“There are some deeds so grand
That their mighty doers stand
Ennobled, in a moment, more than kings.”
BOKER
It was towards the evening of a blazing
July day on Morris Island. The mail had just
come in and been distributed. Jim, with some papers
and a precious missive from Sallie in one hand, his
supper in the other, betook himself to a cool spot
by the river, if, indeed, any spot could
be called cool in that fiery sand, and proceeded
to devour the letter with wonderful avidity while
the “grub,” properly enough, stood unnoticed
and uncared for. Presently he stopped, rubbed
his eyes, and re-read a paragraph in the epistle before
him, then re-rubbed, and read it again; and then,
laying it down, gave utterance to a long whistle,
expressive of unbounded astonishment, if not incredulity.
The whistle was answered by its counterpart,
and Jim, looking up, beheld his captain, Coolidge
by name, a fast, bright New York boy, standing
at a little distance, and staring with amazed eyes
at a paper he held in his hands. Glancing from
this to Jim, encountering his look, he burst out laughing
and came towards him.
“Helloa, Given!” he called:
Jim was a favorite with him, as indeed with pretty
much every one with whom he came in contact, officers
and men, you, too, seem put out. I wonder if youve read anything as
queer as that, handing him the paper and striking his finger down on an item;
read it. Jim read:
“MISCEGENATION. DISGRACEFUL
FREAK IN HIGH LIFE. FRUIT OF AN ABOLITION WAR. We
are credibly informed that a young man belonging to
one of the first families in the city, Mr. W.A.S., we
spare his name for the sake of his relatives, who
has been engaged since its outset in this fratricidal
war, has just given evidence of its legitimate effect
by taking to his bosom a nigger wench as his wife.
Of course he is disowned by his family, and spurned
by his friends, even radical fanaticism not being
yet ready for such a dose as this. However ”
Jim did not finish the homily of which this was the
presage, but, throwing the paper on the ground, indignantly
drove his heel through it, tearing and soiling it,
and then viciously kicked it into the river.
Said the Captain when this operation
was completed, having watched it with curious eyes,
“Well, my man, are you aware of the fact that
that is my paper?”
“Don’t care if it is.
What in thunder did you bring the damned Copperhead
sheet to me for, if you didn’t want it smashed?
Ain’t you ashamed of yourself having such a
thing round? How’d you feel if you were
picked up dead by a reb, with that stuff in your pocket?
Say now!”
Coolidge laughed, he was
always ready to laugh: that was probably why
the men liked him so well, and stood in awe of him
not a bit. “Feel? horridly, of course.
Bad enough, being dead, to yet speak, and tell ’em
that paper didn’t represent my politics:
’d that do?”
Jim shook his head dubiously.
“What are you making such a
devil of a row for, I’d like to know? it’s
too hot to get excited. ’Tain’t likely
you know anything about Willie Surrey.”
“O ho! it is Mr. Will, then,
is it? Know him, don’t I, though?
Like a book. Known him ever since he was knee-height
of a grasshopper. I’d like to have that
fellow” shaking his fist toward the
floating paper “within arm’s
reach. Wouldn’t I pummel him some?
O no, of course not, not at all. Only,
if he wants a sound skin, I’d advise him, as
a friend, to be scarce when I’m round, because
it’d very likely be damaged.”
“You think it’s all a
Copperhead lie, then! I should have thought so,
at first, only I know Surrey’s capable of doing
any Quixotic thing if he once gets his mind fixed
on it.”
“I know what I know,”
Jim answered, slowly folding and unfolding Sallie’s
letter, which he still held in his hand. “I
know all about that young lady he’s been marrying.
She’s young, and she’s handsome handsome
as a picture and rich, and as good as an
angel; that’s about what she is, if Sallie Howard
and I know B from a bull’s foot.”
“Who is Sallie Howard?” queried the Captain.
“She? O,” very
red in the face, “she’s a friend
of mine, and she’s Miss Ercildoune’s seamstress.”
“Ercildoune? good name!
Is she the lady upon whom Surrey has been bestowing
his ?”
