shrewdly
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page153">[153]</span>
+
+
+realised that he could not be the king he wished to
+become unless England stood behind him to cover with
+her flag his heroic actions as well as his misdeeds.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+That Rhodes' death occurred at an opportune moment
+cannot be denied. It is a sad thing to say, but for
+South Africa true enough. It removed from the path
+of Sir Alfred Milner the principal obstacle that had stood
+in his way ever since his arrival at Cape Town. The
+Rhodesian party, deprived of its chief, was entirely
+harmless. Rhodesian politics, too, lost their strength
+when he was no longer there to impose them upon South
+Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+One of the great secrets of the enormous influence
+which the Colossus had acquired lay in the fact that he
+had never spared his money when it was a question of
+thrusting his will in directions favourable to his interest.
+None of those who aspired to take his place could follow
+him on that road, because none were so superbly indifferent
+to wealth. Cecil Rhodes did not care for riches
+for the personal enjoyments they can purchase. He
+was frugal in his tastes, simple in his manners and belongings,
+and absolutely careless as to the comforts of
+life. The waste in his household was something fabulous,
+but it is a question whether he ever participated in
+luxuries showered upon others. His one hobby had
+been the embellishment of Groote Schuur, which he had
+really transformed into something absolutely fairylike
+as regards its exterior beauties and the loveliness of its
+grounds and gardens. Inside, too, the house, furnished
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page154">[154]</span>
+
+
+after the old Dutch style, struck one by its handsomeness,
+though it was neither homelike nor comfortable.
+In its decoration he had followed the plans of a clever
+architect, to whose artistic education he had generously
+contributed by giving to him facilities to travel in Europe,
+but he had not lent anything of his own personality to
+the interior arrangements of his home, which had always
+kept the look of a show place, neither cared for nor
+properly looked after.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Rhodes himself felt happier and more at his ease
+when rambling in his splendid park and gazing on Table
+Mountain from his stoep than amidst the luxury of his
+richly furnished rooms. Sometimes he would sit for hours
+looking at the landscape before him, lost in a meditation
+which but few cared to disturb, and after which he invariably
+showed himself at his best and in a softer mood
+than he had been before. Unfortunately, these moments
+never lasted long, and he used to revenge himself on
+those who had surprised him in such reveries by indulging
+in the most caustic and cruel remarks which he could
+devise in order to goad them out of all patience. A
+strange man with strange instincts; and it is no wonder
+that, once, a person who knew him well, and who had
+known him in the days of his youth when he had not
+yet developed his strength of character, had said of him
+that "One could not help liking him and one could not
+avoid hating him; and sometimes one hated him when
+one liked him most."
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Sir Alfred Milner had neither liked nor hated him,
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page155">[155]</span>
+
+
+perhaps because his mind was too well balanced to allow
+him to view him otherwise than with impartiality and
+with a keen appreciation of his great qualities. He
+would have liked to work with Rhodes, and would gladly
+have availed himself of his experience of South Africa
+and of South African politicians. But Sir Alfred refused
+to be drawn into any compromises with his own conscience
+or to offend his own sense of right and wrong.
+He was always sincere, though he was never given credit
+for being so in South Africa. Sir Alfred Milner could
+not understand why Rhodes, instead of resolutely asserting
+that he wanted to enter into negotiations with the
+Bond in order to win its co-operation in the great work
+of organising the new existence of South Africa on a
+sound and solid basis, preferred to cause promises to be
+made to the Bond which he would never consent to
+acknowledge.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+These tortuous roads, which were so beloved by
+Rhodes, were absolutely abhorrent to the High Commissioner.
+When Rhodes started the agitation for the
+suspension of the Constitution, which occupied his
+thoughts during the last months of his life&#8212;an agitation
+which he had inaugurated out of spite against Mr. Sauer
+and Mr. Hofmeyr, who had refused to dance to Rhodes'
+tune&#8212;Sir Alfred Milner had at once seen through the
+underlying motives of the moment, and what he discerned
+had not increased his admiration for Rhodes. Sir
+Alfred had not opposed the plans, but he had never been
+sanguine as to their chance of success, and they were
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page156">[156]</span>
+
+
+not in accordance with his own convictions. Had he
+thought they had the least chance of being adopted, most
+certainly he would have opposed them with just as much
+energy as Sir Gordon Sprigg had done. He saw quite
+well that it would not have been opportune or politic
+to put himself into open opposition to Rhodes. Sir
+Alfred therefore did not contradict the rumours which
+attributed to him the desire to reduce the Cape to the
+condition of a Crown Colony, but bent his energy to the
+far more serious task of negotiating a permanent peace
+with the leading men in the Transvaal, a peace for which
+he did not want the protection of Rhodes, and to which
+an association with Rhodes might have proved inimical
+to the end in view&#8212;the ideal of a South African Federation
+which Rhodes had been the first to visualise, but
+which Providence did not permit him to see accomplished.
+</p>
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote" id="chapter11.FNDEF.1">
+<a href="#chapter11.FNREF.1">[1]</a>&#160;Dr. Jameson died November 26th, 1917.
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page157">[157]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="num" id="chapter12">CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+<h2>
+THE CONCENTRATION CAMPS
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+It is impossible to speak or write about the South
+African War without mentioning the Concentration
+Camps. A great deal of fuss was made about them, not
+only abroad, where all the enemies of England took a
+particular and most vicious pleasure in magnifying the
+so-called cruelties which were supposed to take place,
+but also in the English Press, where long and heartrending
+accounts appeared concerning the iniquities and
+injustices practised by the military authorities on the
+unfortunate Boer families assembled in the Camps.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In recurring to this long-forgotten theme, I must
+first of all say that I do not hold a brief for the English
+Government or for the administration which had
+charge of British interests in South Africa. But pure
+and simple justice compels me to protest, first against
+the use which was made for party purposes of certain
+regrettable incidents, and, more strongly still, against
+the totally malicious and ruthless way in which the incidents
+were interpreted.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It is necessary before passing a judgment on the
+Concentration Camps to explain how it came about that
+these were organised. At the time of which I am writing
+people imagined that by Lord Kitchener's orders Boer
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page158">[158]</span>
+
+
+women, children and old people were forcibly taken
+away from their homes and confined, without any reason
+for such an arbitrary proceeding, in unhealthy places
+where they were subjected to an existence of privation
+as well as of humiliation and suffering. Nothing of the
+kind had taken place.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The idea of the Camps originated at first from the
+Boers themselves in an indirect way. When the English
+troops marched into the Orange Free State and the
+Transvaal, most of the farmers who composed the bulk
+of the population of the two Republics having taken to
+arms, there was no one left in the homes they had abandoned
+save women, children and old men no longer able
+to fight. These fled hurriedly as soon as English detachments
+and patrols were in sight, but most of the time
+they did not know where they could fly to, and generally
+assembled in camps somewhere on the veldt, where they
+hoped that the British troops would not discover them.
+There, however, they soon found their position intolerable
+owing to the want of food and to the lack of
+hygienic precautions.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The British authorities became aware of this state
+of things and could not but try to remedy it. Unfortunately,
+this was easier said than done. To come to
+the help of several thousands of people in a country
+where absolutely no resources were to be found was a
+quite stupendous task, of a nature which might well
+have caused the gravest anxieties to the men responsible
+for the solution. It was then that the decision was
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page159">[159]</span>
+
+
+reached to organise upon a reasonable scale camps after
+the style of those which already had been inaugurated
+by the Boers themselves.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The idea, which was not a bad one, was carried out
+in an unfortunate manner, which gave to the world at
+large the idea that the burgher families who were confined
+in these camps were simply put into a prison
+which they had done nothing to deserve. The Bond
+Press, always on the alert to reproach England, seized
+hold of the establishment of the Camps to transform
+into martyrs the persons who had been transferred to
+them, and soon a wave of indignation swept over not
+only South Africa, but also over Britain. This necessary
+act of human civilisation was twisted to appear as
+an abuse of power on the part of Lord Roberts and
+especially of Lord Kitchener, who, in this affair, became
+the scapegoat for many sins he had never committed.
+The question of the Concentration Camps
+was made the subject of interpellations in the House
+of Commons, and indignation meetings were held in
+many parts of England. The Nonconformist Conscience
+was deeply stirred at what was thought to be conduct
+which not even the necessities of war could excuse. Torrents
+of ink were spilt to prove that at the end of the
+nineteenth century measures and methods worthy of the
+Inquisition were resorted to by British Government
+officials, who&#8212;so the ready writers and ready-tongued
+averred&#8212;with a barbarity such as the Middle Ages had
+not witnessed, wanted to be revenged on innocent women
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page160">[160]</span>
+
+
+and children for the resistance their husbands and fathers
+were making against an aggression which in itself nothing
+could justify.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+So far as the Boers themselves were concerned, I
+think that a good many among them viewed the subject
+with far more equanimity than the English public. For
+one thing, the fact of their women and children being
+put in places where at least they would not die of
+hunger must have come to them rather in the light of a
+relief than anything else. Then, too, one must
+not lose sight of the conditions under which the Boer
+burghers and farmers used to exist in normal times.
+Cleanliness did not rank among their virtues; and, as a
+rule, hygiene was an unknown science. They were
+mostly dirty and neglected in their personal appearance,
+and their houses were certainly neither built nor kept
+in accordance with those laws of sanitation which in the
+civilised world have become a matter of course. Water
+was scarce, and the long and torrid summers, during
+which every bit of vegetation was dried up on the veldt,
+had inured the population to certain privations which
+would have been intolerable to Europeans. These things,
+and the unfortunate habits of the Boers, made it extremely
+difficult, if not impossible, to realise in the
+Camps any approach to the degree of cleanliness which
+was desirable.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+To say that the people in the Concentration Camps
+were happy would be a gross exaggeration, but to say
+that they were martyrs would convey an equally false
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page161">[161]</span>
+
+
+idea. When judging of facts one ought always to remember
+the local conditions under which these facts
+have developed. A Russian moujik sent to Siberia does
+not find that his life there is very much different from
+what it was at home, but a highly civilised, well-educated
+man, condemned to banishment in those frozen solitudes,
+suffers acutely, being deprived of all that had made existence
+sweet and tolerable to him. I feel certain that
+an Englishman, confined in one of the Concentration
+Camps of South Africa, would have wished himself dead
+ten times a day, whilst the wife of a Boer farmer would
+not have suffered because of missing soap and water and
+clean towels and nicely served food, though she might
+have felt the place hot and unpleasant, and might have
+lamented over the loss of the home in which she had
+lived for years.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The Concentration Camps were a necessity, because
+without them thousands of people, the whole white population
+of a country indeed, amounting to something
+over sixty thousand people, would have died of hunger
+and cold.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The only means of existence the country Boers had
+was the produce of their farms. This taken away from
+them, they were left in the presence of starvation, and
+starvation only. This population, deprived of every
+means of subsistence, would have invaded Cape Colony,
+which already was overrun with white refugees from
+Johannesburg and the Rand, who had proved a prolific
+source of the greatest annoyance to the British
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page162">[162]</span>
+
+
+Government. To allow this mass of miserable humanity
+to wander all over the Colony would have been inhuman,
+and I would like to know what those who, in England
+and upon the Continent, were so indignant over the
+Concentration Camps would have said had it turned out
+that some sixty thousand human creatures had been
+allowed to starve.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The British Government, owing to the local conditions
+under which the South African War came to be
+fought, found itself in a dilemma, out of which the only
+escape was to try to relieve wholesale misery in the most
+practical manner possible. There was no time to plan
+out with deliberation what ought to be done; some means
+had to be devised to keep a whole population alive whom
+an administration would have been accused of murdering
+had there been delay in feeding it.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+There was also another danger to be faced had the
+veldt been allowed to become the scene of a long-continued
+migration of nations&#8212;that of allowing the movements
+of the British troops to become known, thereby
+lengthening a war of already intolerable length, to say
+nothing of exposing uselessly the lives of English detachments,
+which, in this guerrilla kind of warfare, would
+inevitably have occurred had the Boer leaders remained
+in constant communication with their wandering compatriots.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Altogether the institution of the Concentration Camps
+was not such a bad one originally. Unfortunately, they
+were not organised with the seriousness which ought to
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page163">[163]</span>
+
+
+have been brought to bear on such a delicate matter,
+and their care was entrusted to people who succeeded,
+unwittingly perhaps, in making life there less tolerable
+than it need have been.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+I visited some of the Concentration Camps, and
+looked into their interior arrangements with great
+attention. The result of my personal observations was
+invariably the same&#8212;that where English officials were in
+charge of these Camps everything possible was done to
+lighten the lot of their inmates. But where others
+were entrusted with surveillance, every kind of annoyance,
+indignity and insult was offered to poor people
+obliged to submit to their authority.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In this question, as in many others connected with
+the Boer War, it was the local Jingoes who harmed the
+British Government more than anything else, and the
+Johannesburg Uitlanders, together with the various
+Volunteer Corps and Scouts, brought into the conduct
+of the enterprises with which they were entrusted an
+intolerance and a smallness of spirit which destroyed
+British prestige far more than would have done a dozen
+unfortunate wars. The very fact that one heard these
+unwise people openly say that every Boer ought to be
+killed, and that even women and children ought to be
+suppressed if one wanted to win the war, gave abroad
+the idea that England was a nation thirsting for the
+blood of the unfortunate Afrikanders. This mistaken
+licence furnished the Bond with the pretext to persuade
+the Dutch Colonists to rebel, and the Boer leaders with
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page164">[164]</span>
+
+
+that of going on with their resistance until their last
+penny had been exhausted and their last gun had been
+captured.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Without these detestable Jingoes, who would have
+done so much harm not only to South Africa, but also
+to their Mother Country, England, it is certain that an
+arrangement, which would have brought about an honourable
+peace for everybody, could have come much sooner
+than it did. A significant fact worth remembering&#8212;that
+the Boers did not attempt to destroy the mines on
+the Rand&#8212;goes far to prove that they were not at all
+so determined to hurt British property, or to ruin
+British residents, or to destroy the large shareholder
+concerns to which the Transvaal owed its celebrity, as
+was credited to them.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+When the first rumours that terrible things were
+going on in the Concentration Camps reached England
+there were found at once amateurs willing to start for
+South Africa to investigate the truth of the accusations.
+A great fuss was made over an appeal by Lady
+Maxwell, the wife of the Military Governor of Pretoria,
+in which she entreated America to assist her in raising
+a fund to provide warm clothing for the Boer women and
+children. Conclusions were immediately drawn, saddling
+the military authorities with responsibility for the destitution
+in which these women and children found themselves.
+But in the name of common sense, how could
+one expect that people who had run away before what
+they believed to be an invasion of barbarians determined
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page165">[165]</span>
+
+
+to burn down and destroy all their belongings&#8212;how could
+one expect that these people in their flight would have
+thought about taking with them their winter clothes,
+which, in the hurry of a departure in a torrid summer,
+would only have proved a source of embarrassment to
+them? More recently we have seen in Belgium, France,
+Poland and the Balkans what occurred to the refugees
+who fled before foreign invasion. The very fact of Lady
+Maxwell's appeal proved the solicitude of the official
+English classes for the unfortunate Boers and their
+desire to do something to provide them with the necessaries
+of life.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Everybody knows the amount of money which is
+required in cases of this kind, and&#8212;in addition to
+America's unstinting response&#8212;public and private
+charity in Britain flowed as generously as it always does
+upon every occasion when an appeal is made to it in
+cases of real misfortune. But when it comes to relieve
+the wants of about sixty-three thousand people, of all
+ages and conditions, this is not so easy to do as persons
+fond of criticising things which they do not understand
+are apt sweepingly to declare. Very soon the question
+of the Concentration Camps became a Party matter, and
+was made capital of for Party purposes without discrimination
+or restraint. Sham philanthropists filled the
+newspapers with their indignation, and a report was
+published in the form of a pamphlet by Miss Hobhouse,
+which, it is to be feared, contained some percentage of
+tales poured into her ears by people who were nurtured
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page166">[166]</span>
+
+
+in the general contempt for truth which at that time
+existed in South Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+If the question of Concentration Camps had been
+examined seriously, it would have been at once perceived
+what a tremendous burden the responsibility of having
+to find food and shelter for thousands of enemy people
+imposed on English officials. No one in Government
+circles attempted or wished to deny, sorrowful as it was
+to have to recognise it, that the condition of the Camps
+was not, and indeed could not be, nearly what one
+would have wished or desired. On the other hand, the
+British authorities were unremitting in their efforts to
+do everything which was compatible with prudence to
+improve the condition of these Camps. Notwithstanding,
+people were so excited in regard to the question, and it
+was so entirely a case of "Give a dog a bad name," that
+even the appointment of an Imperial Commission to
+report on the matter failed to bring them to anything
+approaching an impartial survey. Miss Hobhouse's report
+had excited an emotion only comparable to the
+publication of Mrs. Beecher Stowe's famous novel,
+"Uncle Tom's Cabin."
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Miss Hobhouse came to South Africa inspired by
+the most generous motives, but her lack of knowledge
+of the conditions of existence common to everyone in
+that country prevented her from forming a true opinion
+as to the real hardship of what she was called upon to
+witness. Her own interpretations of the difficulties and
+discomforts which she found herself obliged to face
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page167">[167]</span>
+
+
+proved that she had not realised what South Africa really
+was. Her horror at the sight of a snake in one of the
+tents she visited could only evoke a smile from those
+who had lived for some time in that country, as a visitor
+of that particular kind was possible even in the suburbs
+of Cape Town, and certainly offered nothing wonderful
+in a tent on the high veldt. The same remark can be
+applied to the hotels, which Miss Hobhouse described as
+something quite ghastly. Everyone who knew what
+South Africa really was could only agree with her that
+the miserable places there were anything but pleasant
+residences, but the fuss which she made as to these trivial
+details could only make one sceptical as to the genuineness
+of the other scenes which she described at such
+length. No one who had had occasion to watch the
+development of the war or the circumstances which had
+preceded it could bring himself to believe with her that
+the British Government was guilty of premeditated
+cruelty.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Of course, it was quite dreadful for those who had
+been taken to the Concentration Camps to find themselves
+detained there against their will, but at the same
+time, as I have already remarked, the question remains
+as to what these people would have done had they been
+left absolutely unprotected and unprovided for among
+the remnants of what had once been their homes. It
+was certain that Miss Hobhouse's pamphlet revealed a
+parlous state of things, but did she realise that wood,
+blankets, linen and food were not things which could
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page168">[168]</span>
+
+
+be transported with the quickness that those responsible
+heartily desired? Did she remember that the British
+troops also had to do without the most elementary comforts,
+in spite of all the things which were constantly
+being sent from home for the benefit of the field
+forces? Both had in South Africa two enemies in
+common that could not be subdued&#8212;distance and difficulty
+of communication. With but a single line of railway,
+which half the time was cut in one place or another,
+it was but natural that the Concentration Camps were
+deprived of a good many things which those who were
+compelled to live within their limits would, under different
+circumstances or conditions, have had as a
+matter of course.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Miss Hobhouse had to own that she met with the
+utmost courtesy from the authorities with whom she had
+to deal, a fact alone which proved that the Government
+was only too glad to allow people to see what was being
+done for the Boer women and children, and gratefully
+appreciated every useful suggestion likely to lighten the
+sad lot of those in the Camps.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It is no use denying, and indeed no one, Sir Alfred
+Milner least of all, would have denied that some of the
+scenes witnessed by Miss Hobhouse, which were afterwards
+described with such tremulous indignation, were
+of a nature to shock public opinion both at home and
+abroad. But, at the same time, it was not fair to
+circumstances or to people to have a false sentimentality
+woven into what was written. Things ought to have
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page169">[169]</span>
+
+
+been looked upon through the eyes of common sense
+and not through the refracting glasses of the indignation
+of the moment. It was a libel to suggest that the British
+authorities rendered themselves guilty of deliberate
+cruelty, because, on the contrary, they always and upon
+every occasion did everything they could to lighten the
+lot of the enemy peoples who had fallen into their
+hands.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page170">[170]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="num" id="chapter13">CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+<h2>
+THE PRISONERS' CAMPS
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+I went myself very carefully into the details of
+whatever information I was able to gather in regard
+to the treatment of Boer prisoners in the various Camps,
+notably at Green Point near Cape Town, and I always
+had to come to the conclusion that nothing could have
+been better. Is it likely that, when such an amount of
+care was bestowed upon the men, the women and children
+should have been made the objects of special persecution?
+No impartial person could believe such a thing to have
+been possible, and I feel persuaded that if the people who
+in England contributed to make the position of the British
+Government more difficult than already it was, could
+have glanced at some Prisoners' Camps, for instance, they
+would very quickly have recognised that an unbalanced
+sentimentality had exaggerated facts, and even in some
+cases distorted them.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In Green Point the prisoners were housed in double-storied
+buildings which had balconies running round
+them. Here they used to spend many hours of the day,
+for not only could they see what was going on around
+the Camps but also have a good view of the sea and
+passing ships. Each room held six men, and there was
+besides a large mess-room downstairs in each building
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page171">[171]</span>
+
+
+which held about ninety people. Each Boer officer had
+a room for himself. When, later on, the number of
+prisoners of war was increased, tents had to be erected
+to accommodate them; but this could hardly be
+considered hardship in the climate which prevails at
+the Cape, and cannot be compared to what at the present
+moment the soldiers of the Allies are enduring in the
+trenches. The tents were put in a line of twenty each,
+and each score had a building attached for the men in
+that line to use as a dormitory if they chose. Excellent
+bathrooms and shower-baths were provided, together with
+a plentiful supply of water. The feeding of the prisoners
+of war was on a substantial scale, the daily rations per
+man including:
+</p>
+
+
+<table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" summary="Daily rations">
+<tr><td class="data">Bread</td><td class="data">1&frac14; lb.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="data">Meat (fresh)</td><td class="data">1 lb.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="data">Sugar</td><td class="data">3 oz.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="data">Coal (or)</td><td class="data">1 lb.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="data">Wood (or)</td><td class="data">2 lb.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="data">Coal and wood</td><td class="data">1&frac12; lb.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="data">Vegetables</td><td class="data">&frac12; lb.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="data">Jam</td><td class="data">&frac14; lb., or 6 oz. of
+vegetables in lieu.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>
+Coffee, milk and other items were also in like generous
+apportionments.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The clothing issued to the prisoners, as asked for by
+them, to give the month of June, 1901, as an instance,
+was:
+</p>
+
+
+<table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" summary="Clothing distribution">
+<tr><td class="data">Boots</td><td class="number">143</td><td class="data">pairs</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="data">Braces</td><td class="number">59</td><td class="data">pairs</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="data">Hats</td><td class="number">164</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="data">Jackets</td><td class="number">133</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="data">Shirts</td><td class="number">251</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="data">Socks</td><td class="number">222</td><td class="data">pairs</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="data">Trousers</td><td class="number">166</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="data">Waistcoats</td><td class="number">87 </td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="continuation">
+and other small sundries.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page172">[172]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+At Green Point Camp ample hospital accommodation
+was provided for the sick, and there was a medical staff
+thoroughly acquainted with the Dutch language and Boer
+habits. There was electric light in every ward, as well
+as all other comforts compatible with discipline.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In the first six months of 1901 only five men died in
+the Camps, the average daily strength of which was over
+5,000 men. As for the sick, the average rarely surpassed
+1 per cent., amongst which were included wounded men,
+the cripples, and the invalids left behind from the parties
+of war prisoners sent oversea to St. Helena or other
+places.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The hospital diet included, as a matter of course, many
+things not forming part of the ordinary rations, such as
+extra milk, meat extracts, and brandy. A suggestive
+fact in that respect was that though the medical officers
+in charge of the Camps often appealed to Boer sympathisers
+to send them eggs, milk and other comforts for
+the sick prisoners, they hardly ever met with response;
+and in the rare cases when it happened, it was mostly
+British officials or officers' wives who provided these
+luxuries.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The spiritual needs of the prisoners of war were
+looked after with consideration; there was a recreation
+room, and, during the time that a large number of very
+young Boers were in Camps, an excellent school, in
+which the headmaster and assistant teachers held teachers'
+certificates. Under the Orange River Colony this school
+was later transferred to the Prisoners of War Camp at
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page173">[173]</span>
+
+
+Simonstown, and in both places it did a considerable
+amount of good. The younger Boers took very kindly
+and almost immediately to English games such as football,
+cricket, tennis and quoits, for which there was
+plenty of room, and the British authorities provided
+recreation huts, and goal posts and other implements.
+The Boers also amused themselves with amateur
+theatricals, club-swinging, and even formed a minstrel
+troup called the "Green Point Spreemos."
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In the Camps there was a shop where the Boers
+could buy anything that they required in reason at prices
+regulated by the Military Commandant. Beyond this,
+relatives and friends were allowed to send them fruit or
+anything else, with the exception of firearms. In the
+Boer laagers were coffee shops run by speculative young
+Boers. The prisoners used to meet there in order to
+drink coffee, eat pancakes and talk to heart's content.
+This particular spot was generally called Pan Koek
+Straat, and the wildest rumours concerning the war
+seemed to originate in it.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Now as to the inner organisation of the Camps. The
+prisoners were allowed to choose a corporal from their
+midst and also to select a captain for each house. Over
+the whole Camp there reigned a Boer Commandant,
+assisted by a Court of "Heemraden" consisting of exlandrosts
+and lawyers appointed by the prisoners of war
+themselves. Any act of insubordination or inattention
+to the regulations, sanitary or otherwise, was brought
+before this court and the guilty party tried and sentenced.
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page174">[174]</span>
+
+
+When the latter refused to abide by the judgment
+of the Boer court he was brought before the Military
+Commandant, but for this there was very seldom
+need.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The prisoners of war had permission to correspond
+with their friends and relatives, and were allowed newspapers
+and books. The former, however, were rather
+too much censored, which fact constituted an annoyance
+which, with the exertion of a little tact, might easily
+have been avoided.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+As will be seen from the details, the fate of the Boer
+prisoners of war was not such a bad one after all. Nor,
+either, was life in the Concentration Camps, and I have
+endeavoured to throw some new light on the subject to
+rebut the old false rumours which, lately, the German
+Government revived when taxed with harsh treatment
+of their own prisoners of war, so as to draw comparisons
+advantageously to themselves.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+While adhering to my point, I quite realise that it
+would be foolish to assert that all the Concentration
+Camps were organised and administered on the model of
+the Green Point Camp, where its vicinity to Cape Town
+allowed the English authorities to control everything
+that was going on. In the interior of the country things
+could not be arranged upon such an excellent scale, but
+had there not existed such a state of irritation all over
+the whole of South Africa&#8212;an irritation for which the
+so-called English loyalists must also share the blame&#8212;matters
+would not have grown so sadly out of proportion
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page175">[175]</span>
+
+
+ to the truth, painful though the facts were in some
+cases.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+This question of the Camps was admittedly a most
+difficult one. It was the result of a method of warfare
+which was imposed upon England by circumstances, but
+for which no individual Minister or General was solely
+responsible. The matter was brought about by successive
+steps that turned out to be necessary, though they
+were deplorable in every respect. Failing the capture
+of the Boer commandoes, which was well-nigh impossible,
+the British troops were driven to strip the country,
+and stripping the country meant depriving not only the
+fighting men but also the women and children of the
+means of subsistence. Concentration, therefore, followed
+inevitably, and England found itself burdened with
+the immense responsibility of feeding, housing and clothing
+some sixty thousand women and children.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In spite of the British officers in charge of the Concentration
+Camps struggling manfully with this crushing
+burden of anxiety, and doing all that lay within their
+power to alleviate the sufferings of this multitude, cruel
+and painful things happened. The food, which was
+sufficient and wholesome for soldiers, could not do for
+young people, and yet it was impossible to procure any
+other for them. If the opinion of the military had been
+allowed to be expressed openly, one would have found
+probably that they thought England ought never to
+have assumed this responsibility, but rather have chosen
+the lesser evil and left these people on their farms, running
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page176">[176]</span>
+
+
+ the risk of the Boers provisioning themselves therefrom.
+The risk would not, perhaps, have been so great
+as could have been supposed at first sight, but then this
+ought to have been done from the very beginning of the
+war, and the order to burn the Boer farms ought never to
+have been given. But once the Boer farms had been
+deprived of their military use to the enemy, these people
+could not be turned back to starve on the veldt; the
+British had to feed them or earn the reproach of having
+destroyed a nation by hunger. As things had developed
+it was impossible for Great Britain to have followed any
+other policy&#8212;adopted, perhaps, in a moment of rashness,
+but the consequences had to be accepted. It only
+remained to do the best toward mitigating as far as
+possible the sufferings of the mass of humanity gathered
+into the Camps, and this I must maintain that the English
+Government did better than could have been expected
+by any who knew South Africa and the immense
+difficulties which beset the British authorities.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It must not be forgotten that when the war began
+it was looked upon in the light of a simple military
+promenade; and, who knows, it might have been that had
+not the Boers been just as mistaken concerning the intentions
+of England in respect of them as England was
+in regard to the Boer military strength and power of
+resistance. One must take into account that for the
+few years preceding the war, and especially since the
+fatal Jameson Raid, the whole of the Dutch population
+of the Transvaal and of the Orange Free State, as well
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page177">[177]</span>
+
+
+as that of Cape Colony, was persuaded that England
+had made up its mind to destroy it and to give up their
+country, as well as their persons, into the absolute power
+of the millionaires who ruled the Rand. On their
+side the millionaires openly declared that the mines
+were their personal property, and that England was
+going to war to give the Rand to them, and thereafter
+they were to rule this new possession without any
+interference from anyone in the world, not even that
+of England. Such a state of things was absolutely
+abnormal, and one can but wonder how ideas of the kind
+could have obtained credence. But, strange as it may
+seem, it is an indisputable fact that the opinion was
+prevalent all over South Africa that the Rand was to
+be annexed to the British Empire just in the same way
+as Rhodesia had been and under the same conditions.
+Everyone in South Africa knew that the so-called conquest
+of the domain of King Lobengula had been effected
+only because it had been supposed that it was as rich in
+gold and diamonds as the Transvaal.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+When Rhodes had taken possession of the vast expanse
+of territory which was to receive his name, the
+fortune-seekers who had followed in his footsteps had
+high anticipations of speedy riches, and came in time
+to consider that they had a right to obtain that which
+they had come to look for. These victims of money-hunger
+made Rhodes personally responsible for the disappointments
+which their greed and unhealthy appetites
+encountered when at last they were forced to the conclusion
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page178">[178]</span>
+
+
+ that Rhodesia was a land barren of gold. In
+time, perhaps, and at enormous expense, it might be
+developed for the purpose of cattle breeding, but gold
+and diamonds either did not exist or could only be
+found in such small quantities that it was not worth while
+looking for them.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+As a result of this realisation, Rhodes found himself
+confronted by all these followers, who loudly clamoured
+around him their indignation at having believed in his
+assertions. What wonder, therefore, that the thoughts
+of these people turned toward the possibility of diverting
+the treasures of the Transvaal into their own direction.
+Rhodes was brought into contact with the idea that it
+was necessary to subdue President Kruger. With a
+man of Rhodes' impulsive character to begin wishing
+for a thing was sufficient to make him resort to every
+means at his disposal to obtain it. The Boer War was
+the work of the Rhodesian party, and long before it
+broke out it was expected, spoken of, and considered
+not only by the Transvaal Government, but also by the
+Burghers, who, having many opportunities of visiting
+the Cape as well as Rhodesia, had there heard expression
+of the determination of the South African League, and
+of those who called themselves followers and partisans
+of Rhodes, to get hold of the Rand, at the head of which,
+as an inevitable necessity, should be the Colossus himself.
+No denial of these plans ever came from Rhodes.
+By his attitude, even when relations between London
+and Pretoria were excellent, he gave encouragement to
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page179">[179]</span>
+
+
+the people who were making all kinds of speculations
+as to what should happen when the Transvaal became a
+Crown Colony.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The idea of a South African Federation had not at
+that time taken hold of public opinion, and, if Rhodes
+became its partisan later on, it was only after he had
+realised that the British Cabinet would never consent to
+put Johannesburg on the same footing as Bulawayo and
+Bechuanaland. Too large and important interests were
+at stake for Downing Street to look with favourable eyes
+on the Rand becoming only one vast commercial concern.
+A line had to be drawn, but, unfortunately, the
+precise demarcation was not conveyed energetically
+enough from London. On the other hand, Cecil Rhodes,
+as well as his friends and advisers, did not foresee that a
+war would not put them in power at the Transvaal, but
+would give that country to the Empire to rule, to use
+its riches and resources for the good of the community
+at large.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The saddest feature of the South African episode
+was its sordidness. This robbed it of every dignity and
+destroyed every sympathy of those who looked at it impartially
+or from another point of view than that of
+pounds, shillings and pence. England has been cruelly
+abused for its conduct in South Africa, and abused most
+unjustly. Had that feeling of trust in the justice and
+in the straightforwardness of Great Britain only existed
+in the Dark Continent, as it did in the other Colonies
+and elsewhere, it would have proved the best solution to
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page180">[180]</span>
+
+
+all the entangled questions which divided the Transvaal
+Republic from the Mother Country by reason of its
+manner of looking at the exploitation of the gold mines.
+On its side too, perhaps, England might have been
+brought to consider the Boers in a different light had
+she disbelieved a handful of people who had every interest
+in the world to mislead her and to keep her badly
+informed as to the truth of the situation.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+When war broke out it was not easy for the Command
+to come at once to a sane appreciation of the
+situation, and, unfortunately for all the parties concerned,
+the unjust prejudices which existed in South Africa
+against Sir Alfred Milner had to a certain extent tinctured
+the minds of people at home, exercising no small
+influence on the men who ought to have helped the
+High Commissioner to carry through his plans for the
+settlement of the situation subsequently to the war.
+The old saying, "Calumniate, calumniate, something
+will always remain after it," was never truer than in the
+case of this eminent statesman.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It took some time for matters to be put on a sound
+footing, and before this actually occurred many mistakes
+had been made, neither easy to rectify nor possible to
+explain. Foremost among them was this question of
+the Concentration Camps. Not even the protestations
+of the women who subsequently went to the Cape and
+to the Transvaal to report officially on the question were
+considered sufficient to dissipate the prejudices which had
+arisen on this unfortunate question.
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page181">[181]</span>
+
+
+The best reply that was made to Miss Hobhouse, and
+to the lack of prudence which spoiled her good intentions,
+was a letter which Mrs. Henry Fawcett addressed to
+the <i>Westminster Gazette</i>. In clear, lucid diction this
+letter re-established facts on their basis of reality, and
+explained with self-respect and self-control the inner
+details of a situation which the malcontents had not
+given themselves the trouble to examine.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"First," says this forceful document, "I would note
+Miss Hobhouse's frequent acknowledgments that the
+various authorities were doing their best to make the
+conditions of Camp life as little intolerable as possible.
+The opening sentence of her report is, 'January 22.&#8212;I
+had a splendid truck given me at Cape Town through
+the kind co-operation of Sir Alfred Milner&#8212;a large
+double-covered one, capable of holding twelve tons.' In
+other places she refers to the help given to her by various
+officials. The commandant at Aliwal North had ordered
+&#163;150 worth of clothing, and had distributed it; she
+undertook to forward some of it. At Springfontein
+'the commandant was a kind man, and willing to help
+both the people and me as far as possible.' Other similar
+quotations might be made. Miss Hobhouse acknowledges
+that the Government recognise that they are
+responsible for providing clothes, and she appears rather
+to deprecate the making and sending of further supplies
+from England. I will quote her exact words on this
+point. The italics are mine. 'The demand for clothing
+is so huge that it is hopeless to think that the private
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page182">[182]</span>
+
+
+charity of England and Colonial working parties combined
+can effectually cope with it. <i>The Government
+recognise that they must provide necessary clothes,</i> and
+I think we all agree that, having brought these people
+into this position, it is their duty to do so. <i>It is, of
+course, a question for English folk to decide how long
+they like to go on making and sending clothes.</i> There
+is no doubt they are immensely appreciated; besides,
+they are mostly made up, which the Government clothing
+won't be.' Miss Hobhouse says that many of the
+women in the Camp at Aliwal North had brought their
+sewing machines. If they were set to work to make
+clothes it might serve a double purpose of giving them
+occupation and the power of earning a little money, and
+it would also ensure the clothes being made sufficiently
+large. Miss Hobhouse says people in England have very
+incorrect notions of the magnificent proportions of the
+Boer women. Blouses which were sent from England
+intended for women could only be worn by girls of twelve
+and fourteen; they were much too small for the well-developed
+Boer maiden, who is really a fine creature.
+Could a woman's out-out size be procured? It must be
+remembered that when Miss Hobhouse saw the Camps
+for the first time it was in January, the hottest month
+in the South African year; the difficulty of getting supplies
+along a single line of rail, often broken by the
+enemy, was very great. The worst of the Camps she
+saw was at Bloemfontein, and the worst features of this
+worst Camp were:
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page183">[183]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+"1. Water supply was bad.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"2. Fuel was very scarce.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"3. Milk was very scarce.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"4. Soap was not to be had.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"5. Insufficient supply of trained nurses.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"6. Insufficient supply of civilian doctors.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"7. No ministers of religion.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"8. No schools for children.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"9. Exorbitant prices were demanded in the shops.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"10. Parents had been separated from their children.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"Within the Report itself, either in footnotes or in
+the main body of the Report, Miss Hobhouse mentions
+that active steps had already been taken to remedy these
+evils. Tanks had been ordered to boil all the water.
+She left money to buy another, and supplied every family
+with a pan to hold boiled water. Soap was given out
+with the rations. 'Moreover, the Dutch are so very
+full of resources and so clever they can make their own
+soap with fat and soda.' The milk supply was augmented;
+during the drought fifty cows only yielded four
+buckets of milk daily. 'After the rains the milk supply
+was better.' An additional supply of nurses were on
+their way. 'The Sister had done splendid work in her
+domain battling against incessant difficulties &#8230; and
+to crown the work she has had the task of training Boer
+girls to nurse under her guidance.'
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"Ministers of religion are in residence, and schools
+under Mr. E.B. Sargant, the Educational Commissioner,
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page184">[184]</span>
+
+
+are open for boys and girls. Children have
+been reunited to parents, except that some girls, through
+Miss Hobhouse's kind efforts, have been moved away
+from the Camps altogether into boarding schools. Even
+in this Bloemfontein Camp, notwithstanding all that
+Miss Hobhouse says of the absence of soap and the
+scarcity of water, she is able to write: 'All the tents
+I have been in are exquisitely neat and clean, except
+two, and they are ordinary.' Another important admission
+about this Camp is to be found in the last sentence
+of the account of Miss Hobhouse's second visit to Bloemfontein.
+She describes the iron huts which have been
+erected there at a cost of &#163;2,500, and says: 'It is so
+strange to think that every tent contains a family, and
+every family is in trouble&#8212;loss behind, poverty in front,
+privation and death in the present&#8212;but they have agreed
+to be cheerful and make the best of it all.'
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"There can be no doubt that the sweeping together of
+about 68,000 men, women and children into these Camps
+must have been attended by great suffering and misery,
+and if they are courageously borne it is greatly to the
+credit of the sufferers. The questions the public will
+ask, and will be justified in asking, are :
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"1. Was the creation of these Camps necessary
+from the military point of view?
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"2. Are our officials exerting themselves to make
+the conditions of the Camps as little oppressive as
+possible?
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page185">[185]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+"3. Ought the public at home to supplement the
+efforts of the officials, and supply additional comforts
+and luxuries?
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"The reply to the first question can only be given
+by the military authorities, and they have answered it
+in the affirmative. Put briefly, their statement is that
+the farms on the veldt were being used by small commandoes
+of the enemy as storehouses for food, arms and
+ammunition; and, above all, they have been centres for
+supplying false information to our men about the movements
+of the enemy, and correct information to the
+enemy about the movements of the British. No one
+blames the Boer women on the farms for this; they
+have taken an active part on behalf of their own people
+in the war, and they glory in the fact. But no one can
+take part in war without sharing in its risks, and the
+formation of the Concentration Camps is part of the
+fortune of war. In this spirit 'they have agreed,' as
+Miss Hobhouse says, 'to be cheerful and make the best
+of it.'
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"The second question&#8212;'Are our officials exerting
+themselves to make the Camps as little oppressive as
+possible?'&#8212;can also be answered in the affirmative,
+judging from the evidence supplied by Miss Hobhouse
+herself. This does not imply that at the date of Miss
+Hobhouse's visit, or at any time, there were not matters
+capable of improvement. But it is confessed even by
+hostile witnesses that the Government had a very difficult
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page186">[186]</span>
+
+
+task, and that its officials were applying themselves to
+grapple with it with energy, kindness and goodwill.
+Miss Hobhouse complains again and again of the difficulty
+of procuring soap. May I quote, as throwing light
+upon the fact that the Boer women were no worse off
+than the English themselves, that Miss Brooke-Hunt,
+who was in Pretoria to organise soldiers' institutes a
+few months earlier than Miss Hobhouse was at Bloemfontein,
+says in her interesting book, 'A Woman's
+Memories of the War': 'Captain &#8213; presented me
+with a piece of Sunlight soap, an act of generosity I did
+not fully appreciate till I found that soap could not be
+bought for love or money in the town.' A Boer woman
+of the working-class said to Miss Brooke-Hunt: 'You
+English are different from what I thought. They told
+us that if your soldiers got inside Pretoria they would
+rob us of everything, burn our houses, and treat us
+cruelly; but they have all been kind and respectable.
+It seems a pity we did not know this before.' Miss
+Hobhouse supplies some rather similar testimony. In
+her Report she says: 'The Mafeking Camp folk were
+very surprised to hear that English women cared a rap
+about them or their suffering. It has done them a lot
+of good to hear that real sympathy is felt for them at
+home, and I am so glad I fought my way here, if only
+for that reason.'
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"In what particular way Miss Hobhouse had to fight
+her way to the Camps does not appear, for she acknowledges
+the kindness of Lord Kitchener and Lord Milner
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page187">[187]</span>
+
+
+in enabling her to visit them; we must therefore
+suppose that they provided her with a pass. But the
+sentence just quoted is enough in itself to furnish the
+answer to the third question&#8212;'Is it right for the public
+at home to supplement by gifts of additional comforts
+and luxuries the efforts of our officials to make Camp
+life as little intolerable as possible?' All kinds of fables
+have been told to the Boer men and women of the
+brutality and ferocity of the British. Let them learn
+by practical experience, as many of them have learnt
+already, that the British soldier is gentle and generous,
+and that his women-folk at home are ready to do all in
+their power to alleviate the sufferings of the innocent
+victims of the war. I know it will be said, 'Let us attend
+to the suffering loyalists first.' It is a very proper
+sentiment, and if British generosity were limited to the
+gift of a certain definite amount in money or in kind, I
+would be the first to say, 'Charity begins at home, and
+our people must come first.' But British generosity is
+not of this strictly measured kind. By all means let us
+help the loyal sufferers by the war; but let us also help
+the women and children of those who have fought
+against us, not with any ulterior political motive, but
+simply because they have suffered and are bound to
+suffer much, and wounded hearts are soothed and healed
+by kindness.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"Mr. Rowntree has spoken quite publicly of the
+deep impression made on the Boer women by the kindness
+shown them by our men. One said she would be
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page188">[188]</span>
+
+
+always glad to shake hands with a British soldier; it
+was because of the kindly devices they had invented to
+make over their own rations to the women and children
+during the long journey when all were suffering from
+severe privations. Another Boer girl, referring to an
+act of kindness shown her by a British officer, remarked
+quietly: 'When there is so much to make the heart
+ache it is well to remember deeds of kindness.' The
+more we multiply deeds of kindness between Boer and
+Briton in South Africa, the better for the future of
+the two races, who, we hope, will one day fuse into a
+united nation under the British flag."
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+I hope the reader will forgive me for having quoted
+in such abundance from Mrs. Fawcett's letter, but it
+has seemed to me that this plain, unprejudiced and unsophisticated
+report, on a subject which could not but
+have been viewed with deep sorrow by every enlightened
+person in England, goes far to remove the doubts that
+might still linger in the minds of certain people ignorant
+of the real conditions of existence in South Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+A point insufficiently realised in regard to South
+African affairs is the manner in which individuals comparatively
+devoid of education, and with only a hazy
+notion of politics, contrived to be taken into serious
+consideration not only by those who visited South Africa,
+but by a certain section of English society at home, and
+also in a more restricted measure by people at the Cape
+and in the Transvaal who had risen. These people professed
+to understand local politics better than the British
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page189">[189]</span>
+
+
+authorities, and expected the officials, as well as public
+opinion in Great Britain, to adopt their advice, and to
+recognise their right to bring forward claims which they
+were always eager to prosecute. Unfortunately they
+had friends everywhere, to whom they confided their
+regrets that the British Government understood so very
+little the necessities of the moment. As these malcontents
+were just back from the Rand, there were
+plenty of people in Cape Town, and especially in Port
+Elizabeth, Grahamstown, and other English cities in
+Cape Colony, ready to listen to them, and to be influenced
+by the energetic tone in which they declared
+that the Boers were being helped all along by Dutch
+Colonials who were doing their best to betray the
+British.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In reality, matters were absolutely different, and
+those who harmed England the most at that time were
+precisely the people who proclaimed that they, and they
+alone, were loyal to her, and knew what was necessary
+and essential to her interests and to her future at the
+Cape of Good Hope and the Rand. Foremost amongst
+them were the adherents of Rhodes, and this fact will
+always cling to his memory&#8212;most unfortunately and
+most unjustly, I hasten to say, because had he been left
+absolutely free to do what he liked, it is probable he would
+have been the first to get rid of these encumbrances,
+whose interferences could only sow animosity where
+kindness and good will ought to have been put forward.
+Cecil Rhodes wanted to have the last and definite word
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page190">[190]</span>
+
+
+to say in the matter of a settlement of the South African
+difficulties, and as no one seemed willing to allow him to
+utter it, he thought that he would contrive to attain
+his wishes on the subject by seeming to support the
+exaggerations of his followers. Yet, at the same time,
+he had the leaders of the Dutch party approached with
+a view of inducing them to appeal to him to put himself
+at their head.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+This double game, which while it lasted constituted
+one of the most curious episodes in a series of events of
+which every detail was interesting, I shall refer to later
+in more detail, but before doing so must touch upon
+another, and perhaps just as instructive, question&#8212;the
+so-called refugees, whose misfortunes and subsequent
+arrogance caused so many anxious hours to Sir Alfred
+Milner during his tenure of office at the Cape and later
+on in Pretoria.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page191">[191]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="num" id="chapter14">CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+<h2>
+IN FLIGHT FROM THE RAND
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+One of the greatest difficulties with which the Imperial
+Government found themselves confronted
+when relations between Great Britain and the Transvaal
+became strained was the influx of refugees who at the
+first hint of impending trouble left Johannesburg and the
+Rand, and flocked to Cape Town.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The greater number were aliens. From Russia in
+particular they had flocked to the Transvaal when they
+heard of its treasures. Adventurers from other parts
+of Europe, with a sprinkling of remittance men, also
+deserted Johannesburg. Only the few were real English
+residents who, from the time the Rand had begun to
+develop, had been living and toiling there in order to win
+sufficient for the maintenance of their families. All this
+mass of humanity, which passed unnoticed when scattered
+over wide areas in the vicinity of Pretoria or Johannesburg,
+had lived for many years in the expectation of the
+day when the power of the Transvaal Republic would be
+broken. They had discounted it perhaps more than they
+should have done had the dictates of prudence been
+allowed to take the lead against the wishes of their hearts.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+When war became imminent the big mining houses
+considered it wiser to close their offices and mines, and
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page192">[192]</span>
+
+
+for these unfortunate beings, deprived of their means of
+existence, the position became truly a lamentable one.
+They could not very well remain where they were, because
+the Burghers, who had never taken kindly to them, made
+no secret of their hostility, and gave them to understand
+very clearly that as soon as war had been declared they
+would simply turn them out without warning and confiscate
+their property. Prudence advised no delay, and
+the consequence was that, beginning with the month of
+August, and, indeed, the very first days which followed
+upon the failure of the Bloemfontein Conference, a stream
+of people from the Transvaal began migrating toward
+Cape Colony, which was supposed to be the place where
+their sufferings would find a measure of relief that
+they vainly imagined would prove adequate to their
+needs. At the Cape, strangely enough, no one had ever
+given a thought to the possibility of such a thing happening.
+In consequence, the public were surprised by this
+persisting stream of humanity which was being poured
+into the Colony; the authorities, too, began to feel a
+despair as to what could be done. It is no exaggeration
+to say that for months many hundreds of people arrived
+daily from the north, and that so long as communications
+were kept open they continued to do so.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+At first the refugees inundated the lodging-houses in
+Cape Town, but these soon being full to overflowing,
+some other means had to be devised to house and feed
+them. Committees were formed, with whom the Government
+officials in the Colony worked with great zeal and
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page193">[193]</span>
+
+
+considerable success toward alleviating the misery with
+which they found themselves confronted in such an
+unexpected manner. The Municipal Council, the various
+religious communities, the Medical men&#8212;one and all
+applied themselves to relief measures, even though they
+could not comprehend the reason of the blind rush to
+the Cape. Nor, in the main, could the refugees explain
+more lucidly than the one phrase which could, be heard
+on all sides, no matter what might have been the social
+position: "We had to go away because we did not feel
+safe on the Rand." In many cases it would have been
+far nearer to the truth to say that they had to go because
+they could no longer lead the happy-go-lucky existence
+they had been used to.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The most to be pitied among these people were most
+certainly the Polish Jews, who originally had been expelled
+from Russia, and had come to seek their fortunes
+at Johannesburg. They had absolutely no one to whom
+they could apply, and, what was sadder still, no claim on
+anyone; on the English Government least of all. One
+could see them huddling together on the platform of
+Cape Town railway station, surrounded by bundles of
+rags which constituted the whole of their earthly belongings,
+not knowing at all what to do, or where to go to.
+Of course they were looked after, because English charity
+has never stopped before differences of race and creed,
+but still it was impossible to deny that their constantly
+increasing number added considerably to the difficulties
+of the situation.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page194">[194]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+A Jewish Committee headed by the Chief Rabbi of
+Cape Town, the Rev. Dr. Bender, worked indefatigably
+toward the relief of these unfortunate creatures, and did
+wonders. A considerable number were sent to Europe,
+but a good many elected to remain where they were, and
+had to be provided for in some way till work could be
+found for them, which would at least allow them to exist
+without being entirely dependent on public charity.
