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The Capture Of De Wet - The South African Rebellion, 1914 (1915) (Paperback)
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The Capture Of De Wet - The South African Rebellion, 1914 (1915) (Paperback)
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for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book:
CHAPTER III Special session of Parliament?General Botha's great
speech ?On honour and dishonour?Hertzog's extraordinary attitude ?
General Smuts' smashing reply ? Result of the voting. The scene
next shifts to Capetown, where the special session of Parliament
opened on September 9. It was memorable from the fact that it was a
special war session, that it marked the first public appearance in
South Africa of Lord Buxton (who had succeeded Lord Gladstone as
Governor-General), and that the Premier, General Botha, made a
speech which, considering all the circumstances of the case, is as
remarkable as anything the war has produced in the shape of support
to the British cause. Consider, twelve years previously this same
General Botha was in arms against the British, and now the duty and
the responsibility were cast upon him of declaring the readiness of
himself and his compatriots to take up arms on behalf of their
former foes. General Botha knew better than most that such an
attitude on the part of the Government would not be received with
enthusiasm by a section of the South African Dutch, and he also
must have been aware that it would meet with active opposition in
certain quarters. Yet he never flinched from the path he and his
colleagues in the Cabinet evidently had mapped out for themselves
from the first. His speech is such a manly epitome of the
sentiments of the loyal section of his followers, and had such
momentous consequences in bringing the Dutch to the crucial parting
of the ways, that it must be given in full: " As Prime Minister, he
moved: ' This House, duly recognizing the obligation of the Union
as a portion of the British Empire, respectfully requests His
Excellency the Governor-General to convey a humble address to His
Majesty the King, assuring him of its l...
General
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