In the Shadow of Death 
 
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by P. H. Kritzinger and R. D. McDonald This eBook is for the use of 
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Title: In the Shadow of Death 
Author: P. H. Kritzinger and R. D. McDonald 
Release Date: August 7, 2005 [EBook #16463] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE 
SHADOW OF DEATH *** 
 
Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Taavi Kalju and the Online Distributed 
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
[Illustration: GENERAL P.H. KRITZINGER. 
_Photo by Emberon, London._] 
 
In the Shadow of Death
BY 
GENERAL P.H. KRITZINGER 
AND 
MR. R.D. MCDONALD 
ILLUSTRATED WITH PORTRAITS AND DIAGRAMS 
PRINTED FOR PRIVATE CIRCULATION 1904 
LONDON: PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, 
LIMITED, DUKE STREET, STAMFORD STREET, S.E., AND 
GREAT WINDMILL STREET, W. 
 
Preface. 
Several excellent works have already been written about the 
Anglo-Boer War of the beginning of the twentieth century; but the field 
of operations was so extensive, the duration of the war so long, and the 
leaders, on the Boer side, were necessarily so independent of one 
another in the operations that were conducted with one common aim, 
that something of interest may well remain to be said. We have not here 
chronicled our experiences and adventures in the form of a diary, but 
have rather grouped together events and observations. We write as 
Boers, frankly regretting the loss of that independence for which we 
took the field; but also as those who wish to give no offence to any 
honourable opponent. Our aim has been to do equal justice to both 
sides in the war; to unite and reconcile, not to separate and embitter, 
two Christian peoples destined to live together in one land. 
"In the Shadow of Death" is a title the reader will hardly consider 
inappropriate by the time he reaches the end of this little book. 
Outnumbered on the battlefield, often exposed to the enemy's fire, and 
one of us wounded and laid low on a bed of intense suffering, and then 
charged before a Military Court with the greatest of crimes, we did not
dare to hope that we should live to write these pages. 
And here let our cordial thanks be given to Advocate F.G. Gardiner for 
his inestimable services in the hour of need, and for kindly submitting 
to us the "papers" bearing on the trial. 
P.H. KRITZINGER. 
R.D. MCDONALD. 
 
Contents. 
CHAP. PAGE 
PREFACE iii 
I. ANTECEDENTS 1 
II. DARK DAYS 5 
III. ENGAGEMENTS 21 
IV. IN TIGHT CORNERS 43 
V. TO THE CAPE COLONY 56 
VI. WOUNDED 70 
VII. COURT-MARTIALLED 81 
VIII. WHY WE SURRENDERED 102 
IX. THE BOER AS SEEN IN THE LIGHT OF THE WAR 118 
X. THE RISING IN THE CAPE COLONY 149 
XI. WAR INCIDENTS 170
"In the Shadow of Death." 
CHAPTER I. 
ANTECEDENTS. 
The child is father to the man; And I could wish my days to be Bound 
each to each by natural piety. 
_Wordsworth._ 
A few preliminary pages of personal history I offer to those who 
followed me either in thought or deed during the Anglo-Boer War. 
My ancestors were Germans; my grandfather was born in the South. 
About the year 1820 he, along with two brothers, bade farewell to the 
land of his nativity and emigrated to South Africa. They found a home 
for themselves in the neighbourhood of Port Elizabeth, and there they 
settled as farmers. Two of the brothers married women of Dutch 
extraction; one died a bachelor. A small village, Humansdorp, situated 
near to Port Elizabeth, was the birth-place of my father. There he spent 
the greater part of his life. He, too, married a Dutch lady; and we 
children adopted the language of our mother, and spoke Dutch rather 
than German. 
My father took an active part in several of the early Kaffir Wars, and 
rendered assistance to the Colonial forces in subjugating the native 
tribes in the Eastern Province of the Cape Colony. With rapt attention 
and enthusiasm we children would listen to him as he told the tale of 
those early native wars. I then thought that there was nothing so 
sublime and glorious as war. My imagination was inflamed, and I 
longed intensely to participate in such exciting adventures. My 
experience of recent years has corrected my views. I think differently 
now. Peace is better than war. War is brutal and damnable. It is indeed 
"hell let loose."
On the 20th of April, 1870, the arrival of a little Kritzinger was 
announced on the farm Wildeman's-Kraal, Port Elizabeth District. That 
little fellow happened to be    
    
		
	
	
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