Read Hero of the Empire: The Boer War, a Daring Escape, and the Making of Winston Churchill Online
Authors: Candice Millard
Tags: #Military, #History, #Political, #Biography & Autobiography, #General, #Europe, #Great Britain
“Go back you…fool”
: Ibid.
“Where were the others?”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 271.
“I cannot describe the surge”
: Winston Churchill,
London to Ladysmith
, 67.
“Amid a tumult of emotion”
: Ibid.
“uttered a ‘miaul’ of alarm”
: Ibid.
Now that disaster had
: Ibid.; Haldane diary, 140I.
“Cannot get out”
: Winston Churchill,
London to Ladysmith
, 67.
CHAPTER 19:
TOUJOURS DE L’AUDACE
“Of course, I shall be recaptured”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 271.
“I said to myself,
‘Toujours de l’audace
’ ”
: Ibid., 271–72.
“at large in Pretoria”
: Ibid., 272.
Even walking at a leisurely pace
: Winston Churchill,
London to Ladysmith
, 68. There is an old story that claims that when describing his escape, Churchill said he swam the “mighty Apies.” The story has become a source of hilarity and ridicule among South Africans, who know the thin, narrow river, but Churchill himself said that it was the product of a reporter’s exaggeration, and he had never described the river in those terms.
“I was in the heart”
: Ibid.
He was also painfully aware
: Ibid.
“He had given me water”
: Ibid.
“Still, it might be only winding”
: Ibid.
“When hope had departed”
: Ibid.
“A wild feeling of exhilaration”
: Ibid.
“I would board a train in motion”
: Ibid.
“I thought of Paul Bultitude’s escape”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 273.
“suddenly and entirely altered”
: Girouard,
History of the Railways During the War in South Africa
, 9–10.
From one day to the next
: Ibid., 10–11.
“My escape must be known at dawn”
: Winston Churchill,
London to Ladysmith
, 68.
When the engine pulled away
: Ibid.
“the consciousness of oppressive difficulties”
: Ibid., 69.
“cosy hiding place”
: Ibid.
“You could lift the heat”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 132.
“manifested an extravagant interest”
: Winston Churchill,
London to Ladysmith
, 70.
“If the human race ever reaches”
: WSC to Lady Randolph Churchill, Jan. 14, 1897, CAC.
“I accumulated in those years”
: Churchill,
My Early Life
, 113–14.
“It seemed good to let the mind”
: Ibid., 117.
CHAPTER 20: “TO TAKE MY LEAVE”
“a full dose of opprobrious epithets”
: Haldane, diary, 140I.
When a soldier-servant stepped
: Haldane,
How We Escaped from Pretoria
, 33.
“Cox’s should be instructed”
: WSC to Lady Randolph Churchill, Nov. 18, 1899, CAC.
“I won’t travel 2d again”
: WSC to Lady Randolph Churchill, Dec. 27, 1891, quoted in Randolph S. Churchill,
Youth
, 171.
“You are really too extravagant”
: Randolph to WSC, March 29, 1892, CAC.
Any money they needed
: Churchill,
My Early Life
, 105.
“Unfortunately, he was an inquisitive”
: Haldane,
How We Escaped from Pretoria
, 33.
“Some gave him no answer”
: Hofmeyr,
Story of My Captivity
, 134.
“gently and apologetically”
: Ibid., 134–35.
“Consternation is now changed into panic”
: Ibid., 135.
“in a great rage”
: Ibid., 135–36.
On the envelope, Churchill could not resist
: Sandys,
Churchill
, 95.
“So great was the Government’s”
: Haldane,
How We Escaped from Pretoria
, 34.
“It seemed to me”
: Hofmeyr,
Story of My Captivity
, 132.
“Vengeance was now”
: Ibid., 136–37.
“We were subjected”
: Haldane,
How We Escaped from Pretoria
, 35.
Additional sentries were added
: Ibid., 34.
