<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV</SPAN><br/> <span class="smaller">THE SIEGE OF LADYSMITH (1899-1900)</span></h2>
<p class="summary">Ladysmith—Humours of the shell—The <i>Lyre</i> tries to be funny—Attack
on Long Tom—A brave bugler—Practical jokes—The black
postman—A big trek—Last shots—Some one comes—Saved at last.</p>
<p>Ladysmith, where Sir George White and his men detained
the Boers so long, is a scattered town lying on a lake-like
plain, and surrounded by an amphitheatre of rocky
hills. To the north-west was Pepworth Hill, where
the Boer Long Tom was placed; north-east of the town,
and four miles away, was Unbulwana: here the Boers
had dragged a large siege-gun.</p>
<p>South of the town the Klip River runs close under
the hills, and here many caves were dug as hiding-places
for the residents. There were many women and children
there all day long. On the 3rd of November the wires
were cut; Ladysmith was isolated and besieged. On
the next day it was discussed whether General Joubert’s
proposal should be accepted—that the civilians, women,
and children should go out and form a camp five miles
off under the white flag. Archdeacon Barker got up, and
said: “Our women and children shall stay with the men
under the Union Jack, and those who would do them
harm may come to them at their peril.”</p>
<p>The meeting cheered the tall, white-haired priest, and
agreed thereto.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The townsfolk soon got used to shell-fire, but they
spent most of the day by the river in their cool caves.
There was a Dr. Starke, a visitor from Torquay, who
used to go about with a fishing-rod, and spend hours by
the river—a kindly man, who one day found a cat mewing
piteously at a deserted house, and, making friends with
it, used to carry it about with him. This gentleman,
having the cat in his arms, was standing near the door
of the Royal Hotel talking to Mr. McHugh, when a shell
came through the roof, passed through two bedrooms,
and whizzed out at the front-door, catching the poor
doctor just above the knees. His friend escaped without
a scratch. Dr. Starke had always tried to avoid the
peril of shells, and they used to banter him on his over-anxiety.
It is strange how many hits and how many
misses are in the nature of a surprise.</p>
<p>Late in November a shell entered a room in which a
little child was sleeping, and knocked one of the walls
of the bedroom clean out. In the cloud of dust and
smoke the parents heard the cry of the little babe,
rushed in, and found her absolutely untouched, while
20 yards away a splinter of the same shell killed a man
of the Natal Police. At the same house later in the
evening two friends called to congratulate the mother;
they were being shown two pet rabbits, when a splinter
of a shell came in and cut in two one of the rabbits.</p>
<p>One day a Natal Mounted Rifleman was lying in his
tent, stretched himself, yawned, and turned over. At
that instant a shell struck the spot where he had just
been lying, made a hole in the ground, and burst. The
tent was blown away from its ropes, his pillow and
clothes were tossed into the air. Poor fellow! his comrades
ran towards him, and found him sitting up, pale,
but unharmed. They could hardly believe their senses.
“Why, man, you ought to have been blown to smithe<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</SPAN></span>reens!”
Another day a trooper of the 18th Hussars
was rolled over, horse and all, yet neither of them suffered
any severe injury.</p>
<p>December came, and by then the poor women were
looking harassed and worn: so many grievous sights,
so many perils to try and avoid, so many losses to weep
over.</p>
<p>Some of the correspondents brought out a local paper,
the <i>Ladysmith Lyre</i>, to enliven the spirits of the dull and
timid and sick. The news may be sampled by the
following extracts:</p>
<p>“<i>November 14.</i>—General French has twice been seen
in Ladysmith disguised as a Kaffir. His force is entrenched
behind Bulwen. Hurrah!</p>
<p>“<i>November 20.</i>—H.M.S. <i>Powerful</i> ran aground in
attempting to come up Klip River; feared total loss.
