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

CHAPTER IV {p
31/61

Its command over the plain country, by permitting fire tier above tier, compensated in part for any lack of development due to limited length or other causes, and afforded also several lines of defence to be successively occupied.

But the height, while it imposes difficulties upon the attacker, has also drawbacks of its own.

A downward, plunging fire demands definite precision and accuracy of {p.144} aim, and in mark firing error in elevation is more commonly found than swerving to the right or left.

The ordinary shot is more apt to fire over a man's head, or strike the ground ahead of him, than to miss him to one side or the other.

When, therefore, it had been found by a few experiences--Talana Hill, Elandslaagte, Belmont and Graspan, in all of which the kopje bore a principal part in the scheme of defence--that the British soldier could not be stopped by them alone, the Boers, without abandoning the kopjes, reinforced them where the ground allowed by utilising the beds of the streams, which except in time of flood are nearly waterless.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books