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

CHAPTER 1
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Such a people like to find the higher morality for themselves, not to have it imposed upon them by those who live under entirely different conditions.

They feel--and with some reason--that it is a cheap form of virtue which, from the serenity of a well-ordered household in Beacon Street or Belgrave Square, prescribes what the relation shall be between a white employer and his half-savage, half-childish retainers.

Both branches of the Anglo-Celtic race have grappled with the question, and in each it has led to trouble.
The British Government in South Africa has always played the unpopular part of the friend and protector of the native servants.

It was upon this very point that the first friction appeared between the old settlers and the new administration.

A rising with bloodshed followed the arrest of a Dutch farmer who had maltreated his slave.


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