[Klip River is 2 feet deep in parts.]</p>
<p>“<i>November 21.</i>—We hear on good authority that the
gunner of Long Tom is Dreyfus.</p>
<p>“<i>November 26.</i>—Boers broke Sabbath firing on our
bathing parties. Believed so infuriated by sight of
people washing that they quite forgot it was Sunday.”</p>
<p>The <i>Ladysmith Lyre</i> had come out three times before
December.</p>
<p>On the 7th of December, at 10 p.m., 400 men, who had
volunteered for the task, were ordered to turn out, carrying
rifles and revolvers only, and to make no noise. A
small party of Engineers were to be with them. Their
object was to destroy Long Tom, which was now removed
from Pepworth to Lombard’s Kop, on the north-east. They
started when the moon went down on a fine starlight
night. By a quarter to two a.m. they were close to
the foot of Lombard’s Kop, but the Boer pickets had not
been alarmed. General Hunter, who led them, explained
how 100 of the Imperial Light Horse and 100 of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</SPAN></span>
Carbineers would steal up the mountain and take the
Boer guns, while 200 of the Border Mounted (on foot)
would go round the hill to protect their comrades from
a flank attack. The Engineers, carrying gun-cotton
and tools, followed close after the storming party. As
our men were creeping quietly up the hill on hands and
knees, amazed that there were no outposts, a sudden
challenge rang out behind them: “Wis kom dar?”</p>
<p>Had the Boer sentry been dreaming in the drowsy
night?</p>
<p>“Wis (pronounced ve) kom dar? Wis kom dar?” he
impatiently shouted. Our men sat down on the slope
above him, grinning to themselves, and made no answer.</p>
<p>“Wis kom dar?” He was getting angry and frightened
this time, by the tone of it.</p>
<p>“Take that fellow in the wind with the butt of a rifle,
and stop his mouth.”</p>
<p>Then the Boer knew who they were, and yelled to
his comrades for help; then they heard him say to his
after-rider: “Bring my peart—my horse!” and he was
safely off!</p>
<p>Further up the hill a shrill voice shouted: “Martinas,
Carl Joubert, der Rovinek!” (the Red-neck). At this our
men clambered up like goats, while a volley was fired,
and bullets whizzed over their heads.</p>
<p>“Stick to me, guides!” shouted General Hunter.</p>
<p>As they neared the top Colonel Edwards, of the volunteers,
shouted: “Now then, boys, fix bayonets, and
give them a taste of the steel.” This was meant for the
Dutchmen to hear, for there was not a bayonet amongst
the assaulting party.</p>
<p>The Boers do not like cold steel, and they were heard
slithering and stumbling down the other side of the
mountain. Now they were up on the top. There stood
Long Tom pointing at high heaven, loaded ready, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</SPAN></span>
laid to a range of 8,000 yards, or over four miles. Not
a Boer was to be seen or heard anywhere.</p>
<p>Quickly the Engineers got to work. Some removed
the breech-block, others filled the barrel with gun-cotton,
plugged both muzzle and breech, and ran a pretty necklace
of gun-cotton round the dainty ribs of the barrel.
Long Tom was looking quite unconscious of their attentions,
and shone in the starlight.</p>
<p>He had been set on solid masonry, was mounted on
high iron wheels, and a short railway line had been laid
down for purposes of locomotion. A thick bomb-proof
arch was built over him, and huge pyramids of shells
were piled up round about him. A Howitzer and a field-gun,
which stood close by, were then destroyed, and a
Maxim was reserved to be brought away.</p>
<p>In about twenty minutes the Engineers announced
that they were ready.</p>
<p>Like goats they had swarmed about him, and now it
was Long Tom’s turn to say “Baa!”</p>
<p>The firing fuse was attached. “Keep back! keep
back!”</p>
<p>There was heard a dull roar from the monster, and the
whole mountain flared out with a flash as if of lightning.</p>
<p>“Had the gun-cotton done its work?” They ran
back to inspect.</p>
<p>“Barrel rent, sir; part of the muzzle torn away.”
Long Tom has fired his last shot. The ladies of Ladysmith
will be very thankful for this small favour. The
men came back, most of them carrying small trophies.</p>
<p>Down they scrambled; no barbed wire, no impediments.
