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Show " - " - 4s JHbbbbbbbbbbbbI DE WET. 'ISBI A good many people are natural hero TTrtt(BfflHHBM pers. To such we commend the Boer 0aH9HH Wet. He emerges from the great Boer-StwHRHURH covered with glory, the very grandest U(wfiMHH contest. ' He seemed to have made a roirfmjMBmB his own soul to make the best fight he Imh leave the result to God. From the first WwSBSBKSKk against hopless odds; he braved every VmMj endured every hardships when all seemed hopjf HIM lessly lost, his resourceful mind planned and exe otIbbbbI cuted new attacks and new defenses; be witsi JSIbbbbI ubiquitious; he put aside fatigue and smiled a JHwibbbI danger; as his followers grew few he multiplied; ssvHbbI himself into a host in his country's defease; hi mHbbbI never exulted, never despaired, never complaiaftdi , JSuBKBIbbbb! but fought on and on, keeping the MAtrM(KsHHH he had made with his soul and keeping lWRPHHB books until they should balance and ft PSSmSSS know what Fate had decreed. He iaft,mBB ments, never thought of the heat or the ptiflPHHII he had no food he fought on tbflygHHHBHH was the ground, his side walls UlHBHHnH roof the sky; for three years he faced dpfHHHHH whelming odds; he asked nothing of htlwMyHWWB follower except to follow where he led; thttt gfttjft JSbubbIsbbbbI silent, alert, he held his way, performing deeds of HH loftiest valor as a matter of course, accepting etftry IKB rebuff which smote him as merely an incident tod raLj2J9B trivial to much consider, and never faltered LiH the answer came to him that he had kept the th;fl31B that he had been true to the covenant that he dHHH made at first, and then, forgetting self, mMttncHSiWH tho terms on which his countrymen would ' J'fH peace. -f" liiH When they were accepted and the stipulation '- JM fflH was signed then his inner self shone out and he '' M became tho very grandest figure of the war. Be jM turned to his people and told them that the terms J : "fl must be accepted, not grudgingly, not morosely, '9 but in full-heartedness, for God had decided the j S conflict and they must accept with cheerfulness fl and all sincerity and begin the work of smooth- B ing away the scars of the war andof uplifting ( jH their country. The defeated Chleftan bore away fl the brightest, highest honors of the war, and if JH those in authority in England are real statesmen j jfl they will heap honors and emoluments upon him H and give him a high place in the service of th gH Government of South Alrio. for this age has poi mm duced no higher .type of man than General DeWe WmM y liiH 1 mBSbBBBS ' h .4JHJBBBb1 - f iJf JKOTbbbV i&lilli'SaBUBBBBBBBBl |