第10部分 (第3/7頁)
無邊的寒冷提示您:看後求收藏(奇妙書庫www.qmshu.tw),接著再看更方便。
although I was but a lad。 I recall that with much graphic detail he told me the story of how; when he was suffering from fever; he was nearly thrown overboard as a dead man off the West Coast of Africa; where he had been serving in the Ashanti Expedition。 Recently I have been reading his very interesting and remarkable autobiography; in which I see he describes this incident。
Subsequently — but I think this was at Pietermaritzburg — I became well acquainted with Colonel (afterwards Sir George) Colley。 He stayed with us at Government House and I remember a curious little incident concerning him。
He was leaving Natal and wished to sell a shot…gun which I wished to purchase; though I am not sure whether this was on my account or on that of Sir Henry Bulwer。 We had a difference of opinion as to the price of the article。 Finally I interviewed him one morning when he was taking his bath; and he suggested that we should settle the matter by tossing。 This I did with a half…sovereign; he giving the call; but who won I forget。
Of my last tragic meeting with poor Colley at the time of the first Boer War I may speak later in this book。
After a short stay at Durban we proceeded to Maritzburg; the seat of government; in some kind of a horse conveyance; as; except for a short time on the coast; there was then no railway in Natal。 In those days it was a charming town of the ordinary Dutch character; with wide streets bordered by sluits of running water and planted with gum trees。
Of the year or so that I spent in Natal I have not much to say that is worthy of record。 The country impressed me enormously。 Indeed; on the whole I think it the most beautiful of any that I have seen in the world; parts of Mexico alone excepted。 The great plains rising by st