Who would have thought that these English
would stir out o’ night? Had they no desire to sleep
and rest? But when they got down they found some
had been wounded. Major Henderson had been twice
hit—thumb almost torn away, and a couple of slugs<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</SPAN></span>
in his thigh. Yet he had never halted, and was the first
to tackle the gun. A few privates were also hit, but only
one so seriously as to be left behind in care of a surgeon.</p>
<p>Great rejoicing at breakfast, and congratulations from
Sir George White.</p>
<p>But the time wore on, and sickness came—far worse
and more fatal than shell-fire. There were hundreds of
fever patients in the hospital outside at Intombi Spruit.</p>
<p>Fever—typhoid, enteric—and no stimulants, no jellies,
no beef-tea!</p>
<p>The only luxury was a small ration of tinned milk.
Scores of convalescents died of sheer starvation. The
doctors were overworked, and they, too, broke down.</p>
<p>No wonder that many in the garrison chafed at inaction,
found fault with their superiors, and asked bitterly:
“Are we to stay here till we rot?”</p>
<p>By New Year’s Eve Ladysmith had endured some
8,000 rounds of shell; many buildings had been hit half
a dozen times. On New Year’s Day an officer of the
Lancers was sleeping in his house, when a shell exploded
and buried him in a heap of timber. When they pulled
the mess off him, he sat up, rubbed the dust out of
his eyes, and asked, “What o’clock is it?” He was
unhurt.</p>
<p>There was a small bugler of the 5th Lancers who was
the envy of every boy in the town. This boy was in the
battle at Elands Laagte, and when a regiment seemed
wavering he sounded the call, the advance, the charge.
The result was that that regiment faced the music, and
did valiantly. A General rode up to the bugler after the
fight, and took his name, saying: “You are a plucky
boy. I shall report you!”</p>
<p>For this boy, after sounding the charge, had drawn
his revolver, rode into the thick of the fight on his Colonel’s
flank, and shot three Boers one after the other.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Scores of officers gave the boy a sovereign for his
pluck, and he wore his cap all through the siege in a very
swagger fashion.</p>
<p>Some of the regiments had their pet dogs in Ladysmith.</p>
<p>When the King’s Royals went into action their regimental
dog went with them. He had never been out of
the fighting line, and had never had a scratch, but seemed
to enjoy the fun of barking and looking back, saying,
“Come on—faster!”</p>
<p>There was another, a little red mongrel, who insisted
on seeing every phase of warfare; he had lost a leg in
India—it was so smashed up that the doctor had to
cut it off. There he was, pottering about on three legs,
full of inquisitive ardour, and when not engaged on
sanitary inspection work, always to the front when the
guns were at it. This was the Hussars’ dog.</p>
<p>The Boers were fond of playing practical jokes. On
Christmas Day they had fired a shell containing a plum-pudding
into the artillery camp. On the hundred and first
day of the siege one of the Boers on Bulwana Hill called
up the signallers at Cæsar’s Camp, and flashed the
message, “A hundred and one, not out.”</p>
<p>The Manchesters flashed back: “Ladysmith still
batting.”</p>
<p>“What is the use of shelling these Britishers?” once
said a Boer artilleryman. “They just go on playing
cricket. Look yonder!”</p>
<p>Ah! but that was in the early days of the siege, when
they had some strength in them. Later, after having
short rations of horse-flesh, they could hardly creep from
hill to hill.</p>
<p>Another day a heliograph message came: “How do
you like horse-meat?”</p>
<p>“Fine,” was the answer, “When the horses are
finished we shall eat baked Boer!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It became very difficult to get letters through the
Boer pickets; they had so many ways of trapping the
native runners. The Kaffir paths were watched; bell-wires
were doubled—one placed close to the ground,
the other at the height of a man’s head. When the
Kaffir touched one of these an electric bell rang on one
of the kopjes, or hills, and swarms of guards swooped
down to intercept him. But the Kaffir, being paid
£15 a journey, did his best too.</p>
<p>He left the outer line of our pickets at dusk, and flitted
away silently to the nearest native kraal; he handed in
the letters to the black chief, and wandered on empty-handed
towards General Buller’s camp. Meanwhile a
simple Kaffir girl would pass the Boer camp, calabash
on head, going to fetch water from the spring in the
early morning. The letters were in the empty water-vessel!</p>
<p>She put them under a stone by the spring, and another
maiden would come from the other side, and take them
on in her calabash or mealie-jar.</p>
<p>At last the native runner would call for them and
carry the letters to the English lines.</p>
<p>On the 6th of January a determined attack was made
by the pick of the Boers upon Cæsar’s Camp. Our pickets
in Buller’s relieving army could hear the sound of the
guns, muffled by distance; officers and men gathered
in groups on the hill-sides and listened intently to the
long low growl of the rifle. Then came a helio message
from Sir George White to General Clery: “Attacked on
every side.” The nervous strain on these men, condemned
to inaction after each new failure to cross the
Tugela and fight their way into Ladysmith, became almost
insupportable. They sat outside the big camp, gazing
on Bulwana with telescopes and field-glasses, hardly
daring to utter their thoughts. A second helio was flashed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</SPAN></span>
across: “Enemy everywhere repulsed; fighting continues.”