+Among the aliens who showed a desire to remain in South
+Africa were many in possession of resources of their own;
+but they carefully concealed the fact, as, upon whatever it
+amounted to, they counted to rebuild their fortunes when
+Britain became sole and absolute mistress on the Rand.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The most dangerous element in the situation was that
+group of easygoing loafers who lived on the fringe of
+finance and picked up a living by doing the odd things
+needed by the bigger speculators. When things began
+to be critical, these idlers were unable to make money
+without working, and while prating of their patriotism,
+made the British Government responsible for their present
+state of penury. These men had some kind of
+instruction, if not education, and pretended they understood
+all about politics, the government of nations, and
+last, but not least, the conduct of the war. Their free
+talk, inflamed with an enthusiasm got up for the occasion,
+gave to the stranger an entirely incorrect idea of the
+position, and was calculated to give rise to sharp and
+absolutely undeserved criticisms concerning the conduct
+of the administration at home, and of the authorities in
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page195">[195]</span>
+
+
+the Colony. They also fomented hatred and spite
+between the English and the Dutch.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The harm done by these people, at a moment when the
+efforts of the whole community ought to have been
+directed toward allaying race hatred, and smoothing
+down the differences which had arisen between the two
+white sections of the population, is almost impossible of
+realisation for one who was not in South Africa at the
+time, and who could not watch the slow and gradual
+growth of the atmosphere of lies and calumny which
+gradually divided like a crevasse the very people who, in
+unison, might have contributed more than anything else
+to bring the war to a close. One must not forget that
+among these refugees who poisoned the minds of their
+neighbours with foundationless tales of horror, there were
+people who one might have expected to display sound
+judgment in their appreciation of the situation, and whose
+relatively long sojourn in South Africa entitled them to
+be heard by those who found themselves for the first time
+in that country. They were mostly men who could talk
+well, even eloquently; and they discussed with such
+apparent knowledge all the circumstances which, according
+to them, had brought about the war, that it was next
+to impossible for the new-comers not to be impressed by
+their language&#8212;it seemed bubbling over with the most
+intense patriotism.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The observer must take into account that among these
+people there happened to be a good many who, as the war
+went on, enrolled themselves in the various Volunteer
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page196">[196]</span>
+
+
+Corps which were formed. These gave the benefit of
+their experience to the British officers, who relied on the
+knowledge and perception of their informants because of
+themselves, especially during the first months which
+followed upon their landing, they could not come to a
+clearly focused, impartial judgment of the difficulties
+with which they found their efforts confronted. One
+must also remember that these officers were mostly quite
+young men, full of enthusiasm, who flamed up whenever
+the word rebellion was mentioned in their presence, and
+who, having arrived in South Africa with the firm determination
+to win the war at all costs, must not be blamed
+if in some cases they allowed their minds to be poisoned
+by those who painted the plight of the country in such a
+lugubrious tint. If, therefore, acts of what appeared to
+be cruelty were committed by these officers, it would be
+very wrong to make them alone responsible, because they
+were mostly done out of a spirit of self-defence against an
+enemy whom they believed to be totally different from
+what he was in reality, and who if only he had not been
+exasperated, would have proved of better and healthier
+stuff than, superficially, his acts seemed to indicate.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+There was still another class of refugee, composed
+of what I would call the rich elements of the Rand:
+the financiers, directors of companies; managers and
+engineers of the different concerns to which Kimberley
+and Johannesburg owed their celebrity. From the very
+first these rightly weighed up the situation, and had been
+determined to secure all the advantages which it held for
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page197">[197]</span>
+
+
+anyone who gave himself the trouble to examine it
+rationally. They came to Cape Town under the pretence
+of putting their families out of harm's way, but in reality
+because they wanted to be able to watch the development
+of the situation at its centre. They hired houses at
+exorbitant prices in Cape Town itself, or the suburbs, and
+lived the same kind of hospitable existence which had
+been theirs in Johannesburg. Their intention was to be
+at hand at the settlement, to put in their word when the
+question of the different financial interests with which
+they were connected would crop up&#8212;as it was bound
+to do.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The well-to-do executive class forming the last group
+had the greatest cause to feel alarmed at the consequences
+which might follow upon the war. Although they hoped
+that they would be able to maintain themselves on the
+Rand in the same important positions which they had
+occupied previous to the war, yet they had enough
+common sense to understand that they would not be
+allowed under a British administration the same free
+hand that President Kruger had given, or which they had
+been able to obtain from him by means of "refreshers"
+administered in some shape or other. It is true that they
+had always the alternative of retiring from South Africa
+to Park Lane, whence they would be able to astonish
+Society, but they preferred to wait, in case the crash were
+still delayed for some little time.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The big houses, such as Wernher, Beit and Co.&#8212;the
+head of which, at Johannesburg, was Mr. Fred
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page198">[198]</span>
+
+
+Eckstein, a man of decided ability, who perhaps was one
+of those in South Africa who had judged the situation
+with accuracy&#8212;would have preferred to see the crisis
+delayed. Mr. Eckstein and other leading people knew
+very well that sooner or later the Transvaal was bound
+to fall to England, and they would have felt quite content
+to wait quietly until this event had been accomplished
+as a matter of course, by the force of circumstances,
+without violence. President Kruger was such an old
+man that one could, in a certain sense, discuss the consequences
+which his demise was bound to bring to South
+Africa. There was no real necessity to hurry on events,
+nor would they have been hurried had it not been for the
+efforts of the Rhodesians, whose complaints had had more
+than anything else to do with the failure of the Bloemfontein
+Conference, and all that followed upon that
+regrettable incident. It was the Rhodesians, and not the
+big houses of the Rand, who were most eager for
+the war.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The exploitation of Rhodesia, the principal aim of
+which was the foundation of another Kimberley, had
+turned out to be a disappointment in that respect, and
+there remained nothing but making the best of it,
+particularly as countless companies had been formed all
+with a distinctly mineral character to their prospectuses.
+Now, if the Rand, with all its wealth and its still unexplored
+treasures, became an appanage of Kimberley, it
+would be relatively easy to effect an amalgamation
+between gold and diamond mines, which existed there,
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page199">[199]</span>
+
+
+and the Rhodesian companies. Under these conditions
+it was but natural that despite an intelligent comprehension
+of the situation, Sir Alfred Milner was nevertheless
+unable to push forward his own plans in regard to the
+Transvaal and its aged President, Mr. Kruger.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The misfortune of the whole situation, as I have
+already pointed out, was that the men who had attempted
+to play a high game of politics, in reality understood very
+little about them, and that instead of thinking of the
+interests of the Empire to which they professed themselves
+to be so deeply attached, they thought in terms of
+their personal outlook. Rhodes alone of those not in
+official position saw the ultimate aim of all these entangled
+politics. But unfortunately, though he had the
+capacities and experience of a statesman, he was not a
+patient man; indeed, throughout his life he had acted like
+a big spoiled child, to whom must be given at once whatever
+he desires. Too often he acted in the present,
+marring the future by thinking only of the immediate
+success of his plans, and brutally starting to work, regardless
+of consequences and of his personal reputation.
+Though his soul was essentially that of a financier and
+he would ride rough-shod over those who conducted their
+business affairs by gentler methods, yet at the same time,
+by a kind of curious contrast, he was always ready, nay,
+eager, to come to the material help of his neighbour&#8212;maybe
+out of affection for him; maybe out of that special
+sort of contempt which makes one sometimes throw a
+bone to a starving dog one has never seen before. The
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page200">[200]</span>
+
+
+greatest misfortune in Rhodes' life was his faculty, too
+often applied upon occasions when it were best suppressed,
+of seeing the mean and sordid aspects of an
+action, and of imagining that every man could be bought,
+provided one knew the price. He was so entirely convinced
+of this latter fact that it always caused him a kind
+of impatience he did not even give himself the trouble to
+dissimulate, to find that he had been mistaken. This
+happened to him once or twice in the course of his
+career.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The English party in the Colony regretted until the
+end of Rhodes' life the strange aberration that allowed
+the Raid, and made him sacrifice his reputation for the
+sake of hastening an event which, without his interference,
+would almost surely soon have come to pass. The salient
+feature of the Raid was its terrible stupidity; in that
+respect it was worse than a crime, for crime is forgotten,
+but nothing can efface from the memory of the world or
+the condemnation of history a colossally stupid political
+blunder.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+After the foolish attempt to seize hold of their
+country, the Boers distrusted British honour and British
+integrity; and doubting the word or promises of England,
+they made her responsible for this mistake of Cecil
+Rhodes. Rhodes, however, refused to recognise the sad
+fact. The big magnates of Johannesburg said that the
+wisest thing Rhodes could have done at this critical
+juncture would have been to go to Europe, there to
+remain until after the war, thus dissociating himself
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page201">[201]</span>
+
+
+from the whole question of the settlement, instead of
+intriguing to be entrusted with it.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The fact of Cecil Rhodes' absence would have cleared
+the whole situation, relieved Sir Alfred Milner, and
+given to the Boers a kind of political and financial
+security that peace would not be subject to the ambitions
+and prejudices of their enemies, but concluded with a view
+to the general interests of the country.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page202">[202]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="num" id="chapter15">CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+<h2>
+DEALING WITH THE REFUGEES
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+The refugees were a continual worry and annoyance
+to the English community at the Cape. As time went
+on it became extremely difficult to conciliate the differing
+interests which divided them, and to prevent them from
+committing foolish or rash acts likely to compromise
+British prestige in Africa. The refugees were for the
+most boisterous people. They insisted upon being heard,
+and expected the whole world to agree with their conclusions,
+however unstable these might be. It was absolutely
+useless to talk reason to a refugee; he refused to
+listen to you, but considered that, as he had been&#8212;as
+he would put it&#8212;compelled to leave that modern paradise,
+the Rand, and to settle at Cape Town, it became the
+responsibility of the inhabitants of Cape Town to maintain
+him. Table Mountain echoed with the sounds of
+their vain talk. They considered that they were the only
+people who knew anything about what the English
+Government ought to do, and who criticised it the most,
+threatening at every moment that they would write to
+their influential friends&#8212;even the poorest and most
+obscure had "influential friends"&#8212;revealing the abominable
+way in which English interests were neglected in
+Cape Colony, where the Government, according to them,
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page203">[203]</span>
+
+
+only helped the rebels, and considered their wants and
+requirements in preference to those of their own people.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+At first, when they were not known as they deserved
+to be, some persons fresh from the Mother Country, to
+whom South African morals and intrigues were unknown,
+took to heart the position as well as the complaints of
+those refugees. Hearing them continually mention cases
+in which rebel Dutch had, in this way or that, shown
+their want of allegiance to the British Government, conclusions
+were jumped at that there must exist a reason
+for these recriminations and allegations, and that British
+officials were in reality too anxious to conciliate the anti-English
+elements in the Colony, to the detriment of the
+loyalists, whose feelings of patriotism they considered,
+as a matter of course, required no reward and scarcely
+any encouragement. These people, unequipped with the
+truth, took up with a warmth which it certainly did not
+deserve the cause of these loyalists, sought their advice,
+and formed a totally wrong and even absurd opinion
+both as to South African politics and the conduct of the
+representatives of the Queen in Cape Town.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+All the misrepresentation and misunderstanding
+which took place increasingly, led to animosity on the
+part of the Dutch. Rightly or wrongly, it was taken
+as a matter of course that Rhodes favoured the idea of
+a total annihilation of the Cape Dutch. And as he was
+considered a kind of demigod by so many the idea was
+widely circulated, and became at last deeply rooted in
+the minds of most of the white population of South
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page204">[204]</span>
+
+
+Africa, who, without being able to say why, considered
+it in consequence a part of its duty to exaggerate in the
+direction of advocating severity toward the Dutch. This
+did not contribute to smoothen matters, and it grew
+into a very real danger, inimical to the conclusion of an
+honourable and permanent peace. Federation, which at
+one time had been ardently wished for almost everywhere,
+became a new cause for anxiety as soon as it was
+known that Rhodes was in favour of it. People fancied
+that his ambitions lay in the direction of a kind of
+dictatorship exercised by himself over the whole of South
+Africa, a dictatorship which would make him in effect
+master of the country.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+This, however, was the last thing which the financiers
+on the Rand wished. Indeed, they became quite alarmed
+at the thought that it might become possible, and
+hastened to explain to Sir Alfred Milner the peril which
+such a thing, if it ever happened, would constitute for
+the community at large. Their constant attendance upon
+Sir Alfred, however, gave rise to the idea that these
+financiers wanted to have it all their own way with him
+and with the Cabinet at home, and that they meant
+to confiscate the Transvaal to their own profit.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The presence of the moneyed class at the Cape had
+also another drawback: it exasperated the poorer refugees,
+who could not forgive those who, too, had fled the
+Rand, for having so successfully saved their own belongings
+from the general ruin and remained rich, when so
+many of those who had directly or indirectly helped them
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page205">[205]</span>
+
+
+to acquire their wealth were starving at their door. In
+reality the magnates of the Rand spent huge sums in the
+relief of their poorer brethren in misfortune. I know
+from personal experience, having often solicited them in
+favour of, say, some unfortunate Russian Jew or a destitute
+Englishman who had lost all his earthly belongings
+through the war. These millionaires, popularly accused
+of being so hardhearted, were always ready with their
+purses to help those who appealed to their charity. But
+the fact that they were able to live in large and luxurious
+houses whilst so many others were starving in hovels,
+that their wives wore diamonds and pearls, and that they
+seemed still to be able to gratify their every desire, exasperated
+the multitude of envious souls congregated at
+the Cape.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+A general feeling of uneasiness and of unpleasantness
+began to weigh on the whole atmosphere, and as
+it was hardly possible for anyone to attack openly those
+who had inexhaustible purses, it became the fashion to
+say that the Dutch were responsible for the general misfortune,
+and to discover means of causing them unpleasantness.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+On the other hand, as the war went on and showed
+no signs of subsiding, the resources of those who, with
+perfect confidence in its short duration, had left the
+Rand at a moment's notice, began to dwindle the more
+quickly insomuch as they had not properly economised
+in the beginning, when the general idea was prevalent
+that the English army would enter Pretoria for the
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page206">[206]</span>
+
+
+Christmas following upon the beginning of the war, and
+that an era of unlimited prosperity was about to dawn
+in the Transvaal. I do believe that among certain circles
+the idea was rooted that once President Kruger had been
+expelled from the Rand its mines would become a sort
+of public property accessible to the whole community at
+large, and controlled by all those who showed any inclination
+for doing so.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The mine owners themselves looked upon the situation
+from a totally different point of view. They had
+gathered far too much experience concerning the state
+of things in South Africa to nurse illusions as to the
+results of a war which was bound to put an end to the
+corruption of the Transvaal Republic. They would have
+preferred infinitely to let things remain in the condition
+into which they had drifted since the Raid, because they
+understood that a strong British Government would be
+interested in putting an end to the abuses which had
+transformed the Rand into an annexe of the Stock Exchange
+of almost every European capital. But, as the
+war had broken out, they preferred that it should end,
+in the establishment of a regular administration which
+could neither be bought nor persuaded to serve interests
+in preference to the public. They did not relish the possible
+triumph of a single man, backed by a powerful
+financial company, with whom they had never lived upon
+particularly affectionate terms.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Rather than see South Africa continue under the influence
+which had hitherto held it in grip, the magnates
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page207">[207]</span>
+
+
+preferred to associate themselves with Sir Alfred Milner
+to bring about as soon as possible a Federation of the
+different South African States, where there would be
+no place for the ambition of a single individual, and
+where the domination of one financial company would
+become an impossibility. These magnates were reasonable
+people after all, quite content, after they had taken
+the cream, to allow others to drink. The fever for gold
+had left them. The fact was that these people were
+not at all anxious to remain at Johannesburg; they preferred
+to gather dividends in London rather than to toil
+in South Africa; the merry, merry days of the Rand
+had come to an end.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Altogether, indeed, things were beginning to slow
+down at Johannesburg, in spite of the fictitious agitation
+by the Rhodesian party. The war had come as
+a relief to everybody, and afforded the magnates the
+opportunity which they had been longing for, to enforce
+order and economy upon a stringent scale in their mines
+and to begin modelling their concerns after a European
+fashion, closing the door upon adventurers and cutting
+off the "financial fringe." The times when new fields
+of exploitation were discovered every day were at an
+end; the treasures which the Transvaal contained in the
+way of precious metals and stones had all been located;
+and very few surprises could be expected in that direction.
+It was time for the pioneers to retire upon their
+laurels and to give to themselves, as well as to their fortunes,
+the sedate appearance which they required in order
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page208">[208]</span>
+
+
+to be able to take a place amid the most elegant and
+exclusive society of Europe. Had Rhodes remained
+alive he would have proved the one great obstacle which
+the magnates of the Rand would have to take into consideration,
+the disturbing element in a situation that
+required calm and quiet.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+If Cecil Rhodes had been allowed to decide alone
+as to the best course of action to pursue he also might
+have come to the same conclusion as these magnates.
+During those moments when he was alone with his own
+thoughts and impulses he would have realised his duty
+toward his country. He was conscious, if others were
+not, of how utterly he had lost ground in South Africa,
+and he understood that any settlement of the South
+African difficulties could only become permanent if his
+name were not associated with it. This, though undeniable,
+was a great misfortune, because Rhodes understood
+so perfectly the art of making the best of every
+situation, and using the resources to hand, that there
+is no doubt he would have brought forward a practical
+solution of the problems which had cropped up on every
+side. He might have proved of infinite use to Sir
+Alfred Milner by his thorough knowledge of the Dutch
+character and of the leaders of the Dutch party with
+whom he had worked. But Rhodes was not permitted
+to decide alone his line of conduct: there were his supporters
+to be consulted, his so-called friends to pacify,
+the English Jingoes to satisfy, and, most difficult of all,
+the Bond and Dutch party to please. Moreover, he had
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page209">[209]</span>
+
+
+been indulging in various intrigues of his own, half of
+which had been conducted through others and half carried
+out alone, with what he believed was success. In
+reality they proved to be more of these disappointments
+he had courted with a carelessness which would
+have appeared almost incredible if one did not know
+Cecil Rhodes. The Rhodesians, who with intention had
+contrived to compromise him, never left him a moment
+to his own thoughts. Without the flatterers who surrounded
+him Rhodes would undoubtedly have risen to
+the height of the situation and frankly and disinterestedly
+put himself at the disposal of the High Commissioner.
+But they managed so to irritate him against
+the representative of the Queen, so to anger him against
+the Dutch party to which he had belonged formerly, and
+so to persuade him that everybody was jealous of his
+successes, his genius and his position in South Africa,
+that it became relatively easy with a man of Rhodes'
+character to make him smart under the sense of non-appreciation.
+Thus goaded, Rhodes acted often without
+premeditation.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In contrast to this impatience and the sense of unsatisfied
+vanity, the coolness and greatness of character
+of Sir Alfred Milner appeared in strong contrast, even
+though many friends of earlier days, such as W.T.
+Stead, had turned their backs upon Sir Alfred, accusing
+him of being the cause of all the misfortunes which fell
+upon South Africa. But those who thus condemned Sir
+Alfred did not understand the peculiar features of the
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page210">[210]</span>
+
+
+situation. He was credited with inspiring all the harsh
+measures which were employed on occasion by others,
+measures which he had stridently disapproved. Rhodes,
+in his place, would have killed somebody or destroyed
+something; Sir Alfred went slowly on with his work,
+disdained praise as well as blame, and looked toward the
+future. I leave it to the reader to decide which of the
+two showed himself the better patriot.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The refugees did not take kindly to the High Commissioner.
+They had been full of illusions concerning
+the help they fondly imagined he would be glad to offer
+them, and when they discovered that, far from taking
+them to his bosom, he discouraged their intention of
+remaining in Cape Town until the end of the war, they
+grumbled and lied with freedom. Sir Alfred gave them
+very distinctly to understand that they had better not
+rely on the British Government to feed and clothe them.
+He said that they would be well advised to try to find
+some work which would allow them to keep themselves
+and their families. But especially he recommended them
+to go back to Europe, which, he gravely assured the
+refugees, was the best place for them and their talents.
+This did not please those refugees who posed as martyrs
+of their English patriotism and as victims of the hatred
+of Kruger and of the Dutch. They expected to be
+petted and flattered as those looked up to as the saviours
+of the Empire.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+All the foregoing applies to the middle-class section
+of the refugees. The poorer ones grumbled also, but
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page211">[211]</span>
+
+
+in a different manner, and their irritation was rather
+directed towards the military authorities. As for the
+millionaires, with a few exceptions they also did not care
+for the High Commissioner for reasons elaborated in
+earlier pages of this volume. They even considered that
+it would be prejudicial to their interests to allow Rhodes
+to be upon too intimate terms with Sir Alfred Milner,
+so they kept a faithful watch at Government House as
+well as at Groote Schuur, and in doing so added to the
+tension which, up to the last moment of Sir Alfred's
+tenure of office at Cape Town, existed between him and
+Cecil Rhodes. Too courteous to tell his redoubtable
+adversary that he had better mind his own business,
+convinced, on the other hand, of the latter's great
+capacities and great patriotism, Sir Alfred was constantly
+doing all that he could do in reason to pacify him. Cecil
+Rhodes used to make most bitter and untrue remarks as
+to the stupidity of the Imperial Government at home
+and the incapacity of the men in charge of its armies
+in South Africa. All this was repeated right and left
+with the usual exaggeration, and reached, as perhaps
+was intended, those whom it concerned. The result was
+that Rhodes found himself tabooed at Pretoria. This
+he said was due to the great fear which his influence
+over public opinion in South Africa inspired among
+those in command there.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The big trouble with Rhodes was that he would never
+own himself in the wrong. He quibbled, he hesitated,
+he postponed replies to questions submitted for his consideration.
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page212">[212]</span>
+
+
+He wearied everybody around him with his
+constant prevarications in regard to facts he ought to
+have accepted without flinching if he wanted to regain
+some of his lost prestige. Unfortunately for himself
+and for the cause of peace in South Africa, Rhodes
+fancied himself immensely clever at "biding his time,"
+as he used to say. He had ever lurking somewhere in
+his brain the conviction that one day the whole situation
+at Cape Town and Pretoria would become so entangled
+that they would have to send for him to beg him as a
+favour to step round and by his magic touch unravel all
+difficulties. His curious shyness, his ambition and his
+vanity battled with each other so long that those in
+authority at last came to the sad conclusion that it was
+far better to look elsewhere for support in their honest
+efforts at this important moment in the existence of
+the African Continent.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+One last attempt was made. It was backed up by
+people in London, among others by Stead. Stead liked
+the Great Imperialist as well as one man can like another,
+and had a great and justified confidence in Rhodes' good
+heart as well as in that indefinable nobility which manifested
+itself at times in his strange, wayward nature.
+Moreover, being gifted with a keen sense of intuition,
+the famous journalist realised quite well the immense
+work that might have been done by England through
+Rhodes had the latter consented to sweep away those
+men around him who were self-interested.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+But Rhodes preferred to maintain his waiting attitude,
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page213">[213]</span>
+
+
+whilst trying at the same time to accumulate as
+many proofs as possible that people wanted him to
+assert himself at last. It was the fact that these proofs
+were denied to him at the very minute when he imagined
+he held them already in his hands which led to his suddenly
+turning once more against the persons he had been
+almost on the point of propitiating. It led him to begin
+the movement for the suspension of the Constitution in
+Cape Colony, out of which he expected so much and
+which he intended to use as his principal weapon against
+the enemies whom he suspected. That was the last great
+political venture in his life; it failed, but merciful Providence
+allowed him not to see the utter collapse of his
+latest house of cards.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page214">[214]</span>
+
+
+<h2 class="num" id="chapter16">CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+<h2>
+UNDER MARTIAL LAW
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+It may be useful, or at any rate of interest, before I
+lay my pen aside, to refer to several things which,
+at the time they occurred, caused torrents of ink to flow
+both in England and in South Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The most important, perhaps, was the application of
+martial law in Cape Colony. I must repeat that I hold
+no brief for England. My affection and admiration for
+her does not go to the extent of remaining absolutely
+blind to faults she has made in the past, and perhaps is
+making in the present. I will not deny that martial law,
+which, unfortunately, is a necessity in wartime, was
+sometimes applied with severity in South Africa. But
+the odium rests principally on the loyalists; their spiteful
+information in many cases induced British officers
+to treat as rebels people who had never even dreamt of
+rebellion.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It must not be forgotten that those to whom was
+entrusted the application of martial law had perforce
+to rely on local residents, whom they could not possibly
+suspect of using these officers to satisfy private animosities
+of further private interests. These British officers
+had never been used to see suspicion reign as master,
+or to watch a perfectly conscious twisting of the truth
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page215">[215]</span>
+
+
+in order to condemn, or even destroy, innocent people.
+A young and probably inexperienced officer sent into a
+small place like Aliwal North or Uitenhage, for instance,
+found himself obliged to rely for information as to the
+loyalty of the inhabitants on some adventurer who,
+through capitalist influence, had obtained an executive
+post of some kind. How can one wonder, therefore,
+that many regrettable incidents occurred and were
+immediately made capital of by the Bond party further
+to embitter the feelings of the Dutch Colonists?
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Many illegal acts were performed under martial law;
+of some a mention was made in the Cape Town Parliament;
+these, therefore, do not admit of doubt. For
+instance, as Mr. Neethling said in the Legislative
+Council, a man of seventy was sent down from Paarl
+to Beaufort West without being allowed to say good-bye
+to his wife, who was left behind without means of support.
+Their house was searched for papers, but without
+result, and the man&#8212;a member of the Afrikander Bond&#8212;was
+sent back, after eighteen months' deportation,
+without any charge having been made against him. He
+was an auctioneer and shipping agent, and during his
+absence his business was annexed by a rival. One British
+Colonial, who held office at Stellenbosch, said to one
+family, without even making an inquiry as to their conduct,
+"You are rebels and I will take your mules"&#8212;which
+was done. The mules were afterwards sold to the
+Commissariat Department by the man who had commandeered
+them. Is it a matter of astonishment, therefore,
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page216">[216]</span>
+
+
+that many people felt sore and bitter at all that
+they had undergone and were going through?
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The administration of martial law in the country
+districts was absolutely deplorable; but when one examines
+minutely the circumstances of the cases of
+injustice about which one could have no doubt, it
+always emerged that these never proceeded from British
+officers, who, on the contrary, wherever they found
+themselves in command, invariably acted with humanity.
+The great mistake of the military authorities was that
+they had far too much confidence in the Volunteer Corps
+and those members of it who were only anxious to make
+money out of existing circumstances. Unfortunately,
+certain officers in command of the different corps were
+extreme Jingoes, and this distorted their whole outlook.
+People said at the time of the war that some districts
+of Cape Colony had been turned into hells; some things,
+in truth, called for strong comment. No words could
+be energetic enough to describe the manner in which
+martial law had been administered&#8212;in the district of
+Graaf Reinet, for instance. The commandants&#8212;this
+justice must be rendered to them&#8212;generally meant well,
+but, unfortunately, they were assisted by men of less
+stable character as intelligence officers. These, in their
+turn, unwisely without due inquiry, engaged subordinates,
+upon whom they relied for their information.
+Graaf Reinet people had had to put up with something
+akin to the Spanish Inquisition. Men there were afraid
+to speak for fear of espionage, the most innocent remarks
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page217">[217]</span>
+
+
+ were distorted by spies recruited from an uncertain
+section of the community. A cattle inspector
+was deported without trial; in consequence, the Secretary
+for Agriculture decided not to employ him again;
+at Graaf Reinet a Colonial intelligence officer constantly
+declared in public that it was his intention to
+drive the people into rebellion; and so instances could
+be multiplied.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The rebellion was not due to martial law. In Graaf
+Reinet the prison was frequently so crowded, often by
+men who did not in the least know why, that no more
+sleeping accommodation could be found in it. People
+were in durance vile because they would not join the
+town guard or defence force. So overcrowded the
+prison became that many persons contracted disease
+during their incarceration.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+For these sad occurrences the Cape Government
+was not initially to blame; more than once they had
+remonstrated with the local military authorities, but reports
+concerning their conduct were not allowed to reach
+the ears of Lord Roberts or of Lord Kitchener. Very
+often a Hottentot informed against respectable citizens
+to the intelligence officer, and by virtue of that they
+were imprisoned as long as the military authorities
+deemed fit. When released, a man would sometimes
+find that his house had been sacked and his most valuable
+property carried away. Persons were deported at
+an hour's notice without reasons being given, and thereafter
+scouts took possession of their farms and plundered
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page218">[218]</span>
+
+
+and destroyed everything. Four wagon-loads of men,
+women and children were deported from their homes at
+Beaufort West. In vain did they ask what they had
+done. Everybody of the name of Van Zyl in the district
+of Graaf Reinet was deported! not a single person
+was left on their farms except those who had driven
+them out of them. And after these had done their work
+the victims were told, "Now you can return home."
+Some had to walk back many miles to their farms, to
+find only ruin left. Many white people were imprisoned
+on the mere evidence of coloured persons, the reputation
+for veracity of whom was well known all over South
+Africa, and whose evidence against a white man would
+never have been admitted in any court of law previous
+to the war.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In Uitenhage the same kind of thing occurred. It
+was sufficient for a Boer column to pass near the farm
+of an Afrikander for the latter to be taken to prison
+without the slightest investigation. No one knew where
+the fines paid went, and certainly a good many of those
+which were imposed by the commanders of the scouts
+and volunteer corps never reached the coffers of the
+Government.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+At Cradock, Somerset East, Graaf Reinet and
+Middelburg people were compelled to eradicate prickly
+pears and do other hard labour simply because they had
+remained quietly at home, according to the proclamation
+issued by Sir Alfred Milner, and refused to join a volunteer
+corps of some sort or other. Many magistrates,
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page219">[219]</span>
+
+
+acting on instructions, forced guiltless people to walk a
+four to six hours' drive under the pretence of subduing
+their spirits.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+One case especially was of such a flagrant nature that
+it illustrates how far the malice of these so-called
+loyalists went and the harm which their conduct did
+to the British Government. The act which I am going
+to relate would never have been committed by any
+genuine English officer, no matter under what provocation.
+There is also a detail which must be noticed:
+by a strange coincidence all the victims of oppression
+were, with but few exceptions, men of means, whom,
+therefore, it was worth while to plunder. The story is
+that a certain Mr. Schoeman, a man of wealth and
+position residing on Vlakteplaats, a farm in the division
+of Oudtshoorn, received, on August 28th, 1901, a message
+through his son from the military scouts who were
+stationed at De Jaeger's farm in the neighbourhood,
+instructing him to hand over his horses to their care.
+No written order from the Commandant was exhibited
+to Mr. Schoeman, either at that time or on his request,
+nor was any evidence adduced at his trial later on to
+prove that such an order had really been given by an
+officer administering martial law in the district. Nevertheless,
+Mr. Schoeman obeyed the order, and on the
+same afternoon sent his horses, three in number, to De
+Jaeger. The scouts refused to take his horses, and told
+them to bring them on the following morning, Thursday,
+August 29th. This Schoeman did; on coming to
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page220">[220]</span>
+
+
+the place with them he found that the scouts had left,
+and was obliged to take the animals again back to his
+farm. On the afternoon of that same day he received
+a message from the scouts, and in reply told them to
+come and see him. He had meanwhile, for safety's sake,
+sent two horses to be concealed away from his stable,
+and kept one, a stallion, at the homestead.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The next day, Friday, Boers appeared early in the
+afternoon. They took the stallion, and the following day
+they returned and asked where the other horses were.
+Mr. Schoeman declined to give any information, but
+they discovered and seized them. Immediately after the
+Boers had left, Mr. Schoeman dispatched one of his
+farm boys named Barry to De Jaeger, the nearest military
+post, to report the occurrence. The scouts had,
+however, disappeared, and he learned from De Jaeger
+that before leaving they had received a report of the
+presence of the Boers. On the return of Barry, Mr.
+Schoeman endeavoured to obtain another messenger.
+Owing to the state of the country, which was infested
+with the enemy, his efforts proved unavailing.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+During the next week Mr. Schoeman, with a considerable
+number of his neighbours, was ordered to
+Oudtshoorn. On his arrival he was arrested, without any
+charge or warrant, and confined for some three months,
+bail being refused. No preliminary examination was
+held as provided in the instructions on martial law
+issued May 1st, 1901. On Sunday, December 1st, it
+was notified to Mr. Schoeman that he would be tried
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page221">[221]</span>
+
+
+on the following day, and the charges were for the first
+time communicated to him. On December 2nd the
+court assembled and Mr. Schoeman was charged with
+three offences:
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+1. For not having handed his horses over to the
+proper military authorities, whereby they fell into the
+hands of the enemy.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+2. For having been on friendly terms with the
+enemy.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+3. For having failed to report the presence of the
+enemy.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+He was found guilty on the first and last charges
+and not guilty on the second count, being sentenced to
+six months' hard labour and to pay a fine of &#163;500, or
+to suffer a further term of twelve months' hard labour
+in lieu of the fine. The sentence was confirmed, the
+fine was paid by Mr. Schoeman, and he underwent the
+imprisonment for one month with hard labour and for
+five months without hard labour, which was remitted
+upon order from Lord Kitchener, who, without even
+being fully instructed as to the circumstances of the case,
+of his own accord lightened the terrible sentence passed
+upon Mr. Schoeman.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Later on Mr. Schoeman was cleared of the calumnies
+that had been the cause of his suffering. In this case,
+as in many others, the victim was the object of the
+private vengeance of a man who had had a grudge against
+him, and repaid it in that abominable manner.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+One of the worst mistakes among the many committed
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page222">[222]</span>
+
+
+during the South African War was to allow
+residents to be invested with what was nothing less
+than unlimited authority over their fellow-citizens. The
+British Government, which was made responsible for
+these acts, would never have given its sanction to any
+one of them; mostly, it was unaware of the original
+facts. The English military authorities dealt in absolute
+good faith, which makes the more shameful the
+conduct of those who wilfully led them into error. Their
+one fault was not to realise that certain individuals were
+not fit to administer martial law. In one particular district
+the man in authority seemed to have as the single
+aim of his life the punishment of anyone with Dutch
+sympathies or of Dutch blood. It was useless to appeal
+to him, because whenever a complaint was brought by
+an inhabitant of the district he simply refused to listen
+to it, and poured a torrent of abuse at the head of the
+bringer. One of his most notorious actions was the treatment
+which, by his orders, was inflicted on an old man
+who enjoyed the general esteem of both the English
+and the Dutch community, a former member of the
+House of Assembly. His house was searched, the floors
+were taken up, and the whole garden was dug out of
+recognition in a search for documents that might have
+proved that his son, or himself, or any other member of
+his family had been in correspondence with the two Republics.
+All this kind of thing was done on hearsay
+evidence, behind which lay personal motives.
+
+Had the settlement of the country been left entirely
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page223">[223]</span>
+
+
+in the hands of Lord Kitchener, nothing approaching
+what I have related could have occurred. Unfortunately
+for all concerned, this was precisely the thing which the
+Rhodesian and other interests opposed. Much of the
+loyalty, about which such a fuss was made at the Cape,
+was loyalty to the sovereign in the pocket, and not
+loyalty to the Sovereign on the throne. This concern
+for wealth was seen in many aspects of life in South
+Africa, and occasionally invaded drastically the realm of
+social well-being. A case in point was the opposition by
+the financial interests to a tax on brandy. In South
+Africa drunkenness was one of the worst evils, especially
+among the coloured race, yet the restrictive influence of
+a tax was withheld. The underlying motive was nothing
+but the desire to avoid the tax on diamonds, which every
+reasonable person claimed and considered to be a source
+of revenue of which the Government had no right to
+deprive itself. While Rhodes lived the legislation introduced
+and maintained by his powerful personality revealed
+the policy of compromise which he always pursued.
+He was eminently practical and businesslike. He said
+to the members of the Bond, "Don't you tax diamonds
+and I won't tax dop," as the Cape brandy is called. The
+compact was made and kept in his lifetime.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+When Rhodes was dead and a big democratic British
+element had come into the country after the war, those
+in power began wondering how it was that diamonds,
+which kept in luxury people who did not live in the
+country and consequently had no interest whatever in
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page224">[224]</span>
+
+
+its prosperity, were not taxed. The Ministry presided
+over by Sir Gordon Sprigg shared this feeling, and in
+consequence found itself suddenly forsaken by its
+adherents of the day before, and the Rhodesian Press in
+full cry against the Government. Sir Gordon Sprigg
+was stigmatised as a tool of the Bond and as disloyal to
+the Empire after the fifty years he had worked for it,
+with rare disinterestedness and great integrity. Nevertheless,
+the Ministry declared that, as there existed an
+absolute necessity for finding new resources to liquidate
+the expenses contingent on the war, it would propose a
+tax on diamonds and another one on dop.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The exasperation of the Rhodesian party, which was
+thus roused, was the principal reason why the agitation
+for the suspension of the Constitution in Cape Colony
+was started and pursued so vigorously in spite of the
+small chance it had to succeed. His support of this
+agitation may be called the death-bed effort of Rhodes.
+When he was no longer alive to lend them his strong
+hand, the Rhodesian party was bound to disperse. They
+tried in vain to continue his policy, but all their efforts
+to do so failed, because there was nothing really tangible
+for them to work upon.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div style="text-align:center"><table class="figure" summary="THE RT. HON. SIR JOHN GORDON SPRIGG" id="FIG.7"><tr><td><a href="images/image07.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="images/image07-th.jpg" title="THE RT. HON. SIR JOHN GORDON SPRIGG" alt="THE RT. HON. SIR JOHN GORDON SPRIGG" width="350" height="517" /></a></td></tr><tr><td class="figure-attribution"><p>Photo: Elliott &amp; Fry</p></td></tr><tr><td class="figure-caption"><p>THE RT. HON. SIR JOHN GORDON SPRIGG</p></td></tr></table></div>
+<p>
+With Cecil Rhodes came to an end also what can
+be called the romantic period of the history of South
+Africa, that period during which fortunes were made and
+lost in a few days; when new lands were discovered and
+conquered with a facility and a recklessness that reminded
+one of the Middle Ages. The war established an
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page225">[225]</span>
+
+
+equilibrium which but for it would have taken years to
+be reached. It sealed the past and heralded the dawn of
+a new day when civilisation was to assert itself, to brush
+away many abuses, much cruelty and more injustice.
+The race hatred which the personality of Rhodes had
+done so much to keep alive, collapsed very quickly after
+his death, and as time went on the work done with such
+unselfishness and such quiet resolution by Sir Alfred
+Milner began to bear fruit. It came gradually to be
+understood that the future would justify his aims.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The war was one of those colossal crises which shake
+the foundations of a country and change the feelings of
+a whole generation of men and women in regard to each
+other. Whilst it lasted it roused the worst passions and
+showed up the worst aspects of the character of the
+people who played a part in it; but once it was over the
+false fabric upon which the animosities of the day before
+had been built fell. A serious and more enlightened
+appreciation of the events that had brought about the
+cataclysm which had cleared the air took the place of
+the furious outburst of hatred that had preceded it.
+People began to realise that it was not possible, on a
+continent where Europeans constituted but a small
+minority, that they could give the coloured races a terrible
+example of disunion and strife and still maintain
+dominance. Both the English and Dutch had at last
+recognised the necessity for working together at the great
+task of a Federation of the South African States, which
+would allow the whole of the vast Southern Continent
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page226">[226]</span>
+
+
+to develop itself on a plane of higher progress under the
+protection of the British flag. This Union was conceived
+many, many years earlier by Cecil Rhodes. It was his
+great spirit that thought of making into one great
+nation the agglomeration of small nationalities, white
+and black, that lay over the veldt and impenetrable forests
+of South and Central Africa. For a long space of years
+Cecil Rhodes was South Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+So long as Rhodes lived it would have been impossible
+for South Africa to escape the influence of his
+brain, which was always plotting and planning for the
+future whilst forgetting more often than was healthy
+or wise the preoccupations of the present. After the
+Queen's flag had been hoisted at Pretoria, Cecil Rhodes
+alive would have proved an anomaly in South Africa.
+Cecil Rhodes dead would still retain his position as a
+dreamer and a thinker, a man who always pushed forward
+without heeding the obstacles, forgetful of aught
+else but the end he was pursuing, the country which he
+loved so well, and, what he cared for even more, his own
+ambition. Men like Rhodes&#8212;with all their mistakes to
+mar their dazzling successes&#8212;cannot be replaced; it is
+just as difficult to take up their work as it is to fill the
+gap caused by their disappearance.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page227">[227]</span>
+
+
+<h2 id="CONCLUSION">
+CONCLUSION
+</h2>
+
+<p>
+I have come to the end of what I intended at first
+to be a book of recollections but which has resolved
+itself into one of impressions. A more competent pen
+than mine will one day write the inner history of this
+South African War, which by an anomaly of destiny had
+quite different results from those expected. So many
+things have occurred since it happened that the whole
+sequence of events, including the war, is now looked
+upon by many people as a simple incident in a long
+story.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In reality the episode was something more than that.
+It was a manifestation of the great strength of the British
+Empire and of the wonderful spirit of vitality which has
+carried England triumphantly through crises that would
+have wrecked any other nation. The incidents which
+followed the war proved the generosity that lies at the
+bottom of the English character and the grandeur that
+comes out of it in those grave moments when the welfare
+of a nation appears to be at stake and its rulers are
+unable to apply to a succession of evils and dangers the
+right remedy to bring about peace and contentment. No
+other nations possess this remarkable and distinctive feature.
+England very wisely refused to notice the bitterness
+which still persisted in the early days after the conclusion
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page228">[228]</span>
+
+
+of peace, and devoted her energies to the one immense
+and immediate work of Federation.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The colossal work of Union had been conceived in
+the shape which it was eventually to assume by Sir Alfred
+Milner, who, after having laid the foundations, was patriot
+enough to allow others to achieve its consummation,
+because he feared the unjust estimate of his character,
+disseminated by interested persons, might compromise the
+desired object and far-reaching possibilities of an enterprise
+which the most sanguine had never imagined could
+be accomplished within so short a space of time. He
+had toiled courageously toward the founding of a new
+State where the rights of every white as well as of every
+coloured man should be respected and taken into account,
+and where it would be impossible for a handful of rich
+men by the mere power of riches to control the lives
+and consciences of others.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The time of Sir Alfred Milner's administration was
+the transitory period between the primitive and the
+civilised that no nation escapes, and this period Sir Alfred
+used in working toward the establishment of a strong and
+wise government. Whether the one which started its
+course of existence on the day when the Federation of
+South Africa became an accomplished fact was strong
+and wise it is not for me to say. At least it was a
+patriotic government, one which worked sincerely at the
+abolition of the race hatred which the war had not entirely
+killed, and also one which recognised that after all it was
+the principle of Imperial government that alone could
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page229">[229]</span>
+
+
+bring back prosperity and security to unfortunate and
+bleeding South Africa.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The war gave to the Empire the loyal support and
+co-operation of the Dutch population at the Cape and
+also in the Transvaal, and the fidelity with which General
+Botha fulfilled his duty toward the Mother Country in
+the difficult moments of 1914 proved the strong link
+forged in 1902 between the British Empire and South
+Africa. Now that years have passed it is possible to look
+with a less passionate eye upon the past and upon the
+men who took a leading part in the events which gave to
+the British Empire another fair dominion. They appear
+to us as they really were, and we can more justly accord
+them their proper valuation. The personality of Cecil
+Rhodes will always remain a great one; his merits and
+his defects will be reduced to their proper relative proportions,
+and the atmosphere of adulation or antagonism
+which, as the occasion suited, was poured upon him, be
+dissipated by time's clarifying influences. His real work
+consisted in the opening of new sources of wealth and
+new spheres of activity to a whole multitude of his fellow-countrymen,
+and of giving his native land an extension
+of its dominions in regions it had never penetrated before
+Cecil Rhodes' enterprising spirit of adventure and of conquest
+sent him into the wilderness of Africa to open a
+new and radiating centre of activity and development for
+his country. The conception of the Cape to Cairo Railway
+was one of those projects for which his country will
+ever remain grateful.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page230">[230]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+Yes! Rhodes was a great Englishman in spite of his
+faults, and perhaps on account of his faults. Beside the
+genius of a Darwin or of a Pasteur, the talent of a Shakespeare
+or of a Milton, the science of a Newton or of a
+Lister, his figure seems a small one indeed, and it is
+absurd to raise him to the same level as these truly
+wonderful men. The fact that the activity of Cecil
+Rhodes lay in quite a different direction does not, however,
+diminish the real importance of the work which
+he did, nor of the services which he rendered to his
+country. The mistake is to judge him as a universal
+genius. His genius had a particular bent; it was always
+directed toward one point and one only, that of material
+advantages to be acquired for the nation to which he
+belonged and of which he was so proud to be the son.
+Without him South Africa would possibly have been
+lost for the British Empire, which owes him most certainly
+a great debt in that respect.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The years which have gone by since his death have
+proved that in many things Rhodes had been absolutely
+mistaken. Always he was an attractive, and at times
+even a lovable, personality; a noble character marred by
+small acts, a generous man and an unscrupulous foe;
+violent in temper, unjust in his view of facts that displeased
+him, understanding chiefly his personal interests,
+true to those whom he considered his friends, but implacable
+toward the people whom he himself had wronged.
+He was a living enigma to which no one had ever found
+a solution; because he presented constantly new and
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page231">[231]</span>
+
+
+unexpected sides that appeared suddenly and shattered
+the conclusion to which one had previously arrived.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+In Europe Rhodes would not only have been impossible,
+but he would never have found the opportunity
+to give full rein to his faculties of organisation and of
+conquest. He knew no obstacles and would admit none
+in his way; he was of the type of Pizarro and of Fernando
+Cortez, with fewer prejudices, far more knowledge, and
+that clear sense of civilisation which only an Englishman
+born and bred amid the traditions of liberty can possess.
+But he was lacking in the fine political conception
+of government which Sir Alfred Milner possessed, and
+whilst refusing to admit the thought of compromise in
+matters where a little yielding to the wishes and desires
+of others might have secured him considerable advantage,
+he yet allowed himself to become entangled in intrigues
+which he denied as soon as he perceived that they could
+not be successful, but for which the world always condemned
+and never forgave, and even in some cases
+despised him.
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Notwithstanding the great brilliance of his intelligence
+and the strength of his mind, Cecil Rhodes will always
+be found inferior to the present Viscount Milner as a
+statesman. Rhodes could not and would not wait.
+Milner spent his whole existence in waiting, and waited
+so successfully that he lived to see the realisation of the
+plans which he had made and which so many, even among
+his friends, had declared to be quite impossible for him
+to realise. Milner, about whose tact and mental greatness
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page232">[232]</span>
+
+
+so many false notions existed in South Africa as
+well as elsewhere, had been the one man who had seen
+clearly the consequences of the war. As he told me one
+day when we were talking about the regrettable race-hatred
+which lent such animosity to the struggle: "It
+will cease sooner than one thinks."
