[The Great Boer War by Arthur Conan Doyle]@TWC D-Link book
The Great Boer War

CHAPTER 30
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The British had learned their lesson so thoroughly that they often turned the tables upon their instructors.

Again and again the surprise was effected, not by the nation of hunters, but by those rooineks whose want of cunning and of veld-craft had for so long been a subject of derision and merriment.

A year of the kopje and the donga had altered all that.

And in the proportion of casualties another very marked change had occurred.
Time was when in battle after battle a tenth would have been a liberal estimate for the losses of the Boers compared with those of the Briton.
So it was at Stormberg; so it was at Colenso; so it may have been at Magersfontein.

But in this last stage of the war the balance was rather in favour of the British.


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