Then tongues were once more loosened, and
hope arose as the distant firing sank to a sullen minute-gun.
But half an hour later the booming of big guns on
Bulwana was renewed, and away to the west arose a
fierce rifle fire. “Attack renewed; enemy reinforced,”
winked the helio from the top of Convent Hill, and again
a dumb despair fell on the watchers. “Very hard
pressed,” came the third message, firing our soldiers
with indignant rage, as they thought of the poor part
they had hitherto taken in relieving Ladysmith. But
at length the heroism of the Devons, the Imperial Light
Horse, and others of the Ladysmith garrison beat back
the Boers’ desperate assault.</p>
<p>The Devons had climbed up the hill late in the afternoon
to avenge their fallen comrades. They had charged
straight up the hill in a line, but a deadly fire at short
range brought down dozens of them as they rushed the
top. However, there was no wavering in the Devons,
but they pressed forward at the double with the steel
advanced, and only a few Boers waited for that disagreeable
operation in war. There was a terrific hailstorm
going on as Colonel Park halted his men just
below the crest: it was a moment to try the nerves of
the strongest. Once over that lip of hillside and a fiercer
storm than hail would meet them in the face, and call
many of them to their last account. No wonder many
a hand went for the water-bottle, and little nervous
tricks of foot and hand betrayed the tension of the
moment.</p>
<p>“Now then, Devons, get ready!” The men gripped
their rifles in the old way of drill, quick and altogether,
brows were knit, teeth set, and away they went into the
jaws of death.</p>
<p>“Steady, Devons, steady!” No need to bid them be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</SPAN></span>
steady. They bore down upon the Boers with dogged
and irresistible force, and the Boers turned and ran.
Many an English officer fell that day, and several doctors
were wounded while doing their duty.</p>
<p>The Boers who fought most fiercely were the old
Dopper Boers, who nursed a bitter hatred for all Englishmen.
These men would refuse all kind help even when
lying hurt. They were suspected sometimes of cruelty
to our wounded; for more than one of our men was
found covered with bruises, as though he had been kicked
or beaten to death. But these things were exceptional,
and such conduct was confined to the most ignorant and
uncivilized of the old Boers.</p>
<p>Many of the wounded lay where they fell for twenty-four
hours and more. The Kaffir boys as they dug the long
shallow graves would hum a low refrain; above wheeled
the vultures, looking down upon the slain. The Boers
confessed that it was the worst day they had ever had,
and five days after the battle they were still searching for
their dead. Our dead numbered about 150.</p>
<p>The Imperial Light Horse, containing many young
Englishmen in their ranks, greatly distinguished themselves.
