DAWN
By H. Rider Haggard
1884
CONTENTS
COLONEL QUARITCH, V.C.
A Tale Of Country Life
By H. Rider Haggard
First Published 1888.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I. — HAROLD QUARITCH MEDITATES
CHAPTER II. — THE COLONEL MEETS THE SQUIRE
CHAPTER III. — THE TALE OF SIR JAMES DE LA MOLLE
CHAPTER IV. — THE END OF THE TALE
CHAPTER V. — THE SQUIRE EXPLAINS THE POSITION
CHAPTER VII. — EDWARD COSSEY, ESQUIRE
CHAPTER VIII. — MR. QUEST’S WIFE
CHAPTER IX. — THE SHADOW OF RUIN
CHAPTER XII. — GEORGE PROPHESIES
CHAPTER XIV. — THE TIGER SHOWS HER CLAWS
CHAPTER XVI. — THE HOUSE WITH THE RED PILLARS
CHAPTER XVII. — THE TIGRESS IN HER DEN
CHAPTER XVIII. — “WHAT SOME HAVE FOUND SO SWEET”
CHAPTER XX. — “GOOD-BYE TO YOU, EDWARD”
CHAPTER XXI. — THE COLONEL GOES OUT SHOOTING
CHAPTER XXII. — THE END OF THE MATCH
CHAPTER XXIII. — THE BLOW FALLS
CHAPTER XXIV. — “GOOD-BYE, MY DEAR, GOOD-BYE!”
CHAPTER XXV. — THE SQUIRE GIVES HIS CONSENT
CHAPTER XXVI. — BELLE PAYS A VISIT
CHAPTER XXVII. — MR. QUEST HAS HIS INNINGS
CHAPTER XXVIII. — HOW GEORGE TREATED JOHNNIE
CHAPTER XXIX. — EDWARD COSSEY MEETS WITH AN ACCIDENT
CHAPTER XXX. — HAROLD TAKES THE NEWS
CHAPTER XXXII. — GEORGE PROPHESIES AGAIN
CHAPTER XXXIII. — THE SQUIRE SPEAKS HIS MIND
CHAPTER XXXIV. — GEORGE’S DIPLOMATIC ERRAND
CHAPTER XXXV. — THE SWORD OF DAMOCLES
CHAPTER XXXVI. — HOW THE GAME ENDED
CHAPTER XXXVII. — SISTER AGNES
CHAPTER XXXVIII. — COLONEL QUARITCH EXPRESSES HIS VIEWS
CHAPTER XXXIX. — THE COLONEL GOES TO SLEEP
CHAPTER XLI. — HOW THE NIGHT WENT
CHAPTER XLII. — IDA GOES TO MEET HER FATE
CHAPTER XLIII. — GEORGE IS SEEN TO LAUGH
CHAPTER XLIV. — CHRISTMAS CHIMES
MR. MEESON’S WILL
By H. Rider Haggard
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I. — AUGUSTA AND HER PUBLISHER.
CHAPTER II. — HOW EUSTACE WAS DISINHERITED.
CHAPTER III. — AUGUSTA’S LITTLE SISTER.
CHAPTER IV. — AUGUSTA’S DECISION.
CHAPTER V. — THE R.M.S. KANGAROO.
CHAPTER VI. — MR. TOMBEY GOES FORWARD.
CHAPTER VII. — THE CATASTROPHE.
CHAPTER VIII. — KERGUELEN LAND.
CHAPTER IX. — AUGUSTA TO THE RESCUE.
CHAPTER X. — THE LAST OF MR. MEESON.
CHAPTER XII. — SOUTHAMPTON QUAY.
CHAPTER XIII. — EUSTACE BUYS A PAPER.
CHAPTER XIV. — AT HANOVER-SQUARE.
CHAPTER XV. — EUSTACE CONSULTS A LAWYER.
CHAPTER XVI. — SHORT ON LEGAL ETIQUETTE.
CHAPTER XVII. — HOW AUGUSTA WAS FILED.
CHAPTER XVIII. — AUGUSTA FLIES.
CHAPTER XIX. — MEESON V. ADDISON AND ANOTHER.
CHAPTER XX. — JAMES BREAKS DOWN.
