The River War - An Account Of The Reconquest Of The Sudan By Winston S. Churchill

















































 -  But the country
 - whether forest, mud-flat, or prairie - was always damp and feverish:
a wet land steaming under a - Page 411
The River War - An Account Of The Reconquest Of The Sudan By Winston S. Churchill - Page 411 of 476 - First - Home

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But The Country - Whether Forest, Mud-Flat, Or Prairie - Was Always Damp And Feverish: A Wet Land Steaming Under A Burning Sun And Humming With Mosquitoes And All Kinds Of Insect Life.

Onward and southward toiled the flotilla, splashing the brown water into foam and startling the strange creatures on the banks, until on the 18th of September they approached Fashoda.

The gunboats waited, moored to the bank for some hours of the afternoon, to allow a message which had been sent by the Sirdar to the mysterious Europeans, to precede his arrival, and early in the morning of the 19th a small steel rowing-boat was observed coming down stream to meet the expedition. It contained a Senegalese sergeant and two men, with a letter from Major Marchand announcing the arrival of the French troops and their formal occupation of the Soudan. It, moreover, congratulated the Sirdar on his victory, and welcomed him to Fashoda in the name of France.

A few miles' further progress brought the gunboats to their destination, and they made fast to the bank near the old Government buildings of the town. Major Marchand's party consisted of eight French officers or non-commissioned officers, and 120 black soldiers drawn from the Niger district. They possessed three steel boats fitted for sail or oars, and a small steam launch, the Faidherbe, which latter had, however, been sent south for reinforcements. They had six months' supplies of provisions for the French officers, and about three months' rations for the men; but they had no artillery, and were in great want of small-arm ammunition. Their position was indeed precarious.

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