The Brigadier commanding in the fight wrote
to their chief officer: “No one realizes more clearly than
I do that your men were the backbone of the defence
during that day’s long fighting.” But sickness carried
off far more than rifle or cannon. The Imperial Light
Horse, who came to Ladysmith 475 strong, were now
reduced to 150; the Devons, from 984 had gone down
to 480.</p>
<p>As Majuba Day was coming near the messages brought
by the runners became more hopeful: “All going well,”
“Cronje is surrounded.”</p>
<p>But time after time came the news of Buller’s failure
on the Tugela, and with every piece of ill news came<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</SPAN></span>
reduced rations at Ladysmith. The artillery horses were
nearly all eaten, the cavalry horses too; those that remained
were too weak even to raise a trot. Would Buller
ever cut his way through? The garrison were beginning
to despond. If they had to fight a fierce battle again
like that at Cæsar’s Camp a few weeks ago, when the
pick of the Boer forces tried to take it by storm, would
they not reel and faint for very want of food? Then,
when all looked dark, and the far-off sound of Buller’s
guns seemed to be dying away in another failure, something
happened.</p>
<p>Men on outpost duty upon the hills round Ladysmith
saw what seemed to them to be a long white snake
crawling over the veldt. Officers seized their glasses,
and started with an ejaculation of surprise, for what
they saw was a long sinuous line of white-tilted waggons.
“It’s the Boers coming away from the Tugela! By
Jove! it’s a great trek!” Yes, the enemy were in full
retreat at last; Buller had hammered them in so many
places, and now at last he had succeeded.</p>
<p>There they came, waggon after waggon, in endless
succession, as it seemed. Verily, it was a retreat of an
army, for there were thousands of horsemen too, riding
at a hand gallop, singly or in clusters, a continuous
stream of moving figures coming round the corner of
End Hill and then riding north behind Telegraph Hill.
They were seeking their railway base.</p>
<p>But, though they rode fast in retreat, there was no
confusion; the Boers know how to trek, and they do it
well.</p>
<p>Oh! that we had had some horses, good strong horses,
to gallop our guns in their direction. But the horses
were all either eaten or too weak to trot. Those who
looked to Bulwana Hill saw a strange black tripod being
erected above the big Boer gun: they were going to take<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</SPAN></span>
the gun away. The gunners of the <i>Powerful</i> saw the
tripod too. They set to work to try and prevent that
work from being accomplished; both the 4·7’s were in
action, and made the red earth fly near the Boer redoubt.</p>
<p>The third shell burst upon the summit of the hill. The
many clusters of men who were watching waited breathlessly
for the white smoke to clear away, and when it
cleared there was no tripod to be seen! Then an exultant
shout rose up from hill-side and from spruit; some in their
excitement danced and sang and shook hands and
laughed. They were weak for want of food, and had not
the usual English restraint. Then a great hailstorm came
drifting by, and there was a rush into the town to tell the
glad news.</p>
<p>What a Babel of talk there was at dinner that evening!
Why, some officers were so hopeful now that they ventured
to predict that by to-morrow some of Buller’s
men would be in Ladysmith.</p>
<p>The dinner of horse-flesh was progressing merrily when
all at once a strange clattering of shoes outside awoke
attention. They listened in the mess-room, and heard
eager voices, cries of men and boys as they hurried past.
One went to the window and shouted: “What’s the
row?”</p>
<p>“Buller’s troopers are in sight; they have been seen
riding across the flats!”</p>
<p>What! Then they all jumped up, and the youngest
and strongest fared forth with the hurrying crowd
towards the nearest river-drift.</p>
<p>On reaching this they saw across the river and the
flat ground beyond, riding down a little ridge, a column
of horsemen trotting towards them. Horsemen at full
trot! Then they could not be any of their men, for their
horses could not trot to save their lives.</p>
<p>The evening sun shone upon their full kit, and no one<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</SPAN></span>
could doubt that it was the relief column at last! God be
thanked!</p>
<p>Now they had pulled up, and were welcomed by some
officers of Sir George White’s staff. Meanwhile the motley
crowd grew, at first too dazed to cheer or shout, but rather
moist about the eyes. Malays were there in their red
fezes, coolies in many-coloured turbans, and white-clad
Indians, dhoolie-bearers, grinning a silent welcome.