“Yes, she is; and here’s
her photograph. Sallie begged it of her, and
sent it to me, once after she had done a kind thing
by both of us. Looks like a ‘nigger wench,’
don’t she?”
The Captain seized the picture, and,
having once fastened his eyes upon it, seemed incapable
of removing them. “This? this her?”
he cried. “Great Cæsar! I should
think Surrey would have the fellow out at twenty paces
in no time. Heavens, what a beauty!”
Jim grinned sardonically: “She
is rather pretty, now, ain’t she?”
“Pretty! ugh, what an expression!
pretty, indeed! I never saw anything so beautiful.
But what a sad face it is!”
“Sad! well, ’tain’t
much wonder. I guess her life’s been sad
enough, in spite of her youth, and her beauty, and
her riches, and all the rest.”
“Why, how should that be?”
“Suppose you take another squint at that face.”
“Well.”
“See anything peculiar about it?”
“Nothing except its beauty.”
“Not about the eyes?”
“No, only I believe it is they that
make the face so sorrowful.”
“Very like. You generally
see just such big mournful-looking eyes in the faces
of people that are called octoroons.”
“What?” cried the Captain, dropping the
picture in his surprise.
“Just so,” Jim answered,
picking it up and dusting it carefully before restoring
it to its place in his pocket-book.
“So, then, it is part true, after all.”
“True!” exclaimed Jim,
angrily, “don’t make an ass
of yourself, Captain.”
“Why, Given, didn’t you
say yourself that she was an octoroon, or some such
thing?”
“Suppose I did, what then?”
“I should say, then, that Surrey
has disgraced himself forever. He has not only
outraged his family and his friends, and scandalized
society, but he has run against nature itself.
It’s very plain God Almighty never intended
the two races to come together.”
“O, he didn’t, hey?
Had a special despatch from him, that you know all
about it? I’ve heard just such talk before
from people who seemed to be pretty well posted about
his intentions, in this particular matter, though
I generally noticed they weren’t chaps who were
very intimate with him in any other way.”
The Captain laughed. “Thank
you, Jim, for the compliment; but come, you aren’t
going to say that nature hasn’t placed a barrier
between these people and us? an instinct that repels
an Anglo-Saxon from a negro always and everywhere?”
“Ho, ho! that’s good!
why, Captain, if you keep on, you’ll make me
talk myself into a regular abolitionist. Instinct,
hey? I’d like to know, then, where all
the mulattoes, and the quadroons, and the octoroons
come from, the yellow-skins and brown-skins
and skins so nigh white you can’t tell ’em
with your spectacles on! The darkies must have
bleached out amazingly here in America, for you’d
have to hunt with a long pole and a telescope to boot
to find a straight-out black one anywhere round, leastwise
that’s my observation.”
“That was slavery.”
“Yes ’twas, and
then the damned rascals talk about the amalgamationists,
and all that, up North. ’Twan’t the
abolitionists; ’twas the slaveholders and their
friends that made a race of half-breeds all over the
country; but, slavery or no slavery, they showed nature
hadn’t put any barriers between them, and
it seems to me an enough sight decenter and more
respectable plan to marry fair and square than to
sell your own children and the mother that bore them.
Come, now, ain’t it?”
“Well, yes, if you come to that, I suppose it
is!”
“You suppose it is!
See here, I’ve found out something
since I’ve been down here, and have had time
to think; ’tain’t the living together
that troubles squeamish stomachs; it’s the marrying.
That’s what’s the matter!”
“Just about!” assented
the Captain, with an amused look, “and here’s
a case in point. Surrey ought to have been shot
for marrying one of that degraded race.”
“Bah! he married one of his
own race, if I know how to calculate.”
“There, Jim, don’t be
a fool! If she’s got any negro blood in
her veins she’s a nigger, and all your talk
won’t make her anything else.”
“I say, Captain, I’ve
heard that some of your ancestors were Indians:
is that so?”
“Yes: my great-grandmother
was an Indian chief’s daughter, so
they say; and you might as well claim royalty when
you have the chance.”
“Bless me! your great-grandmother,
eh? Come, now, what do you call yourself, an
Injun?”