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The wise administrator, who had studied human nature
+so closely as he had done politics, had based his judgments
+on the knowledge which he had acquired of the spirit of
+colonisation which makes Great Britain so superior to
+any other nation in the world, and his belief that her
+marvellous spirit of adaptation was bound to make itself
+felt in South Africa as it had elsewhere. Sir Alfred
+Milner knew that as time went on the Afrikanders would
+realise that their erstwhile enemies had given them the
+position to which they had always aspired, a position which
+entitled them to take a place among the other great
+nations of the world. He knew, too, that their natural
+spirit of pride and of vanity would make them cherish the
+Empire that had allowed them to realise their ambitions
+of the past. Until the war they had been proud of their
+gold and of their diamonds; after the war they would be
+proud of their country. And by the consciousness which
+would gradually come to them of the advantages which
+their Federation under the British flag had brought to
+them they would become also ardent British patriots&#8212;blessing
+the day when, in a passing fit of insanity, goaded
+into it by people who had never seen clearly the situation,
+President Kruger had declared war on England.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="page233">[233]</span>
+
+
+
+<hr /><div class="index" id="INDEX">
+
+<h2>
+INDEX
+</h2>
+
+<ul class="index">
+
+ <li>Africa, South, charm of, <a href="#page22">22</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>conquest of, <a href="#page1">1</a></li>
+ <li>drunkenness in, <a href="#page223">223</a></li>
+ <li>English colonists, <a href="#page14">14</a></li>
+ <li>prior to Boer War, <a href="#page6">6</a></li>
+ <li>Union of (<i>see</i> Union)</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>Afrikander Bond, <a href="#page86">86</a>, <a href="#page99">99</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>and Rhodes, <a href="#page73">73</a>, <a href="#page82">82</a>, <a href="#page84">84</a></li>
+ <li>and Sir A. Milner, <a href="#page134">134</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>Afrikander party compel Rhodes' resignation, <a href="#page50">50</a></li>
+ <li>Aliwal North concentration camp, <a href="#page182">182</a></li>
+ <li>America's response to concentration camp appeal, <a href="#page165">165</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">B</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+ <li>Barkly West, Rhodes elected for, <a href="#page28">28</a></li>
+ <li>Barnato, Barney, <a href="#page24">24</a>, <a href="#page137">137</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>his awe of Rhodes, <a href="#page60">60</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>Beit, Alfred, <a href="#page24">24</a></li>
+ <li>Bender, Rev. Dr., Chief Rabbi of Cape Town, <a href="#page194">194</a></li>
+ <li>Bloemfontein, concentration camp at, <a href="#page182">182</a>, <a href="#page184">184</a></li>
+ <li>Bloemfontein Conference, the, <a href="#page13">13</a>, <a href="#page16">16</a>, <a href="#page140">140</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>failure of, <a href="#page67">67</a>, <a href="#page104">104</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>Boer War, concentration camps, <a href="#page157">157</a> <i>et seq.</i>
+ <ul>
+ <li>not a war of annihilation, <a href="#page3">3</a></li>
+ <li>prime cause of, <a href="#page128">128</a>, <a href="#page137">137</a>, <a href="#page139">139</a>, <a href="#page178">178</a></li>
+ <li>Rhodes' prophecy, <a href="#page67">67</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>Boers, the, mistrust of England after the Raid, <a href="#page200">200</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>pre-war hygienic conditions of, <a href="#page160">160</a> (<i>Cf. also</i> Dutch)</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>Botha, General, <a href="#page83">83</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>imperialism of, <a href="#pagexii">xii</a>, <a href="#page229">229</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>British Empire, South Africa added to, <a href="#page3">3</a></li>
+ <li>British Government, the, a missed opportunity, <a href="#page41">41</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>and Boer concentration camps, <a href="#page162">162</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>British South Africa Company, constitution of, <a href="#page44">44</a> (<i>See also</i> Chartered Company)</li>
+ <li>Brooke-Hunt, Miss, in Pretoria, <a href="#page186">186</a></li>
+ <li>Buller, Sir Redvers, and siege of Kimberley, <a href="#page94">94</a>, <a href="#page95">95</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">
+ C
+ </h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+ <li>Cape Colony, diamond fields, <a href="#page3">3</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>loyalty to England, <a href="#page129">129</a></li>
+ <li>martial law in, <a href="#page214">214</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li>mutiny of Dutch in, <a href="#page8">8</a></li>
+ <li>overcrowded prisons, <a href="#page217">217</a></li>
+ <li>Rhodes as Premier, <a href="#page30">30</a>, <a href="#page43">43</a>, <a href="#page44">44</a></li>
+ <li>Sir Gordon Sprigg as Premier, <a href="#page99">99</a>, <a href="#page121">121</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Cape to Cairo Railway, <a href="#page81">81</a>, <a href="#page124">124</a>, <a href="#page229">229</a></li>
+ <li>Cape Town, influx of refugees, <a href="#page191">191</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+ <li>Chamberlain, Joseph, <a href="#page104">104</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>policy of, <a href="#page133">133</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Chartered Company of South Africa, <a href="#page25">25</a>, <a href="#page26">26</a>, <a href="#page78">78</a>, <a href="#page80">80</a>
+
+ <ul>
+ <li>sinister rumours, <a href="#page45">45</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Concentration camps, <a href="#page141">141</a>, <a href="#page142">142</a>, <a href="#page157">157</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>hygienic conditions of, <a href="#page160">160</a></li>
+ <li>inner organisation, <a href="#page173">173</a></li>
+ <li>Miss Hobhouse's charges, and Mrs. Henry Fawcett's reply to, <a href="#page165">165</a>, <a href="#page181">181</a></li>
+ <li>necessity for, <a href="#page161">161</a></li>
+ <li>rations, <a href="#page171">171</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>Cronje, General, <a href="#page94">94</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<h3 class="index">D</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+ <li>De Beers Consolidated Mines, <a href="#page24">24</a>, <a href="#page80">80</a>, <a href="#page112">112</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>power of Company, <a href="#page114">114</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>Delagoa Bay, <a href="#page91">91</a></li>
+ <li>Dop tax, the, <a href="#page223">223</a></li>
+ <li>Dutch, the, and Dr. Jameson, <a href="#page149">149</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>and Sir A. Milner, <a href="#page151">151</a></li>
+ <li>enmity with English, <a href="#page11">11</a></li>
+ <li>mutiny in Cape Colony, <a href="#page8">8</a></li>
+ <li>popularity of Rhodes with, <a href="#page30">30</a>, <a href="#page43">43</a>, <a href="#page73">73</a></li>
+ <li>reconciliation with English, <a href="#page129">129</a> (<i>Cf. also</i> Boers)</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">E</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ <li>Eckstein, F., <a href="#page97">97</a>, <a href="#page197">197</a></li>
+
+ <li>England acquires the Transvaal, <a href="#page1">1</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>the question of concentration camps, <a href="#page159">159</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>English, the
+ <ul>
+ <li>as colonists, <a href="#page14">14</a>, <a href="#page15">15</a></li>
+ <li>enmity with the Dutch, <a href="#page11">11</a></li>
+ <li>reconciliation with the Dutch, <a href="#page129">129</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">F</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+ <li>Fawcett, Mrs. Henry, reply to Miss Hobhouse, <a href="#page181">181</a></li>
+ <li>Frenchman, a, and a Johannesburg mining property, <a href="#page64">64</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">G</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+ <li>Glen Grey Act, the, <a href="#page126">126</a></li>
+ <li>Graaf Reinet, martial law in, <a href="#page216">216</a></li>
+ <li>Green Point (Cape Town) concentration camp, <a href="#page170">170</a></li>
+ <li>Groote Schuur, the house and gardens, <a href="#page153">153</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">H</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+ <li>Hammond, John Hays, <a href="#page138">138</a></li>
+ <li>Hely-Hutchinson, Sir W.F., <a href="#page99">99</a></li>
+ <li>Hobhouse, Miss, pamphlet on concentration camps, <a href="#page165">165</a> <i>et seq.</i> </li>
+ <li>Hofmeyr, Mr., <a href="#page38">38</a>, <a href="#page43">43</a>, <a href="#page83">83</a>, <a href="#page84">84</a>, <a href="#page86">86</a>, <a href="#page135">135</a>, <a href="#page150">150</a>, <a href="#page155">155</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>popularity of, <a href="#page136">136</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">I</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+ <li>I.D.B. Act, the, unwisdom of, <a href="#page113">113</a></li>
+ <li>Imperial Commission report on concentration camps, <a href="#page166">166</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">J</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+
+ <li>Jameson, Dr., affection for Rhodes, <a href="#page72">72</a>, <a href="#page148">148</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>becomes Prime Minister, <a href="#page73">73</a></li>
+ <li>death of, <a href="#page148">148</a> (note)</li>
+ <li>enters Transvaal territory, <a href="#page47">47</a> (<i>see</i> Jameson Raid)</li>
+ <li>political aspirations of, <a href="#page56">56</a></li>
+ <li>Progressive leader, <a href="#page72">72</a></li>
+ <li>relations with Rhodes after the raid, <a href="#page54">54</a></li>
+ <li>rumours of his forthcoming raid, <a href="#page45">45</a></li>
+ <li>the Dutch and, <a href="#page149">149</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Jameson Raid, the, <a href="#page9">9</a>, <a href="#page30">30</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>a colossal blunder, <a href="#page200">200</a></li>
+ <li>aftermath of, <a href="#page69">69</a></li>
+ <li>its aim, <a href="#page53">53</a></li>
+ <li>tacitly encouraged by Rhodes, <a href="#page51">51</a>, <a href="#page67">67</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Jews, Polish, plight of, <a href="#page193">193</a></li>
+
+ <li>Jingoes, the, <a href="#page69">69</a>, <a href="#page107">107</a>, <a href="#page130">130</a>, <a href="#page135">135</a>, <a href="#page142">142</a>, <a href="#page163">163</a>, <a href="#page216">216</a></li>
+
+ <li>Joel, S., <a href="#page24">24</a></li>
+
+ <li>Johannesburg, a shady operation in, <a href="#page63">63</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>flight from, <a href="#page191">191</a></li>
+ <li>goldfields of, <a href="#page24">24</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">K</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+ <li>Kekewich, Colonel, entrusted with defence of Kimberley, <a href="#page94">94</a></li>
+ <li>Kimberley, diamond mines in, <a href="#page17">17</a>, <a href="#page24">24</a>, <a href="#page87">87</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>relief of, <a href="#page116">116</a></li>
+ <li>Rhodes' purchase of plots in, <a href="#page21">21</a></li>
+ <li>Rhodes' secret negotiations, <a href="#page76">76</a></li>
+ <li>siege of, <a href="#page75">75</a>, <a href="#page83">83</a>, <a href="#page94">94</a></li>
+ <li>the I.D.B. Act in operation, <a href="#page113">113</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Kitchener, Lord, and Boer concentration camps, <a href="#page159">159</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>intervenes in the Schoeman case, <a href="#page221">221</a></li>
+ <li>Rhodes and, <a href="#page147">147</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Koopman, Mrs. van, author's admiration for, <a href="#page48">48</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>disillusionment of, <a href="#page47">47</a>, <a href="#page74">74</a>, <a href="#page146">146</a></li>
+ <li>her alarm at raid rumours, <a href="#page45">45</a></li>
+ <li>intimacy with Rhodes, <a href="#page40">40</a></li>
+ <li>Rhodes denies raid projected, <a href="#page46">46</a></li>
+ <li>under police supervision, <a href="#page48">48</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Kruger, President, <a href="#page30">30</a>, <a href="#page53">53</a>, <a href="#page198">198</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>and Mrs. van Koopman, <a href="#page40">40</a></li>
+ <li>candid criticisms of Rhodes, <a href="#page92">92</a>, <a href="#page93">93</a></li>
+ <li>death sentence for Reformers, <a href="#page51">51</a></li>
+ <li>"refreshers" for, <a href="#page197">197</a></li>
+ <li>Rhodes attempts alliance with, <a href="#page90">90</a></li>
+ <li>Rhodes' <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">b&#234;te-noire</i>, <a href="#page150">150</a></li>
+ <li>Rhodes' duplicity, <a href="#page74">74</a></li>
+ <li>warned against Sir A. Milner, <a href="#page104">104</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">L</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+ <li>Ladysmith, relief of, <a href="#page116">116</a></li>
+ <li>Lobengula, King, <a href="#page36">36</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>and Rhodesia, <a href="#page25">25</a></li>
+ <li>Cecil Rhodes and, <a href="#page19">19</a></li>
+ <li>his son becomes one of Rhodes' gardeners, <a href="#page37">37</a></li>
+ </ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Loyalists and concentration camps, <a href="#page174">174</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">M</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+ <li>Mafeking concentration camp, <a href="#page186">186</a></li>
+ <li>Majuba, defeat of British at, <a href="#page73">73</a></li>
+ <li>Martial law in Cape Colony, <a href="#page214">214</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li>"Martyrdom of Man" (Reade's), its influence on Rhodes, <a href="#page126">126</a></li>
+
+
+
+
+ <li>Matabele Rebellion, the, Rhodes' courage in, <a href="#page43">43</a></li>
+
+ <li>Matabeleland, <a href="#page19">19</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>acquired by the Chartered Company, <a href="#page26">26</a>, <a href="#page90">90</a>, <a href="#page112">112</a></li>
+ </ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Matoppo Hills, an historic meeting, <a href="#page43">43</a>
+<ul>
+ <li>Rhodes' burial-place, <a href="#page72">72</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Maxwell, Lady, an appeal by, <a href="#page164">164</a></li>
+
+<li>Merriman, Mr., <a href="#page134">134</a>, <a href="#page150">150</a>
+<ul>
+ <li>severs relations with Rhodes, <a href="#page73">73</a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Methuen, Lord, mandate to Rhodes, <a href="#page95">95</a></li>
+
+<li>Milner, Sir (Viscount) Alfred, <a href="#page4">4</a>, <a href="#page58">58</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>a hint to Rhodes, <a href="#page147">147</a></li>
+ <li>and the Boers, <a href="#page12">12</a>, <a href="#page85">85</a>, <a href="#page132">132</a></li>
+ <li>and Rhodes, <a href="#page74">74</a>, <a href="#page140">140</a>, <a href="#page148">148</a></li>
+ <li>and the De Beers Company, <a href="#page115">115</a></li>
+ <li>appointed Governor of Cape Colony, <a href="#page8">8</a>, <a href="#page85">85</a></li>
+ <li>dignified speech, <a href="#page134">134</a></li>
+ <li>efforts for peace, <a href="#page156">156</a></li>
+ <li>his great object, <a href="#page86">86</a></li>
+ <li>influence of, <a href="#page104">104</a></li>
+ <li>misunderstood and misjudged <a href="#page7">7</a>, <a href="#page12">12</a>, <a href="#page85">85</a>, <a href="#page104">104</a>, <a href="#page107">107</a>, <a href="#page108">108</a>, <a href="#page180">180</a>, <a href="#page228">228</a></li>
+ <li>overruled from Whitehall, <a href="#page135">135</a></li>
+ <li>policy of conciliation, <a href="#page130">130</a></li>
+ <li>reports from Rhodes on defence of Kimberley, <a href="#page94">94</a></li>
+ <li>Rhodes' distrust of, <a href="#page13">13</a>, <a href="#page75">75</a></li>
+ <li>the refugees and, <a href="#page210">210</a></li>
+ <li>the South African League, <a href="#page90">90</a></li>
+ <li>transferred to Johannesburg, <a href="#page99">99</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">N</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+<li>Napoleon, Pius VII. on, <a href="#page35">35</a></li>
+
+<li>Neethling, Mr., and martial law in Cape Colony, <a href="#page215">215</a></li>
+
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">O</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+ <li>Orange Free State, flight of the populace, <a href="#page158">158</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>illusions of the Dutch in, <a href="#page176">176</a></li>
+ <li>resources of, <a href="#page8">8</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">P</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+ <li>Pius VII., Pope, on Napoleon, <a href="#page35">35</a></li>
+
+ <li>Polish Jews, plight of, <a href="#page193">193</a></li>
+
+ <li>Pretoria, British flag hoisted at, <a href="#page226">226</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>Rhodes tabooed at, <a href="#page211">211</a></li>
+ <li>Rhodes visits Kruger at, <a href="#page91">91</a></li>
+ <li>soldiers' institutes at, <a href="#page186">186</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">R</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+
+ <li>Radziwill, Princess Catherine, and Rhodes, <a href="#page110">110</a>, <a href="#page146">146</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>and Rhodes' suspicions of Sir A. Milner, <a href="#page107">107</a></li>
+ <li>conversations with Sir A. Milner, <a href="#page106">106</a>, <a href="#page232">232</a></li>
+ <li>Rhodes' characteristic note to, <a href="#page59">59</a></li>
+ <li>talks with Rhodes on Reade's "Martyrdom of Man," <a href="#page127">127</a></li>
+ <li>visits concentration camps, <a href="#page163">163</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Rand, the, Downing Street and, <a href="#page179">179</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>Dutch illusions as to Britain's intentions, <a href="#page177">177</a></li>
+ <li>flight from, <a href="#page191">191</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li>gold fields of, <a href="#page90">90</a></li>
+ <li>magnates of, <a href="#page137">137</a> <i>el seq.</i>, <a href="#page197">197</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Reade, Winwood, influence of his
+ <ul>
+ <li>"Martyrdom of Man" on Rhodes, <a href="#page126">126</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Rhodes, Cecil, agitates for suspension
+ of constitution, <a href="#page118">118</a>, <a href="#page155">155</a>, <a href="#page213">213</a>, <a href="#page224">224</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>beginning of his fortune, <a href="#page21">21</a></li>
+ <li>created a Privy Councillor, <a href="#page43">43</a></li>
+ <li>death, <a href="#page129">129</a>, <a href="#page153">153</a>, <a href="#page224">224</a></li>
+ <li>end of his political career, <a href="#page47">47</a>, <a href="#page50">50</a>, <a href="#page57">57</a>, <a href="#page73">73</a></li>
+ <li>enters political life, <a href="#page28">28</a></li>
+ <li>patriotism of, <a href="#page10">10</a>,<a href="#page17">17</a>, <a href="#page31">31</a>, <a href="#page76">76</a>, <a href="#page82">82</a>, <a href="#page152">152</a>, <a href="#page230">230</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Rhodes, Herbert (brother of Cecil Rhodes), <a href="#page20">20</a></li>
+
+ <li>Rhodesia, annexation of, <a href="#page24">24</a>, <a href="#page25">25</a>, <a href="#page28">28</a>, <a href="#page35">35</a>, <a href="#page36">36</a>, <a href="#page78">78</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>exploitation of, <a href="#page198">198</a></li>
+ <li>question of its mineral wealth, <a href="#page177">177</a></li>
+ <li>Rhodes as "King" of, <a href="#page122">122</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Roberts, Lord, complimentary lunch to, <a href="#page134">134</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>Rhodes' abuse of, <a href="#page147">147</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Rowntree, Mr., and the concentration camps, <a href="#page187">187</a></li>
+
+ <li>Russia, Wallace's work on, <a href="#page126">126</a></li>
+
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">S</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+ <li>Sandringham, Rhodes at, <a href="#page126">126</a></li>
+
+ <li>Sargent, E.B., <a href="#page183">183</a></li>
+
+ <li>Sauer, Mr., <a href="#page86">86</a>, <a href="#page117">117</a>, <a href="#page134">134</a>, <a href="#page150">150</a>, <a href="#page155">155</a>,
+ <ul>
+ <li>and Rhodes, <a href="#page73">73</a></li>
+ <li>leader of Bond party, <a href="#page100">100</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Schoeman, Mr., illegal arrest of, and Lord Kitchener's intervention, <a href="#page200">200</a>, <a href="#page201">201</a></li>
+
+
+
+
+ <li>Schoeman, Mr., and Loyalists, <a href="#page219">219</a></li>
+
+ <li>Schreiner, Mr., <a href="#page38">38</a>, <a href="#page86">86</a>, <a href="#page133">133</a>, <a href="#page150">150</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>confidence in Rhodes, <a href="#page32">32</a></li>
+ <li>indignation with Rhodes, <a href="#page50">50</a>, <a href="#page73">73</a></li>
+ <li>questions Rhodes, <a href="#page45">45</a></li>
+ <li>Rhodes and, <a href="#page23">23</a>, <a href="#page74">74</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Schreiner, Olive, on annexation of Rhodesia, <a href="#page36">36</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>Rhodes and, <a href="#page33">33</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Simonstown, camp for prisoners of war at, <a href="#page172">172</a></li>
+
+ <li>Smuts, General, Imperialism of, <a href="#pagexii">xii</a></li>
+
+ <li>Sonnenberg, Mr., and Rhodes, <a href="#page26">26</a></li>
+
+ <li>South Africa (<i>see</i> Africa, South)</li>
+
+ <li>South African League, <a href="#page86">86</a>, <a href="#page88">88</a>, <a href="#page97">97</a>, <a href="#page99">99</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>a petition to Sir Gordon Sprigg, <a href="#page99">99</a>, <a href="#page102">102</a></li>
+ <li>and Sir A. Milner, <a href="#page90">90</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Southern Cross, the, <a href="#page22">22</a></li>
+
+ <li>Sprigg, Sir Gordon, and the South African League, <a href="#page99">99</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>diamond and dop taxes, <a href="#page224">224</a></li>
+ <li>Premier of Cape Colony, <a href="#page99">99</a>, <a href="#page121">121</a>, <a href="#page132">132</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Stead, W.T., admiration of Rhodes, <a href="#page212">212</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>and Sir A. Milner, <a href="#page209">209</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Steyn, President, and Mrs. van Koopman, <a href="#page40">40</a></li>
+
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">T</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+ <li>Transvaal, the, flight of Boer inhabitants, <a href="#page158">158</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>gold mines, <a href="#page1">1</a>, <a href="#page3">3</a>, <a href="#page17">17</a></li>
+ <li>loyalty to England, <a href="#page129">129</a></li>
+ <li>object of Jameson Raid, <a href="#page53">53</a></li>
+ <li>racial qualifications, <a href="#page137">137</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Transvaal Republic, intrigues in, <a href="#page1">1</a></li>
+
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">U</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+ <li>Uitenhage, martial law in, <a href="#page218">218</a></li>
+
+ <li>Uitlanders, the, and concentration camps, <a href="#page163">163</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>quarrel with, <a href="#page30">30</a></li>
+ <li>their part in the Boer War, <a href="#page16">16</a>, <a href="#page97">97</a>, <a href="#page137">137</a>, <a href="#page139">139</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+ <li>Union of South Africa, <a href="#page228">228</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>an accomplished fact, <a href="#page131">131</a>, <a href="#page228">228</a></li>
+ <li>magnates' views, <a href="#page207">207</a></li>
+ <li>organisation of, <a href="#page2">2</a></li>
+ <li>Sir A. Milner's part in constitution, <a href="#page14">14</a></li>
+ <li>united effort for, <a href="#page225">225</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+
+</ul>
+
+<h3 class="index">W</h3><ul class="index">
+
+
+ <li>Wall, David de, <a href="#page99">99</a>, <a href="#page101">101</a>, <a href="#page146">146</a></li>
+ <li>Wales, Prince of (Edward VII.), <a href="#page126">126</a></li>
+ <li>Wallace, Mackenzie, meets Rhodes, <a href="#page126">126</a></li>
+ <li>Wernher, Beit and Company, <a href="#page97">97</a>, <a href="#page197">197</a></li>
+ <li>Wet, De, <a href="#page83">83</a></li>
+ <li><i>Westminster Gazette,</i> Mrs. Fawcett's reply to Miss Hobhouse in, <a href="#page181">181</a></li>
+
+</ul>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" noshade="noshade" size="4" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CECIL RHODES***</p>
+<p>******* This file should be named 16600-h.txt or 16600-h.zip *******</p>
+<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br />
+<a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/6/6/0/16600">https://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/6/0/16600</a></p>
+<p>Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.</p>
+
+<p>Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.</p>
+
+
+
+<pre>
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+<a href="https://gutenberg.org/license">https://gutenberg.org/license)</a>.
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS,' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://www.gutenberg.org/about/contact
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit:
+https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Each eBook is in a subdirectory of the same number as the eBook's
+eBook number, often in several formats including plain vanilla ASCII,
+compressed (zipped), HTML and others.
+
+Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks replace the old file and take over
+the old filename and etext number. The replaced older file is renamed.
+VERSIONS based on separate sources are treated as new eBooks receiving
+new filenames and etext numbers.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+<a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">https://www.gutenberg.org</a>
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+EBooks posted prior to November 2003, with eBook numbers BELOW #10000,
+are filed in directories based on their release date. If you want to
+download any of these eBooks directly, rather than using the regular
+search system you may utilize the following addresses and just
+download by the etext year.
+
+<a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext06/">https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext06/</a>
+
+ (Or /etext 05, 04, 03, 02, 01, 00, 99,
+ 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90)
+
+EBooks posted since November 2003, with etext numbers OVER #10000, are
+filed in a different way. The year of a release date is no longer part
+of the directory path. The path is based on the etext number (which is
+identical to the filename). The path to the file is made up of single
+digits corresponding to all but the last digit in the filename. For
+example an eBook of filename 10234 would be found at:
+
+https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/0/2/3/10234
+
+or filename 24689 would be found at:
+https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/4/6/8/24689
+
+An alternative method of locating eBooks:
+<a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/GUTINDEX.ALL">https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/GUTINDEX.ALL</a>
+
+*** END: FULL LICENSE ***
+</pre>
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/16600-h/images/image00-th.jpg b/16600-h/images/image00-th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b532752
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/images/image00-th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h/images/image00.jpg b/16600-h/images/image00.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a5b12b7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/images/image00.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h/images/image01-th.jpg b/16600-h/images/image01-th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..29e6711
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/images/image01-th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h/images/image01.jpg b/16600-h/images/image01.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7e98ff9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/images/image01.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h/images/image02-th.jpg b/16600-h/images/image02-th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e5e7dd9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/images/image02-th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h/images/image02.jpg b/16600-h/images/image02.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..92445bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/images/image02.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h/images/image03-th.jpg b/16600-h/images/image03-th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..99c0e45
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/images/image03-th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h/images/image03.jpg b/16600-h/images/image03.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4525c7a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/images/image03.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h/images/image04-th.jpg b/16600-h/images/image04-th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..12fe5bf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/images/image04-th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h/images/image04.jpg b/16600-h/images/image04.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..45c6f75
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/images/image04.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h/images/image05-th.jpg b/16600-h/images/image05-th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..911acbd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/images/image05-th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h/images/image05.jpg b/16600-h/images/image05.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a4bee1a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/images/image05.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h/images/image06-th.jpg b/16600-h/images/image06-th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..98946fa
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/images/image06-th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h/images/image06.jpg b/16600-h/images/image06.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..aefa682
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/images/image06.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h/images/image07-th.jpg b/16600-h/images/image07-th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..42fbc45
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/images/image07-th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600-h/images/image07.jpg b/16600-h/images/image07.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a00dfe3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600-h/images/image07.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/16600.txt b/16600.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..edfed93
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,6290 @@
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Cecil Rhodes, by Princess Catherine Radziwill
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Cecil Rhodes
+ Man and Empire-Maker
+
+
+Author: Princess Catherine Radziwill
+
+
+
+Release Date: August 26, 2005 [eBook #16600]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CECIL RHODES***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Dainis Millers, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net/)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 16600-h.htm or 16600-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/6/6/0/16600/16600-h/16600-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/6/6/0/16600/16600-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+CECIL RHODES
+
+Man and Empire-Maker
+
+by
+
+PRINCESS CATHERINE RADZIWILL
+(CATHERINE KOLB-DANVIN)
+
+With Eight Photogravure Plates
+
+Cassell & Company, Ltd
+London, New York, Toronto and Melbourne
+
+1918
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THE RT. HON. CECIL RHODES]
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+
+ 1. CECIL RHODES AND SIR ALFRED MILNER 1
+ 2. THE FOUNDATIONS OF FORTUNE 17
+ 3. A COMPLEX PERSONALITY 28
+ 4. MRS. VAN KOOPMAN 40
+ 5. RHODES AND THE RAID 50
+ 6. THE AFTERMATH OF THE RAID 69
+ 7. RHODES AND THE AFRIKANDER BOND 82
+ 8. THE INFLUENCE OF SIR ALFRED MILNER 104
+ 9. THE OPENING OF THE NEW CENTURY 120
+ 10. AN ESTIMATE OF SIR ALFRED MILNER 130
+ 11. CROSS CURRENTS 144
+ 12. THE CONCENTRATION CAMPS 157
+ 13. THE PRISONERS' CAMPS 170
+ 14. IN FLIGHT FROM THE RAND 191
+ 15. DEALING WITH THE REFUGEES 202
+ 16. UNDER MARTIAL LAW 214
+ CONCLUSION
+ INDEX
+
+
+
+
+ LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ THE RT. HON. CECIL RHODES Frontispiece
+
+ Facing page
+
+ THE RT. HON. W.P. SCHREINER 32
+ PRESIDENT KRUGER 68
+ THE HON. J.H. HOFMEYR 86
+ THE RT. HON. SIR W.F. HELY-HUTCHINSON 98
+ VISCOUNT MILNER 132
+ THE RT. HON. SIR LEANDER STARR JAMESON 148
+ THE RT. HON. SIR JOHN GORDON SPRIGG 224
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+The recent death of Sir Starr Jameson reminded the public of the South
+African War, which was such an engrossing subject to the British public at
+the close of the 'nineties and the first years of the present century. Yet
+though it may seem quite out of date to reopen the question when so many
+more important matters occupy attention, the relationship between South
+Africa and England is no small matter. It has also had its influence on
+actual events, if only by proving to the world the talent which Great
+Britain has displayed in the administration of her vast Colonies and the
+tact with which British statesmen have contrived to convert their foes of
+the day before into friends, sincere, devoted and true.
+
+No other country in the world could have achieved such a success as did
+England in the complicated and singularly difficult task of making itself
+popular among nations whose independence it had destroyed.
+
+The secret of this wonderful performance lies principally in the care
+which England has exercised to secure the welfare of the annexed
+population, and to do nothing likely to keep them in remembrance of the
+subordinate position into which they had been reduced. England never
+crushes those whom it subdues. Its inbred talent for colonisation has
+invariably led it along the right path in regard to its colonial
+development. Even in cases where Britain made the weight of its rule
+rather heavy for the people whom it had conquered, there still developed
+among them a desire to remain federated to the British Empire, and also a
+conviction that union, though it might be unpleasant to their personal
+feelings and sympathies, was, after all, the best thing which could have
+happened to them in regard to their material interests.
+
+Prosperity has invariably attended British rule wherever it has found
+scope to develop itself, and at the present hour British patriotism is far
+more demonstrative in India, Australia or South Africa than it is in
+England itself. The sentiments thus strongly expressed impart a certain
+zealotism to their feelings, which constitutes a strong link with the
+Mother Country. In any hour of national danger or calamity this trait
+provides her with the enthusiastic help of her children from across the
+seas.
+
+The Englishman, generally quiet at home and even subdued in the presence
+of strangers, is exuberant in the Colonies; he likes to shout his
+patriotism upon every possible occasion, even when it would be better to
+refrain. It is an aggressive patriotism which sometimes is quite uncouth
+in its manifestations, but it is real patriotism, disinterested and devoid
+of any mercenary or personal motives.
+
+It is impossible to know what England is if one has not had the
+opportunity of visiting her Dominions oversea. It is just as impossible to
+judge of Englishmen when one has only seen them at home amid the comforts
+of the easy and pleasant existence which one enjoys in Merrie England, and
+only there. It is not the country Squires, whose homes are such a definite
+feature of English life; nor the aristocratic members of the Peerage, with
+their influence and their wealth; nor even the political men who sit in
+St. Stephen's, who have spread abroad the fame and might and power of
+England. But it is these modest pioneers of "nations yet to be" who, in
+the wilds and deserts of South Africa, Australia and Asia, have
+demonstrated the realities of English civilisation and the English spirit
+of freedom.
+
+In the hour of danger we have seen all these members of the great Mother
+Country rush to its help. The spectacle has been an inspiring one, and in
+the case of South Africa especially it has been unique, inasmuch as it has
+been predicted far and wide that the memory of the Boer War would never
+die out, and that loyalty to Great Britain would never be found in the
+vast African veldt. Facts have belied this rash assertion, and the world
+has seldom witnessed a more impressive vindication of the triumph of true
+Imperialism than that presented by Generals Botha and Smuts. As the leader
+of a whole nation, General Botha defended its independence against
+aggression, yet became the faithful, devoted servant and the true adherent
+of the people whom he had fought a few years before, putting at their
+disposal the weight of his powerful personality and the strength of his
+influence over his partisans and countrymen.
+ CATHERINE RADZIWILL.
+ _December, 1917._
+
+
+
+
+CECIL RHODES
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+CECIL RHODES AND SIR ALFRED MILNER
+
+
+The conquest of South Africa is one of the most curious episodes in
+English history. Begun through purely mercenary motives, it yet acquired a
+character of grandeur which, as time went on, divested it of all sordid
+and unworthy suspicions. South Africa has certainly been the land of
+adventurers, and many of them found there either fame or disgrace,
+unheard-of riches or the most abject poverty, power or humiliation. At the
+same time the Colony has had amongst its rulers statesmen of unblemished
+reputation and high honour, administrators of rare integrity, and men who
+saw beyond the fleeting interests of the hour into the far more important
+vista of the future.
+
+When President Kruger was at its head the Transvaal Republic would have
+crumbled under the intrigues of some of its own citizens. The lust for
+riches which followed upon the discovery of the goldfields had, too, a
+drastic effect. The Transvaal was bound to fall into the hands of someone,
+and to be that Someone fell to the lot of England. This was a kindly throw
+of Fate, because England alone could administer all the wealth of the
+region without its becoming a danger, not only to the community at large,
+but also to the Transvaalers.
+
+That this is so can be proved by the eloquence of facts rather than by
+words. It is sufficient to look upon what South Africa was twenty-five
+years ago, and upon what it has become since under the protection of
+British rule, to be convinced of the truth of my assertion. From a land of
+perennial unrest and perpetual strife it has been transformed into a
+prosperous and quiet colony, absorbed only in the thought of its economic
+and commercial progress. Its population, which twenty years ago was
+wasting its time and energy in useless wrangles, stands to-day united to
+the Mother Country and absorbed by the sole thought of how best to prove
+its devotion.
+
+The Boer War has still some curious issues of which no notice has been
+taken by the public at large. One of the principal, perhaps indeed the
+most important of these, is that, though brought about by material
+ambitions of certain people, it ended by being fought against these very
+same people, and that its conclusion eliminated them from public life
+instead of adding to their influence and their power. The result is
+certainly a strange and an interesting one, but it is easily explained if
+one takes into account the fact that once England as a nation--and not as
+_the_ nation to which belonged the handful of adventurers through whose
+intrigues the war was brought about--entered into the possession of the
+Transvaal and organised the long-talked-of Union of South Africa, the
+country started a normal existence free from the unhealthy symptoms which
+had hindered its progress. It became a useful member of the vast British
+Empire, as well as a prosperous country enjoying a good government, and
+launched itself upon a career it could never have entered upon but for the
+war. Destructive as it was, the Boer campaign was not a war of
+annihilation. On the contrary, without it it would have been impossible
+for the vast South African territories to become federated into a Union of
+its own and at the same time to take her place as a member of another
+Empire from which it derived its prosperity and its welfare. The grandeur
+of England and the soundness of its leaders has never come out in a more
+striking manner than in this conquest of South Africa--a blood-stained
+conquest which has become a love match.
+
+During the concluding years of last century the possibility of union was
+seldom taken into consideration; few, indeed, were clever enough and wise
+enough to find out that it was bound to take place as a natural
+consequence of the South African War. The war cleared the air all over
+South Africa. It crushed and destroyed all the suspicious, unhealthy
+elements that had gathered around the gold mines of the Transvaal and the
+diamond fields of Cape Colony. It dispersed the coterie of adventurers who
+had hastened there with the intention of becoming rapidly rich at the
+expense of the inhabitants of the country. A few men had succeeded in
+building for themselves fortunes beyond the dreams of avarice, whilst the
+majority contrived to live more or less well at the expense of those naive
+enough to trust to them in financial matters until the day when the war
+arrived to put an end to their plunderings.
+
+The struggle into which President Kruger was compelled to rush was
+expected by some of the powerful intriguers in South Africa to result in
+increasing the influence of certain of the millionaires, who up to the
+time when the war broke out had ruled the Transvaal and indirectly the
+Cape Colony by the strength and importance of their riches. Instead, it
+weakened and then destroyed their power. Without the war South Africa
+would have grown more wicked, and matters there were bound soon to come to
+a crisis of some sort. The crux of the situation was whether this crisis
+was going to be brought about by a few unscrupulous people for their own
+benefit, or was to arise in consequence of the clever and far-seeing
+policy of wise politicians.
+
+Happily for England, and I shall even say happily for the world at large,
+such a politician was found in the person of the then Sir Alfred Milner,
+who worked unselfishly toward the grand aim his far-sighted Imperialism
+saw in the distance.
+
+History will give Viscount Milner--as he is to-day--the place which is due
+to him. His is indeed a great figure; he was courageous enough, sincere
+enough, and brave enough to give an account of the difficulties of the
+task he had accepted. His experience of Colonial politics was principally
+founded on what he had seen and studied when in Egypt and in India, which
+was a questionable equipment in the entirely new areas he was called upon
+to administer when he landed in Table Bay. Used to Eastern shrewdness and
+Eastern duplicity, he had not had opportunity to fight against the
+unscrupulousness of men who were neither born nor brought up in the
+country, but who had grown to consider it as their own, and exploited its
+resources not only to the utmost, but also to the detriment of the
+principles of common honesty.
+
+The reader must not take my words as signifying a sweeping condemnation of
+the European population of South Africa. On the contrary, there existed in
+that distant part of the world many men of great integrity, high
+principles and unsullied honour who would never, under any condition
+whatsoever, have lent themselves to mean or dishonest action; men who held
+up high their national flag, and who gave the natives a splendid example
+of all that an Englishman could do or perform when called upon to maintain
+the reputation of his Mother Country abroad.
+
+Some of the early English settlers have left great remembrance of their
+useful activity in the matter of the colonisation of the new continent to
+which they had emigrated, and their descendants, of whom I am happy to say
+there are a great number, have not shown themselves in any way unworthy of
+their forbears. South Africa has its statesmen and politicians who, having
+been born there, understand perfectly well its necessities and its wants.
+Unfortunately, for a time their voices were crushed by the new-comers who
+had invaded the country, and who considered themselves better able than
+anyone else to administer its affairs. They brought along with them fresh,
+strange ambitions, unscrupulousness, determination to obtain power for the
+furtherance of their personal aims, and a greed which the circumstances in
+which they found themselves placed was bound to develop into something
+even worse than a vice, because it made light of human life as well as of
+human property.
+
+In any judgment on South Africa one must never forget that, after all,
+before the war did the work of a scavenger it was nothing else but a vast
+mining camp, with all its terrifying moods, its abject defects, and its
+indifference with regard to morals and to means. The first men who began
+to exploit the riches of that vast territory contrived in a relatively
+easy way to build up their fortunes upon a solid basis, but many of their
+followers, eager to walk in their steps, found difficulties upon which
+they had not reckoned or even thought about. In order to put them aside
+they used whatever means lay in their power, without hesitation as to
+whether these answered to the principles of honesty and
+straightforwardness. Their ruthless conduct was so far advantageous to
+their future schemes that it inspired disgust among those whose ancestors
+had sought a prosperity founded on hard work and conscientious toil. These
+good folk retired from the field, leaving it free to the adventurers who
+were to give such a bad name to England and who boasted loudly that they
+had been given full powers to do what they liked in the way of conquering
+a continent which, but for them, would have been only too glad to place
+itself under English protection and English rule. To these people, and to
+these alone, were due all the antagonisms which at last brought about the
+Boer War.
+
+It was with these people that Sir Alfred Milner found himself out of
+harmony; from the first moment that he had set his foot on African soil
+they tried to put difficulties in his way, after they had convinced
+themselves that he would never consent to lend himself to their schemes.
+
+Lord Milner has never belonged to the class of men who allow themselves to
+be influenced either by wealth or by the social position of anyone. He is
+perhaps one of the best judges of humanity it has been my fortune to meet,
+and though by no means an unkind judge, yet a very fair one. Intrigue is
+repulsive to him, and unless I am very much mistaken I venture to affirm
+that, in the 'nineties, because of the intrigues in which they indulged,
+he grew to loathe some of the men with whom he was thrown into contact.
+Yet he could not help seeing that these reckless speculators controlled
+public opinion in South Africa, and his political instinct compelled him
+to avail himself of their help, as without them he would not have been
+able to arrive at a proper understanding of the entanglements and
+complications of South African politics.
+
+Previous to Sir Alfred's appointment as Governor of the Cape of Good Hope
+the office had been filled by men who, though of undoubted integrity and
+high standing, were yet unable to gauge the volume of intrigue with which
+they had to cope from those who had already established an iron--or,
+rather, golden--rule in South Africa.
+
+Coteries of men whose sole aim was the amassing of quick fortunes were
+virtual rulers of Cape Colony, with more power than the Government to whom
+they simulated submission. All sorts of weird stories were in circulation.
+One popular belief was that the mutiny of the Dutch in Cape Colony just
+before the Boer War was at bottom due to the influence of money. This was
+followed by a feeling that, but for the aggressive operations of the
+outpost agents of certain commercial magnates, it would have been possible
+for England to realise the Union of South Africa by peaceful means instead
+of the bloody arbitrament of war.
+
+In the minds of many Dutchmen--and Dutchmen who were sincerely patriotic
+Transvaalers--the conviction was strong that the natural capabilities of
+Boers did not lie in the direction of developing, as they could be, the
+amazing wealth-producing resources of the Transvaal and of the Orange Free
+State. By British help alone, such men believed, could their country hope
+to thrive as it ought.
+
+Here, then, was the nucleus around which the peaceful union of Boer and
+English peoples in South Africa could be achieved without bloodshed.
+Indeed, had Queen Victoria been represented at the Cape by Sir Alfred
+Milner ten years before he was appointed Governor there, many things which
+had a disastrous influence on the Dutch elements in South Africa would not
+have occurred. The Jameson Raid would certainly not have been planned and
+attempted. To this incident can be ascribed much of the strife and
+unpleasantness which followed, by which was lost to the British Government
+the chance, then fast ripening, of bringing about without difficulty a
+reconciliation of Dutch and English all over South Africa. This
+reconciliation would have been achieved through Cecil Rhodes, and would
+have been a fitting crown to a great career.
+
+At one time the most popular man from the Zambesi to Table Mountain, the
+name of Cecil Rhodes was surrounded by that magic of personal power
+without which it is hardly possible for any conqueror to obtain the
+material or moral successes that give him a place in history; that win for
+him the love, the respect, and sometimes the hatred, of his
+contemporaries. Sir Alfred Milner would have known how to make the work of
+Cecil Rhodes of permanent value to the British Empire. It was a thousand
+pities that when Sir Alfred Milner took office in South Africa the
+influence of Cecil Rhodes, at one time politically dominant, had so
+materially shrunk as a definitive political factor.
+
+Sir Alfred Milner found himself in the presence of a position already
+compromised beyond redemption, and obliged to fight against evils which
+ought never to have been allowed to develop. Even at that time, however,
+it would have been possible for Sir Alfred Milner to find a way of
+disposing of the various difficulties connected with English rule in South
+Africa had he been properly seconded by Mr. Rhodes. Unfortunately for both
+of them, their antagonism to each other, in their conception of what ought
+or ought not to be done in political matters, was further aggravated by
+intrigues which tended to keep Rhodes apart from the Queen's High
+Commissioner in South Africa.
+
+It would not at all have suited certain people had Sir Alfred contrived to
+acquire a definite influence over Mr. Rhodes, and assuredly this would
+have happened had the two men have been allowed unhindered to appreciate
+the mental standard of each other. Mr. Rhodes was at heart a sincere
+patriot, and it was sufficient to make an appeal to his feelings of
+attachment to his Mother Country to cause him to look at things from that
+point of view. Had there existed any real intimacy between Groote Schuur
+and Government House at Cape Town, the whole course of South African
+politics might have been very different.
+
+Sir Alfred Milner arrived in Cape Town with a singularly free and unbiased
+mind, determined not to allow other people's opinions to influence his
+own, and also to use all the means at his disposal to uphold the authority
+of the Queen without entering into conflict with anyone. He had heard a
+deal about the enmity of English and Dutch, but though he perfectly well
+realised its cause he had made up his mind to examine the situation for
+himself. He was not one of those who thought that the raid alone was
+responsible; he knew very well that this lamentable affair had only fanned
+into an open blaze years-long smoulderings of discontent. The Raid had
+been a consequence, not an isolated spontaneous act. Little by little over
+a long span of years the ambitious and sordid overridings of various
+restless, and too often reckless, adventurers had come to be considered as
+representative of English rule, English opinions and, what was still more
+unfortunate, England's personality as an Empire and as a nation.
+
+On the other side of the matter, the Dutch--who were inconceivably
+ignorant--thought their little domain the pivot of the world. Blind to
+realities, they had no idea of the legitimate relative comparison between
+the Transvaal and the British Empire, and so grew arrogantly oppressive in
+their attitude towards British settlers and the powers at Cape Town.
+
+All this naturally tinctured native feeling. Suspicion was fostered among
+the tribes, guns and ammunition percolated through Boer channels, the
+blacks viewed with disdain the friendly advances made by the British, and
+the atmosphere was thick with mutual distrust. The knowledge that this was
+the situation could not but impress painfully a delicate and proud mind,
+and surely Lord Milner can be forgiven for the illusion which he at one
+time undoubtedly cherished that he would be able to dispel this false
+notion about his Mother Country that pervaded South Africa.
+
+The Governor had not the least animosity against the Dutch, and at first
+the Boers had no feeling that Sir Alfred was prejudiced against them. Such
+a thought was drilled into their minds by subtle and cunning people who,
+for their own avaricious ends, desired to estrange the High Commissioner
+from the Afrikanders. Sir Alfred was represented as a tyrannical,
+unscrupulous man, whose one aim in life was the destruction of every
+vestige of Dutch independence, Dutch self-government and Dutch influence
+in Africa. Those who thus maligned him applied themselves to make him
+unpopular and to render his task so very uncongenial and unpleasant for
+him that he would at last give it up of his own accord, or else become the
+object of such violent hatreds that the Home Government would feel
+compelled to recall him. Thus they would be rid of the presence of a
+personage possessed of a sufficient energy to oppose them, and they would
+no longer need to fear his observant eyes. Sir Alfred Milner saw himself
+surrounded by all sorts of difficulties, and every attempt he made to
+bring forward his own plans for the settlement of the South African
+question crumbled to the ground almost before he could begin to work at
+it. Small wonder, therefore, if he felt discouraged and began to form a
+false opinion concerning the persons or the facts with whom he had to
+deal. Those who might have helped him were constrained, without it being
+his fault. Mr. Rhodes became persuaded that the new Governor of Cape
+Colony had arrived there with preconceived notions in regard to himself.
+He was led to believe that Milner's firm determination was to crush him;
+that, moreover, he was jealous of him and of the work he had done in South
+Africa.
+
+Incredible as it appears, Rhodes believed this absurd fiction, and learned
+to look upon Sir Alfred Milner as a natural enemy, desirous of thwarting
+him at every step. The Bloemfontein Conference, at which the brilliant
+qualities and the conciliating spirit of the new Governor of Cape Colony
+were first made clearly manifest, was represented to Rhodes as a desire to
+present him before the eyes of the Dutch as a negligible quantity in South
+Africa. Rhodes was strangely susceptible and far too mindful of the
+opinions of people of absolutely no importance. He fell into the snare,
+and though he was careful to hide from the public his real feelings in
+regard to Sir Alfred Milner, yet it was impossible for anyone who knew him
+well not to perceive at once that he had made up his mind not to help the
+High Commissioner. There is such a thing as damning praise, and Rhodes
+poured a good deal of it on the head of Sir Alfred.
+
+Fortunately, Sir Alfred was sufficiently conscious of the rectitude of his
+intentions and far too superior to feelings of petty spite. He never
+allowed himself to be troubled by these unpleasantnesses, but went on his
+way without giving his enemies the pleasure of noticing the measure of
+success which, unhappily, attended their campaign. He remained inflexible
+in his conduct, and, disdaining any justification, went on doing what he
+thought was right, and which was right, as events proved subsequently.
+Although Milner had at last to give up, yet it is very largely due to him
+that the South African Union was ultimately constituted, and that the
+much-talked-of reconciliation of the Dutch and English in Cape Colony and
+in the Transvaal became an accomplished fact. Had Sir Alfred been listened
+to from the very beginning it might have taken place sooner, and perhaps
+the Boer War altogether avoided.
+
+It is a curious thing that England's colonising powers, which are so
+remarkable, took such a long time to work their way in South Africa. At
+least it would have been a curious thing if one did not remember that
+among the first white men who arrived there Englishmen were much in the
+minority. And of those Englishmen who were attracted by the enormous
+mineral wealth which the country contained, a good proportion were not of
+the best class of English colonists. Many a one who landed in Table Bay
+was an adventurer, drawn thither by the wish to make or retrieve his
+fortune. Few came, as did Rhodes, in search of health, and few, again,
+were drawn thither by the pure love of adventure. In Australia, or in New
+Zealand or other colonies, people arrived with the determination to begin
+a new life and to create for themselves new ties, new occupations, new
+duties, so as to leave to their children after them the result of their
+labours. In South Africa it was seldom that emigrants were animated by the
+desire to make their home in the solitudes of the vast and unexplored
+veldt. Those who got rich there, though they may have built for themselves
+splendid houses while they dwelt in the land, never looked upon South
+Africa as home, but aspired to spend their quickly gained millions in
+London and to forget all about Table Mountain or the shafts and factories
+of Johannesburg and Kimberley.
+
+To such men as these England was a pretext but never a symbol. Their
+strange conception of patriotism jarred the most unpleasantly on the
+straightforward nature of Sir Alfred Milner, who had very quickly
+discerned the egotism that lay concealed beneath its cloak. He understood
+what patriotism meant, what love for one's own country signified. He had
+arrived in South Africa determined to spare neither his person nor his
+strength in her service, and the man who was repeatedly accused both by
+the Dutch and by the English party in the Colony of labouring under a
+misconception of its real political situation was the one who had from the
+very first appreciated it as it deserved, and had recognised its damning
+as well as its redeeming points.
+
+Sir Alfred meant South Africa to become a member of the British Empire, to
+participate in its greatness, and to enjoy the benefits of its protection.
+He had absolutely no idea of exasperating the feelings of the Dutch part
+of its population. He had the best intentions in regard to President
+Kruger himself, and there was one moment, just at the time of the
+Bloemfontein Conference, when a _modus vivendi_ between President Kruger
+and the Court of St. James's might have been established, notwithstanding
+the difficult question of the Uitlanders. It was frustrated by none other
+than these very Uitlanders, who, fondly believing that a war with England
+would establish them as absolute masters in the Gold Fields, brought it
+about, little realising that thereby was to be accomplished the one thing
+which they dreaded--the firm, just and far-seeing rule of England over all
+South Africa.
+
+In a certain sense the Boer War was fought just as much against financiers
+as against President Kruger. It put an end to the arrogance of both.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE FOUNDATIONS OF FORTUNE
+
+
+It is impossible to speak of South Africa without awarding to Cecil Rhodes
+the tribute which unquestionably is due to his strong personality. Without
+him it is possible that the vast territory which became so thoroughly
+associated with his name and with his life would still be without
+political importance. Without him it is probable that both the Diamond
+Fields to which Kimberley owes its prosperity and the Gold Fields which
+have won for the Transvaal its renown would never have risen above the
+importance of those of Brazil or California or Klondyke.
+
+It was Rhodes who first conceived the thought of turning all these riches
+into a political instrument and of using it to the advantage of his
+country--the England to which he remained so profoundly attached amid all
+the vicissitudes of his life, and to whose possessions he was so eager to
+add.
+
+Cecil Rhodes was ambitious in a grand, strange manner which made a
+complete abstraction of his own personality under certain conditions, but
+which in other circumstances made him violent, brutal in manner, thereby
+procuring enemies without number and detractors without end. His nature
+was something akin to that of the Roman Emperors in its insensate desire
+to exercise unchallenged an unlimited power. Impatient of restraint, no
+matter in what shape it presented itself, he brooked no resistance to his
+schemes; his rage against contradiction, and his opposition to any
+independence of thought or action on the part of those who were around
+him, brought about a result of which he would have been the first to
+complain, had he suspected it--that of allowing him to execute all his
+fancies and of giving way to all his resentments. Herein lies the reason
+why so many of his schemes fell through. This unfortunate trait also
+thrust him very often into the hands of those who were clever enough to
+exploit it, and who, more often than proved good to Rhodes' renown,
+suggested to him their own schemes and encouraged him to appropriate them
+as his own. He had a very quick way of catching hold of any suggestions
+that tallied with his sympathies or echoed any of his secret thoughts or
+aspirations.
+
+Yet withal Rhodes was a great soul, and had he only been left to himself,
+or made longer sojourns in England, had he understood English political
+life more clearly, had he had to grapple with the difficulties which
+confront public existence in his Mother Country, he would most certainly
+have done far greater things. He found matters far too easy for him at
+first, and the obstacles which he encountered very often proved either of
+a trivial or else of a removable nature--by fair means or methods less
+commendable. A mining camp is not a school of morality, and just as
+diamonds lose of their value in the estimation of those who continually
+handle them, as is the case in Kimberley, so integrity and honour come to
+be looked upon from a peculiar point of view according to the code of the
+majority.
+
+Then again, it must not be forgotten that the first opponents of Cecil
+Rhodes were black men, of whom the European always has the conception that
+they are not his equals. It is likely that if, instead of Lobengula, he
+had found before him a European chief or monarch, Rhodes would have acted
+differently than history credits him to have done toward the dusky
+sovereign. It is impossible to judge of facts of which one has had no
+occasion to watch the developments, or which have taken place in lands
+where one has never been. Neither Fernando Cortez in Mexico nor Pizzaro
+Gonzalo in Peru proved themselves merciful toward the populations whose
+territory they conquered. The tragedy which sealed the fate of
+Matabeleland was neither a darker nor a more terrible one than those of
+which history speaks when relating to us the circumstances attending the
+discovery of America. Such events must be judged objectively and forgiven
+accordingly. When forming an opinion on the doings and achievements of
+Cecil Rhodes one must make allowance for all the temptations which were
+thrown in his way and remember that he was a man who, if ambitious, was
+not so in a personal sense, but in a large, lofty manner, and who, whilst
+appropriating to himself the good things which he thought he could grasp,
+was also eager to make others share the profit of his success.
+
+Cecil Rhodes, in all save name, was monarch over a continent almost as
+vast as his own fancy and imagination. He was always dreaming, always lost
+in thoughts which were wandering far beyond his actual surroundings,
+carrying him into regions where the common spirit of mankind seldom
+travelled. He was born for far better things than those which he
+ultimately attained, but he did not belong to the century in which he
+lived; his ruthless passions of anger and arrogance were more fitted for
+an earlier and cruder era. Had he possessed any disinterested friends
+capable of rousing the better qualities that slumbered beneath his
+apparent cynicism and unscrupulousness, most undoubtedly he would have
+become the most remarkable individual in his generation. Unfortunately, he
+found himself surrounded by creatures absolutely inferior to himself,
+whose deficiencies he was the first to notice, whom he despised either for
+their insignificance or for their mental and moral failings, but to whose
+influence he nevertheless succumbed.
+
+When Cecil Rhodes arrived at Kimberley he was a mere youth. He had come to
+South Africa in quest of health and because he had a brother already
+settled there, Herbert Rhodes, who was later on to meet with a terrible
+fate. Cecil, if one is to believe what one hears from those who knew him
+at the time, was a shy youth, of a retiring disposition, whom no one could
+ever have suspected would develop into the hardy, strong man he became in
+time. He was constantly sick, and more than once was on the point of
+falling a victim of the dreaded fever which prevails all over South Africa
+and then was far more virulent in its nature than it is to-day. Kimberley
+at that time was still a vast solitude, with here and there a few
+scattered huts of corrugated iron occupied by the handful of colonists.
+Water was rare: it is related, indeed, that the only way to get a wash was
+to use soda water.
+
+The beginning of Rhodes' fortune, if we are to believe what we are told,
+was an ice machine which he started in partnership with another settler.
+The produce they sold to their companions at an exorbitant price, but not
+for long; whereafter the enterprising young man proceeded to buy some
+plots of ground, of whose prolificacy in diamonds he had good reason to be
+aware. It must be here remarked that Rhodes was never a poor man; he could
+indulge in experiments as to his manner of investing his capital. And he
+was not slow to take advantage of this circumstance. Kimberley was a wild
+place at that time, and its distance from the civilised world, as well as
+the fact that nothing was controlled by public opinion, helped some to
+amass vast fortunes and put the weaker into the absolute power of the most
+unscrupulous. It is to the honour of Rhodes that, however he might have
+been tempted, he never listened to the advice which was given to him to do
+what the others did, and to despoil the men whose property he might have
+desired to acquire. He never gave way to the excesses of his daily
+companions, nor accepted their methods of enriching themselves at top
+speed so as soon to be able to return home with their gains.