CHAPTER XXI. — GRANT AS PRAYED.
CHAPTER XXII. — ST. GEORGE’S, HANOVER-SQUARE.
CHAPTER XXIII. — MEESON’S ONCE AGAIN.
THE LAST BOER WAR
H. Rider Haggard
CONTENTS.
| PAGES | ||
| Author's Note | v | |
|
CHAPTER I. Its Inhabitants, Laws, and Customs. |
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| Invasion by Mosilikatze — Arrival of the emigrant Boers — Establishment of the South African Republic — The Sand River Convention — Growth of the territory of the republic — The native tribes surrounding it — Capabilities of the country — Its climate — Its inhabitants — The Boers — Their peculiarities and mode of life — Their abhorrence of settled government and payment of taxes — The Dutch patriotic party — Form of government previous to the annexation — Courts of law — The commando system — Revenue arrangements — Native races in the Transvaal | 1-22 | |
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CHAPTER II. Events Preceding the Annexation. |
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| Mr. Burgers elected president — His character and aspirations — His pension from the English Government — His visit to England — The railway loan — Relations of the republic with native tribes — The pass laws — Its quarrel with Cetywayo — Confiscation of native territory in the Keate Award — Treaty with the Swazi king — The Secocœni war — Capture of Johannes' stronghold by the Swazi allies — Attack on Secocœni's mountain — Defeat and dispersion of the Boers — Elation of the natives — Von Schlickmann's volunteers — Cruelties perpetrated — Abel Erasmus — Treatment of natives by Boers — Public meeting at Potchefstroom in 1868 — The slavery question — Some evidence on the subject — Pecuniary position of the Transvaal prior to the annexation — Internal troubles — Divisions amongst the Boers — Hopeless condition of the country | 23-49 | |
|
CHAPTER III. The Annexation. |
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| Anxiety of Lord Carnarvon — Despatch of Sir T. Shepstone as Special Commissioner to the Transvaal — Sir T. Shepstone, his great experience and ability — His progress to Pretoria, and reception there — Feelings excited by the arrival of the mission — The annexation not a foregone conclusion — Charge brought against Sir T. Shepstone of having called up the Zulu army to sweep the Transvaal — Its complete falsehood — Cetywayo's message to Sir T. Shepstone — Evidence on the matter summed up — General desire of the natives for English rule — Habitual disregard of their interests — Assembly of the Volksraad — Rejection of Lord Carnarvon's Confederation Bill and of President Burgers' new constitution — President Burgers' speeches to the Raad — His posthumous statement — Communication to the Raad of Sir T. Shepstone's intention to annex the country — Despatch of Commission to inquire into the alleged peace with Secocœni — Its fraudulent character discovered — Progress of affairs in the Transvaal — Paul Kruger and his party — Restlessness of natives — Arrangements for the annexation — The annexation proclamation | 50-86 | |
|
CHAPTER IV. The Transvaal under British Rule. |
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| Reception of the annexation — Major Clarke and the Volunteers — Effect of the annexation on credit and commerce — Hoisting of the Union Jack — Ratification of the annexation by Parliament — Messrs. Kruger and Jorissen's mission to England — Agitation against the annexation in the Cape Colony — Sir T. Shepstone's tour — Causes of the growth of discontent among the Boers — Return of Messrs. Jorissen and Kruger — The Government dispenses with their services — Despatch of a second deputation to England — Outbreak of war with Secocœni — Major Clarke, R.A. — The Gunn of Gunn plot — Mission of Captain Paterson and Mr. Sergeaunt to Matabeleland — Its melancholy termination — The Isandhlwana disaster — Departure of Sir T. Shepstone for England — Another Boer meeting — The Pretoria Horse — Advance of the Boers on Pretoria — Arrival of Sir B. Frere at Pretoria and dispersion of the Boers — Arrival of Sir Garnet Wolseley — His proclamation — The Secocœni expedition — Proceedings of the Boers — Mr. Pretorius — Mr. Gladstone's Mid-Lothian speeches, their effect — Sir G. Wolseley's speech at Pretoria, its good results — Influx of Englishmen and cessation of agitation — Financial position of the country after three years of British rule — Letter of the Boer leaders to Mr. Courtney | 87-119 | |