“No, I don’t. I call myself an Anglo-Saxon.”
“What, not call yourself an
Injun, when your great-grandmother was one?
Here’s a pretty go!”
“Nonsense! ’tisn’t
likely that filtered Indian blood can take precedence
and mastery of all the Anglo-Saxon material it’s
run through since then.”
“Hurray! now you’ve said
it. Lookee here, Captain. You say the Anglo-Saxon’s
the master race of the world.”
“Of course I do.”
“Of course you do, being
a sensible fellow. So do I; and you say the negro
blood is mighty poor stuff, and the race a long way
behind ours.”
“Of course, again.”
“Now, Captain, just take a sober
squint at your own logic. You back Anglo-Saxon
against the field; very well! here’s Miss Ercildoune,
we’ll say, one eighth negro, seven eighths Anglo-Saxon.
You make that one eighth stronger than all the other
seven eighths: you make that little bit of negro
master of all the lot of Anglo-Saxon. Now I have
such a good opinion of my own race that if it were
t’other way about, I’d think the one eighth
Saxon strong enough to beat the seven eighths nigger.
That’s sound, isn’t it? consequently, I
call anybody that’s got any mixture at all,
and that knows anything, and keeps a clean face, and
ain’t a rebel, nor yet a Copperhead, I
call him, if it’s a him, and her, if it’s
a she, one of us. And I mean to say to any such
from henceforth, ’Here’s your chance, go
in, and win, if you can, and anybody be
damn’d that stops you!’”
“Blow away, Jim,” laughed
the Captain, “I like to hear you; and it’s
good talk if you don’t mean it.”
“I’ll be blamed if I don’t.”
“Come, you’re talking
now, you’re saying a lot more than
you’ll live up to, you know that
as well as I. People always do when they’re gassing.”
“Well, blow or no blow, it’s
truth, whether I live up to it or not.”
And he, evidently with not all the steam worked off,
began to gather sticks and build a fire to fry his
bit of pork and warm the cold coffee.
Just then they heard the plash of oars keeping time to the
cadence of a plantation hymn, which came floating solemn and clear through the
night:
“My brudder sittin’ on de
tree ob life,
An’ he yearde when Jordan roll.
Roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll Jordan,
roll,
Roll Jordan, roll!”
They both paused to listen as the
refrain was again and again repeated.
“There’s nigger for you,”
broke out Jim, “what’n thunder’d
they mean by such gibberish as that?”
The Captain laughed. “Come,
Given, don’t quarrel with what’s above
your comprehension. Doubtless there’s a
spiritual meaning hidden away somewhere, which your
unsanctified ears can’t interpret.”
“Spiritual fiddlestick!”
“Worse and worse! what a heathen
you’re demonstrating yourself! Violins
are no part of the heavenly chorus.”
“Much you know about it!
Hark, theyre at it again; and again the voices and break of oars came through
the night:
“O march, de angel march! O
march, de angel march!
O my soul arise in heaven, Lord, for to
yearde when Jordan roll!
Roll Jordan, roll
Jordan, roll Jordan, roll.”
“Well, I confess that’s
a little bit above my comprehension, that
is. Spiritual or something else. Lazy vermin!
they’ll paddle round in them boats, or lie about
in the sun, and hoot all day and all night about ‘de
good Lord’ and ’de day ob jubilee,’ and
think God Almighty is going to interfere in their
special behalf, and do big things for them generally.”
“It’s a fact; they do
all seem to be waiting for something.”
“Well, I reckon they needn’t
wait any longer. The day of miracles is gone
by, for such as them, anyway. They ain’t
worth the salt that feeds them, so far as I can discover.”
Through the wash of the waters they
could hear from the voices, as they sang, that their
possessors were evidently drawing nearer.
“Sense or not,” said the
Captain, “I never listen to them without a queer
feeling. What they sing is generally ridiculous
enough, but their voices are the most pathetic things
in the world.”
Here the hymn stopped; a boat was
pulled up, and presently they saw two men coming from
the sands and into the light of their fire, ragged,
dirty; one shabby old garment a pair of
tow pantaloons on each; bareheaded, barefooted, great,
clumsy feet, stupid and heavy-looking heads; slouching
walk, stooping shoulders; something eager yet deprecating
in their black faces.