+
+From the first moment that he set foot on African soil Rhodes succumbed to
+the strange charm the country offers for thinkers and dreamers. His
+naturally languid temperament found a source of untold satisfaction in
+watching the Southern Cross rise over the vast veldt where scarcely man's
+foot had trod, where the immensity of its space was equalled by its
+sublime, quiet grandeur. He liked to spend the night in the open air,
+gazing at the innumerable stars and listening to the voice of the desert,
+so full of attractions for those who have grown to discern somewhat of
+Nature's hidden joys and sorrows. South Africa became for him a second
+Motherland, and one which seemed to him to be more hospitable to his
+temperament than the land of his birth. In South Africa he felt he could
+find more satisfaction and more enjoyment than in England, whose
+conventionalities did not appeal to his rebellious, unsophisticated heart.
+He liked to roam about in an old coat and wideawake hat; to forget that
+civilisation existed; to banish from his mind all memory of cities where
+man must bow down to Mrs. Grundy and may not defy, unscathed, certain
+well-defined prejudices.
+
+Yet Cecil Rhodes neither cared for convention nor custom. His motto was to
+do what he liked and not to trouble about the judgments of the crowd. He
+never, however, lived up to this last part of his profession because, as I
+have shown already, he was keenly sensitive to praise and to blame, and
+hurt to the heart whenever he thought himself misjudged or condemned. Most
+of his mistakes proceeded from this over-sensitiveness which, in a certain
+sense, hardened him, inasmuch as it made him vindictive against those from
+whom he did not get the approval for which he yearned. In common with many
+another, too, Cecil Rhodes had that turn of mind which harbours resentment
+against anyone who has scored a point against its possessor. After the
+Jameson Raid Rhodes never forgave Mr. Schreiner for having found out his
+deceit, and tried to be revenged.
+
+Cecil Rhodes had little sympathy with other people's woes unless these
+found an echo in his own, and the callousness which he so often displayed
+was not entirely the affectation it was thought by his friends or even by
+his enemies. Great in so many things, there were circumstances when he
+could show himself unutterably small, and he seldom practised consistency.
+Frank by nature, he was an adept at dissimulation when he thought that his
+personal interest required it. But he could "face the music," however
+discordant, and, unfortunately for him as well as for his memory, it was
+often so.
+
+The means by which Cecil Rhodes contrived to acquire so unique a position
+in South Africa would require volumes to relate. Wealth alone could not
+have done so, nor could it have assured for him the popularity which he
+gained, not only among the European colonists, but also among the coloured
+people, notwithstanding the ruthlessness which he displayed in regard to
+them. There were millionaires far richer than himself in Kimberley and in
+Johannesburg. Alfred Beit, to mention only one, could dispose of a much
+larger capital than Rhodes ever possessed, but this did not give him an
+influence that could be compared with that of his friend, and not even the
+Life Governorship of De Beers procured for him any other fame than that of
+being a fabulously rich man. Barney Barnato and Joel were also familiar
+figures in the circle of wealthy speculators who lived under the shade of
+Table Mountain; but none among these men, some of whom were also
+remarkable in their way, could effect a tenth or even a millionth part of
+what Rhodes succeeded in performing. His was the moving spirit, without
+whom these men could never have conceived, far less done, all that they
+did. It was the magic of Rhodes' name which created that formidable
+organisation called the De Beers Company; which annexed to the British
+Empire the vast territory known now by the name of Rhodesia; and which
+attracted to the gold fields of Johannesburg all those whom they were to
+enrich or to ruin. Without the association and glamour of Rhodes' name,
+too, this area could never have acquired the political importance it
+possessed in the few years which preceded, and covered, the Boer War.
+Rhodes' was the mind which, after bringing about the famous Amalgamation
+of the diamond mines around Kimberley, then conceived the idea of turning
+a private company into a political instrument of a power which would
+control public opinion and public life all over South Africa more
+effectually even than the Government. This organisation had its own agents
+and spies and kept up a wide system of secret service. Under the pretext
+of looking out for diamond thieves, these emissaries in reality made it
+their duty to report on the private opinions and doings of those whose
+personality inspired distrust or apprehension.
+
+This organisation was more a dictatorship than anything else, and had
+about it something at once genial and Mephistophelian. The conquest of
+Rhodesia was nothing in comparison with the power attained by this
+combine, which arrogated to itself almost unchallenged the right to
+domineer over every white man and to subdue every coloured one in the
+whole of the vast South African Continent. Rhodesia, indeed, was only
+rendered possible through the power wielded in Cape Colony to bring the
+great Northward adventure to a successfully definite issue.
+
+In referring to Rhodesia, I am reminded of a curious fact which, so far as
+I am aware, has never been mentioned in any of the biographies of Mr.
+Rhodes, but which, on the contrary, has been carefully concealed from the
+public knowledge by his admirers and his satellites. The concession
+awarded by King Lobengula to Rhodes and to the few men who together with
+him took it upon themselves to add this piece of territory to the British
+Empire had, in reality, already been given by the dusky monarch--long
+before the ambitions of De Beers had taken that direction--to a Mr.
+Sonnenberg, a German Jew who had very quickly amassed a considerable
+fortune in various speculations. This Mr. Sonnenberg--who was subsequently
+to represent the Dutch party in the Cape Parliament, and who became one of
+the foremost members of the Afrikander Bond--during one of his journeys
+into the interior of the country from Basutoland, where he resided for
+some time, had taken the opportunity of a visit to Matabeleland to obtain
+a concession from the famous Lobengula. This covered the same ground and
+advantages which, later, were granted to Mr. Rhodes and his business
+associates.
+
+Owing in some measure to negligence and partly through the impossibility
+of raising the enormous capital necessary to make anything profitable out
+of the concession, Mr. Sonnenberg had put the document into his drawer
+without troubling any more about it. Subsequently, when Matabeleland came
+into possession of the Chartered Company, Mr. Sonnenberg ventured to speak
+mildly of his own concession, and the matter was mentioned to Mr. Rhodes.
+The latter's reply was typical: "Tell the ---- fool that if he was fool
+enough to lose this chance of making money he ought to take the
+consequences of it." And Mr. Sonnenberg had to content himself with this
+reply. Being a wise man in his generation he was clever enough to ignore
+the incident, and, realising the principle that might is stronger than
+right, he never again attempted to dispute the title of Cecil John Rhodes
+to the conquest which he had made, and, as I believe, pushed prudence to
+the extent of consigning his own concession to the flames. He knew but too
+well what his future prosperity would have been worth had he remembered
+the document.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+A COMPLEX PERSONALITY
+
+
+Rhodesia and its annexation was but the development of a vast scheme of
+conquest that had its start in the wonderful brain of the individual who
+by that time had become to be spoken of as the greatest man South Africa
+had ever known. Long before this Cecil Rhodes had entered political life
+as member of the Cape Parliament. He stood for the province of Barkly
+West, and his election, which was violently contested, made him master of
+this constituency for the whole of his political career. The entry into
+politics gave a decided aim to his ambitions and inspired him to a new
+activity, directing his wonderful organising faculties toward other than
+financial victories and instilling within him the desire to make for
+himself a name not solely associated with speculation, but one which would
+rank with those great Englishmen who had carried far and wide British
+renown and spread the fame of their Mother Country across the seas.
+
+Rhodes' ambitions were not as unselfish as those of Clive, to mention only
+that one name. He thought far more of himself than of his native land in
+the hours when he meditated on all the advantages which he might obtain
+from a political career. He saw the way to become at last absolutely free
+to give shape to his dreams of conquest, and to hold under his sway the
+vast continent which he had insensibly come to consider as his private
+property. And by this I do not mean Rhodesia only--which he always spoke
+of as "My country"--but he also referred to Cape Colony in the same way.
+With one distinction, however, which was remarkable: he called it "My old
+country," thus expressing his conviction that the new one possessed all
+his affections. It is probable that, had time and opportunity been granted
+him to bring into execution his further plans, thereby to establish
+himself at Johannesburg and at Pretoria as firmly as he had done at
+Kimberley and Buluwayo, the latter townships would have come to occupy the
+same secondary importance in his thoughts as that which Cape Colony had
+assumed. Mr. Rhodes may have had a penchant for old clothes, but he
+certainly preferred new countries to ones already explored. To give Rhodes
+his due, he was not the money-grubbing man one would think, judging by his
+companions. He was constantly planning, constantly dreaming of wider areas
+to conquer and to civilise. The possession of gold was for him a means,
+not an aim; he appreciated riches for the power they produced to do
+absolutely all that he wished, but not for the boast of having so many
+millions standing to his account at a bank. He meant to become a king in
+his way, and a king he unquestionably was for a time at least, until his
+own hand shattered his throne.
+
+His first tenure of the Cape Premiership was most successful, and even
+during the second term his popularity went on growing until the fatal
+Jameson Raid--an act of folly which nothing can explain, nothing can
+excuse. Until it broke his political career, transforming him from the
+respected statesman whom every party in South Africa looked up to into a
+kind of broken idol never more to be trusted, Rhodes had enjoyed the
+complete confidence of the Dutch party. They fully believed he was the
+only man capable of effecting the Union which at that time was already
+considered to be indispensable to the prosperity of South Africa. Often he
+had stood up for their rights as the oldest settlers and inhabitants of
+the country. Even in the Transvaal, notwithstanding the authority wielded
+then by President Kruger, the populace would gladly have taken advantage
+of his services and of his experience to help them settle favourably their
+everlasting quarrels with the Uitlanders, as the English colonists were
+called.
+
+Had Cecil Rhodes but had the patience to wait, and had he cared to enter
+into the details of a situation, the intricacies of which none knew better
+than he, it is probable that the annexation of the Transvaal to the
+British Empire would have taken place as a matter of course and the Boer
+War would never have broken out. Rhodes was not only popular among the
+Dutch, but also enjoyed their confidence, and it is no secret that he had
+courted them to the extent of exciting the suspicions of the ultra-English
+party, the Jingo elements of which had openly accused him of plotting with
+the Dutch against the authority of Queen Victoria and of wishing to get
+himself elected Life President of a Republic composed of the various South
+African States, included in which would be Cape Colony, and perhaps even
+Natal, in spite of the preponderance of the English element there.
+
+That Rhodes might have achieved such a success is scarcely to be doubted,
+and personally I feel sure that there had been moments in his life when
+the idea of it had seriously occurred to him. At least I was led to think
+so in the course of a conversation which we had together on this subject a
+few weeks before the Boer War broke out. At that moment Rhodes knew that
+war was imminent, but it would be wrong to interpret that knowledge in the
+sense that he had ever thought of or planned rebellion against the Queen.
+Those who accused him of harbouring the idea either did not know him or
+else wished to harm him. Rhodes was essentially an Englishman, and set his
+own country above everything else in the world. Emphatically this is so;
+but it is equally true that his strange conceptions of morality in matters
+where politics came into question made him totally oblivious of the fact
+that he thought far more of his own self than of his native land in the
+plans which he conceived and formulated for the supremacy of England in
+South Africa. He was absolutely convinced that his election as Life
+President of a South African Republic would not be in any way detrimental
+to the interests of Great Britain; on the contrary, he assured himself it
+would make the latter far more powerful than it had ever been before in
+the land over which he would reign. By nature something of an Italian
+_condottieri_, he considered his native land as a stepping-stone to his
+own grandeur.
+
+For a good many years he had chosen his best friends among Dutchmen of
+influence in the Cape Colony and in the Transvaal. He flattered, courted
+and praised them until he quite persuaded them that nowhere else would
+they find such a staunch supporter of their rights and of their claims.
+Men like Mr. Schreiner,[A] for instance, trusted him absolutely, and
+believed quite sincerely that in time he would be able to establish firm
+and friendly relations between the Cape Government and that of the
+Transvaal. Though the latter country had been, as it were, sequestrated by
+friends of Rhodes--much to their own profit--Mr. Schreiner felt convinced
+that the Colossus had never encouraged any plans which these people might
+have made against the independence of the Transvaal Republic. Rhodes had
+so completely fascinated him that even on the eve of the day when Jameson
+crossed the Border, Mr. Schreiner, when questioned by one of his friends
+about the rumours which had reached Cape Town concerning a projected
+invasion of the Transvaal by people connected with the Chartered Company,
+repudiated them with energy. Mr. Schreiner, indeed, declared that so long
+as Mr. Rhodes was Prime Minister nothing of the kind could or would
+happen, as neither Jameson nor any of his lieutenants would dare to risk
+such an adventure without the sanction of their Chief, and that it was
+more to the latter's interest than to that of anyone else to preserve the
+independence of the Transvaal Republic.
+
+ [A] Now High Commissioner for the Union of South Africa.
+
+[Illustration: THE RT. HON. W.G. SCHREINER.]
+
+Talking of Mr. Schreiner reminds me of his sister, the famous Olive
+Schreiner, the author of so many books which most certainly will long rank
+among the English classics. Olive Schreiner was once upon terms of great
+friendship with Mr. Rhodes, who extremely admired her great talents. She
+was an ardent Afrikander patriot, Dutch by sympathy and origin, gifted
+with singular intelligence and possessed of wide views, which strongly
+appealed to the soul and to the spirit of the man who at that time was
+considered as the greatest figure in South Africa.
+
+It is not remarkable, therefore, that Rhodes should fall into the habit
+of confiding in Miss Schreiner, whom he found was "miles above" the
+people about him. He used to hold long conversations with her and to
+initiate her into many of his plans for the future, plans in which the
+interests and the welfare of the Cape Dutch, as well as the Transvaalers,
+used always to play the principal part. His friendship with her, however,
+was viewed with great displeasure by many who held watch around him.
+Circumstances--intentionally brought about, some maintain--conspired to
+cause a cooling of the friendship between the two most remarkable
+personalities in South Africa. Later on, Miss Schreiner, who was an ardent
+patriot, having discovered what she termed and considered to be the
+duplicity of the man in whom she had so absolutely trusted, refused to
+meet Cecil Rhodes again. Her famous book, "Trooper Peter Halkett of
+Mashonaland," was the culminating point in their quarrel, and the break
+became complete.
+
+This, however, was but an incident in a life in which the feminine element
+never had any great influence, perhaps because it was always kept in check
+by people anxious and eager not to allow it to occupy a place in the
+thoughts or in the existence of a man whom they had confiscated as their
+own property. There are people who, having risen from nothing to the
+heights of a social position, are able to shake off former associations:
+this was not the case with Rhodes, who, on the contrary, as he advanced in
+power and in influence, found himself every day more embarrassed by the
+men who had clung to him when he was a diamond digger, and who, through
+his financial acumen, had built up their fortunes. They surrounded him day
+and night, eliminating every person likely to interfere; slandering,
+ridiculing and calumniating them in turns, they at last left him nothing
+in place of his shattered faiths and lost ideals, until Rhodes became as
+isolated amidst his greatness and his millions as the veriest beggar in
+his hovel.
+
+It was a sad sight to watch the ethical degradation of one of the most
+remarkable intelligences among the men of his generation; it was
+heartrending to see him fall every day more and more into the power of
+unscrupulous people who did nothing else but exploit him for their own
+benefit. South Africa has always been the land of adventurers, and many a
+queer story could be told. That of Cecil John Rhodes was, perhaps, the
+most wonderful and the most tragic.
+
+Whether he realised this retrogression himself it is difficult to say.
+Sometimes one felt that such might be the case, whilst at others it seemed
+as if he viewed his own fate only as something absolutely wonderful and
+bound to develop in the future even more prosperously than it had done in
+the past. There was always about him something of the "tragediante,
+comediante" applied to Napoleon by Pope Pius VII., and it is absolutely
+certain that he often feigned sentiments which he did not feel, anger
+which he did not experience, and pleasure that he did not have. He was a
+being of fits and starts, moods and fancies, who liked to pose in such a
+way as to give others an absolutely false idea of his personality when he
+considered it useful to his interests to do so. At times it was evident he
+experienced regret, but it is doubtful whether he knew the meaning of
+remorse. The natives seldom occupied his thoughts, and if he were reminded
+in later years that, after all, terrible cruelties had been practised in
+Mashonaland or in Matabeleland, he used simply to shrug his shoulders and
+to remark that it was impossible to make an omelette without breaking some
+eggs. It never occurred to him that there might exist people who objected
+to the breaking of a certain kind of eggs, and that humanity had a right
+to be considered even in conquest.
+
+And, after all, was this annexation of the dominions of poor Lobengula a
+conquest? If one takes into account the strength of the people who
+attacked the savage king, and his own weakness, can one do else but regret
+that those who slaughtered Lobengula did not remember the rights of mercy
+in regard to a fallen foe? There are dark deeds connected with the
+attachment of Rhodesia to the British Empire, deeds which would never have
+been performed by a regular English Army, but which seemed quite natural
+to the band of enterprising fellows who had staked their fortunes on an
+expedition which it was their interest to represent as a most dangerous
+and difficult affair. I do not want to disparage them or their courage,
+but I cannot help questioning whether they ever had to withstand any
+serious attack of the enemy. I have been told perfectly sickening details
+concerning this conquest of the territory now known by the name of
+Rhodesia. The cruel manner in which, after having wrung from them a
+concession which virtually despoiled them of every right over their native
+land and after having goaded these people into exasperation, the people
+themselves were exterminated was terrible beyond words. For instance,
+there occurred the incident mentioned by Olive Schreiner in "Trooper Peter
+Halkett of Mashonaland," when over one hundred savages were suffocated
+alive in a cave where they sought a refuge.
+
+Personally, I remain persuaded that these abominable deeds remained
+unknown to Mr. Rhodes and that he would not have tolerated them for one
+single instant. They were performed by people who were in possession of
+Rhodes' confidence, and who abused it by allowing the world to think that
+he encouraged such deeds. Later on it is likely that he became aware of
+the abuse that had been made of his name and of the manner in which it had
+been put forward as an excuse for inexcusable deeds, but he was far too
+indolent and far too indifferent to the blame of the world, at these
+particular moments to disavow those who, after all, had helped him in his
+schemes of expansion, and who had ministered to his longing to have a
+kingdom to himself. Apart from this, he had a curious desire to brave
+public opinion and to do precisely the very things that it would have
+disapproved. He loved to humiliate those whom he had at one moment thought
+he might have occasion to fear. This explains the callousness with which
+he made the son of Lobengula one of his gardeners, and did not hesitate to
+ask him one day before strangers who were visiting Groote Schuur in what
+year he "had killed his father." The incident is absolutely true; it
+occurred in my own presence.
+
+At times, such as that related in the paragraph above, Rhodes appeared a
+perfectly detestable and hateful creature, and yet he was never sincere
+whilst in such moods. A few moments later he would show himself under
+absolutely different colours and give proof of a compassionate heart.
+Generous to a fault, he liked to be able to oblige his friends, or those
+who passed as such, while the charitable acts which he was constantly
+performing are too numerous to be remembered. He had a supreme contempt
+for money, but he spoiled the best sides of his strange, eccentric
+character by enjoying a display of its worst facets with a "cussedness" as
+amusing as it was sometimes unpleasant. Is it remarkable, then, that many
+people who only saw him in the disagreeable moods should judge him from an
+entirely false and misleading point of view?
+
+Rhodes was a man for whom it was impossible to feel indifference; one
+either hated him or became fascinated by his curious and peculiar charm.
+This quality led many admirers to remain faithful to him even after
+disillusion had shattered their former friendship, and who, whilst
+refusing to speak to him any more, yet retained for him a deep affection
+which not even the conviction that it had been misplaced could alter. This
+is a remarkable and indisputable fact. After having rallied around him all
+that was honest in South Africa; after having been the petted child of all
+the old and influential ladies in Cape Town; after having been accepted as
+their leader by men like Mr. Schreiner and Mr. Hofmeyr, who, clever though
+they were, and convinced, as they must have been, of their personal
+influence on the Dutch party and the members of the Afrikander Bond, still
+preferred to subordinate their judgment to Rhodes'; after having enjoyed
+such unparalleled confidence, Rhodes had come to be spurned and rejected
+politically, but had always kept his place in their hearts. Fate and his
+own faults separated him from these people of real weight and influence,
+and left him in the hands of those who pretended that they were attached
+to him, but who, in reality, cared only for the material advantages that
+their constant attendance upon him procured to them. They poisoned his
+mind, they separated him from all those who might have been useful to him,
+and they profited by the circumstance that the Raid had estranged him from
+his former friends to strengthen their own influence upon him, and to
+persuade him that those who had deplored the rash act were personal
+enemies, wishful for his downfall and disgrace.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+MRS. VAN KOOPMAN
+
+
+Among those with whom Rhodes had been intimate from almost the first days
+of his establishment in Cape Town and his entrance into political life was
+a lady who, for something like half a century, had been enjoying an
+enviable position throughout almost the whole of South Africa. Mrs. van
+Koopman was a Dutchwoman of considerable means and of high character. She
+was clever, well read, and her quick intelligence allowed her to hold her
+own in discussion upon any subject against the most eminent men of her
+generation. She had never made a secret of her Dutch sympathies, nor of
+her desire to see her countrymen given equal rights with the English all
+over South Africa. She was on excellent terms with President Kruger, and
+with President Steyn, whose personality was a far more remarkable one than
+that of his old and crafty colleague.
+
+The leading South African political men used to meet at Mrs. van Koopman's
+to discuss the current events of the day. It is related that she was one
+of the first to bring to the notice of her friends the complications that
+were bound to follow upon the discovery of the gold fields, and to implore
+them to define, without delay, the position of the foreign element which
+was certain to move toward Johannesburg as soon as the news of the riches
+contained in that region became public property.
+
+If the English Government had considered the matter at once the
+complications which arose as soon as companies began to be formed would
+have been less acute. The directors of these concerns imagined themselves
+to be entitled to displace local government, and took all executive power
+into their own hands. This would never have happened if firm governmental
+action had been promptly taken. The example of Kimberley ought to have
+opened the eyes of the Mother Country, and measures should have been taken
+to prevent the purely commercial domain of the gold fields from assuming
+such strident political activities, and little by little dominating not
+only the Transvaal Republic, but also the rest of South Africa.
+
+Mrs. van Koopman had cherished a great affection for Rhodes. Her age--she
+was in the sixties--gave an almost maternal character to the tenderness
+with which she viewed him. He had made her his confidante, telling her all
+that he meant to do for the welfare of the land which she loved so dearly.
+She thought he looked upon South Africa with the same feelings of
+admiration as she did.
+
+The strength of her belief led Mrs. van Koopman to interest all her
+friends in the career of the young Englishman, who appealed to her
+imagination as the embodiment of all that was great and good. Her
+enthusiasm endowed him with many qualities that he did not possess, and
+magnified those which he really had. When he consulted her as to his
+future plans she entered closely into their details, discussed with him
+their chances of success, advised him and used all her influence, which
+was great, in winning him friends and adherents. She trusted him fully,
+and, on his part, whenever he returned to Cape Town after one of his
+yearly visits to Kimberley, or after a few months spent in the solitudes
+of Rhodesia, his first visit was always to the old and gentle lady, who
+welcomed him with open arms, words of affection, and sincere as well as
+devoted sympathy. She had always refused to listen to disparagement of her
+favourite, and would never allow any of the gruesome details connected
+with the annexation of Rhodesia to be recited in her presence.
+
+In Mrs. van Koopman's eyes there was only a glorious side to the Rhodesian
+expedition, and she rejoiced in the renown which it was destined to bring
+to the man who had conceived and planned it. She fully believed that
+Rhodes meant to bring English civilisation, English laws, the English
+sense of independence and respect for individual freedom into that distant
+land. The fact that lucre lay at the bottom of the expedition never
+crossed her mind; even if it had she would have rejected the thought with
+scorn and contempt.
+
+Although the attacks upon Cecil Rhodes increased day by day in intensity
+and in bitterness, Mrs. van Koopman never wavered in her allegiance. She
+attributed them to jealousy and envy, and strenuously defended his name.
+Mrs. van Koopman, too, rejoiced at any new success of Rhodes as if it had
+been her own. She was the first to congratulate him when the dignity of a
+Privy Councillor was awarded to him. After the Matabele Rebellion, during
+which occurred one of the most famous episodes in the life of Rhodes, Mrs.
+van Koopman had been loud in her praises of the man whom she had been the
+first to guess would do great things.
+
+The episode to which I refer, when he alone had had the courage to go
+unattended and unarmed to meet the savage chiefs assembled in the Matoppo
+Hills, had, by the way, done more than anything else to consolidate the
+position of the chairman of De Beers in South Africa.
+
+During the first administration of Cape Colony by Mr. Rhodes, when his
+accession to the premiership had been viewed with a certain suspicion by
+the Dutch party, Mrs. van Koopman made tremendous efforts to induce them
+to have full confidence in her protege. And the attempt succeeded, because
+even the shrewd Mr. Hofmeyr had at last succumbed to the constant
+entreaties which she had poured upon him. Thenceforward Mr. Hofmeyr became
+one of Mr. Rhodes' firm admirers and strong partisans. Under the able
+guidance of Mrs. van Koopman the relations between the Dutch party and
+their future enemy became so cordial that at last a singular construction
+was put upon both sides of the alliance by the opponents of both. The
+accusation, already referred to, was made against Rhodes that he wished to
+make for himself in South Africa a position of such independence and
+strength that even the authority of the Queen might find itself
+compromised by it. As has been pointed out, the supposition was devoid of
+truth, but it is quite certain that the then Premier of Cape Colony would
+not have objected had the suzerainty been placed in his hands by England
+and British rule in South Africa vested solely in his person.
+
+During a brief interval in his political leadership Rhodes pursued his
+work in Rhodesia. In those days the famous British South Africa Company,
+which was to become known as the Chartered Company, was definitely
+constituted, and began its activity in the new territories which had come
+under its control. Ere long, though, the tide of events brought him again
+to the head of the Government. This time, however, though his appointment
+had been considered as a foregone conclusion, and though very few had
+opposed it, he no longer met the same sympathetic attention and
+co-operation which had characterised his first administration of public
+affairs. The Colony had begun to realise that Mr. Rhodes alone, and left
+free to do what he liked, or what he believed was right, was very
+different from Mr. Rhodes under the influence of the many so-called
+financiers and would-be politicians who surrounded him.
+
+An atmosphere of favouritism and of flattery had changed Rhodes, whom one
+would have thought far above such small things. Vague rumours, too, had
+begun to circulate concerning certain designs of the Chartered Company
+(one did not dare yet mention the name of its chief and chairman) on the
+Transvaal. Rhodes was directly questioned upon the subject by several of
+his friends, amongst others by Mr. Schreiner, to whom he energetically
+denied that such a thing had ever been planned. He added that Doctor
+Jameson, of whom the man in the street was already speaking as the man who
+was planning an aggression against the authority of President Kruger, was
+not even near the frontier of the neighbouring Republic. The mere idea of
+such a thing, Rhodes emphatically declared to Mr. Schreiner, was nothing
+but an ill-natured hallucination to create bad blood between the English
+and the Dutch. His tone seemed so sincere that Mr. Schreiner allowed
+himself to be convinced, and voluntarily assured his colleagues that he
+was convinced of the sincerity of the Prime Minister.
+
+The only person who was really alarmed at the persistent rumours which
+circulated in Cape Town in regard to a possible attack in common accord
+with the leaders of the Reform movement in Johannesburg against the
+independence of the Transvaal Republic was Mrs. van Koopman. She knew
+Rhodes' character too well not to fear that he might have been induced to
+listen to the misguided advice of people trying to persuade him that the
+Rhodesian adventure was susceptible of being repeated on a larger and far
+more important scale, with as much impunity and as little danger as the
+other one had been. Alarmed beyond words by all that she was hearing, she
+determined to find out for herself the true state of things, and, trusting
+to her knowledge of Rhodes' character, she asked him to call upon her.
+
+Rhodes came a few afternoons later, and Mrs. van Koopman closely
+questioned him on the subject, telling him of the tales which were being
+circulated not only in Cape Town, but also at Kimberley and Buluwayo and
+Johannesburg. Rhodes solemnly assured her that they were nothing but
+malicious gossip, and, taking her hands in his own, he repeated that all
+she had heard concerning the sinister designs he was supposed to be
+harbouring against the independence of the Transvaal had absolutely no
+foundation. To add force to his words, he continued that he respected her
+far too much to deceive her willingly, and that he would never have risked
+meeting her and talking with her upon such a subject had there been the
+slightest ground for the rumours which were disturbing the tranquillity of
+the inhabitants of Cape Town. When he left her Mrs. van Koopman felt quite
+reassured.
+
+Next morning Mrs. van Koopman told her anxious friends that she had
+received such assurances from Rhodes that she could not disbelieve him,
+and that the best thing which they could do would be to contradict all
+statements on the subject of a raid on the Transvaal that might come to
+their ears. This occurred on an after-Christmas evening of the year 1895.
+
+When the decisive conversation which I have just related was taking place
+between Mrs. van Koopman and Cecil Rhodes, Doctor Jameson and his handful
+of eager adventurers had already entered Transvaal territory. The Raid had
+become an accomplished fact. It was soon realised that it was the most
+deplorable affair that could have occurred for the reputation of Cecil
+Rhodes and for his political future. The rebound, indeed, was immediate;
+his political career came to an end that day.
+
+The person who was struck most painfully by this disgraceful and cryingly
+stupid adventure was Mrs. van Koopman. All her illusions--and she had
+nursed many concerning Rhodes--were destroyed at one blow. She never
+forgave him. All his attempts to bring about a reconciliation failed, and
+when later on he would fain have obtained her forgiveness, she absolutely
+refused all advances, and declared that she would never consent willingly
+to look upon his face or listen to his voice again. The proud old woman,
+whose ideals had been wrecked so cruelly, could not but feel a profound
+contempt for a man who had thus deliberately lied to her at the very time
+when she was appealing to his confidence. Her aristocratic instincts arose
+in indignation at the falsehoods which had been used to dupe her. She
+would not listen to any excuse, would not admit any extenuating
+circumstances; and perhaps because she knew in the secret of her heart
+that she would never be able to resist the pleadings of the man who had
+thus deceived her, she absolutely refused to see him.
+
+Rhodes never despaired of being restored to her favour, and would have
+given much to anyone able to induce her to relent in her judgment as to
+his conduct. Up to the last he made attempts to persuade her to reconsider
+her decision, but they all proved useless, and he died without having been
+able to win a forgiveness which he craved for many years.
+
+I used to know Mrs. van Koopman well and to see her often. I admired her
+much, not only on account of her great talents and of her powerful
+intellect, but also for the great dignity which she displayed all through
+the Boer War, when, suspected of favouring the Dutch cause to the extent
+of holding communications with the rebels all over the Cape Colony, she
+never committed any indiscretion or gave cause for any direct action
+against her. For some time, by order of the military authorities, she was
+placed under police supervision, and her house was searched for papers and
+documents which, however, were not found--as might have been foreseen.
+
+All through these trying months she never wavered in her attitude nor in
+her usual mode of life, except that she saw fewer people than
+formerly--not, as she used playfully to say, because she feared to be
+compromised, but because she did not wish to compromise others. More than
+once during my visits I spoke to her of Mr. Rhodes and tried to induce her
+to relent in her resolution. I even went so far as to tell her that her
+consent to meet him would, more than anything else, cause him to use all
+his influence, or what remained of it, in favour of a prompt settlement of
+the war in a peace honourable to both sides. Mrs. van Koopman smiled, but
+remained immovable. At last, seeing that I would not abandon the subject,
+she told me in tones which admitted of no discussion that she had far too
+much affection for Rhodes not to have been so entirely cut to the core by
+his duplicity in regard to her and by his whole conduct in that
+unfortunate matter of the Raid. She could trust him no longer, she told
+me, and, consequently, a meeting with him would only give her unutterable
+pain and revive memories that had better remain undisturbed. "Had I cared
+for him less I would not say so to you," she added, "but you must know
+that of all sad things the saddest is the destruction of idols one has
+built for oneself."
+
+This attitude on the part of the one friend he had the greatest affection
+for was one of the many episodes which embittered Rhodes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+RHODES AND THE RAID
+
+
+After the Raid, faithful to his usual tactics of making others responsible
+for his own misdeeds, Cecil Rhodes grew to hate with ferocity all those
+whose silence and quiet disapproval reminded him of the fatal error into
+which he had been led. He was loud in his expressions of resentment
+against Mr. Schreiner and the other members of the Afrikander party who
+had not been able to conceal from him their indignation at his conduct on
+the memorable occasion which ruined his own political life. They had
+compelled him--one judged by his demeanour--to resign his office of Prime
+Minister at the very time when he was about to transform it into something
+far more important--to use it as the stepping-stone to future grandeurs of
+which he already dreamt, although he had so far refrained from speaking
+about them to others. Curious to say, however, he never blamed the authors
+of this political mistake, and never, in public at least, reproached
+Jameson for the disaster he had brought upon him.
+
+What his secret thoughts were on this subject it is easy to guess.
+Circumstances used to occur now and then when a stray word spoken on
+impulse allowed one to discern that he deplored the moment of weakness
+into which he had been inveigled. For instance, during a dinner-party at
+Groote Schuur, when talking about the state of things prevailing in
+Johannesburg just before the war, he mentioned the names of five Reformers
+who, after the Raid, had been condemned to death by President Kruger, and
+added that he had paid their fine of twenty-five thousand pounds each.
+"Yes," he continued, with a certain grim accent of satire in his voice, "I
+paid L25,000 for each of these gentlemen." And when one of his guests
+tactlessly remarked, "But surely you need not have done so, Mr. Rhodes? It
+was tacitly admitting that you had been a party to their enterprise!" he
+retorted immediately, "And if I choose to allow the world to think that
+such was the case, what business is it of yours?" I thought the man was
+going to drop under the table, so utterly flabbergasted did he look.
+
+It is, of course, extremely difficult to know what was the actual part
+played by Rhodes in the Raid. He carried that secret to the grave, and it
+is not likely that his accomplices will ever reveal their own share in the
+responsibility for that wild adventure. My impression is that the idea of
+the Raid was started among the entourage of Rhodes and spoken of before
+him at length. He would listen in silence, as was his wont when he wished
+to establish the fact that he had nothing to do with a thing that had been
+submitted to him. Thus the Raid was tacitly encouraged by him, without his
+ever having pronounced himself either for or against it.
+
+Rhodes was an extremely able politician, and a far-seeing one into the
+bargain. He would never have committed himself into an open approval of an
+attempt which he knew perfectly well involved the rights of nations. On
+the other hand, he would have welcomed any circumstance which would result
+in the overthrow of the Transvaal Republic by friends of his. His former
+successes, and especially the facility with which had been carried out the
+attachment of Rhodesia to the British Empire, had refracted his vision,
+and he refused--or failed--to see the difficulties which he might
+encounter if he wanted to proceed for the second time on an operation of
+the same kind.
+
+On the other hand, he was worried by his friends to allow them to take
+decisive action, and was told that everyone in England would approve of
+his initiative in taking upon himself the responsibility of a step, out of
+which could only accrue solid advantage for the Mother Country.
+
+Rhodes had been too long away from England, and his sojourns there during
+the ten years or so immediately preceding 1895 had been far too short for
+him to have been able to come to a proper appreciation of the importance
+of public opinion in Great Britain, or of those principles in matters of
+Government which no sound English politician will ever dare to put aside
+if he wishes to retain his hold. He failed to understand and to appreciate
+the narrow limit which must not be overstepped; he forgot that when one
+wants to perform an act open to certain well-defined objections there must
+be a great aim in order eventually to explain and excuse the doing of it.
+The Raid had no such aim. No one made a mistake as to that point when
+passing judgment upon the Raid. The motives were too sordid, too mean, for
+anyone to do aught else but pass a sweeping condemnation upon the whole
+business.
+
+If he did not, Rhodes ought to have known that the public would most
+certainly pass this verdict on so dark and shameful an adventure, one that
+harmed England's prestige in South Africa far more than ever did the Boer
+War. But though perhaps he realised beforehand that this would be the
+verdict, he only felt a vague apprehension, more as a fancy than from any
+real sense of impending danger. He had grown so used to see success attend
+his every step that his imagination refused to admit the possibility of
+defeat.
+
+As for the people who engaged in the senseless adventure, their motives
+had none of the lofty ideals which influenced Rhodes himself. They simply
+wanted to obtain possession of the gold fields of the Transvaal and to
+oust the rightful owners. President Kruger represented an obstacle that
+had to be removed, and so they proceeded upon their mad quest without
+regard as to the possible consequences. Still less did they reflect that
+in his case they had not to deal with a native chief whose voice of
+protest had no chance to be heard, but with a very cute and determined man
+who had means at his disposal not only to defend himself, but also to
+appeal to European judgment to adjudge an unjustifiable aggression.
+
+Apart from all these considerations, which ought to have been seriously
+taken into account by Doctor Jameson and his companions, the whole
+expedition was planned in a stupid, careless manner. No wonder that it
+immediately came to grief. It is probable that if Rhodes had entered into
+its details and allowed others to consult him, matters might have taken a
+different turn. But, as I have already shown, he preferred to be able to
+say at a given moment that he had known nothing about it. At least, this
+must have been what he meant to do. But events proved too strong for him.
+The fiasco was too complete for Rhodes to escape from its
+responsibilities, though it must be conceded that he never tried to do so
+once the storm burst. He faced the music bravely enough, perhaps because
+of the knowledge that no denial would be believed, perhaps also because
+all the instincts of his, after all, great nature caused him to come
+forward to take his share in the disgrace of the whole deplorable affair.
+
+Whether he forgave Doctor Jameson for this act of folly remains a mystery.
+Personally I have always held that there must have _un cadavre entre eux_.
+No friendship could account for the strange relations which existed
+between these two men, one of whom had done so much to harm the other. At
+first it would have seemed as if an individual of the character of Cecil
+Rhodes would never have brought himself to forgive his confederate for the
+clumsiness with which he had handled a matter upon which the reputation of
+both of them depended, in the present as well as in the future. But far
+from abandoning the friend who had brought him into such trouble, he
+remained on the same terms of intimacy as before, with the difference,
+perhaps, that he saw even more of him than before the Raid. It seemed as
+if he wanted thus to affirm before the whole world his faith in the man
+through whom his whole political career had been wrecked.
+
+The attitude of Rhodes toward Jameson was commented upon far and wide. The
+Dutch party in Cape Town saw in it a mere act of bravado into which they
+read an acknowledgment that, strong as was the Colossus, he was too weak
+to tell his accomplices to withdraw from public sight until the
+ever-increasing difficulties with the Transvaal--which became more and
+more acute after the Raid--had been settled in some way or other between
+President Kruger and the British Government. Instead of this Rhodes seemed
+to take a particular pleasure in parading the trust he declared he had in
+Doctor Jameson, and to consult him publicly upon almost all the political
+questions which were submitted to him for consideration. This did not mean
+that he followed the advice which he received, because, so far as I was
+able to observe, this was seldom the case.
+
+To add to the contrariness of the situation, Rhodes always seemed more
+glad than anything else if he heard someone make an ill-natured remark
+about the Doctor, or when anything particularly disagreeable occurred to
+the latter. An ironic smile used to light up Rhodes' face and a sarcastic
+chuckle be heard. But still, whenever one attempted to explain to him that
+the Raid had been an unforgivable piece of imprudence, or hazarded that
+Jameson had never been properly punished for it, Rhodes invariably took
+the part of this friend of his younger days, and would never acknowledge
+that Doctor Jim's desire to enter public life as a member of the Cape
+Parliament ought not to be gratified.
+
+On his side, Doctor Jameson was determined that the opportunity to do so
+should be offered to him, and he used Rhodes' influence in order to obtain
+election. He knew very well that without it his candidature would have no
+chance.
+
+Later on, when judging the events which preceded the last two years of
+Rhodes' life, many people expressed the opinion that Jameson, being a
+physician of unusual ability, was perfectly well aware that his friend was
+not destined to live to a very old age, and therefore wished to obtain
+from him while he could all the political support he required to establish
+his career as the statesman he fully believed he was. In fact, Doctor
+Jameson had made up his mind to outlive the odium of the Raid, and to
+become rehabilitated in public opinion to the extent of being allowed to
+take up the leadership of the party which had once owned Rhodes as its
+chief. By a strange freak of Providence, helped no doubt by an iron will
+and opportunities made the most of, Jameson, who had been the great
+culprit in the mad adventure of the Raid, became the foremost man in Cape
+Colony for a brief period after the war, while Rhodes, who had been his
+victim, bore the full consequences of his weakness in having permitted
+himself to be persuaded to look through his fingers on the enterprise.
+
+Rhodes never recovered any real political influence, was distrusted by
+English and Dutch alike, looked upon with caution by the Cape Government,
+and with suspicion even among his followers. The poor man had no friends
+worthy of the name, and those upon whom he relied the most were the first
+to betray his confidence. Unfortunately for himself, he had a profound
+contempt for humanity, and imagined himself capable of controlling all
+those whom he had elected to rule. He imagined he could turn and twist
+anyone according to his own impulses. In support of this assertion let me
+relate an incident in which I played a part.
+
+When the Boer War showed symptoms of dragging on for a longer time than
+expected, some Englishmen proposed that Rhodes should be asked to stand
+again for Prime Minister, to do which he resolutely refused. Opinions,
+however, were very much divided. Some people declared that he was the only
+man capable of conciliating the Dutch and bringing the war to a happy
+issue. Others asserted that his again taking up the reins of Government
+would be considered by the Afrikander Bond--which was very powerful at the
+time--as an unjustifiable provocation which would only further embitter
+those who had never forgiven Rhodes for the Raid.
+
+A member of the Upper House of Legislature, whom I used to see often, and
+who was a strong partisan of Rhodes, determined to seek advice outside the
+House, and went to see an important political personage in Cape Town, one
+of those who frequented Groote Schuur and who posed as one of the
+strongest advocates of Rhodes again becoming the head of the Government
+presided over by Sir Alfred Milner. What was the surprise of my friend
+when, instead of finding a sympathising auditor, he heard him say that he
+considered that for the moment the return of Rhodes at the head of affairs
+would only complicate matters; that it was still too soon after the Raid;
+that his spirit of animosity in regard to certain people might not help to
+smooth matters at such a critical juncture; and that, moreover, Rhodes had
+grown very morose and tyrannical, and refused to brook any contradiction.
+Coming from a man who had no reason to be friendly with Rhodes, the
+remarks just reported would not have been important, but proceeding from a
+personage who was continually flattering Rhodes, they struck me as showing
+such considerable duplicity that I wrote warning Rhodes not to attach too
+much importance to the protestations of devotion to his person that the
+individual in question was perpetually pouring down upon him. The reply
+which I received was absolutely characteristic: "Thanks for your letter.
+Never mind what X---- says. He is a harmless donkey who can always make
+himself useful when required to do so."
+
+The foregoing incident is enlightening as to the real nature of Cecil
+Rhodes. His great mistake was precisely in this conviction that he could
+order men at will, and that men would never betray him or injure him by
+their false interpretation of the directions which it pleased him to give
+them. He considered himself so entirely superior to the rest of mankind
+that it never struck him that inferior beings could turn upon him and rend
+him, or forget the obedience to his orders which he expected them to
+observe. He did not appreciate people with independence, though he admired
+them in those rare moments when he would condescend to be sincere with
+himself and with others; but he preferred a great deal the miserable
+creatures who always said "yes" to all his vagaries; who never dared to
+criticise any of his instructions or to differ from any opinions which he
+expressed. Sometimes he uttered these opinions with a brutality that did
+him considerable harm, inasmuch as it could not fail to cause repugnance
+among any who listened to him, but were not sufficiently acquainted with
+the peculiarities of his character to discern that he wanted simply to
+scare his audience, and that he did not mean one single word of the
+ferocious things he said in those moments when he happened to be in a
+particularly perverse mood, and when it pleased him to give a totally
+false impression of himself and the nature of his convictions in political
+and public matters.
+
+It must not be lost sight of when judging Mr. Rhodes that he had been
+living for the best part of his life among people with whom he could not
+have anything in common except the desire to make money in the shortest
+time possible. He was by nature a thinker, a philosopher, a reader, a man
+who belonged to the best class of students, those who understand that
+one's mind wants continually improving and that it is apt to rust when not
+kept active. His companions in those first years which followed upon his
+arrival in South Africa would certainly not have appreciated any of the
+books the reading of which constituted the solace of the young man who
+still preserved in his mind the traditions of Oxford. They were his
+inferiors in everything: intelligence, instruction, comprehension of those
+higher problems of the soul and of the mind which always interested him
+even in the most troubled and anxious moments of his life. He understood
+and realised that this was the fact, and this did not tend to inspire him
+with esteem or even with consideration for the people with whom he was
+compelled to live and work.
+
+Men like Barney Barnato, to mention only this one name among the many,
+felt a kind of awe of Cecil Rhodes. This kind of thing, going on as it did
+for years, was bound to give Rhodes a wrong idea as to the faculty he had
+of bringing others to share his points of view, and he became so
+accustomed to be considered always right that he felt surprised and vexed
+whenever blind obedience was not given. Indeed, it so excited his
+displeasure that he would at once plunge into a course of conduct which he
+might never have adopted but for the fact that he had heard it condemned
+or criticised.
+
+It has been said that every rich man is generally surrounded by parasites,
+and Cecil Rhodes was not spared this infliction. Only in his case these
+parasites did not apply their strength to attacks upon his purse; they
+exploited him for his influence, for the importance which it gave them to
+be considered by the world as his friends, or even his dependants. They
+appeared wherever he went, telling the general public that their presence
+had been requested by the "Boss" in such warm terms that they could not
+refuse. It was curious to watch this systematic chase which followed him
+everywhere, even to England. Sometimes this persistency on the part of
+persons whom he did not tolerate more than was absolutely necessary bored
+him and put him out of patience; but most of the time he accepted it as a
+necessary evil, and even felt flattered by it. He also liked to have
+perpetually around him individuals whom he could bully to his heart's
+content, who never resented an insult and never minded an insolence--and
+Rhodes was often insolent.
+
+Another singular feature in a character as complex as it was interesting
+was the contempt in which he held all those who had risen under his very
+eyes, from comparative or absolute poverty, to the status of millionaires
+possessed of houses in Park Lane and shooting boxes in Scotland. He liked
+to relate all that he knew about them, and sometimes even to mention
+certain facts which the individuals themselves would probably have
+preferred to be consigned to oblivion. But--and here comes the singularity
+to which I have referred--Rhodes would not allow anyone else to speak of
+these things, and he always took the part of his so-called friends when
+outsiders hinted at dark episodes which did not admit of investigation. He
+almost gave a certificate of good conduct to people whom he might have
+been heard referring to a few hours before in a far more antagonistic
+spirit than that displayed by those whom he so sharply contradicted.
+
+I remember one amusing instance of the idiosyncrasy referred to. There was
+in Johannesburg a man who, having arrived there with twenty-five pounds in
+his pockets--as he liked to relate with evident pride in the fact--had, in
+the course of two years, amassed together a fortune of two millions
+sterling. One day during dinner at Groote Schuur he enlarged upon the
+subject with such offensiveness that an English lady, newly arrived in
+South Africa and not yet experienced in the things which at the time were
+better left unsaid, was so annoyed at his persistency that she interrupted
+the speaker with the remark:
+
+"Well, if I were you, I would not be so eager to let the world know that I
+had made two millions out of twenty-five pounds. It sounds exactly like
+the story of the man who says that in order to catch a train at six
+o'clock in the morning he gets up at ten minutes to six. You know at once
+that he cannot possibly have washed, whilst your story shows that you
+could not possibly have been honest."
+
+I leave the reader to imagine the consternation produced among those
+present by these words. But what were their feelings when they heard
+Rhodes say in reply:
+
+"Well, one does not always find water to wash in, and at Kimberley this
+happened oftener than one imagines; as for being honest, who cares for
+honesty nowadays?"
+
+"Those who have not lived in South Africa, Mr. Rhodes," was the retort
+which silenced the Colossus.
+
+This man of the get-rich-quick variety was one of those who had mastered
+the difficult operation of passing off to others the mines out of which he
+had already extracted most of the gold, an occupation which, in the early
+Johannesburg days, had been a favourite one with many of the inhabitants
+of this wonderful town. One must not forget that as soon as the fame of
+the gold fields of the Transvaal began to spread adventurers hastened
+there, together with a few honest pioneers, desirous of making a fortune
+out of the riches of a soil which, especially in prospectuses lavishly
+distributed on the London and Paris Stock Exchanges, was described as a
+modern Golconda. Concessions were bought and sold, companies were formed
+with a rapidity which savoured of the fabulous. Men made not only a
+living, but also large profits, by reselling plots of ground which they
+had bought but a few hours before, and one heard nothing but loud praises
+of this or that mine that could be had for a song, "owing to family
+circumstances" or other reasons which obliged their owner to part with it.
+
+The individual who had boasted of the intelligent manner with which he had
+transformed his twenty-five pounds into two solid millions had, early in
+his career, invested some of his capital in one of these mines. Its only
+merit was its high-sounding name. He tried for some time without success
+to dispose of it. At last he happened to meet a Frenchman, newly arrived
+in Johannesburg, who wanted to acquire some mining property there with the
+view of forming a company. Our hero immediately offered his own. The
+Frenchman responded to the appeal, but expressed the desire to go down
+himself into the shaft to examine the property and get some ore in order
+to test it before the purchase was completed. The condition was agreed to
+with eagerness, and a few days later the victim and his executioner
+proceeded together to the mine. The Frenchman went down whilst Mr. X----
+remained above. He walked about with his hands in his pockets, smoking
+cigarettes, the ashes of which he let fall with an apparent negligence
+into the baskets of ore which were being sent up by the Frenchman. When
+the latter came up, rather hot and dusty, the baskets were taken to
+Johannesburg and carefully examined: the ore was found to contain a
+considerable quantity of gold. The mine was bought, and not one scrap of
+gold was ever found in it. Mr. X---- had provided himself with cigarettes
+made for the purpose, which contained gold dust in lieu of tobacco, and
+the ashes which he had dropped were in reality the precious metal, the
+presence of which was to persuade the unfortunate Frenchman that he was
+buying a property of considerable value. He paid for it something like two
+hundred thousand pounds, whilst the fame of the man who had thus cleverly
+tricked him spread far and wide.
+
+The most amusing part of the story consists in its _denouement_. The duped
+Frenchman, though full of wrath, was, nevertheless, quite up to the game.
+He kept silence, but proceeded to form his company as if nothing had been
+the matter. When it was about to be constituted and registered, he asked
+Mr. X---- to become one of its directors, a demand that the latter could
+not very well refuse with decency. He therefore allowed his name to figure
+among those of the members of the board, and he used his best endeavours
+to push forward the shares of the concern of which he was pompously
+described on the prospectus as having been once the happy owner. As his
+name was one to conjure with the scrip went up to unheard-of prices, when
+both he and his supposed victim, the Frenchman, realised and retired from
+the venture, the richer by several hundreds of thousands of pounds.
+History does not say what became of the shareholders. As for Mr. X----, he
+now lives in Europe, and has still a reputation in South Africa.
+
+This story is but one amongst hundreds, and it is little wonder that,
+surrounded as he was with men who indulged in this charming pastime of
+always trying to dupe their fellow creatures, Rhodes' moral sense relaxed.
