By Evening We Had Regained
The Waterworks, A Most Important Point For Bloemfontein, And We
Held All The Line Of Hills Which Command It.
This strong position
would not have been gained so easily if it had not been for
Pole-Carew's and French's actions two days before, on their way to
join Rundle, which enabled them to turn it from the south.
Ian Hamilton, who had already done good service in the war, having
commanded the infantry at Elandslaagte, and been one of the most
prominent leaders in the defence of Ladysmith, takes from this time
onwards a more important and a more independent position. A thin,
aquiline man, of soft voice and gentle manners, he had already
proved more than once during his adventurous career that he not
only possessed in a high degree the courage of the soldier, but
also the equanimity and decision of the born leader. A languid
elegance in his bearing covered a shrewd brain and a soul of fire.
A distorted and half-paralysed hand reminded the observer that
Hamilton, as a young lieutenant, had known at Majuba what it was to
face the Boer rifles. Now, in his forty-seventh year, he had
returned, matured and formidable, to reverse the results of that
first deplorable campaign. This was the man to whom Lord Roberts
had entrusted the command of that powerful flanking column which
was eventually to form the right wing of his main advance. Being
reinforced upon the morning after the capture of the Waterworks by
the Highland Brigade, the Cornwalls, and two heavy naval guns, his
whole force amounted to not less than seven thousand men.
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