“Look at ’em, Captain;
now you just take a fair look at ’em; and then
say that Mr. Surrey’s wife belongs to the same
family, own kith and kin, you
ca-a-n’t do it.”
“Faugh! for heaven’s sake,
shut up! of course, when it comes to this, I can’t
say anything of the kind.”
“’Nuff said. You
see, I believe in Mr. Surrey, and what’s more,
I believe in Miss Ercildoune, have reason
to; and when I hear anybody mixing her up with these
onry, good-for-nothing niggers, it’s more’n
I can stand, so don’t let’s have any more
of it”; and turning with an air which said that
subject was ended, Jim took up his forgotten coffee,
pulled apart some brands and put the big tin cup on
the coals, and then bent over it absorbed, sniffing
the savory steam which presently came up from it.
Meanwhile the two men were skulking about among the
trees, watching, yet not coming near, “at
their usual work of waiting,” as the Captain
said.
“Proper enough, too, let ’em
wait. Waiting’s their business. Now,”
taking off his tin and looking towards them, “what
d’ye s’pose those anemiles want?
Pity the boat hadn’t tipped over before they
got here. Camp’s overrun now with just
such scoots. Here, you!” he called.
The men came near. “Where’d you come
from?”
One of them pointed back to the boat, seen dimly on
the sand.
“Was that you howling a while ago, ‘Roll
Jordan,’ or something?”
“Yes, massa.”
“And where did you come from? no,
you needn’t look back there again, I
mean, where did you and the boat too come from?”
“Come from Mass’ George Wingate’s
place, massa.”
“Far from here?”
“Big way, massa.”
“What brought you here? what did you come for?”
“If you please, massa, ‘cause
the Linkum sojers was yere, an’ de big guns,
an’ we yearde dat all our people’s free
when dey gets yere.”
“Free! what’ll such fellows as you do
with freedom, hey?”
The two looked at their interrogator,
then at one another, opened their mouths as to speak,
and shut them hopelessly, unable to put
into words that which was struggling in their darkened
brains, and then with a laugh, a laugh
that sounded woefully like a sob, answered, “Dunno,
massa.”
“What fools!” cried Jim,
angrily; but the Captain, who was watching them keenly,
thought of a line he had once read, “There is
a laughter sadder than tears.” “True
enough, poor devils!” he added to
himself.
“Are you hungry?” Jim proceeded.
“I hope massa don’t think
we’s come yere for to git suthin’ to eat,”
said the smaller of the two, a little, thin, haggard-looking
fellow, “we’s no beggars.
Some ob de darkies is, but we’s not
dem kind, Jim an’ me, we’s
willin’ to work, ain’t we, Jim?”
“Jim!” soliloquized Given, “my
name, hey? we’ll take a squint at this fellow.”
The squint showed two impoverished-looking
wretches, with a starved look in their eyes, which
he did not comprehend, and a starved look in their
faces and forms, which he did.
“Come, now, are you hungry?” he queried
once more.
“If ye please, massa,”
began the little one who was spokesman, ’little
folks always are gas-bags,’ Jim was fond of saying
from his six feet of height, “if
ye please, massa, we’s had nothin’ to eat
but berries an’ roots an’ sich like
truck for long while.”
“Well, why by the devil haven’t
you had something else then? what’ve you been
doing with yourselves for ‘long while’?
what d’ye mean, coming here starved to death,
making a fellow sick to look at you? Hold your
gab, and eat up that pork,” pushing over his
tin plate, “‘n’ that bread,”
sending it after, “‘n’ that hard
tack, ’tain’t very good, but
it’s better’n roots, I reckon, or berries
either, ’n’ gobble up that coffee,
double-quick, mind; and don’t you open your heads
to talk till the grub’s gone, slick and clean.
Ugh!” he said to the Captain, “sight
o’ them fellows just took my appetite away;
couldn’t eat to save my soul; lucky they came
to devour the rations; pity to throw them away.”