+It is only surprising that he kept about him so much that was good and
+great, and that he did not succumb altogether to the contamination which
+affected everything and everybody around him. Happily for him he cherished
+his own ambitions, had his own dreams for companions, his absorption in
+the great work he had undertaken; these things were his salvation.
+Rhodesia became the principal field of Rhodes' activity, and the care with
+which he fostered its prosperity kept him too busy and interested to
+continue the quest for riches which had been his great, if not his
+principal, occupation during the first years of his stay in South Africa.
+
+Although Cecil Rhodes was so happily placed that he had no need to bother
+over wealth, he was not so aloof to the glamour of politics. He had always
+felt the irk of his retirement after the Raid, and the hankering after a
+leading political position became more pronounced as the episode which
+shut the Parliamentary door behind him after he had passed through its
+portals faded in the mind of the people.
+
+It was not surprising, therefore, to observe that politics once more took
+the upper hand amidst his preoccupations. It was, though, politics
+connected with the development of the country that bore his name more than
+with the welfare of the Cape Colony or of the Transvaal. It was only
+during the last two years of Rhodes' existence that his interest revived
+in the places connected with his first successes in life. Rhodes had been
+convinced that a war with the Boers would last only a matter of a few
+weeks--three months, as he prophesied when it broke out--and he was
+equally sure, though for what reason it is difficult to guess, that the
+war would restore him to his former position and power. The illusion
+lingered long enough to keep him in a state of excitement, during which,
+carried along by his natural enthusiasm, he indulged in several
+unconsidered steps, and when at last his hope was dispelled he accused
+everybody of being the cause of his disappointment. Never for a moment
+would he admit that he could have been mistaken, or that the war, which at
+a certain moment his intervention might possibly have avoided, had been
+the consequence of the mischievous act he had not prevented.
+
+When the Bloemfontein Conference failed Rhodes was not altogether
+displeased. He had felt the affront of not being asked to attend; and,
+though his common sense told him that it would have been altogether out of
+the question for him to take part in it, as this would have been
+considered in the light of a personal insult by President Kruger, he would
+have liked to have been consulted by Sir Alfred Milner, as well as by the
+English Government, as to the course to be adopted during its
+deliberations. He was fully persuaded in his own mind that Sir Alfred
+Milner, being still a new arrival in South Africa, had not been able to
+grasp its complicated problems, and so had not adopted the best means to
+baffle the intrigues of President Kruger and the diplomacy of his clever
+colleague, President Steyn. At every tale which reached Cecil Rhodes
+concerning the difficulties encountered by Sir Alfred, he declared that he
+was "glad to be out of this mess." Yet it was not difficult to see that he
+passionately regretted not being allowed to watch from a seat at the
+council table the vicissitudes of this last attempt by conference to
+smooth over difficulties arising from the recklessness displayed by people
+in arrogantly rushing matters that needed careful examination.
+
+[Illustration: PRESIDENT KRUGER]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE AFTERMATH OF THE RAID
+
+
+Toward the close of the last chapter I referred to the Raid passing from
+the forefront of public memory. But though, as a fact, it became blurred
+in the mind of the people, as a factor in South African history its
+influence by no means diminished. Indeed, the aftermath of the Raid
+assumed far greater proportions as time went on. It influenced so entirely
+the further destinies of South Africa, and brought about such enmities and
+such bitterness along with it, that nothing short of a war could have
+washed away its impressions. Up to that fatal adventure the Jingo English
+elements, always viewed with distrust and dislike in the Transvaal as well
+as at the Cape, had been more or less held back in their desire to gain an
+ascendancy over the Dutch population, whilst the latter had accepted the
+Jingo as a necessary evil devoid of real importance, and only annoying
+from time to time.
+
+After the Raid all the Jingoes who had hoped that its results would be to
+give them greater facilities of enrichment considered themselves
+personally aggrieved by its failure. They did just what Rhodes was always
+doing. The Boers and President Kruger had acted correctly in this
+enterprise of Doctor Jameson, but the Jingoes made them responsible for
+the results of its failure. They went about giving expression to feelings
+of the most violent hatred against the Boers, and railed at their
+wickedness in daring to stand up in defence of rights which the British
+Government had solemnly recognised. It became quite useless to tell those
+misguided individuals that the Cabinet at Westminster had from the very
+first blamed Rhodes for his share in what the English Press, with but few
+exceptions, had declared to be an entirely disgraceful episode. They
+pretended that people in London knew nothing about the true state of
+affairs in South Africa or the necessities of the country; that the
+British Government had always shown deplorable weakness in regard to the
+treatment meted out to its subjects in the Colonies, and that both Rhodes
+and Jameson were heroes whose names deserved to be handed down to
+posterity for the services which they had rendered to their country.
+
+It is true that these ardent Jingoes were but a small minority and that
+the right-minded elements among the English Colonials universally blamed
+the unwarranted attack that had been made against the independence of the
+Transvaal. But the truculent minority shouted loud enough to drown the
+censure, and as, with a few notable exceptions, the South African Press
+was under the influence of the magnates, it was not very easy to protest
+against the strange way in which the Raid was being excused. I am
+persuaded that, had the subject been allowed to drop, it would have died a
+natural death, or at worst been considered as an historical blunder. But
+the partisans of Rhodes, the friends of Jameson, and personages connected
+with the leading financial powers did their best to keep the remembrance
+of the expedition which wrecked the political life of Rhodes fresh before
+the public. The mere mention of it was soon sufficient to arouse a tempest
+of passions, especially among the Dutch party, and by and by the history
+of South Africa resolved itself into the Raid and its memories. You never
+heard people say, "This happened at such a time"; they merely declared,
+"This happened before, or after, the Raid." It became a landmark for the
+inhabitants of Cape Town and of the Transvaal, and I could almost believe
+that, in Kimberley at any rate, the very children in the schools were
+taught to date their knowledge of English history from the time of the
+Raid.
+
+The enemies of Cecil Rhodes, and their number was legion, always declared
+that the reason why he had faced the music and braved public opinion in
+England lay in the fact that, for some reason or other, he was afraid of
+Doctor Jameson. I have referred already to this circumstance. Whilst
+refusing to admit such a possibility, yet I must own that the influence,
+and even the authority exercised by the Doctor on his chief, had something
+uncanny about it. My own opinion has always been that Rhodes' attitude
+arose principally from his conviction that Jameson was the only one who
+understood his constitution, the sole being capable of looking after his
+health. Curious as it may seem, I am sure the Colossus had an inordinate
+fear of death and of illness of any kind. He knew that his life was not a
+sound one, but he always rebelled against the idea that, like other
+mortals, he was subject to death. I feel persuaded that one of the reasons
+why he chose to be buried in the Matoppo Hills was that, in selecting this
+lonely spot, he felt that he would not often be called upon to see the
+place where he would rest one day.
+
+This dread of the unknown, so rare in people of his calibre, remained with
+him until the end. It increased in acuteness as his health began to fail.
+Then, more than ever, did he entertain and plan new schemes, as if to
+persuade himself that he had unlimited time before him in which to execute
+them. His flatterers knew how to play upon his weakness, and they never
+failed to do so. Perhaps this foible explains the influence which Doctor
+Jameson undoubtedly exercised upon the mind of Rhodes. He believed himself
+to be in safety whenever Jameson was about him. And so in a certain sense
+he was, because, with all his faults, the Doctor had a real affection for
+the man to whom he had been bound by so many ties ever since the days when
+at Kimberley they had worked side by side, building their fortunes and
+their careers.
+
+By a curious freak of destiny, when the tide of events connected with the
+war had given to the Progressive English party a clear majority in the
+Cape Parliament, Jameson assumed its leadership as a matter of course,
+largely because he was the political next-of-kin to Rhodes. The fact that
+at that time he lived at Groote Schuur added to his popularity, and he
+continued whilst there the traditional hospitality displayed during the
+lifetime of Rhodes. That he ultimately became Prime Minister was not
+surprising; the office fell to his share as so many other good things had
+fallen before; and, having obtained this supreme triumph and enjoyed it
+for a time, he was tactful enough to retire at precisely the right moment.
+
+The Raid indirectly killed Rhodes and directly obliterated his political
+reputation. It lost him, too, the respect of all the men who could have
+helped him to govern South Africa wisely and well. It deprived him of the
+experience and popularity of Mr. Schreiner, Mr. Merriman, Mr. Sauer and
+other members of the Afrikander Bond who had once been upon terms of
+intimacy and affection with him.
+
+It must never be forgotten that at one period of his history Rhodes was
+considered to be the best friend of the Dutch party; and, secondly, that
+he had been the first to criticise the action of the British Government in
+regard to the Transvaal. At the very moment when the Raid was contemplated
+he was making the most solemn assurances to his friends--as they then
+believed themselves to be--that he would never tolerate any attack against
+the independence of the Boers. If his advice had been taken, Rhodes
+considered that the errors which culminated at Majuba with the defeat of
+the British troops would have been avoided. He caused the same assurances
+to be conveyed to President Kruger, and this duplicity, which in anyone
+less compromised than he was in regard to the Dutch party might have been
+blamed, was in his case considered as something akin to high treason, and
+roused against him sentiments not only of hatred, but also of disgust.
+When later on, at the time of the Boer War, Rhodes made attempts to
+ingratiate himself once more into the favour of the Dutch he failed to
+realise that while there are cases when animosity can give way before
+political necessity, it is quite impossible in private to shake hands with
+an individual whom one despises. And that such persons as Mrs. van Koopman
+or Mr. Schreiner, for instance, despised Rhodes there can be no doubt.
+
+They were wrong in doing so. Rhodes was essentially a man of moods, and
+also an opportunist in his strange, blunt way. Had the Dutch rallied round
+him during the last war it is certain that he would have given himself up
+body and soul to the task of trying to smooth over the difficulties which
+gave such an obstinate character to the war. He would have induced the
+English Government to grant to all rebel colonists who returned to their
+allegiance a generous pardon and reinstatement into their former rights.
+
+Even while the war lasted it is a fact that, in a certain sense, Rhodes'
+own party suspected him of betraying its interests. I feel almost sure
+that Sir Alfred Milner did not trust him, but, nevertheless, he would have
+liked Rhodes as a coadjutor. If the two men were never on sincerely
+cordial terms with one another it was not the fault of the High
+Commissioner, who, with that honesty of which he always and upon every
+occasion gave proof, tried to secure the co-operation of the great South
+African statesman in his difficult task. But Rhodes would not help Sir
+Alfred. But neither, too, would he help the Dutch unless they were willing
+to eat humble pie before him. In fact, it was this for which Rhodes had
+been waiting ever since the Raid. He wanted people to ask his forgiveness
+for the faults he himself had committed. He would have liked Sir Alfred
+Milner to beg of him as a favour to take the direction of public affairs,
+and he would have desired the whole of the Dutch party to come down _in
+corpore_ to Groote Schuur, to implore him to become their leader and to
+fight not only for them but also for the rights of President Kruger, whom
+he professed to ridicule and despise, but to whom he had caused assurances
+of sympathy to be conveyed.
+
+During the first period of the war, and especially during the siege, Cecil
+Rhodes was in Kimberley. He had gone with the secret hope that he might be
+able from that centre to retain a stronger hold on South African politics
+than could have been the case at Groote Schuur, in which region the only
+authority recognised by English and Dutch alike was that of Sir Alfred
+Milner. He waited for a sign telling him that his ambition was about to be
+realised in some way or other--and waited in vain. It is indisputable that
+whilst he was shut up in the Diamond City Rhodes entered into secret
+negotiations with some of the Dutch leaders. This, though it might have
+been construed in the sense of treason against his own Motherland had it
+reached the knowledge of the extreme Jingo party, was in reality the
+sincere effort of a true patriot to put an end to a struggle which was
+threatening to destroy the prosperity of a country for which he had
+laboured for so many years.
+
+In judging Rhodes one must not forget that though a leading personality in
+South Africa, and the chairman of a corporation which practically ruled
+the whole of the Cape Colony and, in part, also the Transvaal, he was,
+after all, at that time nothing but a private individual. He had the right
+to put his personal influence at the service of the State and of his
+country if he considered that by so doing he could bring to an end a war
+which threatened to bring destruction on a land that was just beginning to
+progress toward civilisation. It must be remembered that his was the only
+great personality in South Africa capable of opposing President Kruger and
+the other Dutch and Boer leaders. He was still popular among many
+people--feared by some, worshipped by others. He could rally round him
+many elements that would never coalesce with either Dutch or English
+unless he provided the impetus of his authority and approval. If only he
+had spoken frankly to the Boer leaders whom he had caused to be
+approached, called them to his side instead of having messages conveyed to
+them by people whom he could disavow later on and whom, in fact, he did
+disavow; and if, on the other hand, Rhodes had placed himself at the
+disposal of Sir Alfred Milner, and told him openly that he would try to
+see what he could do to help him, the tenseness of the situation would
+almost certainly have been eased.
+
+In a position as intermediary between two adversaries who required his
+advice and influence to smooth the way toward a settlement of the terrible
+South African question Rhodes could have done incalculable service and
+added lustre to his name. But he did not, and it is not without interest
+to seek the reason why the Colossus was not courageous enough to embark
+upon such a course. Whether through fear of his actions being wrongly
+interpreted, or else because he did not feel sure of his ground and was
+apprehensive lest he might be induced to walk into a trap, Cecil Rhodes
+never would pronounce himself upon one side or the other. He left to
+well-wishers the task of reconciliation between himself and his enemies,
+or, if not that, at least the possibility for both once more to take
+common action for the solution of South African difficulties. The
+unfortunate side of the whole affair lay in the fact that the Boer and
+Bond leaders each remained under the impression that in the Raid affair it
+was against their particular body that Rhodes had sinned, that it was
+their cause which he had betrayed. Accordingly they expected him to
+recognise this fact and to tell them of his regret.
+
+But this was not Rhodes' way: on the contrary, he looked to his
+adversaries to consider that they had wronged him. Both parties adhered
+firmly to their point of view; it was not an easy matter to persuade
+either of them to take the initiative. Each very well knew and felt it was
+an indispensable step, but each considered it should be taken by the
+other.
+
+This brings me to make a remark which probably has never yet found its way
+into print, though some have spoken about it in South Africa. It is that
+Cecil Rhodes, whilst being essentially an Empire Maker, was not an Empire
+Ruler. His conceptions were far too vast to allow him to take into
+consideration the smaller details of everyday life which, in the
+management of the affairs of the world, obliges one to consider possible
+ramifications of every great enterprise. Rhodes wanted simply to sweep
+away all obstacles without giving the slightest thought to the
+consequences likely to follow on so offhand a manner of getting rid of
+difficulties.
+
+In addition to this disregard of vital details, there was a tinge of
+selfishness in everything which Rhodes undertook and which gave a personal
+aspect to matters which ought to have been looked upon purely from the
+objective. The acquisition of Rhodesia, for instance, was considered by
+him as having been accomplished for the aggrandisement of the Empire and
+also for his own benefit. He sincerely believed that he had had nothing
+else in his mind when he founded the Chartered Company, than the desire to
+conquer a new country and to give it to England; but he would certainly
+have felt cruelly affronted if the British Government had ever taken its
+administration into its own hands and not allowed Rhodes to do exactly
+what he pleased there. He loved to go to Buluwayo, and would spend weeks
+watching all that was being done in the way of agriculture and mining. In
+particular, he showed considerable interest in the natives.
+
+The Colonial Office in London was treated by Cecil Rhodes with the utmost
+disdain on the rare occasions when it tried to put in a word concerning
+the establishment of British rule in the territories which he gloried in
+having presented to the Queen. It was sufficient to mention in his
+presence the possibility of the Charter being recalled to put Rhodes into
+a passion. No king or tyrant of old, indeed, treated his subjects with the
+severity which Rhodes showed in regard to the different civil officials
+and military defenders of the Rhodesia he loved so much and so unwisely.
+
+It is curious that Rhodes never allowed speculation a free hand in
+Rhodesia as he had done at Kimberley or at Johannesburg. He was most
+careful that outsiders should not hear about what was going on, and took
+endless precautions not to expose the companies that worked the old
+dominions of poor King Lobengula, to the sharp criticism of the European
+Stock Exchanges. Their shares remained in the hands of people on whose
+discretion Rhodes believed that he could rely, and no one ever heard of
+gambling in scrip exciting the minds of the inhabitants of Buluwayo or
+Salisbury to anything like the degree stocks in Transvaal concerns did.
+
+In Rhodesia Rhodes believed himself on his own ground and free from the
+criticisms which he guessed were constantly uttered in regard to him and
+to his conduct. In the new land which bore his name Rhodes was surrounded
+only by dependants, whilst in Cape Colony he now and then came across
+someone who would tell him and, what was worse, who would make him feel
+that, after all, he was not the only man in the world, and that he could
+not always have everything his own way. Moreover, in Cape Town there was
+the Governor, whose personality was more important than his own, and whom,
+whether he liked it or not, he had to take into consideration, and to
+whom, in a certain sense, he had to submit. And in Kimberley there was the
+De Beers Board which, though composed of men who were entirely in
+dependence upon him and whose careers he had made, yet had to be
+consulted. He could not entirely brush them aside, the less so that a
+whole army of shareholders stood behind them who, from time to time, were
+impudent enough to wish to see what was being done with their money.
+
+Nothing in the way of hampering critics or circumscribing authorities
+existed in Rhodesia. The Chartered Company, though administered by a
+Board, was in reality left entirely in the hands and under the control of
+Rhodes. Most of the directors were in England and came before public
+notice only at the annual general meeting, which was always a success,
+inasmuch as no one there had ever ventured to criticise, otherwise than in
+a mild way, the work of the men who were supposed to watch over the
+development of the resources of the country. Rhodes was master, and
+probably his power would have even increased had he lived long enough to
+see the completion of the Cape to Cairo Railway, which was his last hobby
+and the absorbing interest of the closing years of his life.
+
+The Cape to Cairo Railway was one of those vast schemes that can be
+ascribed to the same quality in his character as that which made him so
+essentially an Empire Maker. It was a project of world-wide importance,
+and destined to set the seal to the paramount influence of Great Britain
+over the whole of Africa. It was a work which, without Rhodes, would never
+have been accomplished. He was right to feel proud of having conceived it;
+and England, too, ought to be proud of having counted among her sons a man
+capable of starting such a vast enterprise and of going on with it despite
+the violent opposition and the many misgivings with which it was received
+by the general public.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+RHODES AND THE AFRIKANDER BOND
+
+
+To return to the subject of the negotiations which undoubtedly took place
+between Rhodes and the leaders of the Afrikander Bond during the war, I
+must say that, so far as I know, they can rank among the most
+disinterested actions of his life. For once there was no personal interest
+or possible material gain connected with his desire to bring the Dutch
+elements in South Africa to look upon the situation from the purely
+patriotic point of view, as he did himself.
+
+It would have been most certainly to the advantage of everybody if,
+instead of persisting in a resistance which was bound to collapse, no
+matter how successful it might appear to have been at its start, the
+Boers, together with the Dutch Afrikanders, had sent the olive branch to
+Cape Town. There would then have been some hope of compromise or of coming
+to terms with England before being crushed by her armies. It would have
+been favourable to English interests also had the great bitterness, which
+rendered the war such a long and such a rabid one, not had time to spread
+all over the country. Rhodes' intervention, which Sir Alfred Milner could
+not have refused had he offered it, backed by the Boers on one side and by
+the English Progressive party in the Colony on the other, might have
+brought about great results and saved many lives.
+
+No blame, therefore, ought to attach to Cecil Rhodes for wishing to
+present the Boer side of the case. It would, indeed, have been wiser on
+the part of Mr. Hofmeyr and other Bond leaders to have forgotten the past
+and given a friendly hand to the one man capable of unravelling the
+tangled skein of affairs.
+
+At that period, whilst the siege of Kimberley was in progress, it is
+certain that serious consideration was given to this question of common
+action on the part of Rhodes and of the two men who practically held the
+destinies of the Transvaal in their hands--de Wet and General Botha, with
+Mr. Hofmeyr as representative of the Afrikander Bond at their back. Why it
+failed would for ever remain a mystery if one did not remember that
+everywhere in South Africa lurked hidden motives of self-interest which
+interfered with the best intentions. The fruits of the seed of distrust
+sown by the Raid were not easy to eradicate.
+
+Perhaps if Mr. Rhodes had stood alone the attempt might have met with more
+success than was actually the case. But it was felt by all the leading men
+in the Transvaal that a peace concluded under his auspices would result in
+the subjection of the Boers to the foreign and German-Jew millionaires.
+This was the one thing they feared.
+
+The Boers attributed to the millionaires of the Rand all the misfortunes
+which had fallen upon them, and consequently the magnates were bitterly
+hated by the Boers. And not without reason. No reasonable Boer would have
+seriously objected to a union with England, provided it had been effected
+under conditions assuring them autonomy and a certain independence. But no
+one wanted to have liberty and fortune left at the mercy of adventurers,
+even though some of them had risen to reputation and renown, obtained
+titles, and bought their way into Society.
+
+Unfortunately for him, Rhodes was supposed to represent the class of
+people referred to, or, at any rate, to favour them. One thing is
+certain--the great financial interests which Rhodes possessed in the Gold
+Fields and other concerns of the same kind lent some credence to the idea.
+All these circumstances prevented public opinion from expressing full
+confidence in him, because no one could bring himself to believe what
+nevertheless would have come true.
+
+In the question of restoring peace to South Africa Rhodes most certainly
+would never have taken anyone's advice; he would have acted according to
+his own impulse, and more so because Doctor Jameson was not with him
+during the whole time Kimberley was besieged. Unfortunately for all the
+parties concerned, Rhodes let slip the opportunity to resume his former
+friendship with Mr. Hofmeyr, the only man in South Africa whose
+intelligence could measure itself with his own. And in the absence of this
+first step from Rhodes, a false pride--which was wounded vanity more than
+anything else--prevented the Bond from seeking the help of Rhodes. This
+attitude on the part of each man would simply have been ridiculous under
+ordinary circumstances, but at a time when such grave interests were at
+stake, and when the future of so many people was liable to be compromised,
+it became criminal.
+
+In sharp contrast to it stood the conduct of Sir Alfred Milner, who was
+never influenced by his personal feelings or by his vanity where the
+interests of his country were engaged. During the few months which
+preceded the war he was the object of virulent hatred on the part of most
+of the white population of the Colony. When the first disillusions of the
+war brought along with them their usual harvest of disappointments the
+personality of the High Commissioner appeared at last in its true light,
+and one began to realise that here was a man who possessed a singularly
+clear view on matters of politics, and that all his actions were guided by
+sound principles. His quiet determination not to allow himself to be
+influenced by the gossip of Cape Town was also realised, and amid all the
+spite shown it is to his honour that, instead of throwing up the sponge,
+he persevered, until at last he succeeded in the aim which he had kept
+before him from the day he had landed in Table Bay. He restored peace to
+the dark continent where no one had welcomed him, but where everybody
+mourned his departure when he bade it good-bye after the most anxious
+years he had ever known.
+
+When Sir Alfred accepted the post of Governor of the Cape Colony and
+English High Commissioner in South Africa, he had intended to study most
+carefully the local conditions of the new country whither fate and his
+duty were sending him, and then, after having gained the necessary
+experience capable of guiding him in the different steps he aspired to
+take, to proceed to the formidable task he had set for himself. His great
+object was to bring about a reconciliation between the two great political
+parties in the Colony--the South African League, with Rhodes as President,
+and the Afrikander Bond, headed by Messrs. Hofmeyr (the one most in
+popular favour with the Boer farmers), Sauer and Schreiner.
+
+In the gigantic task of welding together two materials which possessed
+little affinity and no love for each other, Sir Alfred was unable to be
+guided by his experience in the Motherland. In England a certain
+constitutional policy was the basis of every party. At the Cape the
+dominating factors were personal feelings, personal hatreds and
+affections, while in the case of the League it was money and money alone.
+I do not mean that every member of the League had been bought by De Beers
+or the Chartered Company; but what I do maintain is that the majority of
+its members had some financial or material reason to enrol themselves.
+
+In judging the politics of South Africa at the period of which I am
+writing, one must not forget that the greater number of those who then
+constituted the so-called Progressive party were men who had travelled to
+the Cape through love of adventure and the desire to enrich themselves
+quickly. It was only the first comers who had seen their hopes realised.
+Those who came after them found things far more difficult, and had
+perforce to make the best of what their predecessors left. On the other
+hand, it was relatively easy for them to find employment in the service of
+one or the other of the big companies that sprang up, and by whom most of
+the mining and industrial concerns were owned.
+
+[Illustration: THE HON. J.H. HOFMEYR]
+
+When the influence of the De Beers increased after its amalgamation with
+the other diamond companies around Kimberley, and when Rhodes made up his
+mind that only a political career could help him to achieve his vast
+plans, he struck upon the thought of using the money and the influence
+which were at his disposal to transform De Beers into one of the most
+formidable political instruments the world had ever seen. He succeeded in
+doing so in what would have been a wonderful manner if one did not
+remember the crowd of fortune-seeking men who were continually landing in
+South Africa. These soon found that it would advantage them to enrol under
+Rhodes' banner, for he was no ordinary millionaire. Here stood a man who
+was perpetually discovering new treasures, annexing new continents, and
+who had always at his disposal profitable posts to scatter among his
+followers.
+
+The reflex action upon Rhodes was that unconsciously he drifted into the
+conviction that every man could be bought, provided one knew what it was
+he wanted. He understood perfectly well the art of speculating in his
+neighbours' weaknesses, and thus liked to invite certain people to make
+long stays at his house, not because he liked them, but because he knew,
+if they did not, that they would soon discover that the mere fact of being
+the guest of Mr. Rhodes procured for them the reputation of being in his
+confidence. Being a guest at Groote Schuur endowed a man with a prestige
+such as no one who has not lived in South Africa can realise, and,
+furthermore, enabled him to catch here and there scraps of news respecting
+the money markets of the world, a proper understanding and use of which
+could be of considerable financial value. A cup of tea at Groote Schuur
+was sufficient to bring about more than one political conversion.
+
+Once started the South African League soon became a power in the land, not
+so strong by any means as the Afrikander Bond, but far more influential in
+official, and especially in financial, circles. Created for the apparent
+aim of supporting British government in Cape Colony, it found itself
+almost from the very first in conflict with it, if not outwardly, at least
+tacitly. After his rupture with the Bond consequent upon the Raid, Rhodes
+brought considerable energy to bear upon the development of the League. He
+caused it to exercise all over the Colony an occult power which more than
+once defied constituted authority, and proved a source of embarrassment to
+British representatives with greater frequency than they would have cared
+to own. Sir Alfred Milner, so far as I have been able to see, when taking
+the reins, had not reckoned upon meeting with this kind of government
+within a government, and in doing so perhaps did not appreciate its
+extent. But from the earliest days of his administration it confronted
+him, at first timidly, afterwards with persistence, and at last with such
+insolence that he found himself compelled to see what he could do to
+reduce to impotence this organisation which sought to devour him.
+
+The problem which a situation of the character described thrust upon Sir
+Alfred was easier to discuss than to solve. The League was a power so wide
+that it was almost impossible to get rid of its influence in the country.
+It was controlled by Rhodes, by De Beers, by the Chartered Company, by the
+members in both Houses who were affiliated to it, by all the great
+financial establishments throughout South Africa--with but a solitary
+exception--by the principal industrial and agricultural enterprises in the
+country. It comprised political men, landowners, doctors, merchants,
+ship-owners, practically all the colonists in Rhodesia, and most of the
+English residents of the Transvaal. It controlled elections, secured
+votes, disposed of important posts, and when it advised the Governor the
+Legislature had to take its remarks into consideration whether or not it
+approved of them. Under the regime of the days when the League was formed
+it had been able to develop itself with great facility, the dangers which
+lurked behind its encroachment on the privileges of the Crown not being
+suspected. But Sir Alfred Milner discovered the menace at once, and with
+the quiet firmness and the tact which he always displayed in everything
+that he undertook proceeded to cope with the organisation.
+
+Sir Alfred soon found himself confronted by the irritation of Rhodes, who
+had relied on his support for the schemes which he had nursed in regard to
+the Transvaal. I must here explain the reason why Rhodes had thrown his
+glances toward the Rand. One must remember the peculiar conditions in
+which he was placed in being always surrounded by creatures whom he could
+only keep attached to his person and to his ambition by satisfying their
+greed for gold. When he had annexed Matabeleland it had been principally
+in the expectation that one would find there the rich gold-bearing strata
+said to exist in that region. Unfortunately, this hope proved a fallacious
+one. Although thousands of pounds were spent in sinking and research, the
+results obtained were of so insignificant a nature, and the quantity of
+ore extracted so entirely insufficient to justify systematic exploitation,
+that the adventurers had perforce to turn their attention toward other
+fields.
+
+It was after this disillusion that the idea took hold of Rhodes, which he
+communicated to his friends, to acquire the gold fields of the Rand, and
+to transform the rich Transvaal into a region where the Chartered Company
+and the South African League would rule. Previous to this, if we are to
+believe President Kruger, Rhodes had tried to conclude an alliance with
+him, and once, upon his return from Beira to Cape Town, had stopped at
+Pretoria, where he paid a visit to the old Boer statesman.
+
+It is quite likely that on this occasion Rhodes put in a word suggesting
+that it would be an advantage to the Transvaal to become possessed of an
+outlet on the sea-board, but I hardly think that Kruger wrote the truth in
+his memoirs in stating that when mentioning Delagoa Bay Rhodes used the
+words, "We must simply take it," thus associating himself with Kruger.
+Cecil Rhodes was far too cute to do any such tiling, knowing that it would
+be interpreted in a sense inimical to his plans. But I should not be
+surprised if, when the President remarked that Delagoa was Portuguese, he
+had replied, "It does not matter, and you must simply take it." This would
+have been far more to the point, as it would have hinted to those who knew
+how to read between the lines that England, which Rhodes was persuaded was
+incarnated in himself, would not mind if the Transvaal did lay hands on
+Delagoa Bay. Such an act would furnish the British Government with a
+pretext for dabbling to some effect in the affairs of the Transvaal
+Republic.
+
+Such a move as this would have been just one of these things which Rhodes
+was fond of doing. He felt sometimes a kind of malicious pleasure in
+whispering to others the very things likely to get them into trouble
+should they be so foolish as to do them. In the case of President Kruger,
+however, he had to deal with a mind which, though uncouth, yet possessed
+all the "slimness" of which so many examples are to be found in South
+Africa.
+
+Kruger wrote, "Rhodes represented capital, no matter how base and
+contemptible, and whether by lying, bribery or treachery, all and every
+means were welcome to him if they led to the attainment of his ambitious
+desires." But Oom Paul was absolutely wrong in thinking that it was the
+personage he was thus describing who practised all these abominations. He
+ought to have remembered that it was his name only which was associated
+with all these basenesses, and the man himself, if left to his better
+self, would never have condescended to the many acts of doubtful morality
+with which his memory will remain associated in history.
+
+I am firmly convinced that on his own impulse he would never, for
+instance, have ventured on the Raid. But, unhappily, his habit, when
+something "not quite" was mentioned to him, was to say nothing and to
+trust to his good luck to avoid unpleasant consequences arising out of his
+silence. Had he ventured to oppose the plans of his confederates they
+would have immediately turned upon him, and ... There were, perhaps, past
+facts which he did not wish the world to remember. His frequent fits of
+raging temper arose from this irksome feeling, and was his way--a futile
+way--of revenging himself on his jailors for the durance in which they
+kept him. The man who believed himself to be omnipotent in South Africa,
+and who was considered so powerful by the world at large, was in reality
+in the hands of the very organisations he had helped to build.
+
+It was not Cecil John Rhodes' will which was paramount in the South
+African League. Kruger spoke absolutely the truth when he asserted that it
+was essential "to know something about the Chartered Company before it was
+possible to realise the true perspective of the history of South Africa
+during the closing years of the last century." Another of Kruger's
+sweeping assertions--and one which he never backed by anything
+tangible--was when he further wrote that Rhodes was "one of the most
+unscrupulous characters that ever existed, whose motto was 'the end
+justifies the means,' a motto that contains a creed which represents the
+whole man." Rhodes by nature was not half so unscrupulous as Kruger
+himself, but he was surrounded by unscrupulous people, whom he was too
+indolent to repulse. He was constantly paying the price of his former
+faults and errors in allowing his name to serve as a shield for the
+ambitions of those who were in no way worthy of him and who constantly
+abused his confidence.
+
+The habit became ingrained in the nature of Cecil Rhodes of always doing
+what he chose without regard to the feelings and sentiments of others. It
+persisted during the whole of the war, and would probably have proved a
+serious impediment to the conclusion of peace had he lived until it became
+accomplished. This characteristic led him, after all his intrigues with
+the Dutch party and the Bond, to throw himself once more into the arms of
+the English Progressive party and to start a campaign of his own against
+the rebel Colonials and the Dutch inhabitants of the Transvaal.
+
+While the siege of Kimberley lasted, even while he was seeking to become
+reconciled to the British element, Rhodes asserted himself in a strongly
+offensive manner. He sent to Sir Alfred Milner in Cape Town reports of his
+own as to the military authorities and dispositions, couched in such
+alarming tones that the High Commissioner became most uneasy concerning
+the possible fate of the Diamond City. These reports accused the officers
+in charge of the town of failing in the performance of their duties, and
+showing symptoms of abject fear in regard to the besieging Boer army. It
+was only after an explanation from Sir Redvers Buller, and after the
+latter had communicated to him the letters which he himself had received
+from Colonel Kekewich, the commander of the troops to whom had been
+entrusted the defence of Kimberley, that Sir Alfred was reassured.
+
+The fact was that Rhodes became very impatient to find that his movements
+were watched by the military authorities, and that sometimes even the
+orders which he gave for what he considered the greater security of the
+town, and gave with the superb assurance which distinguished him, were
+cancelled by the responsible officials. Disgraceful scenes followed.
+Rhodes was accused of wishing to come to an arrangement with Cronje, who
+was in charge of the besieging troops, in order to bring the war to an end
+by his own efforts.
+
+I never have been able to ascertain how much of real truth, if any, was in
+the various accusations made against Cecil Rhodes by the English General
+Officers, but they were embodied in the message which was alleged to have
+been flashed across to Kimberley after the battle of Modder River by Lord
+Methuen, but which was supposed by those whom it concerned to have been
+inspired by the Commander-in-Chief:
+
+"Tell Mr. Rhodes," the heliograph ran, "that on my entry into Kimberley he
+and his friends must take their immediate departure."
+
+Two years later, in November, 1902, Sir Redvers Buller, when speaking at
+the annual dinner of the Devonians in London, remarked that he must
+protest against the rumours which, during the siege of Kimberley, had been
+spread by some of its residents that the Imperial authorities had been in
+a perpetual state of "funk." The allusion was understood to refer to Mr.
+Rhodes by his partisans, who protested against the speech. Rhodes, indeed,
+during his whole life was never in greater disfavour with the English
+Government than after the siege of Kimberley; perhaps because he had
+always accused Whitehall of not understanding the real state of things in
+South Africa. The result of that imperative telegram, and Rhodes' belief
+as to its source, was bitter hatred against Sir Redvers Buller. It soon
+found expression in vindictive attacks by the whole Rhodesian Press
+against the strategy, the abilities, and even the personal honesty of Sir
+Redvers Buller.
+
+Whether Rhodes, upon his arrival in London, attempted to hurt the General
+I do not know, but it could be always taken for granted that Rhodes could
+be a very bad enemy when he chose.
+
+Upon his return to Groote Schuur he seemed more dissatisfied than ever
+with the Home Government. He was loud in his denunciations and unceasing
+in his criticisms. Sir Alfred, however, like the wise man he was,
+preferred to ignore these pinpricks, and invariably treated Rhodes with
+the utmost courtesy and attention. He always showed himself glad to listen
+to Rhodes and to discuss with him points which the Colossus thought it
+worth while to talk over. At that time Rhodes was in the most equivocal
+position he had ever been in his life. He could not return to Kimberley;
+he did not care to go to Rhodesia; and in Cape Colony he was always
+restive.
+
+At this period all kinds of discussions used to take place concerning the
+ultimate results of the war and the influence which it would have on the
+future development of affairs in the Transvaal. The financiers began to
+realise that after the British flag had once been raised at Pretoria they
+would not have such a good time of it as they had hoped at first, and now,
+having done their best to hurry on the war, regretted it more than anybody
+else. The fact was that everybody in South Africa, with the exception of
+the Boers themselves, who knew very well their own resources, had believed
+that the war would be over in three months, and that the Transvaal would
+be transferred into a Crown Colony where adventurers and gold-seekers
+would have a fine time.
+
+Rhodes himself had more than once expressed his conviction that the
+destruction of the Boers would not take more than three months at the
+most, and this assurance was accepted as gospel by most of the financiers
+of Johannesburg. An exception was Mr. F. Eckstein, the general manager and
+partner in the concern of Wernher, Beit & Co., and one of the ablest
+financiers in that city. From the first he was quite pessimistic in regard
+to the length of time the war would take.
+
+As the war dragged on without there seeming any chance of its being
+brought to a rapid conclusion, it became evident that England, after all
+the sacrifices which she was making, would never consent to leave the
+leaders of the movement--the ostensible object of which had been to grant
+to the Uitlanders certain privileges to which they had no right--as sole
+and absolute masters of the situation. In fact, the difficulties of the
+war made it evident that, once peace was proclaimed, public opinion at
+home would demand that the Transvaal, together with the Orange Free State,
+should be annexed to the British Empire in view of a future federation of
+the whole of South Africa, about which the English Press was already
+beginning to speak.
+
+That South Africa should not remain a sphere of exploitation sent shivers
+down the spines of the financiers. The South African League was observed
+to become quite active in discovering rebels. Their zeal in this direction
+was felt all over Cape Colony. Their aim was to reduce the register in
+order to bring about a considerable falling off of voters for the
+Afrikander Bond, and thereby substantially influence the results of the
+next election to the Cape Parliament.
+
+At this period certain overtures were made once again to the Bond party.
+They proceeded apparently from men supposed to act on their own
+initiative, but who were known to be in favour at Groote Schuur. These
+advances met with no response, but when the rumour that they had been made
+spread among the public owing to an indiscretion, Rhodes hastened to deny
+that he had been a party to the plan--as was his wont when he failed to
+achieve. All the same, it is a fact that members of the House of Assembly
+belonging to the Afrikander party visited Groote Schuur in the course of
+that last winter which Rhodes spent there, and were warmly welcomed.
+Rhodes showed himself unusually gracious. He hoped these forerunners would
+rally his former friends to his side once more. But Rhodes was expecting
+too much, considering ail the circumstances. Faithful to his usual
+tactics, even whilst his Afrikander guests were being persuaded to lend
+themselves to an intrigue from which they had hoped to win something,
+Rhodes was making himself responsible for another step likely to render
+the always strong hatred even more acute than ever. More than that, he was
+advocating, through certain underground channels, the suspension of the
+Constitution in Cape Colony.
+
+[Illustration: THE RT. HON. SIR W.F. HELY-HUTCHINSON]
+
+The particulars of this incident were only disclosed after the war was
+over. The whole thing was thrashed out in Parliament and its details
+communicated to the public by Mr. David de Waal, one of the truest friends
+Mr. Rhodes ever had. The discussion took place after Sir Alfred Milner had
+been transferred to Johannesburg and Sir Walter Hely-Hutchinson had taken
+his place in Cape Town. The South African League had become more active
+than ever, and was using all its influence to secure a majority for its
+members at the next general election. The Bond, on its side, had numerous
+adherents up country, and the stout Dutch farmers had remained faithful to
+their old allegiance, so there was no hope that they would be induced,
+even through the influence of money, to give their votes to the
+Progressives. The only things which remained were: a redistribution of
+seats, then a clearing out of the register, and, lastly, a suspension of
+the Constitution, which would have allowed the Governor a "free" hand in
+placing certain measures on the statute book. The most influential members
+among the executive of the South African League met at Cotswold Chambers,
+and Rhodes, who was present, drew up a petition which was to be presented
+to the Prime Minister. Sir Gordon Sprigg, who filled that office, was a
+man who, with all his defects, was absolutely incapable of lending himself
+to any mean trick in order to remain in power. When Sir Gordon became
+acquainted with the demands of the League he refused absolutely to take a
+part in what he maintained would have been an everlasting blot on the
+reputation of the Government.
+
+After Rhodes' death, when the question of the suspension of the
+Constitution was raised by the Progressives in the House of Assembly, it
+was discussed in all its details, and it was proved that the South African
+League, in trying throughout the country to obtain signatures to a monster
+petition on the matter, had resorted to some more than singular means to
+obtain these signatures. Mr. Sauer, who was the leader of the Bond party
+in the Chamber, revealed how the League had employed agents to induce
+women and sometimes young children to sign the petition, and that at the
+camp near Sea Point, a suburb of Cape Town, where soldiers were stationed
+previous to their departure for England, these same agents were engaged in
+getting them to sign it before they left under the inducement of a fixed
+salary up to a certain amount and a large percentage after it had been
+exceeded, according to the number of the names obtained in this way. When
+trustworthy people of unimpeachable character wrote to the papers
+denouncing this manoeuvre the subsidised papers in Cape Town, and the
+Rhodesian Press, refused to publish the affidavits sworn on the subject,
+but wrote columns of calumnies about the Dutch Colonials, and, as a
+finishing stroke, clamoured for the suspension of the Constitution.
+
+The speech of Mr. Sauer gave rise to a heated debate, during which the
+Progressive members indignantly denied his assertions. Then stepped in Mr.
+David de Waal, that friend of Rhodes to whom I have already referred. He
+rose to bring his testimony to the facts revealed by Mr. Sauer, who was
+undoubtedly the most able leader which the Afrikander party possessed,
+with the exception, perhaps, of Mr. Merriman.
+
+"In February, 1902," he said, "there was a meeting in Cotswold Chambers
+consisting of the twenty-two members of the House of Assembly who went by
+the name of 'Rhodes' group.' It was at first discussed and ultimately
+decided to wait on the Prime Minister and to interview him concerning the
+expenditure of the war, which had reached the sum of L200,000 monthly.
+Then, after some further discussion, we came to the conclusion to meet
+once more. This was done on February 17th. You must remember that war was
+still raging at the time. At this second meeting it was agreed to
+formulate a scheme to be submitted to the Government which proposed the
+suspension of the Constitution in regard to five clauses. The first was to
+be this very suspension, then a new registration of voters, a
+redistribution of seats, the indemnity to be awarded to the faithful
+English Colonials, and, finally, the reestablishment of the Constitution.
+As to this last I must make a statement, and that is, that if I had known
+that it was meant to withdraw the Constitution for more than one month I
+would have objected to it, but I was told that it would be only a matter
+of a few days."
+
+At this point Mr. de Waal was interrupted by a Progressive member, who
+exclaimed that Dr. Jameson had denied that such a thing had ever been said
+or mentioned.
+
+"I know he has done so," replied Mr. de Waal, "but I will make a
+declaration on my oath. A committee was then appointed," he went on,
+"which waited on the Prime Minister and presented to him this very same
+petition. Sir Gordon Sprigg, however, said that he would not be ruled by
+anyone, because they had a responsible Government. The Committee reported,
+when it returned, that the Prime Minister was opposed to any movement
+started on the basis of the petition which they had presented to him, and
+that he would not move an inch from his declaration, saying energetically,
+'Never! I shall never do it!' Sir Gordon Sprigg had further pointed out
+that the result of such a step would be that the Cape would become a Crown
+Colony and would find itself in the same position as Rhodesia."
+
+Perhaps this was what Rhodes and the South African League had wished, but
+the publication of the details connected with this incident, especially
+proceeding from a man who had never made a secret of the ties which had
+bound him to Rhodes, and who, among the latter's Dutch friends, had been
+the only one who had never failed him, drove the first nail into the
+coffin of Rhodesian politics.
+
+It was common knowledge that de Waal had steadfastly stood by Rhodes even
+during the terrible time of the Raid. Moreover, he was a man of high
+integrity, who alone among those who had attached themselves to the
+destinies of the Empire Maker had never taken part in the financial
+schemes of a doubtful nature which marked the wonderful career of Rhodes.
+This declaration opened the eyes of many persons who, to that day, had
+denied the political intrigues which had been going on at Cotswold
+Chambers. Afterwards it became relatively easy for Sir Alfred Milner to
+clear the atmosphere in South Africa and to establish public life on
+sounder principles than the pure love of gain. It cannot be sufficiently
+regretted that he should not have done so before Rhodes' death and thus
+have given Rhodes--and, incidentally, the country for which Rhodes had
+done so much in the way of material development--the opportunity to shake
+off his parasites and become a real factor in solidifying the great area
+in which he was such an outstanding personality.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE INFLUENCE OF SIR ALFRED MILNER
+
+
+The occult power exercised by the League on the inner politics of South
+Africa could not fail to impress Sir Alfred Milner most unpleasantly.
+Frank himself, it must have often been absolutely repulsive to him to have
+to do with people whom he feared to trust and who believed that they could
+bring into political life the laxities of the mining camp. Though not
+aware of it, even before he landed in Cape Town the Progressives had made
+up their minds to represent him as determined to sweep the Dutch off the
+face of the earth.
+
+Believing Sir Alfred to be the confederate of Rhodes, the Boers, too,
+would have nothing to do with him. Whilst the Bloemfontein Conference was
+going on President Kruger, as well as the leaders of the Afrikander Bond,
+were overwhelmed with covert warnings to distrust the High Commissioner.
+Whence they emanated is not a matter of much doubt. Sir Alfred was accused
+of wanting to lay a trap for the Boer plenipotentiaries, who were told to
+beware of him as an accomplice of Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, whose very name
+produced at Pretoria the same effect as a red rag upon a bull. Under these
+circumstances the Conference was bound to fail, and the High Commissioner
+returned to Cape Town, very decidedly a sadder and most certainly a wiser
+man.
+
+Now that years have passed since the Boer War it is possible to secure a
+better perspective, in the light of which one can question whether it
+would have been possible to avoid the conflict by an arrangement of some
+kind with the Boer Republics, Personally, I believe that an understanding
+was not out of the question if the strong financial interests had not
+opposed its accomplishment; but at the same time a patched up affair would
+not have been a happy event for either South Africa or for England. It
+would have left matters in almost the same condition as they had been
+before, and the millionaires, who were the real masters on the Rand, would
+have found a dozen pretexts to provoke a new quarrel with the Transvaal
+Government. Had the Boer Executive attempted to do away with the power of
+the concerns which ruled the gold mines and diamond fields, it would have
+courted a resistance with which it would have been next to impossible to
+deal. The war would still have taken place, but it might have occurred at
+a far less favourable moment. No arrangement with President Kruger, even
+one most propitious to British interests, could have done away with the
+corruption and the bribery which, from the first moment of the discovery
+of the gold fields, invaded that portion of South Africa, and this
+corruption would always have stood in the way of the establishment of the
+South African Union.
+
+Sir Alfred Milner knew all this very well, and probably had an inward
+conviction, notwithstanding his efforts to prevent the war, that a
+conflict was the only means of breaking these chains of gold which
+shackled the wheels of progress. At so critical a time the support of
+Rhodes and his party would have been invaluable. And Sir Alfred would have
+welcomed it. Cecil Rhodes, of course, had declared himself officially in
+accord with the High Commissioner, and even praised him to a degree of
+fulsomeness. But the ulterior motive was simply to excite the Dutch party
+against him. The reputation of Sir Alfred Milner as a statesman and as a
+politician was constantly challenged by the very people who ought to have
+defended it. Rhodes himself had been persuaded that the Governor harboured
+the most sinister designs against his person. The innuendo was one of the
+most heinous untruths ever invented by his crowd of sycophants.
+
+An opportunity came my way, by which I was able to convince myself how
+false was the belief nourished by Rhodes against Milner. During the course
+of a conversation with Sir Alfred, I boldly asked him whether he was
+really such an enemy of Rhodes as represented. I was surprised by the
+moderate tone in which he replied to my, after all, impertinent question.
+The remarks which we then exchanged filled me with the greatest admiration
+for the man who so nobly, and so worthily, upheld British prestige in
+South Africa under the most trying circumstances. Milner was an entirely
+honest man--the rarest thing in the whole of Cape Town at that anxious
+period--and after one had had the advantage of discussing with him the
+political situation, one could only be filled with profound respect for
+him and for his opinions, actions and conduct. Far from working against
+Rhodes, as Sir Alfred had been represented to me as doing, I convinced
+myself that he was keenly anxious to be on good and, what is more
+important, on sincere terms with him. Sir Alfred had not the slightest
+feeling of animosity against the Dutch. On the contrary, he would have
+liked them to become persuaded of his desire to protect them against
+possible aggression by the Jingoes, whose offensive conduct none more than
+himself assessed at its true value.
+
+But what was the real situation? He found his every action misconstrued;
+whatever he did was interpreted in a wrong sense, and those who should
+have shared his aims were plotting against him. The position was truly
+tragic from whatever side it was viewed, and a weaker or less honest man
+would assuredly have given up the struggle.
+
+A few days after my conversation with Sir Alfred Milner, which took place
+during the course of a dinner at Government House, I took opportunity to
+mention it to Rhodes. I tried to clear his mind of the suspicions that I
+knew he entertained in regard to the High Commissioner. Cecil Rhodes
+listened to me with attention, then asked me in that sarcastic tone of
+his, which was so intensely disagreeable and offensive, whether I was in
+love with Sir Alfred, as I had so suddenly become his champion. Then he
+ended, "You are trying to make me believe the impossible." I did not allow
+him, however, to ruffle me, as evidently was his desire, but replied that
+when one came to know better those whom one had only met occasionally,
+without ever having talked with them seriously, it was natural to amend
+one's opinion accordingly. I told him, too, that my earlier
+misapprehension had been intensified by a certain lady who posed as
+Rhodes' greatest friend, and who had been loud in her denunciations of the
+High Commissioner, long before I had ever met him. But now, I added, I had
+come to the conclusion that Sir Alfred had been terribly maligned.
+
+At this point Rhodes interrupted me with the remark: "So you think that he
+is a paragon. Well, I won't contradict you, and, besides, you know that I
+have always defended him; but still, with all his virtues, he has not yet
+found out what he ought to do with me."
+
+"What can one do with you, Mr. Rhodes?" I asked with a smile.
+
+"Leave me alone," was the characteristic reply, in a tone which was
+sufficient for me to follow the advice, as it meant that the man was
+getting restive and might at any moment break out into one of those fits
+of rage which he so often used as a means to bring to an end a
+conversation in which he felt that he might not come out as victor.
+
+A few days later a rabid Rhodesian who happened to be staying at Groote
+Schuur approached me. "You have been trying to convert Mr. Rhodes to Sir
+Alfred," he remarked.
+
+"I have done nothing of the kind," I said. "I am not a preacher, but I
+have been telling Mr. Rhodes that he was mistaken if he thought that he
+had an enemy in the High Commissioner."
+
+"Had you any reason to suppose that he considered him one?" was the
+unexpected question.
+
+"Well, from what I have seen it seemed to me that you have all been doing
+your best to persuade him that such was the case," I retorted, "and why
+you should have done so passes my comprehension."
+
+The conversation dropped, but the incident confirmed me in my opinion that
+strong forces were at work to sow enmity between Rhodes and Sir Alfred
+Milner for fear the influence of the High Commissioner might bring Rhodes
+to look at things differently. As things stood at the moment, Rhodes was
+persuaded that the High Commissioner hated him, was jealous of him, wanted
+him out of his path, and never meant to allow him under any circumstances
+whatever to have any say in the settlement of South African affairs. This
+conviction, which was carefully nourished from the outside, evoked in his
+mind an absurd and silly rage to which no man of common sense, unblinded
+by vanity, could have fallen victim. I would not be so foolish as to deny
+to the famous Life Governor of De Beers either abundant common sense or
+outstanding intelligence, but here was a man gifted with genius who, under
+the impulse of passion, could act and speak like a child.
