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at Isandhlwana I for one expected。 Indeed I remember writing to friends prophesying that it would occur; and their great astonishment when on the same day that they received the letter the telegraph brought the news of that great destruction。 This far…sightedness; however; was not due to my own perspicacity; but to the training that I had received under those who knew the Zulus better than any other men in the world。
One of these; Mr。 Osborn; who afterwards was appointed Resident in Zululand; was so disturbed by what he knew was ing that; after a good deal of reflection he wrote a solemn warning of what would occur to the troops if their plan of advance was persisted in; which warning he sent to Lord Chelmsford through the officer manding at Pretoria。 It was never even acknowledged。 I think that I saw this letter; or; if I did not not; Osborn told me all about it。
The disaster at Isandhlwana occurred on January 22; 1879。 A night or two before it happened a lady whom I knew in Pretoria dreamed a dream which she detailed to me on the following day。 I am sorry to say that I cannot remember all this dream。 What I recall of it is to the effect that she saw a great plain in Zululand on which English troops were camped。 Snow began to fall on the plain; snow that was blood…red; till it buried it and the troops。 Then the snow melted into rivers of blood。
The lady whom it visited was convinced that this dream portended some frightful massacre; but of course it may have sprung from the excited and fearful feeling in the air which naturally affected all who had relatives or friends at the front。
A stranger and more inexplicable occurrence happened to myself。 On the morning of the 23rd of January; which was the day after the slaughter; I saw the Hottentot
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