The Captain smiled, he knew Jim. “Poor
cusses!” he added presently, “eat like
cannibals, don’t they? hope they enjoy it.
Had enough?” seeing they had devoured everything
put before them.
“Thankee, massa. Yes, massa.
Bery kind, massa. Had quite ’nuff.”
“Well, now, you, sir!”
looking at the little one, “by the
way, what’s your name?”
“’Bijah, if ye please, massa.”
“’Bijah? Abijah,
hey? well, I don’t please; however, it’s
none of my name. Well, ’Bijah, how came
you two to be looking like a couple of animated skeletons?
that’s the next question.”
“Yes, massa.”
“I say, how came you to be starved?
Hai’n’t they nothing but roots and berries
up your way? Mass’ George Wingate must have
a jolly time, feasting, in that case. Come, what’s
your story? Out with the whole pack of lies at
once.”
“I hope massa thinks we wouldn’t
tell nuffin but de truf,” said Jim, who had
not before spoken save to say, “Thankee,” “cause
if he don’t bleeve us, ain’t no use in
talkin’.”
“You shut up! I ain’t
conversing with you, rawbones! Speak when you’re
spoken to! Come, ’Bijah, fire away.”
“Bery good, massa. Ye see
I’se Mass’ George Wingate’s boy.
Mass’ George he lives in de back country, good
long way from de coast, over a hundred
miles, Jim calklates, an’ Jim’s
smart at calklating; well, Mass’ George he’s
not berry good to his people; never was, an’
he’s been wuss’n ever since the Linkum
sojers cum round his way, ’cause it’s made
feed scurce ye see, an’ a lot of de boys dey
tuck to runnin’ away, so what wid
one ting an’ anoder, his temper got spiled, an’
he was mighty hard on us all de time.
“At las’ I got tired of
bein’ cuffed an’ knocked round, an’
den I yearde dat if our people, any of dem, got
to de Fedral lines dey was free, so I said, ’Cum,
‘Bijah, freedom’s wuth tryin’
for’; an’ one dark night I did up some
hoe-cake an’ a piece of pork an’ started.
I trabbeled hard’s I could all night, ’bout
fifteen mile, I reckon, an’ den as
‘twas gittin’ toward mornin’ I hid
away in a swamp. Ye see I felt drefful bad, for
I could year way off, but plain enuff, de bayin’
of de hounds, an’ I knew dat de men an’
de guns an’ de dogs was all after me; but de
day passed an’ dey didn’t come. So
de next night I started off agen, an’ run an’
walked hard all night, an’ towards mornin’
I went up to a little house standen off from de road,
thinking it was a nigger house, an’ jest as
I got up to it out walked a white woman scarin’
me awfully, an’ de fust ting she axed me was
what I wanted.”
“Tight slave!” interrupted Jim, “what
d’ye do then?”
“Well, massa, ye see I saw mighty
quick I was in for a lie anyhow, so I said, ‘Is
massa at home?’ ‘Yes,’ says she, an’
sure nuff, he cum right out. ‘Hello, nigger!’
he said when he seed me, ’whar you cum from?
so I tells him from Pocotaligo, an’ before he
could ax any more queshuns, I went on an’ tole
him we cotched fifty Yankees down dere yesterday, an’
massa he was so tickled dat he let me go to Barnwells
to see my family, an’ den I said I’d got
off de track an’ was dead beat an’ drefful
hungry, an’ would he please to sell me suthin
to eat. At dat de woman streaked right into de
house, an’ got me some bread an’ meat,
an’ tole me to eat it up an’ not talk
about payin,’ ’we don’t
charge good, faithful niggers nothin’,’
she said, so I thanked her an’ eat
it all up, an’ den, when de man had tole me
how to go, I went right long till I got out ob
sight ob de little house, an’ den I
got into de woods, an’ turned right round de
oder way an’ made tracks fast as I could in dat
direcshun.”
“Ho! ho! you’re about
what I call a ’cute nigger,” laughed Jim.
“Come, go on, this gets interesting.”