+
+Rhodes looked upon the High Commissioner as a nuisance unfortunately not
+to be set aside. What exasperated him, especially in regard to the High
+Commissioner, was the fact that he knew quite well that Sir Alfred Milner
+could assume the responsibility for concluding peace when that time
+arrived. Rhodes always hoped that his personal influence on the English,
+as well as among the Bond party, would enable him to persuade the leaders
+of the rebel movement in Cape Colony to lay down their arms and to leave
+their interests in his hands. Should such a thing have happened, Rhodes
+thought that such a success as this would efface the bad impression left
+by the Raid. He grudgingly admitted that that wild adventure had not
+pleased people, but he always refused to acknowledge that it was the one
+great and unredeemable mistake of his life. I remember once having quoted
+to him the old French motto which in the Middle Ages was the creed of
+every true knight:
+
+ "Mon ame a Dieu,
+ Mon bras au roi,
+ Mon coeur aux dames,
+ L'honneur a moi!"
+
+"Ah, yes! In those times one could still think about such things," he
+simply remarked, which proved to me that he had no comprehension of the
+real sense of the beautiful words. The higher attributes of mind did not
+trouble him either in the hours of his greatest triumphs or in the moments
+when Fortune ceased to smile upon him. He thought he had something far
+better: ambition, love of domination, the desire to eclipse everybody and
+everything around him. I do not mention money, because Rhodes did not care
+for money intrinsically.
+
+Yet the man was great in spite of all his defects. Particularly in the
+rein he gave to his thoughts during nights spent in the solitude of the
+karroo, when the stars were almost the only things which he could look
+upon, their immensity the only companion worthy of himself. One could
+almost believe Cecil Rhodes was possessed of a dual personality. At one
+moment he lived in the skies in regard to his own future prospects and the
+great deeds he wished to perform, about which he never ceased to think.
+The next he was on this earth, dabbling in the meannesses of humanity,
+taking a vicious pleasure in noticing the evil about him and too
+frequently succeeding, somehow, in wounding the feelings of those who
+liked him best, and then wondering how it happened that he had so few
+friends.
+
+On account of these characteristics, notwithstanding all his wonderful
+faculties, Cecil Rhodes will never remain an historical figure like the
+Count of Egmont during the Revolt of the Netherlands, or Mirabeau at the
+time of the French Revolution. Undoubtedly he achieved great things, but
+nothing truly beautiful. I do not think that even the warmest of his
+admirers can ever say that the organising and amalgamation of De Beers or
+the conquest of Matabeleland had anything beautiful about them. Still,
+they were triumphs which no one except himself could have achieved. He
+undoubtedly erected an edifice the like of which had never been seen in
+modern times, and he opened to the ambitions and to the greed of the world
+new prospects, new sources of riches, which caused very many to look upon
+him as truly the god of material success.
+
+Rhodes can be said to have revolutionised Society by bringing to the
+social horizon people who, but for the riches he placed within reach of
+their grasping fingers, would never have been able to emerge from their
+uncultured obscurity.
+
+People have said to me, "How generous was Rhodes!" Yes, but always with a
+shade of disdain in the giving which hurt the recipients of his charity.
+One of the legends in the Cape is that half those whom Rhodes helped had
+been his victims at one time or the other.
+
+It was no wonder that Cecil Rhodes was an embittered man when one reflects
+how many curses must have been showered upon his head. The conquest of
+Matabeleland had not gone by without evoking terrible enmities; and the
+amalgamation of De Beers, in consequence of which so many people who had
+spent thousands of pounds in acquiring plots of ground where they had
+hoped to find diamonds, and who had later to part from them for a mere
+song, were among the things never forgiven him by those whom the
+speculations had ruined. Later on came the famous Bill which he caused to
+be adopted in both Houses of Legislature concerning the illicit buying of
+diamonds, the I.D.B. Act.
+
+The I.D.B. enactment destroyed one of the fundamental principles in
+British legislature which always supposes a man to be innocent until he
+has been proved guilty. It practically put the whole of Cape Colony under
+the thumb of De Beers. The statute was not wisely framed. It could be
+invoked to remove persons whose presence in Kimberley was inconvenient.
+Therefore the I.D.B. Act drew on the head of Rhodes and of his colleagues
+torrents of abuse. It is, unfortunately, certain that cases happened where
+diamonds were hidden surreptitiously among the effects of certain persons
+who had had the imprudence to say too loudly that they meant to expose the
+state of things existing in Kimberley; and in consequence innocent men
+were sentenced to long terms of imprisonment.
+
+I heard one story in particular which, if true, throws a terrible light on
+the state of affairs in the Diamond City. A young man of good connections,
+who had arrived from England to seek his fortune in South Africa, was
+engaged in Kimberley at a small salary by one of the big diamond mining
+concerns. After about three or four months' sojourn he felt so disgusted
+that he declared quite loudly that as soon as he could put by sufficient
+money to pay his passage back to Europe he would do so, there to make it
+the business of his life to enlighten his compatriots as to what was going
+on in South Africa. He threatened, too, to warn his countrymen against
+those who used to deluge England with prospectuses praising, in exalted
+terms, the wonderful state of things existing in South Africa and dilating
+upon the future prospects of Cape Colony. Old residents warned him he
+would do better to restrain his wrath until he was out of reach of
+interested parties; he did not listen to them, with the result that one
+morning detectives appeared in the house where he lodged, searched his
+room, and--found some diamonds hidden in a flower pot of geraniums which
+was standing in his window and which the daughter of his landlady had
+given him that very morning. No protestations of the unhappy young fellow
+availed him. He was taken to Cape Town and condemned to seven years'
+imprisonment, the end of which he did not live to see, as he died a few
+months after he had been sentenced.
+
+The story was freely current in South Africa; and, true or not, it is
+unquestionable that a large number of persons suffered in consequence of
+the I.D.B. Act, no more serious proofs being offered that they had taken
+or concealed diamonds than the fact that the stones had been found in
+unlikely places in their rooms. Books without number have been written
+about the I.D.B. Act, a great number evidently evincing hatred or revenge
+against Mr. Rhodes and his lieutenants.
+
+The famous De Beers Company acquired a position of overwhelming strength
+in the social, economical and political life of South Africa, where
+practically it secured control of everything connected with finance and
+industry. De Beers built cold storage rooms, a dynamite factory, ice
+houses, interested itself in agriculture, fruit-growing, farming and
+cattle-breeding all over the Colony. It managed to acquire shares in all
+the new mining enterprises whether in the Transvaal or in Rhodesia.
+Politically it controlled the elections, and there were certain districts
+in the Cape Colony where no candidate unsupported by De Beers could hope
+to be elected to a seat in Parliament. The company had its own police,
+while its secret service was one of the most remarkable in the world,
+having among its archives a record of the private opinions of all the
+people enjoying any kind of eminence in the country. In presence of De
+Beers the Governor himself was overshadowed; indeed, I do not think that
+if the Home Government had tried to oppose the organisation it would have
+had much chance of coming out on top.
+
+Sir Alfred Milner was the first man who saw that it would be impossible
+for England to have the last word in South Africa unless those who, both
+in Cape Colony and in the Transvaal, were the real masters of the
+situation were broken, and financial concerns persuaded to occupy
+themselves solely with financial matters. Though Sir Alfred was wise
+enough, and prudent enough, not to allow his feelings on the subject to
+become public property, Rhodes was shrewd enough to guess that he would
+encounter a resolute adversary in the person of the High Commissioner.
+Perhaps had he kept his suspicions to himself instead of communicating
+them to others he might have been persuaded in time to recognise that
+there was a great deal in the opinions which Sir Alfred held as to the
+participation of financial organisations in political matters. If only
+each could have had a chance for a frank understanding, probably Milner
+would not have objected to Rhodes continuing to control the vast machine
+into which the diamond mines amalgamation had grown, so long as it
+confined its operations to commerce.
+
+If Government is exercised by a single person it is possible for it to
+possess the elements of justice and equity, and to be carried out with few
+mistakes of such gravity as would compromise the whole system. But,
+unfortunately, the South African autocracy meant an army of small
+autocrats, and it was they who compromised Rhodes and then sheltered
+themselves behind his gigantic personality from the unpopularity and
+detestation which their actions aroused in the whole of South Africa.
+
+I feel personally convinced that if, during the period which immediately
+followed upon the relief of Kimberley and of Lady smith, Rhodes had
+approached Sir Alfred and frankly told him that he wanted to try his luck
+with the Dutch party, and to see whether his former friends and colleagues
+of the Afrikander Bond could not be induced to listen to reason, the High
+Commissioner would have been only too glad to meet him and to explain his
+views on the whole question. Instead of doing so, Rhodes, carried away as
+he always was by this everlasting desire to be the first everywhere, did
+not even give a thought to the wisdom of confiding to anyone the efforts
+which he undoubtedly made to induce the Bond leaders to trust him again.
+
+There was a moment when things got very near to an understanding between
+Rhodes and Sir Alfred. This was when Mr. Sauer himself entertained the
+thought of letting Rhodes sway the future by making with the English
+Government conditions of a peace which would not wound to the quick the
+feelings of the Dutch part of the population of the Colony.
+
+A circumstance, apparently insignificant, destroyed all the hopes that had
+been entertained by several who wished the Colossus well. Certain papers
+were brought to Rhodes; these contained information likely to prove of use
+to him as well as to the English Government. After he had read them he
+asked that they should be left with him until the following day. The
+person in charge of the documents had been asked not to part with them
+even for a single hour, as it was important that no one should be able to
+copy documents which might seriously compromise certain people. Therefore,
+she refused. Rhodes thereupon flew into a terrible passion and demanded to
+know the reason for the apparent distrust. When told that it was not so
+much a question of distrust as the impossibility of breaking a promise
+once given, he exclaimed that he would have nothing more to do with the
+whole business, and started almost immediately afterwards his agitation
+for the suspension of the Constitution in Cape Colony. But--and this is an
+amusing detail to note--Rhodes used every possible effort to obtain
+possession of the papers he had been allowed to see, going so far as to
+have the house searched of the person who had refused to allow him to keep
+the documents--a revenge which was as mean as it was useless, because the
+papers in question had been at once returned to their rightful owners.
+
+The request made by Rhodes to keep these documents produced a very bad
+impression on those who had begun to entertain hopes that he might be
+induced to throw the weight of his personality into the scale of a
+settlement. It confirmed the suspicions held by the Afrikander party ever
+since the Raid.
+
+They say that everyone is afforded once the chance of one's lifetime. In
+the case of Rhodes, he certainly missed by that action the one opportunity
+of reinstating himself once again upon the pinnacle whence the adventure
+of Doctor Jameson had caused him to fall.
+
+I remember that whilst these events were going on a political man, well
+acquainted with all details of the endeavour to secure a reconciliation
+between the Afrikander Bond and Rhodes, came to see me one evening. We
+talked over the whole situation. He told me that there were people who
+thought it would be a good thing to inform Sir Alfred Milner of what was
+going on, in the hope that he might give Rhodes an inkling that he knew
+that intrigue was rife at Groote Schuur, and at the same time express to
+Rhodes with what satisfaction he personally would view the good offices of
+the Colossus to influence both the South African League and the Afrikander
+Bond. But we agreed that it was quite impossible. Such a course would not
+inspire the High Commissioner with an exalted idea as to our morality in
+matters of trust, and, besides, it would not be playing the game in regard
+to Rhodes and his group. So the matter dropped; but Rhodes suspected, and
+never forgave us or any of those whose thoughts ran on the same lines.
+
+Whether Sir Alfred Milner ever learned who had been trying to persuade the
+master of Groote Schuur to seek his co-operation in what would have been
+the noblest deed of Rhodes' life, I have not been able to ascertain to the
+present day. To tell the truth, I never tried to do so, the matter having
+lost all interest except as a matter of history.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE OPENING OF THE NEW CENTURY
+
+
+Such were the preoccupations, the intrigues and the emotions which, all
+through that monotonous winter of 1900-1901, agitated the inhabitants of
+and the visitors to Groote Schuur. Rhodes himself seemed to be the one man
+who thought the least about them. It is certain that he felt hurt in his
+pride and in his consciousness that the good which he had wanted to do
+failed to be appreciated by those whom he had intended to benefit. But
+outwardly he made no sign that the matter interested him otherwise than
+from a purely objective point of view, that of the statesman who thinks
+that it is part of his duty to put his services at the disposal of his
+country whenever required to do so. He felt also slightly surprised to
+find, once he had expressed his willingness to use the experience of South
+African affairs which he had acquired and which no one in the Cape
+possessed with such thoroughness, that the people who had appealed to him,
+and whom he had consented to meet half-way, would not give him the whole
+of their confidence; indeed, they showed some apprehension that he would
+use his knowledge to their detriment.
+
+When one reviews all the circumstances that cast such a tragic shade over
+the history of these eventful months, one cannot help coming to the
+conclusion that there was a good deal of misunderstanding on both sides
+and a deplorable lack of confidence everywhere. Rhodes had entirely lost
+ground among his former friends, and would not understand that it was more
+difficult, even on the part of those who believed in his good intentions,
+to efface the impression that he had been playing a double game ever since
+the Raid had deprived him of the confidence and support which previously
+were his all over Cape Colony.
+
+The whole situation, as the new century opened, was a game of cross
+purposes. Sir Alfred Milner might have unravelled the skein, but he was
+the one man whom no one interested in the business wished to ask for help.
+And what added to the tragedy was the curious but undisputable fact that
+even those who reviled Rhodes hoped he would return to power and assume
+the Premiership in place of Sir Gordon Sprigg.
+
+In spite of the respect which Sir Gordon Sprigg inspired, and of the
+esteem in which he was held by all parties, it was generally felt that if
+Rhodes were once more at the helm he might return to a more reasonable
+view of the whole situation. In such an office, too, it was believed that
+Rhodes would give the Colony the benefit of his remarkable gifts of
+statecraft, as well as wield the authority which he liked so much to
+exercise, for the greater good of the country in general and of the
+British Government in particular. I believe that if at that moment Cecil
+Rhodes had become the head of the Cabinet not one voice, even among the
+most fanatic of the Afrikander Bond, would have objected. Those most
+averse to such a possibility were Rhodes' own supporters, a small group of
+men whose names I shall refrain from mentioning.
+
+All true friends of Rhodes, however, must surely have felt a keen regret
+that he wasted his talents and his energy on those entangled and, after
+all, despicable Cape politics. The man was created for something better
+and healthier than that. He was an Empire Maker by nature, one who might
+have won for himself everlasting renown had he remained "King of
+Rhodesia," as he liked to call himself. There, in the vast solitudes which
+by his enterprise and foresight had become a part of the British Empire,
+he ought to have gone on uninterruptedly in the glorious task of bringing
+civilisation to that hitherto unknown land. For such work his big nature
+and strange character were well fitted, and his wide-ranging mind
+appreciated the extent of the task. As he used to say himself sometimes,
+he was never so happy and never felt so free and so much at peace with the
+world and with mankind as among the Matoppo Hills.
+
+The statesmanlike qualities which Cecil Rhodes undoubtedly possessed were
+weakened by contact with inferior people. It is impossible to create real
+politicians and sound ones at the same rapid pace as financial magnates
+sprang up at the Cape as well as in the Transvaal. The class who entered
+politics had as little real solidity about them as the houses and
+dwellings which were built at a moment's notice from corrugated iron and a
+few logs. They thought that they understood how to govern a nation because
+they had thoroughly mastered the mysteries of bookkeeping in problematical
+financial undertakings.
+
+I remember one afternoon when, talking with Rhodes in the grounds of
+Groote Schuur, he took me to the summer-house which he had built for
+himself, whence one had a beautiful view over the country toward Table
+Mountain. He leaned on the parapet of the little observatory which
+surmounted the summer-house and lost himself in a day dream which, though
+long, I felt I had better not interrupt. I can see his face and expression
+still as, with his arms crossed over his chest, he gazed into space,
+thinking, thinking, and forgetting all else but the vision which he was
+creating in that extraordinary brain of his. I am sure that he remained so
+for over twenty minutes. Then he slowly turned round to me and said, with
+an accent indescribable in its intensity and poignancy:
+
+"I have been looking at the North, at my own country--"
+
+"Why do you not always remain there?" I exclaimed almost involuntarily, so
+painfully did the words strike me.
+
+"Because they will not let me," he replied.
+
+"They? Who?" I asked again. "Surely you can do what you like?"
+
+"You think so," he said, "but you do not know; there are so many things;
+so many things. And they want me here too, and there is this place ..."
+
+He stopped, then relapsed once more into his deep meditation, leaving me
+wondering what was holding back this man who was reputed to do only what
+he chose. Surely there would have been a far better, far nobler work for
+him to do there in that distant North which, after all, in spite of the
+beauties of Groote Schuur, was the only place for which he really cared.
+There he could lead that absolutely free and untrammelled life which he
+loved; there his marvellous gifts could expand with the freedom necessary
+for them to shine in their best light for the good of others as well as
+for his own advantage. In Rhodesia he was at least free, to a certain
+extent, from the parasites.
+
+How could one help pitying him and regretting that his indomitable will
+did not extend to the courage of breaking from his past associations; that
+he did not carry his determination far enough to make up his mind to
+consecrate what was left of his life to the one task for which he was best
+fitted, that of making Rhodesia one of the most glorious possessions of
+the British crown. Rhodes had done so much, achieved so much, had
+conceived such great things--as, for instance, the daring inception of the
+Cape to Cairo Railway--that it surely could have been possible for him to
+rise above the shackling weaknesses of his environment.
+
+So many years have passed since the death of Rhodes that, now, one can
+judge him objectively. To me, knowing him so well as I did, it seem that
+as his figure recedes into the background of history, it acquires more
+greatness. He was a mystery to so many because few had been able to guess
+what it was that he really meant, or believed in, or hoped for. Not a
+religious man by any means, he yet possessed that religion of nature which
+pervades the soul of anyone who has ever lived for long face to face with
+grandeurs and solitudes where human passions have no entrance. It is the
+adoration of the Greatness Who created the beauty which no touch can
+defile, no tongue slander, and nobody destroy. Under the stars, to which
+he confided so much of the thoughts which he had kept for himself in his
+youth and early manhood, Rhodes became a different man. There in the
+silence of the night or the dawn of early morning, when he started for
+those long rides of which he was so fond, he became affectionate, kind,
+thoughtful and tender. There he thought, he dreamt, he planned, and the
+result of these wanderings of his mind into regions far beyond those where
+the people around him could stray was that he revealed himself as God had
+made him and such as man hardly ever saw him.
+
+Rhodes had always been a great reader; books, indeed, had a great
+influence over his mind, his actions and opinions. He used to read slowly,
+and what he had once assimilated he never forgot. Years after he would
+remember a passage treating of some historical fact, or of some social
+interest, and apply it to his own work. For instance, the idea of the Glen
+Grey Act was suggested to him by the famous book of Mackenzie Wallace
+dealing with Russia,[B] in which he described the conditions under which
+Russian peasants then held their land. When Rhodes met the author of the
+aforementioned volume at Sandringham, where both were staying with the
+then Prince and Princess of Wales, he told him at once, with evident
+pleasure at being able to do so, that it was his book which had suggested
+that particular bit of legislation.
+
+ [B] "Russia" (Cassell).
+
+Another occasion I remember when Rhodes spoke of the great impression
+produced upon his opinions by a book called "The Martyrdom of Man,"[C] the
+work of Winwood Reade, an author not very well known to the general
+public. The essay was an unusually powerful negation of the Divinity.
+Rhodes had, unfortunately for him, chanced across it just after he had
+left the University, and during the first months following upon his
+arrival in South Africa he read it in his moments of leisure between
+looking for diamonds in the sandy plains of Kimberley. It completely upset
+all the traditions in which he had been nurtured--it must be remembered
+that he was the son of a clergyman--and caused a revolt against the
+teachings of his former masters.
+
+ [C] Published in the U.S.A., 1875.
+
+The adventurous young man who had left his native country well stocked
+with principles which he was already beginning to find embarrassing, found
+in this volume an excuse for becoming the personage with whom the world
+was to become familiar later on, when he appeared on the horizon as an
+Empire Maker. He always kept this momentous book beside him, and used to
+read it when he wanted to strengthen himself in some hard resolution or
+when he was expected to steel his mind to the performance of some task
+against which his finest instincts revolted even whilst his sense of
+necessity urged him onward.
+
+Talking with me on the occasion I have referred to above, in respect to
+this volume which had left such weeds in his mind, he expressed to me his
+great enthusiasm about the ideas it contained, and spoke with unmeasured
+approval of its strong and powerful arguments against the existence of a
+Deity, and then exclaimed, "You can imagine the impression which it
+produced on me when I read it amid all the excitement of life at Kimberley
+not long after leaving Oxford University." And he added in a solemn tone,
+"That book has made me what I am."
+
+I think, however, that Rhodes exaggerated in attaching such influence to
+Reade's essay. He was very interested in the supernatural, a feature which
+more than once I have had occasion to observe in people who pretend that
+they believe in nothing. I suspect that, had he been able to air the
+doubts which must have assailed him sometimes when alone in the solitudes
+of Rhodesia, one would have discovered that a great deal of carelessness,
+of which he used to boast in regard to morality and to religion, was
+nothing but affectation. He treated God in the same offhand way he handled
+men, when, in order to terrify them, he exposed before their horrified
+eyes abominable theories, to which his whole life gave the lie. But in his
+inmost heart he knew very well that God existed. He would have felt quite
+content to render homage to the Almighty if only this could have been done
+incognito. In fact, he was quite ready to believe in God, but would have
+felt extremely sorry had anyone suspected that such could be the case. The
+ethical side of Cecil Rhodes' character remained all through his life in
+an unfinished state. It might perhaps have been the most beautiful side of
+his many-sided life had he not allowed too much of what was material, base
+and common to rule him. Unwillingly, perhaps, but nevertheless certainly,
+he gave the impression that his life was entirely dedicated to ignoble
+purposes. Perhaps the punishment of his existence lay precisely in the
+rapidity with which the words "Rhodesian finance" and "Rhodesian politics"
+came to signify corruption and bribery. Even though he may not have been
+actually guilty of either, he most certainly profited by both. He
+instituted in South Africa an utter want of respect for one's neighbour's
+property, which in time was a prime cause of the Transvaal War. Hated as
+he was by some, distrusted as he remained by almost everybody, yet there
+was nothing mean about Cecil Rhodes. Though one felt inclined to detest
+him at times, yet one could not help liking and even loving him when he
+allowed one to see the real man behind the veil of cynicism and irony
+which he constantly assumed.
+
+With Rhodes' death the whole system of Rhodesian politics perished. It
+then became relatively easy for Sir Alfred Milner to introduce the
+necessary reforms into the government of South Africa. The financial
+magnates who had ruled at Johannesburg and Kimberley ceased to interest
+themselves politically in the management of the affairs of the Government.
+They disappeared one after the other, bidding good-bye to a country which
+they had always hated, most of them sinking into an obscurity where they
+enjoy good dinners and forget the nightmare of the past.
+
+The Dutch and the English elements have become reconciled, and loyalty to
+England, which seemed at the time of the Boer War, and during the years
+that had preceded it, to have been confined to a small number of the
+English, has become the rule. British Imperialism is no mere phantom: the
+Union of South Africa has proved it to have a very virile body, and, what
+is more important, a lofty and clear-visioned soul.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+AN ESTIMATE OF SIR ALFRED MILNER
+
+
+The conditions under which Sir Alfred Milner found himself compelled to
+shape his policy of conciliation were beset with obstacles and
+difficulties. An understanding of these is indispensable to the one who
+would read aright the history of that period of Imperial evolution.
+
+The question of the refugees who overwhelmed Cape Colony with their
+lamentations, after they had been obliged to leave the Transvaal at
+the beginning of the hostilities--the claims of the Rand
+multi-millionaires--the indignation of the Dutch Colonists confined in
+concentration camps by order of the military authorities--the Jingoes
+who thought it would be only right to shoot down every Dutch
+sympathiser in the country: these were among the things agitating the
+South African public mind, and setting up conflicting claims
+impossible of adjustment without bitter censure on one hand or the
+other. The wonder is that, amid all these antagonistic elements, Sir
+Alfred Milner contrived to fulfil the larger part of the tasks which
+he had sketched out for himself before he left England.
+
+The programme which Sir Alfred planned to carry out proved, in the long
+run, to have been thoroughly sound in conception and practice, because it
+contained in embryo all the conditions under which South Africa became
+united. It is remarkable, indeed, that such a very short time after a war
+which seemed altogether to have compromised any hope of coalescing, the
+Union of South Africa should have become an accomplished fact.
+
+Yet, strange as it may appear, it is certain that up to his retirement
+from office Sir Alfred Milner was very little known in South Africa. He
+had been so well compelled by force of circumstances to lead an isolated
+life that very few had opportunity to study his character or gain insight
+into his personality. In Cape Town he was judged by his policy. People
+forgot that all the time he was at Government House, Cape Town, he was a
+man as well as a politician: a man whose efforts and work in behalf of his
+country deserved some kind of consideration even from his enemies. It is
+useless to discuss whether Sir Alfred did or did not make mistakes before
+the beginning of the war. Why waste words over events which cannot be
+helped, and about which there will always be two opinions? Personally, I
+think that his errors were essentially of the kind which could not have
+been avoided, and that none of them ever compromised ultimately the great
+work which he was to bring to a triumphant close.
+
+What I do think it is of value to point out is the calmness which he
+contrived always to preserve under circumstances which must have been
+particularly trying for him. Another outstanding characteristic was the
+quiet dignity with which he withstood unjustifiable attacks when dealing
+with not-to-be-foreseen difficulties which arose while carrying on his
+gigantic task. Very few would have had the courage to remain silent and
+undaunted whilst condemned or judged for things he had been unable to
+alter or to banish. And yet this was precisely the attitude to which Sir
+Alfred Milner faithfully adhered. It stands out among the many proofs
+which the present Viscount Milner has given of his strong character as one
+of its most characteristic features, for it affords a brilliant
+illustration of what will, mastered by reason, can do.
+
+Since those perilous days I have heard many differing criticisms of Lord
+Milner's administration as High Commissioner in South Africa. What those
+who express opinions without understanding that which lies under the
+surface of history fail to take into account is the peculiar, almost
+invidious position and the loneliness in which Sir Alfred had to stand
+from the very first day that he landed in Table Bay. He could not make
+friends, dared not ask anyone's advice, was forced always to rely entirely
+upon his own judgment. He would not have been human had he not sometimes
+felt misgivings as to the wisdom of what he was doing. He never had the
+help of a Ministry upon whom he could rely or with whom he could
+sympathise. The Cabinet presided over by Sir Gordon Sprigg was composed of
+very well-intentioned men. But, with perhaps one single exception, it did
+not possess any strongly individualistic personage capable of assisting
+Sir Alfred in framing a policy acceptable to all shades of public opinion
+in the Colony, or even to discuss with him whether such a policy could
+have been invented. As for the administration of which Mr. Schreiner was
+the head, it was distinctly hostile to the policy inaugurated by Mr.
+Joseph Chamberlain, which Sir Alfred represented. Its members, indeed, put
+every obstacle in the Governor's way, and this fact becoming known
+encouraged a certain spirit of rebellion among the Dutch section of the
+population. Neither one Ministry nor the other was able to be of any
+serious use to Milner, who, thus hampered, could neither frame a programme
+which accorded with his own judgment nor show himself in his true light.
+
+[Illustration: VISCOUNT MILNER]
+
+All these circumstances were never taken into consideration by friends or
+foes, and, in consequence, he was made responsible for blunders which he
+could not help and for mistakes which he was probably the first to
+deplore. The world forgot that Sir Alfred never really had a free hand,
+was always thwarted, either openly or in secret, by some kind of
+authority, be it civil or military, which was in conflict with his own.
+
+It was next to an impossibility to judge a man fairly under such
+conditions. All that one could say was that he deserved a good deal of
+praise for having, so successfully as he did, steered through the manifold
+difficulties and delicate susceptibilities with which he had to contend in
+unravelling a great tangle in the history of the British Empire.
+
+The Afrikander Bond hated him, that was a recognised fact, but this hatred
+did Sir Alfred more good than anything else. The attacks directed against
+him were so mean that they only won him friends among the very people to
+whom his policy had not been acceptable. The abuse showered by certain
+newspapers upon the High Commissioner not only strengthened his hands and
+his authority, but transformed what ought to have remained a personal
+question into one in which the dignity as well as the prestige of the
+Empire was involved. To have recalled him after he had been subjected to
+such treatment would have been equivalent to a confession that the State
+was in the wrong. I have never been able to understand how men of such
+undoubted perception as Mr. Sauer or Mr. Merriman, or other leaders of the
+Bond, did not grasp this fact. Sir Alfred himself put the aspect very
+cleverly before the public in an able and dignified speech which he made
+at the lunch offered to Lord Roberts by the Mayor and Corporation of Cape
+Town when he said, "To vilify her representative is a strange way to show
+one's loyalty to the Queen."
+
+A feature in Sir Alfred Milner's character, which was little known outside
+the extremely small circle of his personal friends, was that when he was
+in the wrong he never hesitated to acknowledge the fact with
+straightforward frankness. His judgments were sometimes hasty, but he was
+always willing to amend an opinion on just grounds. There was a good deal
+of dogged firmness in his character, but not a shred of stubbornness or
+obstinacy. He never yielded one inch of his ground when he believed
+himself to be in the right, but he was always amenable to reason, and he
+never refused to allow himself to be convinced, even though it may be that
+his natural sympathies were not on the side of those with whom he had got
+to deal. Very few statesmen could boast of such qualities, and they surely
+ought to weigh considerably in the balance of any judgment passed upon
+Viscount Milner.
+
+The welfare of South Africa and the reputation of Sir Alfred would have
+been substantially enhanced had he been able to assert his own authority
+according to his own judgment, without overrulings from Whitehall, and
+with absolute freedom as to choice of colleagues. His position was most
+difficult, and though he showed no outward sign of this fact, it is
+impossible to believe that he did not feel its crushing weight. Between
+the Bond, Mr. Hofmeyr, the race hatred which the Dutch accused him of
+fomenting, the question of the refugees, the clamours of the Jingo
+Colonials, and the extreme seriousness of the military situation at one
+time, it was perfectly marvellous that he did not break down. Instead, as
+very few men could have done, he kept a clear-headed shrewdness, owing to
+which the Empire most certainly contracted an immense debt of gratitude
+toward him for not having allowed himself to yield to the temptation of
+retaliating upon those who had made his task such a particularly hard one.
+His forbearance ought never to be lost sight of in judging the
+circumstances which brought about and attended the South African War.
+Whilst the war was going on it was not realised that Sir Alfred Milner was
+the only man who--when the time arrived--could allay the passions arising
+from the conflict. But, without vanity, he knew, and could well afford to
+wait for his reward until history rather than men had judged him.
+
+In the meanwhile Sir Alfred had to struggle against a sea of obstacles in
+which he was probably the only man clever enough not to drown himself--a
+danger which overtook others who had tried to plunge into the complicated
+politics of South Africa. A succession of administrators at Government
+House in Cape Town ended their political career there, and left, broken in
+spirit, damaged in reputation.
+
+As for the local politicians, they were mostly honest mediocrities or
+adventurous spirits, who used their influence for their personal
+advantage. An exception was Mr. Hofmeyr. But he was far too absorbed in
+securing the recognition of Dutch supremacy at the Cape to be able to work
+on the milder plane necessary to bring about the one great result. The
+popularity of Mr. Hofmeyr was immense and his influence indisputable; but
+it was not a broad influence. He shuddered at the mere possibility of the
+Transvaal falling into the hands of the British.
+
+Whilst touching upon the subject of the Transvaal, I may say a word
+concerning the strangely mixed population, for the sake of whom,
+officially, Britain went to war. The war was entirely the work of the
+Uitlanders, as they called themselves with a certain pride, but very few
+of whom possessed a drop of English blood. The British public at home was
+told that it was necessary to fight President Kruger because Englishmen in
+the Transvaal were being ill-treated and denied their legitimate rights.
+In reality, this was one of those conventional reasons, lacking common
+sense and veracity, upon which nations are so often fed. If we enter
+closely into the details of existence in the Transvaal, and examine who
+were those who shouted so loudly for the franchise, we find that the
+majority were either foreigners or Jews hailing from Frankfurt or Hamburg.
+Many of them had, to be sure, become naturalised British subjects, but I
+doubt very much whether, among all the magnates of Johannesburg or of
+Kimberley, more than one or two pure-blooded Englishmen could be found.
+Rhodes, of course, was an exception, but one which confirmed the rule.
+Those others whose names can still be conjured with in South Africa were
+Jews, mostly of Teutonic descent, who pretended that they were Englishmen
+or Colonials; nothing certain was known about their origin beyond the fact
+that such or such small shops in Grahamstown, Durban or Cape Town had
+witnessed their childish romps. The Beits, the Neumanns and the Wernhers
+were German Jews; Barney Barnato was supposed to have been born under the
+shade of a Portuguese synagogue, and considered the fact as being just as
+glorious a one as would have been that of having in his veins "all the
+blood of all the Howards." The Joels were Hebrews; the Rudds supposed to
+belong to the same race through some remote ancestor; the Mosenthals,
+Abrahams, Phillipps, and other notabilities of the Rand and Kimberley,
+were Jews, and one among the so-called Reformers, associated with the
+Jameson Raid, was an American engineer, John Hays Hammond.
+
+The war, which was supposed to win the franchise for Englishmen in the
+Transvaal, was in reality fought for the advantage of foreigners. Most
+people honestly believed that President Kruger was aiming at destroying
+English prestige throughout the vast dark continent, and would have been
+horrified had they known what was going on in that distant land. Fortunes
+were made on the Rand in a few days, but very few Englishmen were among
+the number of those who contrived to acquire millions. Englishmen, indeed,
+were not congenial to the Transvaal, whilst foreigners, claiming to be
+Englishmen because they murdered the English language, abounded and
+prospered, and in time came sincerely to believe that they were British
+subjects, owing to the fact that they continually kept repeating that
+Britain ought to possess the Rand.
+
+When Britain came really to rule the Rand the adventurers found it did not
+in the least secure the advantages which they had imagined would derive
+from a war they fostered. This question of the Uitlanders was as
+embarrassing for the English Government as it had been for that of the
+Transvaal. These adventurers, who composed the mass of the motley
+population which flourished on the Rand, would prove a source of annoyance
+to any State in the world. On the other hand, the importance acquired by
+the so-called financial magnates was daily becoming a public danger,
+inasmuch as it tended to substitute the reign of a particular class of
+individuals for the ruling of those responsible for the welfare of the
+country. These persons individually believed that they each understood
+better than the Government the conditions prevailing in South Africa, and
+perpetually accused Downing Street of not realising and never protecting
+British interests there.
+
+Amidst their recriminations and the publicity they could command from the
+Press, it is no wonder that Sir Alfred Milner felt bewildered. It is to
+his everlasting honour that he did not allow himself to be overpowered. He
+was polite to everybody; listened carefully to all the many wonderful
+tales that were being related to him, and, without compromising himself,
+proceeded to a work of quiet mental elimination that very soon made him
+thoroughly grasp the intricacies of any situation. He quickly came to the
+conclusion that President Kruger was not the principal obstacle to a
+peaceful development of British Imperialism in South Africa. If ever a
+conflict was foisted on two countries for mercenary motives it was the
+Transvaal War, and a shrewd and impartial mind like Milner's did not take
+long to discover that such was the case.
+
+He was not, however, a man capable of lending himself meekly to schemes of
+greed, however wilily they were cloaked. His was not the kind of nature
+that for the sake of peace submits to things of which it does not approve.
+This man, who was represented as an oppressor of the Dutch, was in reality
+their best friend, and perhaps the one who believed the most in their
+eventual loyalty to the English Crown. It is a thousand pities that when
+the famous Bloemfontein Conference took place Sir Alfred Milner, as he
+still was at that time, had not yet acquired the experience which later
+became his concerning the true state of things in the Transvaal. Had he at
+that time possessed the knowledge which he was later to gain, when the
+beginning of hostilities obliged so many of the ruling spirits of
+Johannesburg to migrate to the Cape, it is likely that he would have acted
+differently. It was not easy for the High Commissioner to shake off the
+influence of all that he heard, whether told with a good or bad intention,
+and it was still harder for him in those first days of his office to
+discern who was right or who was wrong among those who crowded their
+advice upon him--and never forgave him when he did not follow their
+ill-balanced counsels.
+
+Concerning the outstanding personality of Cecil Rhodes, the position of
+Sir Alfred Milner was even more difficult and entangled than in regard to
+anyone else. It is useless to deny that he had arrived at Cape Town with
+considerable prejudice against Rhodes. He could not but look
+interrogatively upon the political career of a man who at the very time he
+occupied the position of Prime Minister had lent himself to a conspiracy
+against the independence of another land. Moreover, Rhodes was supposed,
+perhaps not without reason, to be continually intriguing to return to
+power, and to be chafing in secret at the political inaction which had
+been imposed upon him, and for which he was himself responsible more than
+anyone else. The fact that after the Raid Rhodes had been abandoned by his
+former friends harmed him considerably as a political man by destroying
+his renown as a statesman to whom the destinies of an Empire might be
+entrusted with safety. One can truly say, when writing the story of those
+years, that it resolved _itself_, into the vain struggle of Rhodes to
+recover his lost prestige. Sir Alfred was continually being made
+responsible for things of which he had not only been innocent, but of
+which, also, he had disapproved most emphatically. To mention only
+one--the famous concentration camps. A great deal of fuss was made about
+them at the time, and it was generally believed that they had been
+instituted at the instigation of the High Commissioner. When consulted on
+the subject Sir Alfred Milner had, on the contrary, not at all shared the
+opinion of those who had believed that they were a necessity, although
+ultimately, for lack of earlier steps, they became so.
+
+The Colony at that time found its effective government vested in the hands
+of the military authorities, who not infrequently acted upon opinions
+which were not based upon experience or upon any local conditions. They
+believed, too, implicitly what they were told, and when they heard people
+protest, with tears in their eyes, their devotion to the British Crown,
+and lament over the leniency with which the Governor of Cape Colony looked
+upon rebellion, they could not possibly think that they were listening to
+a tissue of lies, told for a purpose, nor guess that they were being made
+use of. Under such conditions the only wonder is the few mistakes which
+were made. To come back to the Boers' concentration camps, Sir Alfred
+Milner was not a sanguinary man by any means, and his character was far
+too firm to use violence as a means of government. It is probable that,
+left alone, he would have found some other means to secure strict
+obedience from the refugees to orders which most never thought of
+resisting. Unfortunately for everybody concerned, he could do nothing
+beyond expressing his opinion, and the circumstance that, out of a feeling
+of duty, he made no protestations against things of which he could not
+approve was exploited against him, both by the Jingo English party and by
+the Dutch, all over South Africa. At Groote Schuur especially, no secret
+was made by the friends of Rhodes of their disgust at the state of things
+prevailing in concentration camps, and it was adroitly brought to the
+knowledge of all the partisans of the Boers that, had Rhodes been master
+of the situation, such an outrage on individual liberty would never have
+taken place. Sir Alfred Milner was subjected to unfair, ill-natured
+criticisms which were as cunning as they were bitter. The concentration
+camps afford only one instance of the secret antagonisms and injustices
+which Sir Alfred Milner had to bear and combat. No wonder thoughts of his
+days in South Africa are still, to him, a bitter memory!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+CROSS CURRENTS
+
+
+The intrigues which made Groote Schuur such a disagreeable place were
+always a source of intense wonder to me. I could never understand their
+necessity. Neither could I appreciate the kind of hypocrisy which induced
+Rhodes continually to affirm that he did not care to return to power,
+whilst in reality he longed to hold the reins again. It would have been
+fatally easy for Rhodes, even after the hideous mistake of the Raid, to
+regain his political popularity; a little sincerity and a little truth
+were all that was needed. Unfortunately, both these qualities were wanting
+in what was otherwise a really gifted nature. Rhodes, it seemed by his
+ways, could not be sincere, and though he seldom lied in the material
+sense of the word, yet he allowed others to think and act for him, even
+when he knew them to be doing so in absolute contradiction to what he
+ought to have done himself. He appeared to have insufficient energy to
+enforce his will on those whom he despised, yet allowed to dictate to him
+even in matters which he ought to have kept absolutely under his own
+control.
+
+I shall always maintain that Rhodes, without his so-called friends, would
+most certainly have been one of the greatest figures of his time and
+generation. He had a big soul, vast conceptions, and when he was not
+influenced by outward material details--upon which, unfortunately for
+himself as well as for his reputation in history, he allowed his mind to
+dwell too often--his thoughts were always directed toward some higher
+subject which absorbed his attention, inspired him, and moved him
+sometimes to actions that drew very near to the heroic. He might have gone
+to his grave not only with an unsullied, but also with a great reputation
+based on grounds that were noble and splendid had he shaken off the
+companions of former times. Unhappily, an atmosphere of flattery and
+adulation had become absolutely necessary to him, and he became so used to
+it that he did not perceive that his sycophants never left him alone for a
+moment. They watched over him like a policeman who took good care no
+foreign influence should venture to approach.
+
+The end of all this was that Rhodes resented the truth when it was told
+him, and detested any who showed independence of judgment or appreciation
+in matters concerning his affairs and projects. A man supposed to have an
+iron will, yet he was weak almost to childishness in regard to these
+flattering satellites. It amused him to have always at his beck and call
+people willing and ready to submit to his insults, to bear with his fits
+of bad temper, and to accept every humiliation which he chose to offer.
+
+Cecil Rhodes never saw, or affected never to see, the disastrous influence
+all this had on his life.
+
+I remember asking him how it came that he seldom showed the desire to go
+away somewhere quite alone, if even for a day or two, so as to remain
+really tete-a-tete with his own reflections. His reply was most
+characteristic: "What should I do with myself? One must have people about
+to play cards in the evening." I might have added "and to flatter one,"
+but refrained. This craving continually to have someone at hand to bully,
+scold, or to make use of, was certainly one of the failings of Rhodes'
+powerful mind. It also indicated in a way that thirst for power which
+never left him until the last moment of his life. He had within him the
+weakness of those dethroned kings who, in exile, still like to have a
+Court about them and to travel in state. Rhodes had a court, and also
+travelled with a suite who, under the pretence of being useful to him,
+effectually barred access to any stranger. But for his entourage it is
+likely that Rhodes might have outlived the odium of the Raid. But, as Mrs.
+van Koopman said to me, "What is the use of trying to help Rhodes when one
+is sure that he will never be allowed to perform all that he might
+promise?"
+
+The winter which followed upon the relief of Kimberley Rhodes spent almost
+entirely at Groote Schuur, going to Rhodesia only in spring. During these
+months negotiations between him and certain leaders of the Bond party went
+on almost uninterruptedly. These were either conducted openly by people
+like Mr. David de Waal, or else through other channels when not entrusted
+to persons whom it would be relatively easy later on to disavow. Once or
+twice these negotiations seemed to take a favourable turn at several
+points, but always at the last minute Rhodes withdrew under some pretext
+or other. What he would have liked would have been to have, as it were,
+the Dutch party, the Bond, the English Colonists, the South African
+League, President Kruger, and the High Commissioner, all rolled into one,
+fall at his feet and implore him to save South Africa. When he perceived
+that all these believed that there existed a possibility for matters to be
+settled without his intervention, he hated every man of them with a hatred
+such as only very absolute natures can feel. To hear him express his
+disgust with the military authorities, abuse in turns Lord Roberts, whom
+he used to call an old man in his dotage, Lord Kitchener, who was a
+particular antipathy, the High Commissioner, the Government at home, and
+the Bond, was an education in itself. He never hesitated before making use
+of an expression of a coarseness such as does not bear repeating, and in
+his private conversations he hurled insults at the heads of all. It is
+therefore no wonder that the freedom of speech which Rhodes exercised at
+Groote Schuur added to the difficulties of a situation the brunt of which
+not he, but Sir Alfred Milner, had to bear.
+
+More than once the High Commissioner caused a hint to be conveyed to Cecil
+Rhodes that he had better betake himself to Rhodesia, and remain there
+until there was a clearer sky in Cape Colony. These hints were always
+given in the most delicate manner, but Rhodes chose to consider them in
+the light of a personal affront, and poured down torrents of invective
+upon the British Government for what he termed their ingratitude. The
+truth of the matter was that he could not bring himself to understand that
+he was not the person alone capable of bringing about a permanent
+settlement of South Africa. The energy of his young days had left him, and
+perhaps the chronic disease from which he was suffering added to his
+constant state of irritation and obscured the clearness of his judgment in
+these post-raid days.
+
+I hope that my readers will not imagine from my reference that I have a
+grudge of any kind against Doctor Jameson.[D] On the contrary, truth
+compels me to say that I have seldom met a more delightful creature than
+this old friend and companion of Cecil Rhodes, and I do believe he held a
+sincere affection for his chief. But Jameson, as well as Rhodes, was under
+the influence of certain facts and of certain circumstances, and I do not
+think that he was, at that particular moment about which I am writing, the
+best adviser that Rhodes might have had. In one thing Doctor Jim was above
+suspicion: he had never dirtied his hands with any of the financial
+speculations which those about Rhodes indulged in, to the latter's
+detriment much more than his own, considering the fact that it was he who
+was considered as the father of their various "smart" schemes. Jameson
+always kept aloof from every kind of shady transaction in so far as money
+matters were concerned, and perhaps this was the reason why so many people
+detested him and kept advising Rhodes to brush him aside, or, at all
+events, not to keep him near him whilst the war was going on. His name was
+to the Dutch as a red rag to a very fierce and more than furious bull,
+while the Bond, as well as the burghers of the Transvaal, would rather
+have had dealings with the Evil One himself than with Doctor Jim. Their
+prejudices against him were not to be shaken. In reality others about
+Rhodes were far more dangerous than Jameson could ever have proved on the
+question of a South African settlement in which the rights of the Dutch
+elements in the Cape and Orange Free State would be respected and
+considered.
+
+ [D] Dr. Jameson died November 26th, 1917.
+
+[Illustration: THE RT. HON. SIR LEANDER STARR JAMESON]
+
+Whatever might have been his faults, Doctor Jameson was neither a rogue
+nor a fool. For Rhodes he had a sincere affection that made him keenly
+alive to the dangers that might threaten the latter, and anxious to avert
+them. But during those eventful months of the war the influence of the
+Doctor also had been weakened by the peculiar circumstances which had
+arisen in consequence of the length of the Boer resistance. Before the war
+broke out it had been generally supposed that three months would see the
+end of the Transvaal Republic, and Rhodes himself, more often than I care
+to remember, had prophesied that a few weeks would be the utmost that the
+struggle could last. That this did not turn out to be the case had been a
+surprise to the world at large and an intense disappointment to Cecil
+Rhodes. He had all along nourished a bitter animosity against Kruger, and
+in regard to him, as well as Messrs. Schreiner, Merriman, Hofmeyr, Sauer
+and other one-time colleagues, he carried his vindictiveness to an extent
+so terrible that more than once it led him into some of the most
+regrettable actions in his life.
+
+Cecil Rhodes possessed a curious shyness which gave to his character an
+appearance the more misleading in that it hid in reality a will of iron
+and a ruthlessness comparable to a _Condottiere_ of the Middle Ages. The
+fact was that his soul was thirsting for power, and he was inordinately
+jealous of successes which anyone but himself had or could achieve in
+South Africa. I am persuaded that one of the reasons why he always tried
+by inference to disparage Sir Alfred Milner was his annoyance at the
+latter's calm way of going on with the task which he had mapped out for
+himself without allowing his mind to be troubled by the outcries of a mob
+whom he despised from the height of his great integrity, unsullied honour,
+and consciousness of having his duty to perform. Neither could Rhodes ever
+see in political matters the necessities of the moment often made it the
+duty of a statesman to hurl certain facts into oblivion and to reconcile
+himself to new circumstances.
+
+That he did disparage Sir Alfred Milner is unfortunately certain. I
+sincerely believe that the war would never have dragged on so long had not
+Rhodes contrived to convey to the principal Boer leaders the impression
+that while Sir Alfred Milner remained in South Africa no settlement would
+be arrived at with the British Government, because the High Commissioner
+would always oppose any concessions that might bring it to a successful
+and prompt issue. Of course Cecil Rhodes never said this in so many words,
+but he allowed people to guess that such was his conviction, and it was
+only after Sir Alfred had I left the Cape for Pretoria that, by a closer
+contact with the Boers themselves, some of the latter's prejudices against
+him vanished.
+
+At last did the sturdy Dutch farmers realise that if there was one man
+devoid of animosity against them, and desirous of seeing the end of a
+struggle which was ruining a continent, it was Sir Alfred Milner. They
+also discovered another thing concerning his political views and
+opinions--that he desired just as much as they did to destroy the power
+and influence of those multi-millionaires who had so foolishly believed
+that after the war's end they would have at their disposal the riches
+which the Transvaal contained, so that, rather than becoming a part of the
+British Empire, it would in reality be an annexe of the London and Paris
+Stock Exchanges.
+
+As events turned out, by a just retribution of Providence, the magnates
+who had let greedy ambition master them lost most of the advantages which
+they had been able to snatch from President Kruger. Whether this would
+have happened had Rhodes not died before the conclusion of peace remains
+an open question. It is certain he would have objected to a limitation of
+the political power of the concerns in which he had got such tremendous
+interests; it is equally sure that it would have been for him a cruel
+disappointment had his name not figured as the outstanding signature on
+the treaty of peace. There were in this strange man moments when his
+patriotism assumed an entirely personal shape, but, improbable as it may
+appear to the reader, there was sincerity in the conviction which he had
+that the only man who understood what South Africa required was himself,
+and that in all that he had done he had been working for the benefit of
+the Empire. There was in him something akin to the feeling which had
+inspired the old Roman saying, "_Civis Romanum sum._" He understood far
+better than any of the individuals by whom he was surrounded the true
+meaning of the word Imperialism. Unfortunately, he was apt to apply it in
+the personal sense, until, indeed, it got quite confused in his mind with
+a selfish feeling which prompted him to put his huge personality before
+everything else. If one may do so, a reading of his mind would show that
+in his secret heart he felt he had not annexed Rhodesia to the Empire nor
+amalgamated the Kimberley mines and organised De Beers for the benefit of
+his native Britain, but in order to make himself the most powerful man in
+South Africa, and yet at the same time shrewdly realised that he could not
+be the king he wished to become unless England stood behind him to cover
+with her flag his heroic actions as well as his misdeeds.
+
+That Rhodes' death occurred at an opportune moment cannot be denied. It is
+a sad thing to say, but for South Africa true enough. It removed from the
+path of Sir Alfred Milner the principal obstacle that had stood in his way
+ever since his arrival at Cape Town. The Rhodesian party, deprived of its
+chief, was entirely harmless. Rhodesian politics, too, lost their strength
+when he was no longer there to impose them upon South Africa.
+
+One of the great secrets of the enormous influence which the Colossus had
+acquired lay in the fact that he had never spared his money when it was a
+question of thrusting his will in directions favourable to his interest.