|
CHAPTER V. The Boer Rebellion. |
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| Accession of Mr. Gladstone to power — His letters to the Boer leader and the loyals — His refusal to rescind the annexation — The Boers encouraged by prominent members of the Radical party — The Bezeidenhout incident — Despatch of troops to Potchefstroom — Mass meeting of the 8th December 1880 — Appointment of the Triumvirate and declaration of the republic — Despatch of Boer proclamation to Sir O. Lanyon — His reply — Outbreak of hostilities at Potchefstroom — Defence of the court-house by Major Clarke — The massacre of the detachment of the 94th under Colonel Anstruther — Dr. Ward — The Boer rejoicings — The Transvaal placed under martial law — Abandonment of their homes by the people of Pretoria — Sir Owen Lanyon's admirable defence organisation — Second proclamation issued by the Boers — Its complete falsehood — Life at Pretoria during the siege — Murders of natives by the Boers — Loyal conduct of the native chiefs — Difficulty of preventing them from attacking the Boers — Occupation of Lang's Nek by the Boers — Sir George Colley's departure to Newcastle — The condition of that town — The attack on Lang's Nek — Its desperate nature — Effect of victory on the Boers — The battle at the Ingogo — Our defeat — Sufferings of the wounded — Major Essex — Advance of the Boers into Natal — Constant alarms — Expected attack on Newcastle — Its unorganised and indefensible condition — Arrival of the reinforcements and retreat of the Boers to the Nek — Despatch of General Wood to bring up more reinforcements — Majuba Hill — Our disaster, and death of Sir George Colley — Cause of our defeat — A Boer version of the disaster — Sir George Colley's tactics | 120-155 | |
|
CHAPTER VI. The Retrocession of the Transvaal. |
||
| The Queen's Speech — President Brand and Lord Kimberley — Sir Henry de Villiers — Sir George Colley's plan — Paul Kruger's offer — Sir George Colley's remonstrance — Complimentary telegrams — Effect of Majuba on the Boers and English Government — Collapse of the Government — Reasons of the surrender — Professional sentimentalists — The Transvaal Independence Committee — Conclusion of the armistice — The preliminary peace — Reception of the news in Natal — Newcastle after the declaration of peace — Exodus of the loyal inhabitants of the Transvaal — The value of property in Pretoria — The Transvaal officials dismissed — The Royal Commission — Mode of trial of persons accused of atrocities — Decision of the Commission and its results — The severance of territory question — Arguments pro and con — Opinion of Sir E. Wood — Humility of the Commissioners and its cause — Their decision on the Keate Award question — The Montsioa difficulty — The compensation and financial clauses of the report of the Commission — The duties of the British Resident — Sir E. Wood's dissent from the report of the Commission — Signing of the Convention — Burial of the Union Jack — The native side of the question — Interview between the Commissioners and the native chiefs — Their opinion of the surrender — Objections of the Boer Volksraad to the Convention — Mr. Gladstone temporises — The ratification — Its insolent tone — Mr. Hudson, the British Resident — The Boer festival — The results of the Convention — The larger issue of the matter — Its effect on the Transvaal — Its moral aspects — Its effect on the native mind | 156-202 | |
| CHAPTER VII. | ||
| Extract from Introduction to new edition of 1888 | 203 | |
| APPENDIX. | ||
| I. | The Potchefstroom Atrocities, &c. | 231 |
| II. | Pledges given by Mr. Gladstone's Government as to the Retention of the Transvaal | 239 |
| III. | A Boer on Boer Designs | 241 |
REGENERATION
Being an Account of the Social Work of The Salvation Army in Great Britain.
By H. Rider Haggard
1910
CONTENTS
THE GREAT PETER STREET SHELTER
THE WOMEN'S SOCIAL WORK IN LONDON
THE HEADQUARTERS OF THE WOMEN'S SOCIAL WORK
HILLSBOROUGH HOUSE INEBRIATES' HOME
THE TRAINING INSTITUTE FOR WOMEN SOCIAL WORKERS
THE LAND AND INDUSTRIAL COLONY
NOTE ON THE RELIGION OF THE SALVATION ARMY