
Set against the backdrop of the Second Boer War, this memoir follows a young French officer who volunteers to fight alongside the Boers. He recounts the cramped train ride out of Paris, the crowded embarkation on the steamship Natal, and the eclectic mix of fellow volunteers – from Russian attachés to a bird‑seller and a milliner‑to‑be. The narrative captures the restless energy of a group thrust into an unfamiliar continent, their conversations, the uneasy anticipation as the French coast recedes, and the first impressions of the South African landscape.
Once ashore, the author describes the rugged Boer camps, the improvised logistics, and the stark contrast between the disciplined European officers and the resourceful local fighters. His observations blend practical details – the weight of his own scant baggage and the constant hum of rifle fire – with moments of camaraderie around campfires. Listeners are offered a vivid, ground‑level view of a war far from the headlines, seen through the eyes of a foreign soldier learning the harsh realities of guerrilla warfare.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (254K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2012-11-24
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Some of literature’s most enduring works were created without a known name attached, which gives them an extra sense of mystery. In many cases, the missing identity shifts attention away from the writer and onto the story, ideas, or tradition behind the work.
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