“Well, directly I yearde de
dogs. Dere was a pond little way off; so I tuck
to it, an’ waded out till I could just touch
my toes an’ keep my nose above water so’s
to breathe. Presently dey all cum down, an’
I yearde Mass’ George say, ’I’ll
hunt dat nigger till I find him if takes a month.
I’se goin’ to make a zample of him,’ so
I shook some at dat, for I know’d what Mass’
George’s zamples was. Arter while one ob
de men says, ‘He ain’t yere, he’d
shown hisself before dis, if he was,’ an’
I spose I would, for I was pretty nearly choked, only
I said to myself when I went in, ‘I’ll
go to de bottom before I’ll come up to be tuck,’
so I jest held on by my toes an’ waited.
“I didn’t dare to cum
out when dey rode away to try a new scent, an’
when I did I jest skulked round de edge ob de
pond, ready to take to it agen if I yearde dem,
an’ when night cum I started off an’ run
an’ walked agen hard’s I could, an’
den at day-dawn I tuck to anoder pond, an’ went
on a log dat was stickin’ in de water, and broke
down some rushes an’ bushes enuf to lie down
on an’ cover me up, an’ den I slept all
day, for I was drefful tired an’ most starved
too. Next evenin’ when it got dark, I went
on agen, an’ trabblin through de woods I seed
a little light, an’ sartin dis time dat
it was a darkey’s cabin, I made for it, an’
it was. It was his’n,” pointing
to the big fellow who stood beside him, and who nodded
his head in assent.
“I had a palaver before he’d
let me in, but when I was in I seed what de matter
was. He had a sojer dere, a Linkum sojer, bad
wounded, what he’d found in de woods, he
was a runaway hisself, ye see, like me, an’
he’d tuck him to dis olé cabin an’d
been nussin him on for good while. When I seed
dat I felt drefful bad, for I knowed dey was a huntin
for me yet, an’ I tought if de dogs got on de
trail dey’d get to dis cabin, sure:
an’ den dey’d both be tuck. So I up
an’ tole dem, an’ de sojer he says,
’Come, Jim, you’ve done quite enuff fur
me, my boy. If you’re in danger now, be
off with you fast as you can, an’
God reward you, for I never can, for all you’ve
done for me.’
“‘No,’ says Jim,
’Capen, ye needn’t talk in dat way, for
I’se not goin to budge widout you. You
got wounded fur me an’ my people, an’ now
I’ll stick by you an’ face any thing fur
you if it’s Death hisself!’ That’s
just what Jim said; an’ de sojer he put his hand
up to his face, an’ I seed it tremble bad, he
was weak, you see, an’ some big tears
cum out troo his fingers onto de back ob
it.
“Den Jim says, ‘Dis
isn’t a safe place for any on us, an’ we’ll
have to take to our heels agen, an’ so de sooner
we’s off de better.’ So he did up
some vittels, all he had dere, an’
gave ’em to me to tote, an’
den before de Capen could sneeze he had him up on
his back, an’ we was off.
“It was pretty hard work I kin
tell you, strong as Jim was, an’ we’d
have to stop an’ rest putty ofen; an’ den,
Jim an’ I, we’d tote him atween us on
some boughs; an’ den we had to lie by, some days,
all day, an’ we trabbled putty slow,
cause we’d lost our bearing an’ was in
a secesh country, we knowed, an’ we
had nudin but berries an’ sich to eat,
an’ got nigh starved.
“One night we cum onto half
a dozen fellows skulkin’ in de woods, an’
at fust dey made fight, but d’rectly dey know’d
we was friends, fur dey was some more Linkum sojers,
an’ dey’d lost dere way, or ruther, dey
know’d where dey was, but dey didn’t know
how to git way from dere. Dey was ’scaped
pris’ners, dey told us; when I yearde where ’twas
I know’d de way to de coast, an’ said
I’d show ’em de way if dey’d cum
long wid us, so dey did; an’ we got ’long
all right till we got to de ribber up by Mass’
Rhett’s place.”
“Yes, I know where it is,” said the Captain.
“Den what to do was de puzzle.
