[South African Memories by Lady Sarah Wilson]@TWC D-Link book
South African Memories

CHAPTER I
12/12

Well do I remember on that occasion how preoccupied was our host, and how incessantly the talk turned to Johannesburg and the raging discontent there.

In truth, Mr.Rhodes's position was then a very difficult one: he was Prime Minister of Cape Colony, and therefore officially neutral; but in his heart he remained the keen champion of the oppressed Uitlanders, having nominated his brother, Frank Rhodes, to be one of the leaders of the Reform Committee at Johannesburg.

No wonder he was graver than was his wont, with many complications overshadowing him, as one afterwards so fully realized.

His kindness as a host, however, suffered no diminution, and I remember how warmly he pressed us to stay with him when we returned from the north, though he did add, "My plans are a little unsettled." This suggested visit, however, was never paid; Mr.
Rhodes a few weeks afterwards was starting for England, to, as he termed it, "face the music." I shall have occasion to describe him in his home, and the life at Groot Schuurr, more fully later on, when I passed many happy and never-to-be-forgotten weeks beneath his hospitable roof.

As years went on, his kindness to both friends and political foes grew almost proverbial, but even in 1895 Groot Schuurr, barely finished, was already known to be one of the pleasantest places near Cape Town--a meeting-place for all the men of the colony either on their way to and from England, or on the occasion of their flying visits to the capital.
FOOTNOTES: [1] Red neck, or Englishman.
[2] Now Sir A.Wools Sampson, K.C.B..


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