A BRAVE SOLDIER.
" By the last mail," the ' Bendigo Advertiser' says, " a lady residing in ■Sandhurst, who is a relative by marriage of Captain Melvill, the gallant young officer who sacrificed his life whilst protecting the colours of his regiment in the disastrous engagement which took place between a small force of British troops and an overwhelming number of. Zulus a short time back, received a letter in which reference is made to the death of the hero of the occasion. We have been furnished with the following extract: —' I am dreadfully grieved about poor young Melvill, the adjutant of the 24th Begt. Ho married just three years ago, at the Cape, E.'s favourite sister, and came home last year to the Staff College at Aldershot, with his wife and a little boy a year old. He had not been in England a week when he was ordered to rejoin his regiment at the Cape, as this dreadful Zulu War broke out ; so he left his wife and child at home with his family in Cornwall, where she has been ever since, and now, poor girl, she is left a widow, and has anotner little son only two months old. She is not yet 21. One consolation to her will be the noble way in which he died, as he was fortunate enough to escape the battle of Isandula, but was last seen cutting his way through over 100 natives, cutting them down like grass with his sword, as he was determined to save the colours of the regiment, which had fallen into the hands of the enemy. After being mortally wounded in seven places, he rescued the colours, which he had tied around him, and swam the river in time to lie down and die, knowing, as the papers say, that he had saved the honor of his country and regiment. A more noble or glorious death, of course, no soldier could possibly :i|" Ho is nnitp the hero of the day ; thfc ivwrs \rn fui) •■/ his woiirWfn!
bravo it. and he was mentioned in Parliament. The Queen is to present his two little boys with the Yhtorin Cross in admiration of their fathers singular bravery in saving her colours at the cost of his own life, and is also going to give them a commission in the army when they grow tip.'.'
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Temuka Leader, Volume 2, Issue 144, 10 May 1879, Page 3
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394A BRAVE SOLDIER. Temuka Leader, Volume 2, Issue 144, 10 May 1879, Page 3
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