But the most excited and the noisiest in all that throng
were the Kaffir boys and Zulus, the Basutos and
Bechuanas. They felt no cold reserve strangle their
expressions of delight, but danced and shouted and leapt
like madmen, showing gleaming white teeth and sparkling
eyes.</p>
<p>As they drew near the town they met many of the sick
and wounded who had hobbled out, in their great joy,
to receive the relievers, and who tried to wave their caps
and say Hurrah! with the rest—a piteous sight of wan
faces and poor shrunk shanks!</p>
<p>And the men of the Relief Column—so brown and well
they looked—were feeling in their pockets for tobacco
to distribute round, for the spectacle they saw of white-faced,
feeble-kneed invalids smote them to the heart.
They had never realized until at this moment all that the
defenders of Ladysmith had suffered for England.</p>
<p>They rode in slowly, two by two, Dundonald and
Gough and Mackenzie of Natal at the head of the column.
All through the main street they rode, nodding to a friend
here and a friend there, for the Imperial Light Horse had
many friends in Ladysmith.</p>
<p>There were wild cheers half choked by emotion, and
the little ones were hoisted on shoulder to be able to see
the strong men who had come to save them. Then in
the twilight came Sir George White and his staff to
welcome the rescue party. As the leaders shook hands<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</SPAN></span>
the excitement and joy of relief broke forth again. Men
bit their lips as if nothing was happening, but women
and children cried and laughed and cried again. All in
their heart, many in their voices, were thanking God for
this timely deliverance. And then they fell to and cheered
Sir George White: just then his patient heroism and kindly
grip of power appealed to them. And some who had
not wept before cried now when they looked on the old
soldier, sitting so erect and proud in his saddle, with all
the heavy cloud of care suddenly removed from his brow
and the light of joy and gratitude shining through wet
eyes. Twice—aye, thrice—he tried to speak, but the
tears were in his throat and he could not utter his thoughts.
Then the cheers came again, and gave him time to pull
himself together.</p>
<p>He lifted his bowed head and thanked them for all
their loyal help, soldiers and civilians alike, and then
finished by one solemn phrase that touched all hearts:
“Thank God, we kept the old flag flying!”</p>
<p>Why, the very Zulus caught the enthusiasm and leapt
high into the air, waving bare arms aloft and shouting
the old war-cry of Cetewayo and his savage <i>impis</i>. That
night there were long stories to be told in the camp of
the Relief Column.</p>
<p>Mr. Winston Spencer Churchill, M.P., wrote his story
down of how they rode into Ladysmith: “Never shall I
forget that ride. The evening was deliciously cool. My
horse was strong and fresh, for I had changed him at
midday. The ground was rough with many stones, but
we cared little for that—onward, wildly, recklessly, up
and down hill, over the boulders, through the scrub.
We turned the shoulder of a hill, and there before us lay
the tin houses and dark trees we had come so far to see
and save. The British guns on Cæsar’s Camp were
firing steadily in spite of the twilight. What was happen<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</SPAN></span>ing?
Never mind, we were nearly through the dangerous
ground. Now we were all on the flat. Brigadier,
staff, and troops let their horses go. We raced through
the thorn-bushes by Intombi Spruit. Suddenly there
was a challenge: ‘Halt! Who goes there?’ ‘The Ladysmith
Relief Column.’ And thereat, from out of trenches
and rifle-pits artfully concealed in the scrub a score of
tattered men came running, cheering feebly, and some
were crying. In the half-light they looked ghastly pale
and thin, but the tall, strong colonial horsemen, standing
up in their stirrups, raised a loud resounding cheer, for
then we knew we had reached the Ladysmith picket-line.”</p>
<p>One word more on Sir Ian Hamilton, one of the greatest
of our soldiers. It was he who held command on Cæsar’s
Hill during those desperate seventeen hours of fighting.
Spare, tall, quiet, smiling, he had the masterful manner
of the born soldier, who fights and makes no fuss about
it, and draws the soldiers after him in the forlornest of
hopes by the magic of his sympathy and valour. Valour
without sympathy, ability without the devotion of your
men, can do little; but when both are united, steel and
lead cannot prevail against them.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</SPAN></span></p>
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