+None of those who aspired to take his place could follow him on that road,
+because none were so superbly indifferent to wealth. Cecil Rhodes did not
+care for riches for the personal enjoyments they can purchase. He was
+frugal in his tastes, simple in his manners and belongings, and absolutely
+careless as to the comforts of life. The waste in his household was
+something fabulous, but it is a question whether he ever participated in
+luxuries showered upon others. His one hobby had been the embellishment of
+Groote Schuur, which he had really transformed into something absolutely
+fairylike as regards its exterior beauties and the loveliness of its
+grounds and gardens. Inside, too, the house, furnished after the old Dutch
+style, struck one by its handsomeness, though it was neither homelike nor
+comfortable. In its decoration he had followed the plans of a clever
+architect, to whose artistic education he had generously contributed by
+giving to him facilities to travel in Europe, but he had not lent anything
+of his own personality to the interior arrangements of his home, which had
+always kept the look of a show place, neither cared for nor properly
+looked after.
+
+Rhodes himself felt happier and more at his ease when rambling in his
+splendid park and gazing on Table Mountain from his stoep than amidst the
+luxury of his richly furnished rooms. Sometimes he would sit for hours
+looking at the landscape before him, lost in a meditation which but few
+cared to disturb, and after which he invariably showed himself at his best
+and in a softer mood than he had been before. Unfortunately, these moments
+never lasted long, and he used to revenge himself on those who had
+surprised him in such reveries by indulging in the most caustic and cruel
+remarks which he could devise in order to goad them out of all patience. A
+strange man with strange instincts; and it is no wonder that, once, a
+person who knew him well, and who had known him in the days of his youth
+when he had not yet developed his strength of character, had said of him
+that "One could not help liking him and one could not avoid hating him;
+and sometimes one hated him when one liked him most."
+
+Sir Alfred Milner had neither liked nor hated him, perhaps because his
+mind was too well balanced to allow him to view him otherwise than with
+impartiality and with a keen appreciation of his great qualities. He would
+have liked to work with Rhodes, and would gladly have availed himself of
+his experience of South Africa and of South African politicians. But Sir
+Alfred refused to be drawn into any compromises with his own conscience or
+to offend his own sense of right and wrong. He was always sincere, though
+he was never given credit for being so in South Africa. Sir Alfred Milner
+could not understand why Rhodes, instead of resolutely asserting that he
+wanted to enter into negotiations with the Bond in order to win its
+co-operation in the great work of organising the new existence of South
+Africa on a sound and solid basis, preferred to cause promises to be made
+to the Bond which he would never consent to acknowledge.
+
+These tortuous roads, which were so beloved by Rhodes, were absolutely
+abhorrent to the High Commissioner. When Rhodes started the agitation for
+the suspension of the Constitution, which occupied his thoughts during the
+last months of his life--an agitation which he had inaugurated out of
+spite against Mr. Sauer and Mr. Hofmeyr, who had refused to dance to
+Rhodes' tune--Sir Alfred Milner had at once seen through the underlying
+motives of the moment, and what he discerned had not increased his
+admiration for Rhodes. Sir Alfred had not opposed the plans, but he had
+never been sanguine as to their chance of success, and they were not in
+accordance with his own convictions. Had he thought they had the least
+chance of being adopted, most certainly he would have opposed them with
+just as much energy as Sir Gordon Sprigg had done. He saw quite well that
+it would not have been opportune or politic to put himself into open
+opposition to Rhodes. Sir Alfred therefore did not contradict the rumours
+which attributed to him the desire to reduce the Cape to the condition of
+a Crown Colony, but bent his energy to the far more serious task of
+negotiating a permanent peace with the leading men in the Transvaal, a
+peace for which he did not want the protection of Rhodes, and to which an
+association with Rhodes might have proved inimical to the end in view--the
+ideal of a South African Federation which Rhodes had been the first to
+visualise, but which Providence did not permit him to see accomplished.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE CONCENTRATION CAMPS
+
+
+It is impossible to speak or write about the South African War without
+mentioning the Concentration Camps. A great deal of fuss was made about
+them, not only abroad, where all the enemies of England took a particular
+and most vicious pleasure in magnifying the so-called cruelties which were
+supposed to take place, but also in the English Press, where long and
+heartrending accounts appeared concerning the iniquities and injustices
+practised by the military authorities on the unfortunate Boer families
+assembled in the Camps.
+
+In recurring to this long-forgotten theme, I must first of all say that I
+do not hold a brief for the English Government or for the administration
+which had charge of British interests in South Africa. But pure and simple
+justice compels me to protest, first against the use which was made for
+party purposes of certain regrettable incidents, and, more strongly still,
+against the totally malicious and ruthless way in which the incidents were
+interpreted.
+
+It is necessary before passing a judgment on the Concentration Camps to
+explain how it came about that these were organised. At the time of which
+I am writing people imagined that by Lord Kitchener's orders Boer women,
+children and old people were forcibly taken away from their homes and
+confined, without any reason for such an arbitrary proceeding, in
+unhealthy places where they were subjected to an existence of privation as
+well as of humiliation and suffering. Nothing of the kind had taken place.
+
+The idea of the Camps originated at first from the Boers themselves in an
+indirect way. When the English troops marched into the Orange Free State
+and the Transvaal, most of the farmers who composed the bulk of the
+population of the two Republics having taken to arms, there was no one
+left in the homes they had abandoned save women, children and old men no
+longer able to fight. These fled hurriedly as soon as English detachments
+and patrols were in sight, but most of the time they did not know where
+they could fly to, and generally assembled in camps somewhere on the
+veldt, where they hoped that the British troops would not discover them.
+There, however, they soon found their position intolerable owing to the
+want of food and to the lack of hygienic precautions.
+
+The British authorities became aware of this state of things and could not
+but try to remedy it. Unfortunately, this was easier said than done. To
+come to the help of several thousands of people in a country where
+absolutely no resources were to be found was a quite stupendous task, of a
+nature which might well have caused the gravest anxieties to the men
+responsible for the solution. It was then that the decision was reached to
+organise upon a reasonable scale camps after the style of those which
+already had been inaugurated by the Boers themselves.
+
+The idea, which was not a bad one, was carried out in an unfortunate
+manner, which gave to the world at large the idea that the burgher
+families who were confined in these camps were simply put into a prison
+which they had done nothing to deserve. The Bond Press, always on the
+alert to reproach England, seized hold of the establishment of the Camps
+to transform into martyrs the persons who had been transferred to them,
+and soon a wave of indignation swept over not only South Africa, but also
+over Britain. This necessary act of human civilisation was twisted to
+appear as an abuse of power on the part of Lord Roberts and especially of
+Lord Kitchener, who, in this affair, became the scapegoat for many sins he
+had never committed. The question of the Concentration Camps was made the
+subject of interpellations in the House of Commons, and indignation
+meetings were held in many parts of England. The Nonconformist Conscience
+was deeply stirred at what was thought to be conduct which not even the
+necessities of war could excuse. Torrents of ink were spilt to prove that
+at the end of the nineteenth century measures and methods worthy of the
+Inquisition were resorted to by British Government officials, who--so the
+ready writers and ready-tongued averred--with a barbarity such as the
+Middle Ages had not witnessed, wanted to be revenged on innocent women and
+children for the resistance their husbands and fathers were making against
+an aggression which in itself nothing could justify.
+
+So far as the Boers themselves were concerned, I think that a good many
+among them viewed the subject with far more equanimity than the English
+public. For one thing, the fact of their women and children being put in
+places where at least they would not die of hunger must have come to them
+rather in the light of a relief than anything else. Then, too, one must
+not lose sight of the conditions under which the Boer burghers and farmers
+used to exist in normal times. Cleanliness did not rank among their
+virtues; and, as a rule, hygiene was an unknown science. They were mostly
+dirty and neglected in their personal appearance, and their houses were
+certainly neither built nor kept in accordance with those laws of
+sanitation which in the civilised world have become a matter of course.
+Water was scarce, and the long and torrid summers, during which every bit
+of vegetation was dried up on the veldt, had inured the population to
+certain privations which would have been intolerable to Europeans. These
+things, and the unfortunate habits of the Boers, made it extremely
+difficult, if not impossible, to realise in the Camps any approach to the
+degree of cleanliness which was desirable.
+
+To say that the people in the Concentration Camps were happy would be a
+gross exaggeration, but to say that they were martyrs would convey an
+equally false idea. When judging of facts one ought always to remember the
+local conditions under which these facts have developed. A Russian moujik
+sent to Siberia does not find that his life there is very much different
+from what it was at home, but a highly civilised, well-educated man,
+condemned to banishment in those frozen solitudes, suffers acutely, being
+deprived of all that had made existence sweet and tolerable to him. I feel
+certain that an Englishman, confined in one of the Concentration Camps of
+South Africa, would have wished himself dead ten times a day, whilst the
+wife of a Boer farmer would not have suffered because of missing soap and
+water and clean towels and nicely served food, though she might have felt
+the place hot and unpleasant, and might have lamented over the loss of the
+home in which she had lived for years.
+
+The Concentration Camps were a necessity, because without them thousands
+of people, the whole white population of a country indeed, amounting to
+something over sixty thousand people, would have died of hunger and cold.
+
+The only means of existence the country Boers had was the produce of their
+farms. This taken away from them, they were left in the presence of
+starvation, and starvation only. This population, deprived of every means
+of subsistence, would have invaded Cape Colony, which already was overrun
+with white refugees from Johannesburg and the Rand, who had proved a
+prolific source of the greatest annoyance to the British Government. To
+allow this mass of miserable humanity to wander all over the Colony would
+have been inhuman, and I would like to know what those who, in England and
+upon the Continent, were so indignant over the Concentration Camps would
+have said had it turned out that some sixty thousand human creatures had
+been allowed to starve.
+
+The British Government, owing to the local conditions under which the
+South African War came to be fought, found itself in a dilemma, out of
+which the only escape was to try to relieve wholesale misery in the most
+practical manner possible. There was no time to plan out with deliberation
+what ought to be done; some means had to be devised to keep a whole
+population alive whom an administration would have been accused of
+murdering had there been delay in feeding it.
+
+There was also another danger to be faced had the veldt been allowed to
+become the scene of a long-continued migration of nations--that of
+allowing the movements of the British troops to become known, thereby
+lengthening a war of already intolerable length, to say nothing of
+exposing uselessly the lives of English detachments, which, in this
+guerrilla kind of warfare, would inevitably have occurred had the Boer
+leaders remained in constant communication with their wandering
+compatriots.
+
+Altogether the institution of the Concentration Camps was not such a bad
+one originally. Unfortunately, they were not organised with the
+seriousness which ought to have been brought to bear on such a delicate
+matter, and their care was entrusted to people who succeeded, unwittingly
+perhaps, in making life there less tolerable than it need have been.
+
+I visited some of the Concentration Camps, and looked into their interior
+arrangements with great attention. The result of my personal observations
+was invariably the same--that where English officials were in charge of
+these Camps everything possible was done to lighten the lot of their
+inmates. But where others were entrusted with surveillance, every kind of
+annoyance, indignity and insult was offered to poor people obliged to
+submit to their authority.
+
+In this question, as in many others connected with the Boer War, it was
+the local Jingoes who harmed the British Government more than anything
+else, and the Johannesburg Uitlanders, together with the various Volunteer
+Corps and Scouts, brought into the conduct of the enterprises with which
+they were entrusted an intolerance and a smallness of spirit which
+destroyed British prestige far more than would have done a dozen
+unfortunate wars. The very fact that one heard these unwise people openly
+say that every Boer ought to be killed, and that even women and children
+ought to be suppressed if one wanted to win the war, gave abroad the idea
+that England was a nation thirsting for the blood of the unfortunate
+Afrikanders. This mistaken licence furnished the Bond with the pretext to
+persuade the Dutch Colonists to rebel, and the Boer leaders with that of
+going on with their resistance until their last penny had been exhausted
+and their last gun had been captured.
+
+Without these detestable Jingoes, who would have done so much harm not
+only to South Africa, but also to their Mother Country, England, it is
+certain that an arrangement, which would have brought about an honourable
+peace for everybody, could have come much sooner than it did. A
+significant fact worth remembering--that the Boers did not attempt to
+destroy the mines on the Rand--goes far to prove that they were not at all
+so determined to hurt British property, or to ruin British residents, or
+to destroy the large shareholder concerns to which the Transvaal owed its
+celebrity, as was credited to them.
+
+When the first rumours that terrible things were going on in the
+Concentration Camps reached England there were found at once amateurs
+willing to start for South Africa to investigate the truth of the
+accusations. A great fuss was made over an appeal by Lady Maxwell, the
+wife of the Military Governor of Pretoria, in which she entreated America
+to assist her in raising a fund to provide warm clothing for the Boer
+women and children. Conclusions were immediately drawn, saddling the
+military authorities with responsibility for the destitution in which
+these women and children found themselves. But in the name of common
+sense, how could one expect that people who had run away before what they
+believed to be an invasion of barbarians determined to burn down and
+destroy all their belongings--how could one expect that these people in
+their flight would have thought about taking with them their winter
+clothes, which, in the hurry of a departure in a torrid summer, would only
+have proved a source of embarrassment to them? More recently we have seen
+in Belgium, France, Poland and the Balkans what occurred to the refugees
+who fled before foreign invasion. The very fact of Lady Maxwell's appeal
+proved the solicitude of the official English classes for the unfortunate
+Boers and their desire to do something to provide them with the
+necessaries of life.
+
+Everybody knows the amount of money which is required in cases of this
+kind, and--in addition to America's unstinting response--public and
+private charity in Britain flowed as generously as it always does upon
+every occasion when an appeal is made to it in cases of real misfortune.
+But when it comes to relieve the wants of about sixty-three thousand
+people, of all ages and conditions, this is not so easy to do as persons
+fond of criticising things which they do not understand are apt sweepingly
+to declare. Very soon the question of the Concentration Camps became a
+Party matter, and was made capital of for Party purposes without
+discrimination or restraint. Sham philanthropists filled the newspapers
+with their indignation, and a report was published in the form of a
+pamphlet by Miss Hobhouse, which, it is to be feared, contained some
+percentage of tales poured into her ears by people who were nurtured in
+the general contempt for truth which at that time existed in South Africa.
+
+If the question of Concentration Camps had been examined seriously, it
+would have been at once perceived what a tremendous burden the
+responsibility of having to find food and shelter for thousands of enemy
+people imposed on English officials. No one in Government circles
+attempted or wished to deny, sorrowful as it was to have to recognise it,
+that the condition of the Camps was not, and indeed could not be, nearly
+what one would have wished or desired. On the other hand, the British
+authorities were unremitting in their efforts to do everything which was
+compatible with prudence to improve the condition of these Camps.
+Notwithstanding, people were so excited in regard to the question, and it
+was so entirely a case of "Give a dog a bad name," that even the
+appointment of an Imperial Commission to report on the matter failed to
+bring them to anything approaching an impartial survey. Miss Hobhouse's
+report had excited an emotion only comparable to the publication of Mrs.
+Beecher Stowe's famous novel, "Uncle Tom's Cabin."
+
+Miss Hobhouse came to South Africa inspired by the most generous motives,
+but her lack of knowledge of the conditions of existence common to
+everyone in that country prevented her from forming a true opinion as to
+the real hardship of what she was called upon to witness. Her own
+interpretations of the difficulties and discomforts which she found
+herself obliged to face proved that she had not realised what South Africa
+really was. Her horror at the sight of a snake in one of the tents she
+visited could only evoke a smile from those who had lived for some time in
+that country, as a visitor of that particular kind was possible even in
+the suburbs of Cape Town, and certainly offered nothing wonderful in a
+tent on the high veldt. The same remark can be applied to the hotels,
+which Miss Hobhouse described as something quite ghastly. Everyone who
+knew what South Africa really was could only agree with her that the
+miserable places there were anything but pleasant residences, but the fuss
+which she made as to these trivial details could only make one sceptical
+as to the genuineness of the other scenes which she described at such
+length. No one who had had occasion to watch the development of the war or
+the circumstances which had preceded it could bring himself to believe
+with her that the British Government was guilty of premeditated cruelty.
+
+Of course, it was quite dreadful for those who had been taken to the
+Concentration Camps to find themselves detained there against their will,
+but at the same time, as I have already remarked, the question remains as
+to what these people would have done had they been left absolutely
+unprotected and unprovided for among the remnants of what had once been
+their homes. It was certain that Miss Hobhouse's pamphlet revealed a
+parlous state of things, but did she realise that wood, blankets, linen
+and food were not things which could be transported with the quickness
+that those responsible heartily desired? Did she remember that the British
+troops also had to do without the most elementary comforts, in spite of
+all the things which were constantly being sent from home for the benefit
+of the field forces? Both had in South Africa two enemies in common that
+could not be subdued--distance and difficulty of communication. With but a
+single line of railway, which half the time was cut in one place or
+another, it was but natural that the Concentration Camps were deprived of
+a good many things which those who were compelled to live within their
+limits would, under different circumstances or conditions, have had as a
+matter of course.
+
+Miss Hobhouse had to own that she met with the utmost courtesy from the
+authorities with whom she had to deal, a fact alone which proved that the
+Government was only too glad to allow people to see what was being done
+for the Boer women and children, and gratefully appreciated every useful
+suggestion likely to lighten the sad lot of those in the Camps.
+
+It is no use denying, and indeed no one, Sir Alfred Milner least of all,
+would have denied that some of the scenes witnessed by Miss Hobhouse,
+which were afterwards described with such tremulous indignation, were of a
+nature to shock public opinion both at home and abroad. But, at the same
+time, it was not fair to circumstances or to people to have a false
+sentimentality woven into what was written. Things ought to have been
+looked upon through the eyes of common sense and not through the
+refracting glasses of the indignation of the moment. It was a libel to
+suggest that the British authorities rendered themselves guilty of
+deliberate cruelty, because, on the contrary, they always and upon every
+occasion did everything they could to lighten the lot of the enemy peoples
+who had fallen into their hands.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE PRISONERS' CAMPS
+
+
+I went myself very carefully into the details of whatever information I
+was able to gather in regard to the treatment of Boer prisoners in the
+various Camps, notably at Green Point near Cape Town, and I always had to
+come to the conclusion that nothing could have been better. Is it likely
+that, when such an amount of care was bestowed upon the men, the women and
+children should have been made the objects of special persecution? No
+impartial person could believe such a thing to have been possible, and I
+feel persuaded that if the people who in England contributed to make the
+position of the British Government more difficult than already it was,
+could have glanced at some Prisoners' Camps, for instance, they would very
+quickly have recognised that an unbalanced sentimentality had exaggerated
+facts, and even in some cases distorted them.
+
+In Green Point the prisoners were housed in double-storied buildings which
+had balconies running round them. Here they used to spend many hours of
+the day, for not only could they see what was going on around the Camps
+but also have a good view of the sea and passing ships. Each room held six
+men, and there was besides a large mess-room downstairs in each building
+which held about ninety people. Each Boer officer had a room for himself.
+When, later on, the number of prisoners of war was increased, tents had to
+be erected to accommodate them; but this could hardly be considered
+hardship in the climate which prevails at the Cape, and cannot be compared
+to what at the present moment the soldiers of the Allies are enduring in
+the trenches. The tents were put in a line of twenty each, and each score
+had a building attached for the men in that line to use as a dormitory if
+they chose. Excellent bathrooms and shower-baths were provided, together
+with a plentiful supply of water. The feeding of the prisoners of war was
+on a substantial scale, the daily rations per man including:
+
+ Bread 11/4 lb.
+ Meat (fresh) 1 lb.
+ Sugar 3 oz.
+ Coal (or) 1 lb.
+ Wood (or) 2 lb.
+ Coal and wood 11/2 lb.
+ Vegetables 1/2 lb.
+ Jam 1/4 lb., or 6 oz. of
+ vegetables in lieu.
+
+Coffee, milk and other items were also in like generous apportionments.
+
+The clothing issued to the prisoners, as asked for by them, to give the
+month of June, 1901, as an instance, was:
+
+ Boots 143 pairs
+ Braces 59 pairs
+ Hats 164
+ Jackets 133
+ Shirts 251
+ Socks 222 pairs
+ Trousers 166
+ Waistcoats 87
+
+and other small sundries.
+
+At Green Point Camp ample hospital accommodation was provided for the
+sick, and there was a medical staff thoroughly acquainted with the Dutch
+language and Boer habits. There was electric light in every ward, as well
+as all other comforts compatible with discipline.
+
+In the first six months of 1901 only five men died in the Camps, the
+average daily strength of which was over 5,000 men. As for the sick, the
+average rarely surpassed 1 per cent., amongst which were included wounded
+men, the cripples, and the invalids left behind from the parties of war
+prisoners sent oversea to St. Helena or other places.
+
+The hospital diet included, as a matter of course, many things not forming
+part of the ordinary rations, such as extra milk, meat extracts, and
+brandy. A suggestive fact in that respect was that though the medical
+officers in charge of the Camps often appealed to Boer sympathisers to
+send them eggs, milk and other comforts for the sick prisoners, they
+hardly ever met with response; and in the rare cases when it happened, it
+was mostly British officials or officers' wives who provided these
+luxuries.
+
+The spiritual needs of the prisoners of war were looked after with
+consideration; there was a recreation room, and, during the time that a
+large number of very young Boers were in Camps, an excellent school, in
+which the headmaster and assistant teachers held teachers' certificates.
+Under the Orange River Colony this school was later transferred to the
+Prisoners of War Camp at Simonstown, and in both places it did a
+considerable amount of good. The younger Boers took very kindly and almost
+immediately to English games such as football, cricket, tennis and quoits,
+for which there was plenty of room, and the British authorities provided
+recreation huts, and goal posts and other implements. The Boers also
+amused themselves with amateur theatricals, club-swinging, and even formed
+a minstrel troup called the "Green Point Spreemos."
+
+In the Camps there was a shop where the Boers could buy anything that they
+required in reason at prices regulated by the Military Commandant. Beyond
+this, relatives and friends were allowed to send them fruit or anything
+else, with the exception of firearms. In the Boer laagers were coffee
+shops run by speculative young Boers. The prisoners used to meet there in
+order to drink coffee, eat pancakes and talk to heart's content. This
+particular spot was generally called Pan Koek Straat, and the wildest
+rumours concerning the war seemed to originate in it.
+
+Now as to the inner organisation of the Camps. The prisoners were allowed
+to choose a corporal from their midst and also to select a captain for
+each house. Over the whole Camp there reigned a Boer Commandant, assisted
+by a Court of "Heemraden" consisting of exlandrosts and lawyers appointed
+by the prisoners of war themselves. Any act of insubordination or
+inattention to the regulations, sanitary or otherwise, was brought before
+this court and the guilty party tried and sentenced. When the latter
+refused to abide by the judgment of the Boer court he was brought before
+the Military Commandant, but for this there was very seldom need.
+
+The prisoners of war had permission to correspond with their friends and
+relatives, and were allowed newspapers and books. The former, however,
+were rather too much censored, which fact constituted an annoyance which,
+with the exertion of a little tact, might easily have been avoided.
+
+As will be seen from the details, the fate of the Boer prisoners of war
+was not such a bad one after all. Nor, either, was life in the
+Concentration Camps, and I have endeavoured to throw some new light on the
+subject to rebut the old false rumours which, lately, the German
+Government revived when taxed with harsh treatment of their own prisoners
+of war, so as to draw comparisons advantageously to themselves.
+
+While adhering to my point, I quite realise that it would be foolish to
+assert that all the Concentration Camps were organised and administered on
+the model of the Green Point Camp, where its vicinity to Cape Town allowed
+the English authorities to control everything that was going on. In the
+interior of the country things could not be arranged upon such an
+excellent scale, but had there not existed such a state of irritation all
+over the whole of South Africa--an irritation for which the so-called
+English loyalists must also share the blame--matters would not have grown
+so sadly out of proportion to the truth, painful though the facts were in
+some cases.
+
+This question of the Camps was admittedly a most difficult one. It was the
+result of a method of warfare which was imposed upon England by
+circumstances, but for which no individual Minister or General was solely
+responsible. The matter was brought about by successive steps that turned
+out to be necessary, though they were deplorable in every respect. Failing
+the capture of the Boer commandoes, which was well-nigh impossible, the
+British troops were driven to strip the country, and stripping the country
+meant depriving not only the fighting men but also the women and children
+of the means of subsistence. Concentration, therefore, followed
+inevitably, and England found itself burdened with the immense
+responsibility of feeding, housing and clothing some sixty thousand women
+and children.
+
+In spite of the British officers in charge of the Concentration Camps
+struggling manfully with this crushing burden of anxiety, and doing all
+that lay within their power to alleviate the sufferings of this multitude,
+cruel and painful things happened. The food, which was sufficient and
+wholesome for soldiers, could not do for young people, and yet it was
+impossible to procure any other for them. If the opinion of the military
+had been allowed to be expressed openly, one would have found probably
+that they thought England ought never to have assumed this responsibility,
+but rather have chosen the lesser evil and left these people on their
+farms, running the risk of the Boers provisioning themselves therefrom.
+The risk would not, perhaps, have been so great as could have been
+supposed at first sight, but then this ought to have been done from the
+very beginning of the war, and the order to burn the Boer farms ought
+never to have been given. But once the Boer farms had been deprived of
+their military use to the enemy, these people could not be turned back to
+starve on the veldt; the British had to feed them or earn the reproach of
+having destroyed a nation by hunger. As things had developed it was
+impossible for Great Britain to have followed any other policy--adopted,
+perhaps, in a moment of rashness, but the consequences had to be accepted.
+It only remained to do the best toward mitigating as far as possible the
+sufferings of the mass of humanity gathered into the Camps, and this I
+must maintain that the English Government did better than could have been
+expected by any who knew South Africa and the immense difficulties which
+beset the British authorities.
+
+It must not be forgotten that when the war began it was looked upon in the
+light of a simple military promenade; and, who knows, it might have been
+that had not the Boers been just as mistaken concerning the intentions of
+England in respect of them as England was in regard to the Boer military
+strength and power of resistance. One must take into account that for the
+few years preceding the war, and especially since the fatal Jameson Raid,
+the whole of the Dutch population of the Transvaal and of the Orange Free
+State, as well as that of Cape Colony, was persuaded that England had made
+up its mind to destroy it and to give up their country, as well as their
+persons, into the absolute power of the millionaires who ruled the Rand.
+On their side the millionaires openly declared that the mines were their
+personal property, and that England was going to war to give the Rand to
+them, and thereafter they were to rule this new possession without any
+interference from anyone in the world, not even that of England. Such a
+state of things was absolutely abnormal, and one can but wonder how ideas
+of the kind could have obtained credence. But, strange as it may seem, it
+is an indisputable fact that the opinion was prevalent all over South
+Africa that the Rand was to be annexed to the British Empire just in the
+same way as Rhodesia had been and under the same conditions. Everyone in
+South Africa knew that the so-called conquest of the domain of King
+Lobengula had been effected only because it had been supposed that it was
+as rich in gold and diamonds as the Transvaal.
+
+When Rhodes had taken possession of the vast expanse of territory which
+was to receive his name, the fortune-seekers who had followed in his
+footsteps had high anticipations of speedy riches, and came in time to
+consider that they had a right to obtain that which they had come to look
+for. These victims of money-hunger made Rhodes personally responsible for
+the disappointments which their greed and unhealthy appetites encountered
+when at last they were forced to the conclusion that Rhodesia was a land
+barren of gold. In time, perhaps, and at enormous expense, it might be
+developed for the purpose of cattle breeding, but gold and diamonds either
+did not exist or could only be found in such small quantities that it was
+not worth while looking for them.
+
+As a result of this realisation, Rhodes found himself confronted by all
+these followers, who loudly clamoured around him their indignation at
+having believed in his assertions. What wonder, therefore, that the
+thoughts of these people turned toward the possibility of diverting the
+treasures of the Transvaal into their own direction. Rhodes was brought
+into contact with the idea that it was necessary to subdue President
+Kruger. With a man of Rhodes' impulsive character to begin wishing for a
+thing was sufficient to make him resort to every means at his disposal to
+obtain it. The Boer War was the work of the Rhodesian party, and long
+before it broke out it was expected, spoken of, and considered not only by
+the Transvaal Government, but also by the Burghers, who, having many
+opportunities of visiting the Cape as well as Rhodesia, had there heard
+expression of the determination of the South African League, and of those
+who called themselves followers and partisans of Rhodes, to get hold of
+the Rand, at the head of which, as an inevitable necessity, should be the
+Colossus himself. No denial of these plans ever came from Rhodes. By his
+attitude, even when relations between London and Pretoria were excellent,
+he gave encouragement to the people who were making all kinds of
+speculations as to what should happen when the Transvaal became a Crown
+Colony.
+
+The idea of a South African Federation had not at that time taken hold of
+public opinion, and, if Rhodes became its partisan later on, it was only
+after he had realised that the British Cabinet would never consent to put
+Johannesburg on the same footing as Bulawayo and Bechuanaland. Too large
+and important interests were at stake for Downing Street to look with
+favourable eyes on the Rand becoming only one vast commercial concern. A
+line had to be drawn, but, unfortunately, the precise demarcation was not
+conveyed energetically enough from London. On the other hand, Cecil
+Rhodes, as well as his friends and advisers, did not foresee that a war
+would not put them in power at the Transvaal, but would give that country
+to the Empire to rule, to use its riches and resources for the good of the
+community at large.
+
+The saddest feature of the South African episode was its sordidness. This
+robbed it of every dignity and destroyed every sympathy of those who
+looked at it impartially or from another point of view than that of
+pounds, shillings and pence. England has been cruelly abused for its
+conduct in South Africa, and abused most unjustly. Had that feeling of
+trust in the justice and in the straightforwardness of Great Britain only
+existed in the Dark Continent, as it did in the other Colonies and
+elsewhere, it would have proved the best solution to all the entangled
+questions which divided the Transvaal Republic from the Mother Country by
+reason of its manner of looking at the exploitation of the gold mines. On
+its side too, perhaps, England might have been brought to consider the
+Boers in a different light had she disbelieved a handful of people who had
+every interest in the world to mislead her and to keep her badly informed
+as to the truth of the situation.
+
+When war broke out it was not easy for the Command to come at once to a
+sane appreciation of the situation, and, unfortunately for all the parties
+concerned, the unjust prejudices which existed in South Africa against Sir
+Alfred Milner had to a certain extent tinctured the minds of people at
+home, exercising no small influence on the men who ought to have helped
+the High Commissioner to carry through his plans for the settlement of the
+situation subsequently to the war. The old saying, "Calumniate,
+calumniate, something will always remain after it," was never truer than
+in the case of this eminent statesman.
+
+It took some time for matters to be put on a sound footing, and before
+this actually occurred many mistakes had been made, neither easy to
+rectify nor possible to explain. Foremost among them was this question of
+the Concentration Camps. Not even the protestations of the women who
+subsequently went to the Cape and to the Transvaal to report officially on
+the question were considered sufficient to dissipate the prejudices which
+had arisen on this unfortunate question. The best reply that was made to
+Miss Hobhouse, and to the lack of prudence which spoiled her good
+intentions, was a letter which Mrs. Henry Fawcett addressed to the
+_Westminster Gazette_. In clear, lucid diction this letter re-established
+facts on their basis of reality, and explained with self-respect and
+self-control the inner details of a situation which the malcontents had
+not given themselves the trouble to examine.
+
+"First," says this forceful document, "I would note Miss Hobhouse's
+frequent acknowledgments that the various authorities were doing their
+best to make the conditions of Camp life as little intolerable as
+possible. The opening sentence of her report is, 'January 22.--I had a
+splendid truck given me at Cape Town through the kind co-operation of Sir
+Alfred Milner--a large double-covered one, capable of holding twelve
+tons.' In other places she refers to the help given to her by various
+officials. The commandant at Aliwal North had ordered L150 worth of
+clothing, and had distributed it; she undertook to forward some of it. At
+Springfontein 'the commandant was a kind man, and willing to help both the
+people and me as far as possible.' Other similar quotations might be made.
+Miss Hobhouse acknowledges that the Government recognise that they are
+responsible for providing clothes, and she appears rather to deprecate the
+making and sending of further supplies from England. I will quote her
+exact words on this point. The italics are mine. 'The demand for clothing
+is so huge that it is hopeless to think that the private charity of
+England and Colonial working parties combined can effectually cope with
+it. _The Government recognise that they must provide necessary clothes,_
+and I think we all agree that, having brought these people into this
+position, it is their duty to do so. _It is, of course, a question for
+English folk to decide how long they like to go on making and sending
+clothes._ There is no doubt they are immensely appreciated; besides, they
+are mostly made up, which the Government clothing won't be.' Miss Hobhouse
+says that many of the women in the Camp at Aliwal North had brought their
+sewing machines. If they were set to work to make clothes it might serve a
+double purpose of giving them occupation and the power of earning a little
+money, and it would also ensure the clothes being made sufficiently large.
+Miss Hobhouse says people in England have very incorrect notions of the
+magnificent proportions of the Boer women. Blouses which were sent from
+England intended for women could only be worn by girls of twelve and
+fourteen; they were much too small for the well-developed Boer maiden, who
+is really a fine creature. Could a woman's out-out size be procured? It
+must be remembered that when Miss Hobhouse saw the Camps for the first
+time it was in January, the hottest month in the South African year; the
+difficulty of getting supplies along a single line of rail, often broken
+by the enemy, was very great. The worst of the Camps she saw was at
+Bloemfontein, and the worst features of this worst Camp were:
+
+"1. Water supply was bad.
+
+"2. Fuel was very scarce.
+
+"3. Milk was very scarce.
+
+"4. Soap was not to be had.
+
+"5. Insufficient supply of trained nurses.
+
+"6. Insufficient supply of civilian doctors.
+
+"7. No ministers of religion.
+
+"8. No schools for children.
+
+"9. Exorbitant prices were demanded in the shops.
+
+"10. Parents had been separated from their children.
+
+"Within the Report itself, either in footnotes or in the main body of the
+Report, Miss Hobhouse mentions that active steps had already been taken to
+remedy these evils. Tanks had been ordered to boil all the water. She left
+money to buy another, and supplied every family with a pan to hold boiled
+water. Soap was given out with the rations. 'Moreover, the Dutch are so
+very full of resources and so clever they can make their own soap with fat
+and soda.' The milk supply was augmented; during the drought fifty cows
+only yielded four buckets of milk daily. 'After the rains the milk supply
+was better.' An additional supply of nurses were on their way. 'The Sister
+had done splendid work in her domain battling against incessant
+difficulties ... and to crown the work she has had the task of training
+Boer girls to nurse under her guidance.'
+
+"Ministers of religion are in residence, and schools under Mr. E.B.
+Sargant, the Educational Commissioner, are open for boys and girls.
+Children have been reunited to parents, except that some girls, through
+Miss Hobhouse's kind efforts, have been moved away from the Camps
+altogether into boarding schools. Even in this Bloemfontein Camp,
+notwithstanding all that Miss Hobhouse says of the absence of soap and the
+scarcity of water, she is able to write: 'All the tents I have been in are
+exquisitely neat and clean, except two, and they are ordinary.' Another
+important admission about this Camp is to be found in the last sentence of
+the account of Miss Hobhouse's second visit to Bloemfontein. She describes
+the iron huts which have been erected there at a cost of L2,500, and says:
+'It is so strange to think that every tent contains a family, and every
+family is in trouble--loss behind, poverty in front, privation and death
+in the present--but they have agreed to be cheerful and make the best of
+it all.'
+
+"There can be no doubt that the sweeping together of about 68,000 men,
+women and children into these Camps must have been attended by great
+suffering and misery, and if they are courageously borne it is greatly to
+the credit of the sufferers. The questions the public will ask, and will
+be justified in asking, are:
+
+"1. Was the creation of these Camps necessary from the military point of
+view?
+
+"2. Are our officials exerting themselves to make the conditions of the
+Camps as little oppressive as possible?
+
+"3. Ought the public at home to supplement the efforts of the officials,
+and supply additional comforts and luxuries?
+
+"The reply to the first question can only be given by the military
+authorities, and they have answered it in the affirmative. Put briefly,
+their statement is that the farms on the veldt were being used by small
+commandoes of the enemy as storehouses for food, arms and ammunition; and,
+above all, they have been centres for supplying false information to our
+men about the movements of the enemy, and correct information to the enemy
+about the movements of the British. No one blames the Boer women on the
+farms for this; they have taken an active part on behalf of their own
+people in the war, and they glory in the fact. But no one can take part in
+war without sharing in its risks, and the formation of the Concentration
+Camps is part of the fortune of war. In this spirit 'they have agreed,' as
+Miss Hobhouse says, 'to be cheerful and make the best of it.'
+
+"The second question--'Are our officials exerting themselves to make the
+Camps as little oppressive as possible?'--can also be answered in the
+affirmative, judging from the evidence supplied by Miss Hobhouse herself.
+This does not imply that at the date of Miss Hobhouse's visit, or at any
+time, there were not matters capable of improvement. But it is confessed
+even by hostile witnesses that the Government had a very difficult task,
+and that its officials were applying themselves to grapple with it with
+energy, kindness and goodwill. Miss Hobhouse complains again and again of
+the difficulty of procuring soap. May I quote, as throwing light upon the
+fact that the Boer women were no worse off than the English themselves,
+that Miss Brooke-Hunt, who was in Pretoria to organise soldiers'
+institutes a few months earlier than Miss Hobhouse was at Bloemfontein,
+says in her interesting book, 'A Woman's Memories of the War': 'Captain
+---- presented me with a piece of Sunlight soap, an act of generosity I
+did not fully appreciate till I found that soap could not be bought for
+love or money in the town.' A Boer woman of the working-class said to Miss
+Brooke-Hunt: 'You English are different from what I thought. They told us
+that if your soldiers got inside Pretoria they would rob us of everything,
+burn our houses, and treat us cruelly; but they have all been kind and
+respectable. It seems a pity we did not know this before.' Miss Hobhouse
+supplies some rather similar testimony. In her Report she says: 'The
+Mafeking Camp folk were very surprised to hear that English women cared a
+rap about them or their suffering. It has done them a lot of good to hear
+that real sympathy is felt for them at home, and I am so glad I fought my
+way here, if only for that reason.'
+
+"In what particular way Miss Hobhouse had to fight her way to the Camps
+does not appear, for she acknowledges the kindness of Lord Kitchener and
+Lord Milner in enabling her to visit them; we must therefore suppose that
+they provided her with a pass. But the sentence just quoted is enough in
+itself to furnish the answer to the third question--'Is it right for the
+public at home to supplement by gifts of additional comforts and luxuries
+the efforts of our officials to make Camp life as little intolerable as
+possible?' All kinds of fables have been told to the Boer men and women of
+the brutality and ferocity of the British. Let them learn by practical
+experience, as many of them have learnt already, that the British soldier
+is gentle and generous, and that his women-folk at home are ready to do
+all in their power to alleviate the sufferings of the innocent victims of
+the war. I know it will be said, 'Let us attend to the suffering loyalists
+first.' It is a very proper sentiment, and if British generosity were
+limited to the gift of a certain definite amount in money or in kind, I
+would be the first to say, 'Charity begins at home, and our people must
+come first.' But British generosity is not of this strictly measured kind.
+By all means let us help the loyal sufferers by the war; but let us also
+help the women and children of those who have fought against us, not with
+any ulterior political motive, but simply because they have suffered and
+are bound to suffer much, and wounded hearts are soothed and healed by
+kindness.
+
+"Mr. Rowntree has spoken quite publicly of the deep impression made on the
+Boer women by the kindness shown them by our men. One said she would be
+always glad to shake hands with a British soldier; it was because of the
+kindly devices they had invented to make over their own rations to the
+women and children during the long journey when all were suffering from
+severe privations. Another Boer girl, referring to an act of kindness
+shown her by a British officer, remarked quietly: 'When there is so much
+to make the heart ache it is well to remember deeds of kindness.' The more
+we multiply deeds of kindness between Boer and Briton in South Africa, the
+better for the future of the two races, who, we hope, will one day fuse
+into a united nation under the British flag."
+
+I hope the reader will forgive me for having quoted in such abundance from
+Mrs. Fawcett's letter, but it has seemed to me that this plain,
+unprejudiced and unsophisticated report, on a subject which could not but
+have been viewed with deep sorrow by every enlightened person in England,
+goes far to remove the doubts that might still linger in the minds of
+certain people ignorant of the real conditions of existence in South
+Africa.
+
+A point insufficiently realised in regard to South African affairs is the
+manner in which individuals comparatively devoid of education, and with
+only a hazy notion of politics, contrived to be taken into serious
+consideration not only by those who visited South Africa, but by a certain
+section of English society at home, and also in a more restricted measure
+by people at the Cape and in the Transvaal who had risen. These people
+professed to understand local politics better than the British
+authorities, and expected the officials, as well as public opinion in
+Great Britain, to adopt their advice, and to recognise their right to
+bring forward claims which they were always eager to prosecute.
+Unfortunately they had friends everywhere, to whom they confided their
+regrets that the British Government understood so very little the
+necessities of the moment. As these malcontents were just back from the
+Rand, there were plenty of people in Cape Town, and especially in Port
+Elizabeth, Grahamstown, and other English cities in Cape Colony, ready to
+listen to them, and to be influenced by the energetic tone in which they
+declared that the Boers were being helped all along by Dutch Colonials who
+were doing their best to betray the British.
+
+In reality, matters were absolutely different, and those who harmed
+England the most at that time were precisely the people who proclaimed
+that they, and they alone, were loyal to her, and knew what was necessary
+and essential to her interests and to her future at the Cape of Good Hope
+and the Rand. Foremost amongst them were the adherents of Rhodes, and this
+fact will always cling to his memory--most unfortunately and most
+unjustly, I hasten to say, because had he been left absolutely free to do
+what he liked, it is probable he would have been the first to get rid of
+these encumbrances, whose interferences could only sow animosity where
+kindness and good will ought to have been put forward. Cecil Rhodes wanted
+to have the last and definite word to say in the matter of a settlement of
+the South African difficulties, and as no one seemed willing to allow him
+to utter it, he thought that he would contrive to attain his wishes on the
+subject by seeming to support the exaggerations of his followers. Yet, at
+the same time, he had the leaders of the Dutch party approached with a
+view of inducing them to appeal to him to put himself at their head.
+
+This double game, which while it lasted constituted one of the most
+curious episodes in a series of events of which every detail was
+interesting, I shall refer to later in more detail, but before doing so
+must touch upon another, and perhaps just as instructive, question--the
+so-called refugees, whose misfortunes and subsequent arrogance caused so
+many anxious hours to Sir Alfred Milner during his tenure of office at the
+Cape and later on in Pretoria.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+IN FLIGHT FROM THE RAND
+
+
+One of the greatest difficulties with which the Imperial Government found
+themselves confronted when relations between Great Britain and the
+Transvaal became strained was the influx of refugees who at the first hint
+of impending trouble left Johannesburg and the Rand, and flocked to Cape
+Town.
+
+The greater number were aliens. From Russia in particular they had flocked
+to the Transvaal when they heard of its treasures. Adventurers from other
+parts of Europe, with a sprinkling of remittance men, also deserted
+Johannesburg. Only the few were real English residents who, from the time
+the Rand had begun to develop, had been living and toiling there in order
+to win sufficient for the maintenance of their families. All this mass of
+humanity, which passed unnoticed when scattered over wide areas in the
+vicinity of Pretoria or Johannesburg, had lived for many years in the
+expectation of the day when the power of the Transvaal Republic would be
+broken. They had discounted it perhaps more than they should have done had
+the dictates of prudence been allowed to take the lead against the wishes
+of their hearts.
+
+When war became imminent the big mining houses considered it wiser to
+close their offices and mines, and for these unfortunate beings, deprived
+of their means of existence, the position became truly a lamentable one.
+They could not very well remain where they were, because the Burghers, who
+had never taken kindly to them, made no secret of their hostility, and
+gave them to understand very clearly that as soon as war had been declared
+they would simply turn them out without warning and confiscate their
+property. Prudence advised no delay, and the consequence was that,
+beginning with the month of August, and, indeed, the very first days which
+followed upon the failure of the Bloemfontein Conference, a stream of
+people from the Transvaal began migrating toward Cape Colony, which was
+supposed to be the place where their sufferings would find a measure of
+relief that they vainly imagined would prove adequate to their needs. At
+the Cape, strangely enough, no one had ever given a thought to the
+possibility of such a thing happening. In consequence, the public were
+surprised by this persisting stream of humanity which was being poured
+into the Colony; the authorities, too, began to feel a despair as to what
+could be done. It is no exaggeration to say that for months many hundreds
+of people arrived daily from the north, and that so long as communications
+were kept open they continued to do so.
+
+At first the refugees inundated the lodging-houses in Cape Town, but these
+soon being full to overflowing, some other means had to be devised to
+house and feed them. Committees were formed, with whom the Government
+officials in the Colony worked with great zeal and considerable success
+toward alleviating the misery with which they found themselves confronted
+in such an unexpected manner. The Municipal Council, the various religious
+communities, the Medical men--one and all applied themselves to relief
+measures, even though they could not comprehend the reason of the blind
+rush to the Cape. Nor, in the main, could the refugees explain more
+lucidly than the one phrase which could, be heard on all sides, no matter
+what might have been the social position: "We had to go away because we
+did not feel safe on the Rand." In many cases it would have been far
+nearer to the truth to say that they had to go because they could no
+longer lead the happy-go-lucky existence they had been used to.
+
+The most to be pitied among these people were most certainly the Polish
+Jews, who originally had been expelled from Russia, and had come to seek
+their fortunes at Johannesburg. They had absolutely no one to whom they
+could apply, and, what was sadder still, no claim on anyone; on the
+English Government least of all. One could see them huddling together on
+the platform of Cape Town railway station, surrounded by bundles of rags
+which constituted the whole of their earthly belongings, not knowing at
+all what to do, or where to go to. Of course they were looked after,
+because English charity has never stopped before differences of race and
+creed, but still it was impossible to deny that their constantly
+increasing number added considerably to the difficulties of the situation.
+
+A Jewish Committee headed by the Chief Rabbi of Cape Town, the Rev. Dr.
+Bender, worked indefatigably toward the relief of these unfortunate
+creatures, and did wonders. A considerable number were sent to Europe, but
+a good many elected to remain where they were, and had to be provided for
+in some way till work could be found for them, which would at least allow
+them to exist without being entirely dependent on public charity. Among
+the aliens who showed a desire to remain in South Africa were many in
+possession of resources of their own; but they carefully concealed the
+fact, as, upon whatever it amounted to, they counted to rebuild their
+fortunes when Britain became sole and absolute mistress on the Rand.
+
+The most dangerous element in the situation was that group of easygoing
+loafers who lived on the fringe of finance and picked up a living by doing
+the odd things needed by the bigger speculators. When things began to be
+critical, these idlers were unable to make money without working, and
+while prating of their patriotism, made the British Government responsible
+for their present state of penury. These men had some kind of instruction,
+if not education, and pretended they understood all about politics, the
+government of nations, and last, but not least, the conduct of the war.
+Their free talk, inflamed with an enthusiasm got up for the occasion, gave
+to the stranger an entirely incorrect idea of the position, and was
+calculated to give rise to sharp and absolutely undeserved criticisms
+concerning the conduct of the administration at home, and of the
+authorities in the Colony. They also fomented hatred and spite between the
+English and the Dutch.
+
+The harm done by these people, at a moment when the efforts of the whole
+community ought to have been directed toward allaying race hatred, and
+smoothing down the differences which had arisen between the two white
+sections of the population, is almost impossible of realisation for one
+who was not in South Africa at the time, and who could not watch the slow
+and gradual growth of the atmosphere of lies and calumny which gradually
+divided like a crevasse the very people who, in unison, might have
+contributed more than anything else to bring the war to a close. One must
+not forget that among these refugees who poisoned the minds of their
+neighbours with foundationless tales of horror, there were people who one
+might have expected to display sound judgment in their appreciation of the
+situation, and whose relatively long sojourn in South Africa entitled them
+to be heard by those who found themselves for the first time in that
+country. They were mostly men who could talk well, even eloquently; and
+they discussed with such apparent knowledge all the circumstances which,
+according to them, had brought about the war, that it was next to
+impossible for the new-comers not to be impressed by their language--it
+seemed bubbling over with the most intense patriotism.
+
+The observer must take into account that among these people there happened
+to be a good many who, as the war went on, enrolled themselves in the
+various Volunteer Corps which were formed. These gave the benefit of their
+experience to the British officers, who relied on the knowledge and
+perception of their informants because of themselves, especially during
+the first months which followed upon their landing, they could not come to
+a clearly focused, impartial judgment of the difficulties with which they
+found their efforts confronted. One must also remember that these officers
+were mostly quite young men, full of enthusiasm, who flamed up whenever
+the word rebellion was mentioned in their presence, and who, having
+arrived in South Africa with the firm determination to win the war at all
+costs, must not be blamed if in some cases they allowed their minds to be
+poisoned by those who painted the plight of the country in such a
+lugubrious tint. If, therefore, acts of what appeared to be cruelty were
+committed by these officers, it would be very wrong to make them alone
+responsible, because they were mostly done out of a spirit of self-defence
+against an enemy whom they believed to be totally different from what he
+was in reality, and who if only he had not been exasperated, would have
+proved of better and healthier stuff than, superficially, his acts seemed
+to indicate.
+
+There was still another class of refugee, composed of what I would call
+the rich elements of the Rand: the financiers, directors of companies;
+managers and engineers of the different concerns to which Kimberley and
+Johannesburg owed their celebrity. From the very first these rightly
+weighed up the situation, and had been determined to secure all the
+advantages which it held for anyone who gave himself the trouble to
+examine it rationally. They came to Cape Town under the pretence of
+putting their families out of harm's way, but in reality because they
+wanted to be able to watch the development of the situation at its centre.
+They hired houses at exorbitant prices in Cape Town itself, or the
+suburbs, and lived the same kind of hospitable existence which had been
+theirs in Johannesburg. Their intention was to be at hand at the
+settlement, to put in their word when the question of the different
+financial interests with which they were connected would crop up--as it
+was bound to do.
+
+The well-to-do executive class forming the last group had the greatest
+cause to feel alarmed at the consequences which might follow upon the war.
+Although they hoped that they would be able to maintain themselves on the
+Rand in the same important positions which they had occupied previous to
+the war, yet they had enough common sense to understand that they would
+not be allowed under a British administration the same free hand that
+President Kruger had given, or which they had been able to obtain from him
+by means of "refreshers" administered in some shape or other. It is true
+that they had always the alternative of retiring from South Africa to Park
+Lane, whence they would be able to astonish Society, but they preferred to
+wait, in case the crash were still delayed for some little time.
+
+The big houses, such as Wernher, Beit and Co.--the head of which, at
+Johannesburg, was Mr. Fred Eckstein, a man of decided ability, who perhaps
+was one of those in South Africa who had judged the situation with
+accuracy--would have preferred to see the crisis delayed. Mr. Eckstein and
+other leading people knew very well that sooner or later the Transvaal was
+bound to fall to England, and they would have felt quite content to wait
+quietly until this event had been accomplished as a matter of course, by
+the force of circumstances, without violence. President Kruger was such an
+old man that one could, in a certain sense, discuss the consequences which
+his demise was bound to bring to South Africa. There was no real necessity
+to hurry on events, nor would they have been hurried had it not been for
+the efforts of the Rhodesians, whose complaints had had more than anything
+else to do with the failure of the Bloemfontein Conference, and all that
+followed upon that regrettable incident. It was the Rhodesians, and not
+the big houses of the Rand, who were most eager for the war.
