[Story of the War in South Africa by Alfred T. Mahan]@TWC D-Link book
Story of the War in South Africa

CHAPTER II {p
29/36

Rents in their khaki showed white skin; from their grimed hands and heads you might have judged them half red men, half soot-black.

Eyelids hung fat and heavy over hollow cheeks and pointed cheekbones.

Only {p.062} the eye remained--the sky-blue, steel-keen, hard, clear, unconquerable English eye--to tell that thirty-two miles without rest, four days without a square meal, six nights--for many--without a stretch of sleep, still found them soldiers at the end.
"That was the beginning of them; but they were not all in till the middle of the afternoon--which made thirty-six hours on their legs.
The Irish Fusiliers tramped in at lunch-time--going a bit short some of them, nearly all a trifle stiff on the feet--but solid, square and sturdy from the knees upward.

They straightened up to the cheers that met them, and stepped out on scorching feet as if they were ready to go into action again on the instant.

After them came the guns--not the sleek creatures of Laffan's Plain, rough with earth and spinning mud from their wheels, but war-worn and fresh from slaughter; you might imagine their damp muzzles were dripping blood.


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