1900 - From the letters writer by Lt Col Park in Ladysmith
I needn’t have growled about only two letters on the 3rd, as on the 4th the whole mail came in, and I had as my private share, 126 letters, 5 telegrams, 37 bundles of newspapers, and a few more have come yesterday, and today I got 15 letters from you, and think I must have all up to about the 25th January. There seem to be big gaps all the first three weeks in December and Christmas week, and one week in January. Very likely some will turn up still. I also got your big bundles of warm jerseys, socks, hankies, cigarettes, baccy, and muffler; also the little parcel with cotton shirt, socks, and flask, all safe, except that the sides of the flask are stove in flat. I expect they can be forced out by the armourer, if so, it will be a godsend, as my present one is borrowed, and is very heavy and clumsy, and being pewter, makes the whiskey taste filthy. This one is just the right size and shape, and won’t break. The lozenges inside were black and looked very nasty, so I threw them away. I had been longing for my muffler and a thick woolly jersey, and was just thinking of wiring to you for my thick sweater when the parcel came. I shall be all right now. They say frosts at night begin in another month, and we have no warm clothes at all. I wish I had another blanket, but I dare say I shall manage, as I can always go to bed in my socks and all my other clothes. I got quite used to having to do that when attacks were expected. Thank goodness, they are a thing of the past, and we have dismantled all our old posts and shelters, and pitched a nice, smart, square camp on a lovely open piece of clean ground, high up and away from the town, with its smells and dust, and looking out over the country, where a month ago, if a tent had been pitched, six Boer shells would have been thrown at it in ten minutes.
I believe there isn’t a Boer nearer than the line of the Drakensberg. A brigade has gone north to reconnoitre past Elandslaagte today, and set to work on repairing that line. Warren’s division go round at once to join Roberts, and so does Sir G. White. He starts on the 9th, and is to have an army corps command. Buller remains in command in Natal, and we shall probably be incorporated into one of two brigades being made up of the old Ladysmith troops, and rumour says we are all to go down to the neighbourhood of Colenso to rest and recruit, in a few days, as soon as the railway is open through. There is still a small break near Pieters.
Kane and Scafe have been given a month’s sick leave in Natal, and are to go down at once for change to Maritzburg. I shall try to get them sent right on to India to the depot, as the sea voyage will set them up, and they will be quite well enough to help Spratt. Forty-eight hours I worked day and night, reading letters and papers, and docketing them, till my poor head fairly simmered with the rush of news and the muddle of the dates, and trying to get some sense out of the chaos. An English mail closed today, but I couldn’t attempt to write a line, and they must wait till next week. Indian mails are uncertain, and besides you come first, and nobody else matters in comparison.
I met de Courcy Hamilton, of Sir G. White’s staff, this morning, and said I hoped that when he got away round the other side, and after the war was over, Sir George would not forget the Devonshire Regiment, and he said: “If you had seen, as I have, what Sir George has written officially and privately, and said about you and the Devonshire regiment, you would know for a certainty that he will never forget either you or the Devonshire regiment as long as he lives." I am going to have a personal good-bye visit tomorrow, and thank him for his kindness, and of course everyone will be at the station to see him off on Friday.
I am very well, though I have suffered tortures of indigestion the last three days in spite of great care. I suppose my weak and half-starved inside can’t bear the slightest work, and the increase of food has had dire effects. It is fading out gradually, and I expect with regular daily exercise and a little care I shall be all right. I haven’t weighed lately; must do so, and record results. We have white bread, jam, fresh mutton, potatoes, Quaker oats, beer and whiskey now, and I expect we shall shortly break out into puddings and such delicacies. Haven’t seen an egg yet, and only once bacon and once cheese. The amount of tobacco, pipes, cigarettes that are being showered on the whole garrison is incredible. Everyone in the world seems to have sent out some, and all the men*have at least two pipes and 2 lbs. of baccy, and in the mess there are about 12,000 cigarettes and about 2 or 3 lbs. of baccy each. I have got 500 of my own cigarettes, 100 from you, 200 from Lilias, and 200 from mother and someone else, I forget who (Stanley perhaps). The letters of congratulation from all kinds of people have been quite overwhelming, though intensely nice and heartwarming. I do hope you and all at home realise now that there is no further cause for anxiety about me or any of the regiment. We shall do no more fighting in all probability, and are just going to camp about, and eat, and exercise and get strong, and by the time we have done that I should think the war will be so nearly over that we shall be sent straight back to India. I was so relieved and thankful to know you were still at Jullundur, I felt that if you weren’t I was at sea, and should never get at you.
I have at last seen my own gazette, and a January Army List with Park as Lieut.-Colonel which is soothing to the eyes
I don’t think you will find I have aged much, though Rujub says I have got very grey, and I don’t feel strong, though I shall get over that very soon. “Kaiser” is as fit as a fiddle and goes very well with me everywhere.
Poor “Briggs” is a mere shadow, and so weak he can hardly crawl. The last time I tried to get on his back he sat down straight, and if I lean my arms on him he crouches now. He is getting nearly his full feed of corn and goes out for an hour’s walk morning and evening, and then grazes in lovely hay as long as he likes, so I hope in a week or so he will have picked up.