+
+The exploitation of Rhodesia, the principal aim of which was the
+foundation of another Kimberley, had turned out to be a disappointment in
+that respect, and there remained nothing but making the best of it,
+particularly as countless companies had been formed all with a distinctly
+mineral character to their prospectuses. Now, if the Rand, with all its
+wealth and its still unexplored treasures, became an appanage of
+Kimberley, it would be relatively easy to effect an amalgamation between
+gold and diamond mines, which existed there, and the Rhodesian companies.
+Under these conditions it was but natural that despite an intelligent
+comprehension of the situation, Sir Alfred Milner was nevertheless unable
+to push forward his own plans in regard to the Transvaal and its aged
+President, Mr. Kruger.
+
+The misfortune of the whole situation, as I have already pointed out, was
+that the men who had attempted to play a high game of politics, in reality
+understood very little about them, and that instead of thinking of the
+interests of the Empire to which they professed themselves to be so deeply
+attached, they thought in terms of their personal outlook. Rhodes alone of
+those not in official position saw the ultimate aim of all these entangled
+politics. But unfortunately, though he had the capacities and experience
+of a statesman, he was not a patient man; indeed, throughout his life he
+had acted like a big spoiled child, to whom must be given at once whatever
+he desires. Too often he acted in the present, marring the future by
+thinking only of the immediate success of his plans, and brutally starting
+to work, regardless of consequences and of his personal reputation. Though
+his soul was essentially that of a financier and he would ride rough-shod
+over those who conducted their business affairs by gentler methods, yet at
+the same time, by a kind of curious contrast, he was always ready, nay,
+eager, to come to the material help of his neighbour--maybe out of
+affection for him; maybe out of that special sort of contempt which makes
+one sometimes throw a bone to a starving dog one has never seen before.
+The greatest misfortune in Rhodes' life was his faculty, too often applied
+upon occasions when it were best suppressed, of seeing the mean and sordid
+aspects of an action, and of imagining that every man could be bought,
+provided one knew the price. He was so entirely convinced of this latter
+fact that it always caused him a kind of impatience he did not even give
+himself the trouble to dissimulate, to find that he had been mistaken.
+This happened to him once or twice in the course of his career.
+
+The English party in the Colony regretted until the end of Rhodes' life
+the strange aberration that allowed the Raid, and made him sacrifice his
+reputation for the sake of hastening an event which, without his
+interference, would almost surely soon have come to pass. The salient
+feature of the Raid was its terrible stupidity; in that respect it was
+worse than a crime, for crime is forgotten, but nothing can efface from
+the memory of the world or the condemnation of history a colossally stupid
+political blunder.
+
+After the foolish attempt to seize hold of their country, the Boers
+distrusted British honour and British integrity; and doubting the word or
+promises of England, they made her responsible for this mistake of Cecil
+Rhodes. Rhodes, however, refused to recognise the sad fact. The big
+magnates of Johannesburg said that the wisest thing Rhodes could have done
+at this critical juncture would have been to go to Europe, there to remain
+until after the war, thus dissociating himself from the whole question of
+the settlement, instead of intriguing to be entrusted with it.
+
+The fact of Cecil Rhodes' absence would have cleared the whole situation,
+relieved Sir Alfred Milner, and given to the Boers a kind of political and
+financial security that peace would not be subject to the ambitions and
+prejudices of their enemies, but concluded with a view to the general
+interests of the country.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+DEALING WITH THE REFUGEES
+
+
+The refugees were a continual worry and annoyance to the English community
+at the Cape. As time went on it became extremely difficult to conciliate
+the differing interests which divided them, and to prevent them from
+committing foolish or rash acts likely to compromise British prestige in
+Africa. The refugees were for the most boisterous people. They insisted
+upon being heard, and expected the whole world to agree with their
+conclusions, however unstable these might be. It was absolutely useless to
+talk reason to a refugee; he refused to listen to you, but considered
+that, as he had been--as he would put it--compelled to leave that modern
+paradise, the Rand, and to settle at Cape Town, it became the
+responsibility of the inhabitants of Cape Town to maintain him. Table
+Mountain echoed with the sounds of their vain talk. They considered that
+they were the only people who knew anything about what the English
+Government ought to do, and who criticised it the most, threatening at
+every moment that they would write to their influential friends--even the
+poorest and most obscure had "influential friends"--revealing the
+abominable way in which English interests were neglected in Cape Colony,
+where the Government, according to them, only helped the rebels, and
+considered their wants and requirements in preference to those of their
+own people.
+
+At first, when they were not known as they deserved to be, some persons
+fresh from the Mother Country, to whom South African morals and intrigues
+were unknown, took to heart the position as well as the complaints of
+those refugees. Hearing them continually mention cases in which rebel
+Dutch had, in this way or that, shown their want of allegiance to the
+British Government, conclusions were jumped at that there must exist a
+reason for these recriminations and allegations, and that British
+officials were in reality too anxious to conciliate the anti-English
+elements in the Colony, to the detriment of the loyalists, whose feelings
+of patriotism they considered, as a matter of course, required no reward
+and scarcely any encouragement. These people, unequipped with the truth,
+took up with a warmth which it certainly did not deserve the cause of
+these loyalists, sought their advice, and formed a totally wrong and even
+absurd opinion both as to South African politics and the conduct of the
+representatives of the Queen in Cape Town.
+
+All the misrepresentation and misunderstanding which took place
+increasingly, led to animosity on the part of the Dutch. Rightly or
+wrongly, it was taken as a matter of course that Rhodes favoured the idea
+of a total annihilation of the Cape Dutch. And as he was considered a kind
+of demigod by so many the idea was widely circulated, and became at last
+deeply rooted in the minds of most of the white population of South
+Africa, who, without being able to say why, considered it in consequence a
+part of its duty to exaggerate in the direction of advocating severity
+toward the Dutch. This did not contribute to smoothen matters, and it grew
+into a very real danger, inimical to the conclusion of an honourable and
+permanent peace. Federation, which at one time had been ardently wished
+for almost everywhere, became a new cause for anxiety as soon as it was
+known that Rhodes was in favour of it. People fancied that his ambitions
+lay in the direction of a kind of dictatorship exercised by himself over
+the whole of South Africa, a dictatorship which would make him in effect
+master of the country.
+
+This, however, was the last thing which the financiers on the Rand wished.
+Indeed, they became quite alarmed at the thought that it might become
+possible, and hastened to explain to Sir Alfred Milner the peril which
+such a thing, if it ever happened, would constitute for the community at
+large. Their constant attendance upon Sir Alfred, however, gave rise to
+the idea that these financiers wanted to have it all their own way with
+him and with the Cabinet at home, and that they meant to confiscate the
+Transvaal to their own profit.
+
+The presence of the moneyed class at the Cape had also another drawback:
+it exasperated the poorer refugees, who could not forgive those who, too,
+had fled the Rand, for having so successfully saved their own belongings
+from the general ruin and remained rich, when so many of those who had
+directly or indirectly helped them to acquire their wealth were starving
+at their door. In reality the magnates of the Rand spent huge sums in the
+relief of their poorer brethren in misfortune. I know from personal
+experience, having often solicited them in favour of, say, some
+unfortunate Russian Jew or a destitute Englishman who had lost all his
+earthly belongings through the war. These millionaires, popularly accused
+of being so hardhearted, were always ready with their purses to help those
+who appealed to their charity. But the fact that they were able to live in
+large and luxurious houses whilst so many others were starving in hovels,
+that their wives wore diamonds and pearls, and that they seemed still to
+be able to gratify their every desire, exasperated the multitude of
+envious souls congregated at the Cape.
+
+A general feeling of uneasiness and of unpleasantness began to weigh on
+the whole atmosphere, and as it was hardly possible for anyone to attack
+openly those who had inexhaustible purses, it became the fashion to say
+that the Dutch were responsible for the general misfortune, and to
+discover means of causing them unpleasantness.
+
+On the other hand, as the war went on and showed no signs of subsiding,
+the resources of those who, with perfect confidence in its short duration,
+had left the Rand at a moment's notice, began to dwindle the more quickly
+insomuch as they had not properly economised in the beginning, when the
+general idea was prevalent that the English army would enter Pretoria for
+the Christmas following upon the beginning of the war, and that an era of
+unlimited prosperity was about to dawn in the Transvaal. I do believe that
+among certain circles the idea was rooted that once President Kruger had
+been expelled from the Rand its mines would become a sort of public
+property accessible to the whole community at large, and controlled by all
+those who showed any inclination for doing so.
+
+The mine owners themselves looked upon the situation from a totally
+different point of view. They had gathered far too much experience
+concerning the state of things in South Africa to nurse illusions as to
+the results of a war which was bound to put an end to the corruption of
+the Transvaal Republic. They would have preferred infinitely to let things
+remain in the condition into which they had drifted since the Raid,
+because they understood that a strong British Government would be
+interested in putting an end to the abuses which had transformed the Rand
+into an annexe of the Stock Exchange of almost every European capital.
+But, as the war had broken out, they preferred that it should end, in the
+establishment of a regular administration which could neither be bought
+nor persuaded to serve interests in preference to the public. They did not
+relish the possible triumph of a single man, backed by a powerful
+financial company, with whom they had never lived upon particularly
+affectionate terms.
+
+Rather than see South Africa continue under the influence which had
+hitherto held it in grip, the magnates preferred to associate themselves
+with Sir Alfred Milner to bring about as soon as possible a Federation of
+the different South African States, where there would be no place for the
+ambition of a single individual, and where the domination of one financial
+company would become an impossibility. These magnates were reasonable
+people after all, quite content, after they had taken the cream, to allow
+others to drink. The fever for gold had left them. The fact was that these
+people were not at all anxious to remain at Johannesburg; they preferred
+to gather dividends in London rather than to toil in South Africa; the
+merry, merry days of the Rand had come to an end.
+
+Altogether, indeed, things were beginning to slow down at Johannesburg, in
+spite of the fictitious agitation by the Rhodesian party. The war had come
+as a relief to everybody, and afforded the magnates the opportunity which
+they had been longing for, to enforce order and economy upon a stringent
+scale in their mines and to begin modelling their concerns after a
+European fashion, closing the door upon adventurers and cutting off the
+"financial fringe." The times when new fields of exploitation were
+discovered every day were at an end; the treasures which the Transvaal
+contained in the way of precious metals and stones had all been located;
+and very few surprises could be expected in that direction. It was time
+for the pioneers to retire upon their laurels and to give to themselves,
+as well as to their fortunes, the sedate appearance which they required in
+order to be able to take a place amid the most elegant and exclusive
+society of Europe. Had Rhodes remained alive he would have proved the one
+great obstacle which the magnates of the Rand would have to take into
+consideration, the disturbing element in a situation that required calm
+and quiet.
+
+If Cecil Rhodes had been allowed to decide alone as to the best course of
+action to pursue he also might have come to the same conclusion as these
+magnates. During those moments when he was alone with his own thoughts and
+impulses he would have realised his duty toward his country. He was
+conscious, if others were not, of how utterly he had lost ground in South
+Africa, and he understood that any settlement of the South African
+difficulties could only become permanent if his name were not associated
+with it. This, though undeniable, was a great misfortune, because Rhodes
+understood so perfectly the art of making the best of every situation, and
+using the resources to hand, that there is no doubt he would have brought
+forward a practical solution of the problems which had cropped up on every
+side. He might have proved of infinite use to Sir Alfred Milner by his
+thorough knowledge of the Dutch character and of the leaders of the Dutch
+party with whom he had worked. But Rhodes was not permitted to decide
+alone his line of conduct: there were his supporters to be consulted, his
+so-called friends to pacify, the English Jingoes to satisfy, and, most
+difficult of all, the Bond and Dutch party to please. Moreover, he had
+been indulging in various intrigues of his own, half of which had been
+conducted through others and half carried out alone, with what he believed
+was success. In reality they proved to be more of these disappointments he
+had courted with a carelessness which would have appeared almost
+incredible if one did not know Cecil Rhodes. The Rhodesians, who with
+intention had contrived to compromise him, never left him a moment to his
+own thoughts. Without the flatterers who surrounded him Rhodes would
+undoubtedly have risen to the height of the situation and frankly and
+disinterestedly put himself at the disposal of the High Commissioner. But
+they managed so to irritate him against the representative of the Queen,
+so to anger him against the Dutch party to which he had belonged formerly,
+and so to persuade him that everybody was jealous of his successes, his
+genius and his position in South Africa, that it became relatively easy
+with a man of Rhodes' character to make him smart under the sense of
+non-appreciation. Thus goaded, Rhodes acted often without premeditation.
+
+In contrast to this impatience and the sense of unsatisfied vanity, the
+coolness and greatness of character of Sir Alfred Milner appeared in
+strong contrast, even though many friends of earlier days, such as W.T.
+Stead, had turned their backs upon Sir Alfred, accusing him of being the
+cause of all the misfortunes which fell upon South Africa. But those who
+thus condemned Sir Alfred did not understand the peculiar features of the
+situation. He was credited with inspiring all the harsh measures which
+were employed on occasion by others, measures which he had stridently
+disapproved. Rhodes, in his place, would have killed somebody or destroyed
+something; Sir Alfred went slowly on with his work, disdained praise as
+well as blame, and looked toward the future. I leave it to the reader to
+decide which of the two showed himself the better patriot.
+
+The refugees did not take kindly to the High Commissioner. They had been
+full of illusions concerning the help they fondly imagined he would be
+glad to offer them, and when they discovered that, far from taking them to
+his bosom, he discouraged their intention of remaining in Cape Town until
+the end of the war, they grumbled and lied with freedom. Sir Alfred gave
+them very distinctly to understand that they had better not rely on the
+British Government to feed and clothe them. He said that they would be
+well advised to try to find some work which would allow them to keep
+themselves and their families. But especially he recommended them to go
+back to Europe, which, he gravely assured the refugees, was the best place
+for them and their talents. This did not please those refugees who posed
+as martyrs of their English patriotism and as victims of the hatred of
+Kruger and of the Dutch. They expected to be petted and flattered as those
+looked up to as the saviours of the Empire.
+
+All the foregoing applies to the middle-class section of the refugees. The
+poorer ones grumbled also, but in a different manner, and their irritation
+was rather directed towards the military authorities. As for the
+millionaires, with a few exceptions they also did not care for the High
+Commissioner for reasons elaborated in earlier pages of this volume. They
+even considered that it would be prejudicial to their interests to allow
+Rhodes to be upon too intimate terms with Sir Alfred Milner, so they kept
+a faithful watch at Government House as well as at Groote Schuur, and in
+doing so added to the tension which, up to the last moment of Sir Alfred's
+tenure of office at Cape Town, existed between him and Cecil Rhodes. Too
+courteous to tell his redoubtable adversary that he had better mind his
+own business, convinced, on the other hand, of the latter's great
+capacities and great patriotism, Sir Alfred was constantly doing all that
+he could do in reason to pacify him. Cecil Rhodes used to make most bitter
+and untrue remarks as to the stupidity of the Imperial Government at home
+and the incapacity of the men in charge of its armies in South Africa. All
+this was repeated right and left with the usual exaggeration, and reached,
+as perhaps was intended, those whom it concerned. The result was that
+Rhodes found himself tabooed at Pretoria. This he said was due to the
+great fear which his influence over public opinion in South Africa
+inspired among those in command there.
+
+The big trouble with Rhodes was that he would never own himself in the
+wrong. He quibbled, he hesitated, he postponed replies to questions
+submitted for his consideration. He wearied everybody around him with his
+constant prevarications in regard to facts he ought to have accepted
+without flinching if he wanted to regain some of his lost prestige.
+Unfortunately for himself and for the cause of peace in South Africa,
+Rhodes fancied himself immensely clever at "biding his time," as he used
+to say. He had ever lurking somewhere in his brain the conviction that one
+day the whole situation at Cape Town and Pretoria would become so
+entangled that they would have to send for him to beg him as a favour to
+step round and by his magic touch unravel all difficulties. His curious
+shyness, his ambition and his vanity battled with each other so long that
+those in authority at last came to the sad conclusion that it was far
+better to look elsewhere for support in their honest efforts at this
+important moment in the existence of the African Continent.
+
+One last attempt was made. It was backed up by people in London, among
+others by Stead. Stead liked the Great Imperialist as well as one man can
+like another, and had a great and justified confidence in Rhodes' good
+heart as well as in that indefinable nobility which manifested itself at
+times in his strange, wayward nature. Moreover, being gifted with a keen
+sense of intuition, the famous journalist realised quite well the immense
+work that might have been done by England through Rhodes had the latter
+consented to sweep away those men around him who were self-interested.
+
+But Rhodes preferred to maintain his waiting attitude, whilst trying at
+the same time to accumulate as many proofs as possible that people wanted
+him to assert himself at last. It was the fact that these proofs were
+denied to him at the very minute when he imagined he held them already in
+his hands which led to his suddenly turning once more against the persons
+he had been almost on the point of propitiating. It led him to begin the
+movement for the suspension of the Constitution in Cape Colony, out of
+which he expected so much and which he intended to use as his principal
+weapon against the enemies whom he suspected. That was the last great
+political venture in his life; it failed, but merciful Providence allowed
+him not to see the utter collapse of his latest house of cards.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+UNDER MARTIAL LAW
+
+
+It may be useful, or at any rate of interest, before I lay my pen aside,
+to refer to several things which, at the time they occurred, caused
+torrents of ink to flow both in England and in South Africa.
+
+The most important, perhaps, was the application of martial law in Cape
+Colony. I must repeat that I hold no brief for England. My affection and
+admiration for her does not go to the extent of remaining absolutely blind
+to faults she has made in the past, and perhaps is making in the present.
+I will not deny that martial law, which, unfortunately, is a necessity in
+wartime, was sometimes applied with severity in South Africa. But the
+odium rests principally on the loyalists; their spiteful information in
+many cases induced British officers to treat as rebels people who had
+never even dreamt of rebellion.
+
+It must not be forgotten that those to whom was entrusted the application
+of martial law had perforce to rely on local residents, whom they could
+not possibly suspect of using these officers to satisfy private
+animosities of further private interests. These British officers had never
+been used to see suspicion reign as master, or to watch a perfectly
+conscious twisting of the truth in order to condemn, or even destroy,
+innocent people. A young and probably inexperienced officer sent into a
+small place like Aliwal North or Uitenhage, for instance, found himself
+obliged to rely for information as to the loyalty of the inhabitants on
+some adventurer who, through capitalist influence, had obtained an
+executive post of some kind. How can one wonder, therefore, that many
+regrettable incidents occurred and were immediately made capital of by the
+Bond party further to embitter the feelings of the Dutch Colonists?
+
+Many illegal acts were performed under martial law; of some a mention was
+made in the Cape Town Parliament; these, therefore, do not admit of doubt.
+For instance, as Mr. Neethling said in the Legislative Council, a man of
+seventy was sent down from Paarl to Beaufort West without being allowed to
+say good-bye to his wife, who was left behind without means of support.
+Their house was searched for papers, but without result, and the man--a
+member of the Afrikander Bond--was sent back, after eighteen months'
+deportation, without any charge having been made against him. He was an
+auctioneer and shipping agent, and during his absence his business was
+annexed by a rival. One British Colonial, who held office at Stellenbosch,
+said to one family, without even making an inquiry as to their conduct,
+"You are rebels and I will take your mules"--which was done. The mules
+were afterwards sold to the Commissariat Department by the man who had
+commandeered them. Is it a matter of astonishment, therefore, that many
+people felt sore and bitter at all that they had undergone and were going
+through?
+
+The administration of martial law in the country districts was absolutely
+deplorable; but when one examines minutely the circumstances of the cases
+of injustice about which one could have no doubt, it always emerged that
+these never proceeded from British officers, who, on the contrary,
+wherever they found themselves in command, invariably acted with humanity.
+The great mistake of the military authorities was that they had far too
+much confidence in the Volunteer Corps and those members of it who were
+only anxious to make money out of existing circumstances. Unfortunately,
+certain officers in command of the different corps were extreme Jingoes,
+and this distorted their whole outlook. People said at the time of the war
+that some districts of Cape Colony had been turned into hells; some
+things, in truth, called for strong comment. No words could be energetic
+enough to describe the manner in which martial law had been
+administered--in the district of Graaf Reinet, for instance. The
+commandants--this justice must be rendered to them--generally meant well,
+but, unfortunately, they were assisted by men of less stable character as
+intelligence officers. These, in their turn, unwisely without due inquiry,
+engaged subordinates, upon whom they relied for their information. Graaf
+Reinet people had had to put up with something akin to the Spanish
+Inquisition. Men there were afraid to speak for fear of espionage, the
+most innocent remarks were distorted by spies recruited from an uncertain
+section of the community. A cattle inspector was deported without trial;
+in consequence, the Secretary for Agriculture decided not to employ him
+again; at Graaf Reinet a Colonial intelligence officer constantly declared
+in public that it was his intention to drive the people into rebellion;
+and so instances could be multiplied.
+
+The rebellion was not due to martial law. In Graaf Reinet the prison was
+frequently so crowded, often by men who did not in the least know why,
+that no more sleeping accommodation could be found in it. People were in
+durance vile because they would not join the town guard or defence force.
+So overcrowded the prison became that many persons contracted disease
+during their incarceration.
+
+For these sad occurrences the Cape Government was not initially to blame;
+more than once they had remonstrated with the local military authorities,
+but reports concerning their conduct were not allowed to reach the ears of
+Lord Roberts or of Lord Kitchener. Very often a Hottentot informed against
+respectable citizens to the intelligence officer, and by virtue of that
+they were imprisoned as long as the military authorities deemed fit. When
+released, a man would sometimes find that his house had been sacked and
+his most valuable property carried away. Persons were deported at an
+hour's notice without reasons being given, and thereafter scouts took
+possession of their farms and plundered and destroyed everything. Four
+wagon-loads of men, women and children were deported from their homes at
+Beaufort West. In vain did they ask what they had done. Everybody of the
+name of Van Zyl in the district of Graaf Reinet was deported! not a single
+person was left on their farms except those who had driven them out of
+them. And after these had done their work the victims were told, "Now you
+can return home." Some had to walk back many miles to their farms, to find
+only ruin left. Many white people were imprisoned on the mere evidence of
+coloured persons, the reputation for veracity of whom was well known all
+over South Africa, and whose evidence against a white man would never have
+been admitted in any court of law previous to the war.
+
+In Uitenhage the same kind of thing occurred. It was sufficient for a Boer
+column to pass near the farm of an Afrikander for the latter to be taken
+to prison without the slightest investigation. No one knew where the fines
+paid went, and certainly a good many of those which were imposed by the
+commanders of the scouts and volunteer corps never reached the coffers of
+the Government.
+
+At Cradock, Somerset East, Graaf Reinet and Middelburg people were
+compelled to eradicate prickly pears and do other hard labour simply
+because they had remained quietly at home, according to the proclamation
+issued by Sir Alfred Milner, and refused to join a volunteer corps of some
+sort or other. Many magistrates, acting on instructions, forced guiltless
+people to walk a four to six hours' drive under the pretence of subduing
+their spirits.
+
+One case especially was of such a flagrant nature that it illustrates how
+far the malice of these so-called loyalists went and the harm which their
+conduct did to the British Government. The act which I am going to relate
+would never have been committed by any genuine English officer, no matter
+under what provocation. There is also a detail which must be noticed: by a
+strange coincidence all the victims of oppression were, with but few
+exceptions, men of means, whom, therefore, it was worth while to plunder.
+The story is that a certain Mr. Schoeman, a man of wealth and position
+residing on Vlakteplaats, a farm in the division of Oudtshoorn, received,
+on August 28th, 1901, a message through his son from the military scouts
+who were stationed at De Jaeger's farm in the neighbourhood, instructing
+him to hand over his horses to their care. No written order from the
+Commandant was exhibited to Mr. Schoeman, either at that time or on his
+request, nor was any evidence adduced at his trial later on to prove that
+such an order had really been given by an officer administering martial
+law in the district. Nevertheless, Mr. Schoeman obeyed the order, and on
+the same afternoon sent his horses, three in number, to De Jaeger. The
+scouts refused to take his horses, and told them to bring them on the
+following morning, Thursday, August 29th. This Schoeman did; on coming to
+the place with them he found that the scouts had left, and was obliged to
+take the animals again back to his farm. On the afternoon of that same day
+he received a message from the scouts, and in reply told them to come and
+see him. He had meanwhile, for safety's sake, sent two horses to be
+concealed away from his stable, and kept one, a stallion, at the
+homestead.
+
+The next day, Friday, Boers appeared early in the afternoon. They took the
+stallion, and the following day they returned and asked where the other
+horses were. Mr. Schoeman declined to give any information, but they
+discovered and seized them. Immediately after the Boers had left, Mr.
+Schoeman dispatched one of his farm boys named Barry to De Jaeger, the
+nearest military post, to report the occurrence. The scouts had, however,
+disappeared, and he learned from De Jaeger that before leaving they had
+received a report of the presence of the Boers. On the return of Barry,
+Mr. Schoeman endeavoured to obtain another messenger. Owing to the state
+of the country, which was infested with the enemy, his efforts proved
+unavailing.
+
+During the next week Mr. Schoeman, with a considerable number of his
+neighbours, was ordered to Oudtshoorn. On his arrival he was arrested,
+without any charge or warrant, and confined for some three months, bail
+being refused. No preliminary examination was held as provided in the
+instructions on martial law issued May 1st, 1901. On Sunday, December 1st,
+it was notified to Mr. Schoeman that he would be tried on the following
+day, and the charges were for the first time communicated to him. On
+December 2nd the court assembled and Mr. Schoeman was charged with three
+offences:
+
+1. For not having handed his horses over to the proper military
+authorities, whereby they fell into the hands of the enemy.
+
+2. For having been on friendly terms with the enemy.
+
+3. For having failed to report the presence of the enemy.
+
+He was found guilty on the first and last charges and not guilty on the
+second count, being sentenced to six months' hard labour and to pay a fine
+of L500, or to suffer a further term of twelve months' hard labour in lieu
+of the fine. The sentence was confirmed, the fine was paid by Mr.
+Schoeman, and he underwent the imprisonment for one month with hard labour
+and for five months without hard labour, which was remitted upon order
+from Lord Kitchener, who, without even being fully instructed as to the
+circumstances of the case, of his own accord lightened the terrible
+sentence passed upon Mr. Schoeman.
+
+Later on Mr. Schoeman was cleared of the calumnies that had been the cause
+of his suffering. In this case, as in many others, the victim was the
+object of the private vengeance of a man who had had a grudge against him,
+and repaid it in that abominable manner.
+
+One of the worst mistakes among the many committed during the South
+African War was to allow residents to be invested with what was nothing
+less than unlimited authority over their fellow-citizens. The British
+Government, which was made responsible for these acts, would never have
+given its sanction to any one of them; mostly, it was unaware of the
+original facts. The English military authorities dealt in absolute good
+faith, which makes the more shameful the conduct of those who wilfully led
+them into error. Their one fault was not to realise that certain
+individuals were not fit to administer martial law. In one particular
+district the man in authority seemed to have as the single aim of his life
+the punishment of anyone with Dutch sympathies or of Dutch blood. It was
+useless to appeal to him, because whenever a complaint was brought by an
+inhabitant of the district he simply refused to listen to it, and poured a
+torrent of abuse at the head of the bringer. One of his most notorious
+actions was the treatment which, by his orders, was inflicted on an old
+man who enjoyed the general esteem of both the English and the Dutch
+community, a former member of the House of Assembly. His house was
+searched, the floors were taken up, and the whole garden was dug out of
+recognition in a search for documents that might have proved that his son,
+or himself, or any other member of his family had been in correspondence
+with the two Republics. All this kind of thing was done on hearsay
+evidence, behind which lay personal motives. Had the settlement of the
+country been left entirely in the hands of Lord Kitchener, nothing
+approaching what I have related could have occurred. Unfortunately for all
+concerned, this was precisely the thing which the Rhodesian and other
+interests opposed. Much of the loyalty, about which such a fuss was made
+at the Cape, was loyalty to the sovereign in the pocket, and not loyalty
+to the Sovereign on the throne. This concern for wealth was seen in many
+aspects of life in South Africa, and occasionally invaded drastically the
+realm of social well-being. A case in point was the opposition by the
+financial interests to a tax on brandy. In South Africa drunkenness was
+one of the worst evils, especially among the coloured race, yet the
+restrictive influence of a tax was withheld. The underlying motive was
+nothing but the desire to avoid the tax on diamonds, which every
+reasonable person claimed and considered to be a source of revenue of
+which the Government had no right to deprive itself. While Rhodes lived
+the legislation introduced and maintained by his powerful personality
+revealed the policy of compromise which he always pursued. He was
+eminently practical and businesslike. He said to the members of the Bond,
+"Don't you tax diamonds and I won't tax dop," as the Cape brandy is
+called. The compact was made and kept in his lifetime.
+
+When Rhodes was dead and a big democratic British element had come into
+the country after the war, those in power began wondering how it was that
+diamonds, which kept in luxury people who did not live in the country and
+consequently had no interest whatever in its prosperity, were not taxed.
+The Ministry presided over by Sir Gordon Sprigg shared this feeling, and
+in consequence found itself suddenly forsaken by its adherents of the day
+before, and the Rhodesian Press in full cry against the Government. Sir
+Gordon Sprigg was stigmatised as a tool of the Bond and as disloyal to the
+Empire after the fifty years he had worked for it, with rare
+disinterestedness and great integrity. Nevertheless, the Ministry declared
+that, as there existed an absolute necessity for finding new resources to
+liquidate the expenses contingent on the war, it would propose a tax on
+diamonds and another one on dop.
+
+The exasperation of the Rhodesian party, which was thus roused, was the
+principal reason why the agitation for the suspension of the Constitution
+in Cape Colony was started and pursued so vigorously in spite of the small
+chance it had to succeed. His support of this agitation may be called the
+death-bed effort of Rhodes. When he was no longer alive to lend them his
+strong hand, the Rhodesian party was bound to disperse. They tried in vain
+to continue his policy, but all their efforts to do so failed, because
+there was nothing really tangible for them to work upon.
+
+With Cecil Rhodes came to an end also what can be called the romantic
+period of the history of South Africa, that period during which fortunes
+were made and lost in a few days; when new lands were discovered and
+conquered with a facility and a recklessness that reminded one of the
+Middle Ages. The war established an equilibrium which but for it would
+have taken years to be reached. It sealed the past and heralded the dawn
+of a new day when civilisation was to assert itself, to brush away many
+abuses, much cruelty and more injustice. The race hatred which the
+personality of Rhodes had done so much to keep alive, collapsed very
+quickly after his death, and as time went on the work done with such
+unselfishness and such quiet resolution by Sir Alfred Milner began to bear
+fruit. It came gradually to be understood that the future would justify
+his aims.
+
+[Illustration: THE RT. HON. SIR JOHN GORDON SPRIGG]
+
+The war was one of those colossal crises which shake the foundations of a
+country and change the feelings of a whole generation of men and women in
+regard to each other. Whilst it lasted it roused the worst passions and
+showed up the worst aspects of the character of the people who played a
+part in it; but once it was over the false fabric upon which the
+animosities of the day before had been built fell. A serious and more
+enlightened appreciation of the events that had brought about the
+cataclysm which had cleared the air took the place of the furious outburst
+of hatred that had preceded it. People began to realise that it was not
+possible, on a continent where Europeans constituted but a small minority,
+that they could give the coloured races a terrible example of disunion and
+strife and still maintain dominance. Both the English and Dutch had at
+last recognised the necessity for working together at the great task of a
+Federation of the South African States, which would allow the whole of the
+vast Southern Continent to develop itself on a plane of higher progress
+under the protection of the British flag. This Union was conceived many,
+many years earlier by Cecil Rhodes. It was his great spirit that thought
+of making into one great nation the agglomeration of small nationalities,
+white and black, that lay over the veldt and impenetrable forests of South
+and Central Africa. For a long space of years Cecil Rhodes was South
+Africa.
+
+So long as Rhodes lived it would have been impossible for South Africa
+to escape the influence of his brain, which was always plotting and
+planning for the future whilst forgetting more often than was healthy or
+wise the preoccupations of the present. After the Queen's flag had been
+hoisted at Pretoria, Cecil Rhodes alive would have proved an anomaly in
+South Africa. Cecil Rhodes dead would still retain his position as a
+dreamer and a thinker, a man who always pushed forward without heeding the
+obstacles, forgetful of aught else but the end he was pursuing, the
+country which he loved so well, and, what he cared for even more, his own
+ambition. Men like Rhodes--with all their mistakes to mar their dazzling
+successes--cannot be replaced; it is just as difficult to take up their
+work as it is to fill the gap caused by their disappearance.
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+I have come to the end of what I intended at first to be a book of
+recollections but which has resolved itself into one of impressions. A
+more competent pen than mine will one day write the inner history of this
+South African War, which by an anomaly of destiny had quite different
+results from those expected. So many things have occurred since it
+happened that the whole sequence of events, including the war, is now
+looked upon by many people as a simple incident in a long story.
+
+In reality the episode was something more than that. It was a
+manifestation of the great strength of the British Empire and of the
+wonderful spirit of vitality which has carried England triumphantly
+through crises that would have wrecked any other nation. The incidents
+which followed the war proved the generosity that lies at the bottom of
+the English character and the grandeur that comes out of it in those grave
+moments when the welfare of a nation appears to be at stake and its rulers
+are unable to apply to a succession of evils and dangers the right remedy
+to bring about peace and contentment. No other nations possess this
+remarkable and distinctive feature. England very wisely refused to notice
+the bitterness which still persisted in the early days after the
+conclusion of peace, and devoted her energies to the one immense and
+immediate work of Federation.
+
+The colossal work of Union had been conceived in the shape which it was
+eventually to assume by Sir Alfred Milner, who, after having laid the
+foundations, was patriot enough to allow others to achieve its
+consummation, because he feared the unjust estimate of his character,
+disseminated by interested persons, might compromise the desired object
+and far-reaching possibilities of an enterprise which the most sanguine
+had never imagined could be accomplished within so short a space of time.
+He had toiled courageously toward the founding of a new State where the
+rights of every white as well as of every coloured man should be respected
+and taken into account, and where it would be impossible for a handful of
+rich men by the mere power of riches to control the lives and consciences
+of others.
+
+The time of Sir Alfred Milner's administration was the transitory period
+between the primitive and the civilised that no nation escapes, and this
+period Sir Alfred used in working toward the establishment of a strong and
+wise government. Whether the one which started its course of existence on
+the day when the Federation of South Africa became an accomplished fact
+was strong and wise it is not for me to say. At least it was a patriotic
+government, one which worked sincerely at the abolition of the race hatred
+which the war had not entirely killed, and also one which recognised that
+after all it was the principle of Imperial government that alone could
+bring back prosperity and security to unfortunate and bleeding South
+Africa.
+
+The war gave to the Empire the loyal support and co-operation of the Dutch
+population at the Cape and also in the Transvaal, and the fidelity with
+which General Botha fulfilled his duty toward the Mother Country in the
+difficult moments of 1914 proved the strong link forged in 1902 between
+the British Empire and South Africa. Now that years have passed it is
+possible to look with a less passionate eye upon the past and upon the men
+who took a leading part in the events which gave to the British Empire
+another fair dominion. They appear to us as they really were, and we can
+more justly accord them their proper valuation. The personality of Cecil
+Rhodes will always remain a great one; his merits and his defects will be
+reduced to their proper relative proportions, and the atmosphere of
+adulation or antagonism which, as the occasion suited, was poured upon
+him, be dissipated by time's clarifying influences. His real work
+consisted in the opening of new sources of wealth and new spheres of
+activity to a whole multitude of his fellow-countrymen, and of giving his
+native land an extension of its dominions in regions it had never
+penetrated before Cecil Rhodes' enterprising spirit of adventure and of
+conquest sent him into the wilderness of Africa to open a new and
+radiating centre of activity and development for his country. The
+conception of the Cape to Cairo Railway was one of those projects for
+which his country will ever remain grateful.
+
+Yes! Rhodes was a great Englishman in spite of his faults, and perhaps on
+account of his faults. Beside the genius of a Darwin or of a Pasteur, the
+talent of a Shakespeare or of a Milton, the science of a Newton or of a
+Lister, his figure seems a small one indeed, and it is absurd to raise him
+to the same level as these truly wonderful men. The fact that the activity
+of Cecil Rhodes lay in quite a different direction does not, however,
+diminish the real importance of the work which he did, nor of the services
+which he rendered to his country. The mistake is to judge him as a
+universal genius. His genius had a particular bent; it was always directed
+toward one point and one only, that of material advantages to be acquired
+for the nation to which he belonged and of which he was so proud to be the
+son. Without him South Africa would possibly have been lost for the
+British Empire, which owes him most certainly a great debt in that
+respect.
+
+The years which have gone by since his death have proved that in many
+things Rhodes had been absolutely mistaken. Always he was an attractive,
+and at times even a lovable, personality; a noble character marred by
+small acts, a generous man and an unscrupulous foe; violent in temper,
+unjust in his view of facts that displeased him, understanding chiefly his
+personal interests, true to those whom he considered his friends, but
+implacable toward the people whom he himself had wronged. He was a living
+enigma to which no one had ever found a solution; because he presented
+constantly new and unexpected sides that appeared suddenly and shattered
+the conclusion to which one had previously arrived.
+
+In Europe Rhodes would not only have been impossible, but he would never
+have found the opportunity to give full rein to his faculties of
+organisation and of conquest. He knew no obstacles and would admit none in
+his way; he was of the type of Pizarro and of Fernando Cortez, with fewer
+prejudices, far more knowledge, and that clear sense of civilisation which
+only an Englishman born and bred amid the traditions of liberty can
+possess. But he was lacking in the fine political conception of government
+which Sir Alfred Milner possessed, and whilst refusing to admit the
+thought of compromise in matters where a little yielding to the wishes and
+desires of others might have secured him considerable advantage, he yet
+allowed himself to become entangled in intrigues which he denied as soon
+as he perceived that they could not be successful, but for which the world
+always condemned and never forgave, and even in some cases despised him.
+
+Notwithstanding the great brilliance of his intelligence and the strength
+of his mind, Cecil Rhodes will always be found inferior to the present
+Viscount Milner as a statesman. Rhodes could not and would not wait.
+Milner spent his whole existence in waiting, and waited so successfully
+that he lived to see the realisation of the plans which he had made and
+which so many, even among his friends, had declared to be quite impossible
+for him to realise. Milner, about whose tact and mental greatness so many
+false notions existed in South Africa as well as elsewhere, had been the
+one man who had seen clearly the consequences of the war. As he told me
+one day when we were talking about the regrettable race-hatred which lent
+such animosity to the struggle: "It will cease sooner than one thinks."
+
+The wise administrator, who had studied human nature so closely as he had
+done politics, had based his judgments on the knowledge which he had
+acquired of the spirit of colonisation which makes Great Britain so
+superior to any other nation in the world, and his belief that her
+marvellous spirit of adaptation was bound to make itself felt in South
+Africa as it had elsewhere. Sir Alfred Milner knew that as time went on
+the Afrikanders would realise that their erstwhile enemies had given them
+the position to which they had always aspired, a position which entitled
+them to take a place among the other great nations of the world. He knew,
+too, that their natural spirit of pride and of vanity would make them
+cherish the Empire that had allowed them to realise their ambitions of the
+past. Until the war they had been proud of their gold and of their
+diamonds; after the war they would be proud of their country. And by the
+consciousness which would gradually come to them of the advantages which
+their Federation under the British flag had brought to them they would
+become also ardent British patriots--blessing the day when, in a passing
+fit of insanity, goaded into it by people who had never seen clearly the
+situation, President Kruger had declared war on England.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+Africa, South, charm of, 22
+ conquest of, 1
+ drunkenness in, 223
+ English colonists, 14
+ prior to Boer War, 6
+ Union of (_see_ Union)
+
+Afrikander Bond, 86, 99
+ and Rhodes, 73, 82, 84
+ and Sir A. Milner, 134
+
+Afrikander party compel Rhodes' resignation, 50
+Aliwal North concentration camp, 182
+America's response to concentration camp appeal, 165
+
+
+ B
+
+Barkly West, Rhodes elected for, 28
+Barnato, Barney, 24, 137
+ his awe of Rhodes, 60
+Beit, Alfred, 24
+Bender, Rev. Dr., Chief Rabbi of Cape Town, 194
+Bloemfontein, concentration camp at, 182, 184
+Bloemfontein Conference, the, 13, 16, 140
+ failure of, 67, 104
+Boer War, concentration camps, 157 _et seq._
+ not a war of annihilation, 3
+ prime cause of, 128, 137, 139, 178
+ Rhodes' prophecy, 67
+Boers, the, mistrust of England after the Raid, 200
+ pre-war hygienic conditions of, 160 (_Cf. also_ Dutch)
+Botha, General, 83
+ imperialism of, xii, 229
+British Empire, South Africa added to, 3
+British Government, the, a missed opportunity, 41
+ and Boer concentration camps, 162
+British South Africa Company, constitution of, 44
+ (_See also_ Chartered Company)
+Brooke-Hunt, Miss, in Pretoria, 186
+Buller, Sir Redvers, and siege of Kimberley, 94, 95
+
+
+ C
+
+Cape Colony, diamond fields, 3
+ loyalty to England, 129
+ martial law in, 214 _et seq._
+ mutiny of Dutch in, 8
+ overcrowded prisons, 217
+ Rhodes as Premier, 30, 43, 44
+ Sir Gordon Sprigg as Premier, 99, 121
+Cape to Cairo Railway, 81, 124, 229
+Cape Town, influx of refugees, 191 _et seq._
+Chamberlain, Joseph, 104
+ policy of, 133
+Chartered Company of South Africa, 25, 26, 78, 80
+ sinister rumours, 45
+Concentration camps, 141, 142, 157
+ hygienic conditions of, 160
+ inner organisation, 173
+ Miss Hobhouse's charges, and Mrs. Henry Fawcett's reply to, 165, 181
+ necessity for, 161
+ rations, 171
+Cronje, General, 94
+
+
+ D
+
+De Beers Consolidated Mines, 24, 80, 112
+ power of Company, 114
+Delagoa Bay, 91
+Dop tax, the, 223
+Dutch, the, and Dr. Jameson, 149
+ and Sir A. Milner, 151
+ enmity with English, 11
+ mutiny in Cape Colony, 8
+ popularity of Rhodes with, 30, 43, 73
+ reconciliation with English, 129 (_Cf. also_ Boers)
+
+
+ E
+
+Eckstein, F., 97, 197
+England acquires the Transvaal, 1
+ the question of concentration camps, 159
+English, the
+ as colonists, 14, 15
+ enmity with the Dutch, 11
+ reconciliation with the Dutch, 129
+
+
+ F
+
+Fawcett, Mrs. Henry, reply to Miss Hobhouse, 181
+Frenchman, a, and a Johannesburg mining property, 64
+
+
+ G
+
+Glen Grey Act, the, 126
+Graaf Reinet, martial law in, 216
+Green Point (Cape Town) concentration camp, 170
+Groote Schuur, the house and gardens, 153
+
+
+ H
+
+Hammond, John Hays, 138
+Hely-Hutchinson, Sir W.F., 99
+Hobhouse, Miss, pamphlet on concentration camps, 165 _et seq._
+Hofmeyr, Mr., 38, 43, 83, 84, 86, 135, 150, 155
+ popularity of, 136
+
+
+ I
+
+I.D.B. Act, the, unwisdom of, 113
+Imperial Commission report on concentration camps, 166
+
+
+ J
+
+Jameson, Dr., affection for Rhodes, 72, 148
+ becomes Prime Minister, 73
+ death of, 148 (note)
+ enters Transvaal territory, 47 (_see_ Jameson Raid)
+ political aspirations of, 56
+ Progressive leader, 72
+ relations with Rhodes after the raid, 54
+ rumours of his forthcoming raid, 45
+ the Dutch and, 149
+Jameson Raid, the, 9, 30
+ a colossal blunder, 200
+ aftermath of, 69
+ its aim, 53
+ tacitly encouraged by Rhodes, 51, 67
+Jews, Polish, plight of, 193
+Jingoes, the, 69, 107, 130, 135, 142, 163, 216
+Joel, S., 24
+Johannesburg, a shady operation in, 63
+ flight from, 191
+ goldfields of, 24
+
+
+ K
+
+Kekewich, Colonel, entrusted with defence of Kimberley, 94
+Kimberley, diamond mines in, 17, 24, 87
+ relief of, 116
+ Rhodes' purchase of plots in, 21
+ Rhodes' secret negotiations, 76
+ siege of, 75, 83, 94
+ the I.D.B. Act in operation, 113
+Kitchener, Lord, and Boer concentration camps, 159
+ intervenes in the Schoeman case, 221
+ Rhodes and, 147
+Koopman, Mrs. van, author's admiration for, 48
+ disillusionment of, 47, 74, 146
+ her alarm at raid rumours, 45
+ intimacy with Rhodes, 40
+ Rhodes denies raid projected, 46
+ under police supervision, 48
+Kruger, President, 30, 53, 198
+ and Mrs. van Koopman, 40
+ candid criticisms of Rhodes, 92, 93
+ death sentence for Reformers, 51
+ "refreshers" for, 197
+ Rhodes attempts alliance with, 90
+ Rhodes' _bete-noire_, 150
+ Rhodes' duplicity, 74
+ warned against Sir A. Milner, 104
+
+
+ L
+
+Ladysmith, relief of, 116
+Lobengula, King, 36
+ and Rhodesia, 25
+ Cecil Rhodes and, 19
+ his son becomes one of Rhodes' gardeners, 37
+Loyalists and concentration camps, 174
+
+
+ M
+
+Mafeking concentration camp, 186
+Majuba, defeat of British at, 73
+Martial law in Cape Colony, 214 _et seq._
+"Martyrdom of Man" (Reade's), its influence on Rhodes, 126
+Matabele Rebellion, the, Rhodes' courage in, 43
+Matabeleland, 19
+ acquired by the Chartered Company, 26, 90, 112
+Matoppo Hills, an historic meeting, 43
+ Rhodes' burial-place, 72
+Maxwell, Lady, an appeal by, 164
+Merriman, Mr., 134, 150
+ severs relations with Rhodes, 73
+Methuen, Lord, mandate to Rhodes, 95
+Milner, Sir (Viscount) Alfred, 4, 58
+ a hint to Rhodes, 147
+ and the Boers, 12, 85, 132
+ and Rhodes, 74, 140, 148
+ and the De Beers Company, 115
+ appointed Governor of Cape Colony, 8, 85
+ dignified speech, 134
+ efforts for peace, 156
+ his great object, 86
+ influence of, 104
+ misunderstood and misjudged 7, 12, 85, 104, 107, 108, 180, 228
+ overruled from Whitehall, 135
+ policy of conciliation, 130
+ reports from Rhodes on defence of Kimberley, 94
+ Rhodes' distrust of, 13, 75
+ the refugees and, 210
+ the South African League, 90
+ transferred to Johannesburg, 99
+
+
+ N
+
+Napoleon, Pius VII. on, 35
+Neethling, Mr., and martial law in Cape Colony, 215
+
+
+ O
+
+Orange Free State, flight of the populace, 158
+ illusions of the Dutch in, 176
+ resources of, 8
+
+
+ P
+
+Pius VII., Pope, on Napoleon, 35
+Polish Jews, plight of, 193
+Pretoria, British flag hoisted at, 226
+ Rhodes tabooed at, 211
+ Rhodes visits Kruger at, 91
+ soldiers' institutes at, 186
+
+
+ R
+
+Radziwill, Princess Catherine, and Rhodes, 110, 146
+ and Rhodes' suspicions of Sir A. Milner, 107
+ conversations with Sir A. Milner, 106, 232
+ Rhodes' characteristic note to, 59
+ talks with Rhodes on Reade's "Martyrdom of Man," 127
+ visits concentration camps, 163
+Rand, the, Downing Street and, 179
+ Dutch illusions as to Britain's intentions, 177
+ flight from, 191 _et seq._
+ gold fields of, 90
+ magnates of, 137 _el seq._, 197
+Reade, Winwood, influence of his
+ "Martyrdom of Man" on Rhodes, 126
+Rhodes, Cecil, agitates for suspension of constitution, 118, 155, 213, 224
+ beginning of his fortune, 21
+ created a Privy Councillor, 43
+ death, 129, 153, 224
+ end of his political career, 47, 50, 57, 73
+ enters political life, 28
+ patriotism of, 10,17, 31, 76, 82, 152, 230
+Rhodes, Herbert (brother of Cecil Rhodes), 20
+Rhodesia, annexation of, 24, 25, 28, 35, 36, 78
+ exploitation of, 198
+ question of its mineral wealth, 177
+ Rhodes as "King" of, 122
+Roberts, Lord, complimentary lunch to, 134
+ Rhodes' abuse of, 147
+Rowntree, Mr., and the concentration camps, 187
+Russia, Wallace's work on, 126
+
+
+ S
+
+Sandringham, Rhodes at, 126
+Sargent, E.B., 183
+Sauer, Mr., 86, 117, 134, 150, 155,
+ and Rhodes, 73
+ leader of Bond party, 100
+Schoeman, Mr., illegal arrest of, and Lord Kitchener's
+ intervention, 200, 201
+Schoeman, Mr., and Loyalists, 219
+Schreiner, Mr., 38, 86, 133, 150
+ confidence in Rhodes, 32
+ indignation with Rhodes, 50, 73
+ questions Rhodes, 45
+ Rhodes and, 23, 74
+Schreiner, Olive, on annexation of Rhodesia, 36
+ Rhodes and, 33
+Simonstown, camp for prisoners of war at, 172
+Smuts, General, Imperialism of, xii
+Sonnenberg, Mr., and Rhodes, 26
+South Africa (_see_ Africa, South)
+South African League, 86, 88, 97, 99
+ a petition to Sir Gordon Sprigg, 99, 102
+ and Sir A. Milner, 90
+Southern Cross, the, 22
+Sprigg, Sir Gordon, and the South African League, 99
+ diamond and dop taxes, 224
+ Premier of Cape Colony, 99, 121, 132
+Stead, W.T., admiration of Rhodes, 212
+ and Sir A. Milner, 209
+Steyn, President, and Mrs. van Koopman, 40
+
+
+ T
+
+Transvaal, the, flight of Boer inhabitants, 158
+ gold mines, 1, 3, 17
+ loyalty to England, 129
+ object of Jameson Raid, 53
+ racial qualifications, 137
+Transvaal Republic, intrigues in, 1
+
+
+ U
+
+Uitenhage, martial law in, 218
+Uitlanders, the, and concentration camps, 163
+ quarrel with, 30
+ their part in the Boer War, 16, 97, 137, 139
+Union of South Africa, 228
+ an accomplished fact, 131, 228
+ magnates' views, 207
+ organisation of, 2
+ Sir A. Milner's part in constitution, 14
+ united effort for, 225
+
+
+ W
+
+Wall, David de, 99, 101, 146
+Wales, Prince of (Edward VII.), 126
+Wallace, Mackenzie, meets Rhodes, 126
+Wernher, Beit and Company, 97, 197
+Wet, De, 83
+_Westminster Gazette,_ Mrs. Fawcett's reply to Miss Hobhouse in, 181
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CECIL RHODES***
+
+
+******* This file should be named 16600.txt or 16600.zip *******
+
+
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/6/6/0/16600
+
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://www.gutenberg.org/about/contact
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit:
+https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
diff --git a/16600.zip b/16600.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6d671cf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/16600.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..465ede8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #16600 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/16600)