[South African Memories by Lady Sarah Wilson]@TWC D-Link bookSouth African Memories CHAPTER XV 14/18
When the General returned with some more of his Staff, including Lord Brooke, Colonel Douglas Haig,[38] Mr.Brinsley Fitzgerald, and Mr.Brinton, 2nd Life Guards,[39] I was profuse in my apologies, which he promptly cut short by asking me to make the tea, and we had a most cheery meal, interspersed with a good deal of chaff, one of his friends remarking to me that it was probably the only occasion during the last six months in South Africa that General French had been caught asleep. The following day, Sunday, we attended a very impressive military service, at which Lord Roberts and his Staff, in full uniform, were present, and at the conclusion the whole congregation sang the National Anthem with the organ accompaniment.
The volume of sound, together with the well-loved tune, was one not soon to be forgotten. In the evening I had a visit from a stranger, who announced himself to be Mr.Barnes, correspondent to the _Daily Mail_.
This gentleman handed me a letter from my sister, Lady Georgiana Curzon, dated Christmas Day of the previous year, which had at last reached me under peculiar circumstances.
It appeared that, when my resourceful sister heard I had been taken prisoner by the Boers, she decided the best way of communicating with me would be through the President of the South African Republic, via Delagoa Bay.
She had therefore written him a letter as follows: "_Christmas Day, 1899._ "Lady Georgiana Curzon presents her compliments to His Honour President Kruger, and would be very much obliged if he would give orders that the enclosed letter should be forwarded to her sister, Lady Sarah Wilson, who, according to the latest reports, has been taken prisoner by General Snyman." In this letter was enclosed the one now handed to me by Mr.Barnes.
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