Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER III LADYSMITH INVESTED The exodus of the townsfolkCommunications threatenedSlim Piet JoubertEspionage in the townNeglected precautions A truce that paidBritish positions describedBig guns face to faceBoers hold the railwaysFrench's reconnaissanceThe General's flittingA gauntlet of fireAn interrupted telegram Death of Lieutenant Egerton" My cricketing days are over " Under the enemy's guns"A shell in my room"Colonials in actionThe sacrifice of valuable lives. October closed without further hostilities, and its last day was uneventful in a military sense, though full of forebodings in the town, because all knew that the Boers were taking advantage of a brief armistice to bring up reinforcements. On this last day of the month civilians eager to get away from Ladysmith crowded every train. Writing on November ist, Mr. Pearse said: All Saints' Day is observed with some strictness by Boers who do not show similar veneration for other festivals in the Church Calendar. There have at any rate been no hostilities to-day, but from Captain Lambton's Battery on Junction Hill, where the naval 4.7-inch quick-firing gun is being mounted, we have by the aid of the signalman's powerfultelescope watched a significant Boer movement going on for hours. We can see them among the scrubby trees between Lombard's Kop and Umbulwaana (or Bulwaan as it is more generally called), and hurrying off behind that hill along the road that leads southwards. That road cuts the railway not more than six or seven miles out, and their movement threatens our line of communications that way, unless we can manage to check it by judicious use of cavalry and mounted troops. The flight of townsfolk southward continues. They do not even trouble about luggage now, but lock their doors and... --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.