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y institutions。 He told me that it on in your House of mons throughout the country; for speeches to run from two to three hours; and therefore that is the standard and model of time by which addresses are judged。
Now; gentleman; I say to you at once that; high as might be that honour and greatly as I should desire it in any other circumstances; I feel that I should never be petent to be a member of a House of mons of which this is true。 Gentlemen; your president has made some very kind allusions to me and to my rather — what shall I call it? — varied career。 He has spoken; for instance; of Africa。 Well; gentlemen; it is true I began my life as a public servant in Africa; and many wonderful things I saw there。
I was in at the beginning; so to speak; of all the history we are living through today。 I was with Sir Theophilus Shepstone when we annexed the Transvaal; as your president says; I had the honour of hoisting the flag of England over it。 Gentlemen; I lived; too; to see the flag pulled down and buried。 And I tell you this — and you; as colonists as I was; will sympathise with me — it was the bitterest hour of my life。 Never can any of you in this room realise the scene I witnessed upon the market…square of Newcastle when the news of the surrender of Majuba reached us。 It was a strange scene; it was an awful scene。 There was a mob of about 5;000 men; many of them loyal Boers; many Englishmen; soldiers even; who had broken from the ranks — and they marched up and down raving; yet weeping like children — and swearing that whatever they were they were no longer Englishmen。
That is what I went through in those days; and I only mention it to tell you how I came to leave South Africa。 For I agreed that it was no longer a place for an Englishman。 Still;
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