“must have bribed the guards”
: Marie de Souza, diary, Dec. 13, 1899.
The Boers launched a massive search
: Marie de Souza, diary, Jonathan de Souza’s notes, Dec. 15, 1899.
“there is reason to believe”
: Churchill and Gilbert,
Churchill Documents
, 2:1089.
“As there was a 7 o’clock”
: Ibid., 2:1089–90.
“Well gentlemen”
: Mrs. T. J. Rodda, “Memoires,”
Pretoriana
, no. 20 (1956).
As soon as Hans Malan
: Marie de Souza, diary, Jonathan de Souza’s notes, Dec. 15, 1899.
“Louis had an awful row”
: Marie de Souza, diary, Dec. 13, 1899.
“If I accept his word”
: Churchill and Gilbert,
Churchill Documents
, 2:1086.
“It is certainly an odd coincidence”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 300.
“At Frere we are now spending”
: Atkins,
Relief of Ladysmith
, 121–22.
“It is a beautiful job”
: Ibid., 122–23.
“They pulled drawers out of chests”
: Ibid., 124.
“a melancholy heap”
: Ibid., 125.
“get extremely close to others”
: Quoted in Meintjes,
General Louis Botha
, 43–44.
It was the simplest sort of tent
: Pakenham,
Boer War
, 268.
In fact, even he was struggling
: Ibid., 267.
“God will fight for you”
: Ibid., 269–70.
That night, with just eight hundred men
: Ibid., 270.
“Only this we know”
: Atkins,
Relief of Ladysmith
, 133.
CHAPTER 21: ALONE
“The western clouds flushed”
: Winston Churchill,
London to Ladysmith
, 70.
As Churchill cautiously stepped
: Ibid.; Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 276.
“I saw myself leaving the train”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 277.
“I could board some truck”
: Ibid.
“to keep body and soul together”
: Ibid.
“My plan began to crumble”
: Ibid.
As soon as he began his journey
: Ibid., 278.
“no trains are to run after 7 p.m.”
:
Detailed History of the Railways in the South African War
, 104.
“fine and sure”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 278.
“There was nothing for it but to plod on”
: Ibid., 279.
“I had heard”
: Ibid.
“the Boer does not recognize”
: Randolph Henry Spencer Churchill,
Men, Mines, and Animals in South Africa
, 92.
Churchill had had a long, spirited conversation
: Winston Churchill,
London to Ladysmith
, 47–49.
Although he was only twenty-three
: South African History Online, Solomon Tshekisho Plaatje; Comaroff, introduction to
Boer War Diary of Sol T. Plaatje
.
During the siege of Mafeking
: Warwick,
Black People and the South African War
, 35.
“It looked like meat”
: Comaroff,
Boer War Diary of Sol T. Plaatje
, 124.
“The attitude of the natives”
: Steevens,
From Capetown to Ladysmith
, 14.
“They might give me food”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 279.
“Suddenly without the slightest reason”
: Ibid., 280.
“It was certainly by no process of logic”
: Ibid.
“the shimmering gloom of the veldt”
: Ibid., 281.
CHAPTER 22:
“WIE IS DAAR?”
Churchill stood in the moonlight
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 282.
“I am Winston Churchill”
: Ibid.
“They had been turned out of work”
: Steevens,
From Capetown to Ladysmith
, 7.
“They spoke now of intolerable grievance”
: Ibid.
Witbank, the part of the Transvaal
: Lang,
Power Base
, 41–43.
Its owner, Julius Burlein
: Sandys,
Churchill
, 126.
“I felt like a drowning man”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 283.
“They have got the hue and cry out”
: Ibid.
“food, a pistol, a guide”
: Ibid.
As determined as Howard was to help
: Ibid., 284.
“The message of the sunset”
: Ibid., 81.
“in a grip of crushing vigour”
: Ibid., 284.
Stepping into the cage
: Interview with John Bird.