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it did not。 It was a proud moment for me and for all of us; but could we have foreseen what was to happen in the future we should have felt less jubilant。
In one of the newly discovered letters to my mother; written from Government House; Pretoria; on June 17; 1877; I find an allusion to this hoisting of the flag。 I say:
We have Sir A。 Cunynghame; K。C。B。; stopping with us now; he starts for Leydenburg next Friday for shooting。 On the same day the Chief starts for Potchefstroom and Lichtenburg; and will be away about five weeks。 Mr。 Henderson; Chairman of the Finance mittee; will be left alone with myself here。 It will be a melancholy reduction of our large party。 We are now awaiting with great anxiety to hear how the Annexation has been received。 I suppose that the war9 has drawn most of the attention from this business。 It will be some years before people at home realise how great an act it has been; an act without parallel。 I am very proud of having been connected with it。 Twenty years hence it will be a great thing to have hoisted the Union Jack over the Transvaal for the first time。
My absence; which I remember we set down at five years at the most; is likely to be a long one now; my dearest Mother。 The break from all home and family ties and the sense of isolation are very painful; more painful than those who have never tried them know。
Chapter 6 LIFE IN THE TRANSVAAL
H。 R。 H。 appointed Master of the High Court at age of twenty…one — Boers very litigious — Fleeced by lawyers — H。 R。 H。 reforms practice and taxes bills — Much opposition — H。 R。 H。 supported by Judge Kotze — Boer revolt expected — Zulu War threatened — H。 R。 H。 builds house with Cochrane — Jess’s cottage — Sir Bartle Frere — Zulu War — Isandhlwana — Shepstone return
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