Four Months Besieged: The Story of Ladysmith

audiobook

Four Months Besieged: The Story of Ladysmith

by Henry H. S. Pearse

EN·~6 hours·16 chapters

Chapters

16 total
1

PREFACE

1:57
2

ILLUSTRATIONS

0:39
3

PLANS

0:10
4

CHAPTER I - INTRODUCTORY - The declaration of war—Sir George White and the defence of Natal—The force at Glencoe—Battle of Talana Hill—General Yule's retirement—Battle of Elandslaagte—Useless victories—Enemy's continued advance.

4:24
5

CHAPTER II - LOMBARD'S KOP AND NICHOLSON'S NEK - General White forced to fight—The order of battle—Leviathan—The Boers reinforced—A retrograde movement—How Marsden met his death—Naval guns in action—A night of disaster—Who showed the white flag?—A truce declared—A humiliating position.

14:28
6

CHAPTER III - LADYSMITH INVESTED - The exodus of the townsfolk—Communications threatened—Slim Piet Joubert—Espionage in the town—Neglected precautions—A truce that paid—British positions described—Big guns face to face—Boers hold the railways—French's reconnaissance—The General's flitting—A gauntlet of fire—An interrupted telegram—Death of Lieutenant Egerton—"My cricketing days are over"—Under the enemy's guns—"A shell in my room"—Colonials in action—The sacrifice of valuable lives.

22:20
7

CHAPTER IV - EARLY DAYS OF THE SIEGE - Moral effects of shell-fire—General White appeals to Joubert—The neutral camp—Attitude of civilians—Meeting at the Town Hall—A veteran's protest—Faith in the Union Jack—An impressive scene—Removal of sick and wounded—Through the Boer lines—How the posts were manned—Enemy mounting big guns—More about the spies—Boer war ethics—In an English garden—Throwing up defences—A gentlemanly monster—The Troglodytes—Humorous and pathetic—"Long Tom" and "Lady Anne"—Links in the chain of fire—A round game of ordnance.

41:15
8

CHAPTER V - THE FIRST BOER ASSAULT - Joubert's boast—The preliminaries of attack—Shells in the town—A simultaneous advance—Observation Hill threatened—A wary enemy—A prompt repulse—Attack on Tunnel Hill—The colour-sergeant's last words—Manchesters under fire—Prone behind boulders—A Royal salute—The Prince of Wales's birthday—Stretching the Geneva Convention—The redoubtable Miss Maggie—The Boer Foreign Legion—Renegade Irishmen—A signal failure.

17:02
9

CHAPTER VI - A MONTH UNDER SHELL FIRE - The first siege-baby—An Irish-American deserter—A soldierly grumble—Boer cunning and Staff-College strategy—An ammunition difficulty—The tireless cavalry—A white flag incident—What the Boer Commandant understood—The Natal summer—Mere sound and fury—Boer Sabbatarianism—Naval guns at work—"Puffing Billy" of Bulwaan—Intrepid Boer gunners—The barking of "Pom-Poms"—Another reconnaissance—"Like scattered bands of Red Indians"—A futile endeavour—A night alarm—Recommended for the V.C.—A man of straw in khaki—The Boer search-light—Shelling of the hospital—General White protests—The first woman hit—General Hunter's bravado—"Long Tom" knocked out—A gymkhana under fire—Faith, Hope, and Charity—Flash signals from the south—A new Creusot gun.

51:02
10

CHAPTER VII - THE SORTIES OF DECEMBER - Retribution—Sir Archibald Hunter's bold scheme—A night attack—Silently through the darkness—At the foot of Gun Hill—A broken ascent—"Wie kom dar?" "The English are on us!"—Major Henderson thrice wounded—Destroying "Leviathan"—Hussars suffer under fire—Rejoicings in town—Sir George White's address to the troops—Boer compliments—A raid for provender—A second sortie—The Rifles' bold enterprise—An unwelcome light—Cutting the wires—Surprise Hill reached—The sentry's challenge—The Rifles' charge—Boer Howitzer destroyed—The return to camp—Cutting the way home—Serious losses.

37:45

Description

A vivid portrait of the four‑month siege that once gripped Ladysmith, this work draws directly from the frontline letters and diary entries of Henry H. S. Pearse, the Daily News correspondent who lived through the ordeal. From the moment the Boer forces crossed the border to the frantic rush to defend the remote Natal town, Pearse’s observations capture the tension between bold British resistance and the relentless pressure of enemy fire, disease, and dwindling supplies.

Through his keen eye we hear the clatter of artillery, see the shattered roofs of civilian homes turned into shell‑proof shelters, and feel the camaraderie that bound soldiers and townspeople alike. Pearse’s narrative, unfiltered by later retellings, offers a rare, intimate glimpse of daily life under siege—moments of bravery, the strain of scarcity, and the stubborn hope that relief would eventually arrive. Listeners are invited to experience the humanity and hardship of a pivotal chapter in the Boer War, as recorded by someone who watched it unfold from within the besieged walls.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (349K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Taavi Kalju and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2005-08-07

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

HH

Henry H. S. Pearse

1844–1905

A British war correspondent with a talent for vivid firsthand reporting, this writer is best remembered for bringing the Siege of Ladysmith to life from inside the conflict itself. His books carry the immediacy of a witness who saw events unfold day by day.

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