In eighteen hundred and seventy nine
The
British marched in ordered line
A
January morning on the eleventh day
Over
the Buffalo River they made their way
The
British force Lord Chelmsford led
As
on Zulu land his troops did tread
The
Zulu king sees this as an act of war
With
broken word and broken law
Lord
Chelmsford then his force divided
General
Pulliene to make his camp decided
At
Isanhlwana the British camp was made
Pickets
and defenses set against a Zulu raid
But
after eleven days in the Zulu’s land
The
British had to make their stand
The
warriors then the camp surround
After
exploiting any weakness found
The
Zulu impi many thousands strong
Defeat
the British in the ensuing throng
Over
seventeen hundred souls are lost
As
after the battle they count the cost
Also
countless numbers of Zulu’s dead
How
many wives and children left unfed?
An
organized army of foot and horse
Suffers
the worst defeat by a native force
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