Allan Quatermain (1887)-13

2059 Words

It seems almost laughable to talk of steel shirts in these days of bullets, against which they are of course quite useless; but where one has to do with savages, armed with cutting weapons such as assegais or battleaxes, they afford the most valuable protection, being, if well made, quite invulnerable to them. I have often thought that if only the English Government in our savage wars, and more especially in the Zulu war, had thought fit to serve out light steel shirts, there would be many a man alive to-day who, as it is, is dead and forgotten. To return: on the present occasion we blessed our foresight in bringing these shirts, and also our good luck, in that they had not been stolen by our rascally bearers when they ran away with our goods. As Curtis had two, and after considerable del

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