From the diary of William Watson, Ladysmith, November 1899:
There have been a few showers in the night, and it is raining now. Many folk are panic stricken, and have fled. Others are not so cowardly. But the general idea is “Sauve qui peut”. I don’t know when the bombardment is to begin, but somehow, I don’t think it will be so very terrible. The sailor’s battery has some thundering big guns, and they will join in the chorus. We have quite an army here, and something must be risked in desperate cases like the present. I suppose some of us will be killed, but we can not help that, you know. We must take the big guns, even if we lose severely. This is another favour for which we have to thank Gladstone’s cowardice, and England’s dilatoriness. We have been driven from the border to the very centre of Natal. Buller and his army should have been here two months since. By this continued delay, we have allowed the Boers, so to strengthen their positions, even close to Ladysmith, that our men are bound to lose heavily, before they can dislodge the enemy, and the longer we wait, the greater our loss will be. Today’s Witness, says the delay in sending the troops, is owing to General Buller himself. Also that on leaving England he declared our troops, would be in Pretoria in a month. That now he is at Cape Town, he will have the satisfaction of knowing that a very considerable body of our troops, horse, foot and artillery are already in Pretoria, as prisoners of war. Now he is at Cape Town, his army is still behind, on the water. — It is rumoured the Basutos have risen against the Free Staters, and that in consequence, the Free State army has had to return home, to defend their own country. I hope it is true, for we are losing from Cape Town, to this place, although we are unwilling to acknowledge it. I don’t believe the rumoured Basuto rising. We hear such a lot of lies reported as undoubted facts. For instance, three days since, I heard a most circumstantial account of General Buller’s arrival here, and yet, he has only just landed at Cape Town. Last night, half Ladysmith fled to Pietermaritzburg, as this town was most certainly to be bombarded today, yet not a shot has been fired on either side. There is a two day’s truce for burying the dead. By some mischance, the Gloucestershire regiment, Irish fusilleers and a mountain battery, marched into a Boer ambuscade. Half our men were killed and the rest taken. General White and the rebel chief, met, and agreed to a two day’s truce.