De country was all full ob secesh pickets, an’
dere was de ribber, an’ we had no boat, so
Jim, he says, ‘I know what to do; fust I’ll
hide you yere,’ an’ he did all safe in
de woods; ‘an’ den I’ll git ye suthin
to eat from de niggers round,’ an’ he
did dat too, do he couldn’t git much, for fear
he’d be seen; an’ den we, he and I, made
some ropes out ob de tall grass like dat
we’d ofen made fur mats, an’ tied dem
together wid some oder grass, an’ stuck a board
in, an’ den made fur de Yankee camp, an’
yere we is.”
“Yes,” said the black
man Jim, here, breaking silence, “we’ll
show you de way back if you kin go up in a boat dey
can rest in, fur dey’s most all clean done out,
an’ de capen’s wound is awful bad yit.”
“This captain, what’s his name?”
inquired Coolidge.
“His name is here,” said
Jim, carefully drawing forth a paper from his rags, “he
has on dis some figgers an’ a map of de
country he took before he got wounded, an’ some
words he writ wid a bit of burnt stick just before
we cum away, an’ he giv it to me,
an’ tole me to bring it to camp, fur fear something
might happen to him while we was away.”
“My God!” cried Coolidge
when he had opened the paper, and with hasty eyes
scanned its contents, “it’s Tom Russell;
I know him well. This must be sent up to head-quarters,
and I’ll get an order, and a boat, and some
men, to go for them at once.” All of which
was promptly done.
“See here! I speak to be
one of the fellows what goes,” Jim emphatically
announced.
“All right. I reckon we’ll
both go, Given, if the General will let us, and
I think he will,” which was a safe
guess and a true one. The boat was soon ready
and manned. ’Bijah, too weak to pull an
oar, was left behind; and Jim, really not fit to do
aught save guide them, still insisted on taking his
share of work. They found the place at last, and
the men; and taking them on board, Russell
having to be moved slowly and carefully, they
began to pull for home.
The tide was going out, and the river
low: that, with the heavy laden boat, made their
progress lingering; a fact which distressed them all,
as they knew the night to be almost spent, and that
the shores were so lined with batteries, open and
masked, and the country about so scoured by rebels,
as to make it almost sure death to them if they were
not beyond the lines before the morning broke.
The water was steadily and perceptibly
ebbing, the rowing growing more and more
insecure, the danger becoming imminent.
“Ease her off, there! ease her
off!” cried the Captain, as a harsh,
gravelly sound smote on his ear, and at the same moment
a shot whizzed past them, showing that they were discovered, “ease
her off, there! or we’re stuck!”
The warning came too late, indeed,
could not have been obeyed, had it come earlier.
The boat struck; her bottom grating hard on the wet
sand.
“Great God! she’s on a
bar,” cried Coolidge, “and the tide’s
running out, fast.”
“Yes, and them damned rebs are
safe enough from our fire,” said one of
the men.
A few scattering shot fell about them.
“They’re going to make their mark on us,
anyway,” put in another.
“And we can’t send ’em anything
in return, blast ’em!” growled a third.
“That’s the worst of it,”
broke out a fourth, “to be shot at like a rat
in a hole.”
All said in a breath, and the balls
by this time falling thick and fast, a
fiery, awful rain of death. The men were no cowards,
and the captain was brave enough; but what could they
do? To stand up was but to make figure-heads
at which the concealed enemy could fire with ghastly
certainty; to fire in return was to waste their ammunition
in the air. The men flung themselves face foremost
on the deck, silent and watchful.
Through it all Jim had been sitting crouched over his oar.
He, unarmed, could not have fought had the chance offered; breaking out, once
and again, into the solemn-sounding chant which he had been singing when he came
up in his boat the evening before:
“O my soul arise in heaven, Lord,
for to yearde when
Jordan roll,
Roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll,
the words falling in with the sound
of the water as it lapsed from them.
“Stop that infernal noise, will
you?” cried one of the men, impatiently.
The noise stopped.
“Hush, Harry, don’t
swear!” expostulated another, beside whom was
lying a man mortally wounded. “This is
awful! ’tain’t like going in fair and
square, on your chance.”
“That’s so, it’s
enough to make a fellow pray,” was the answer.
Here Russell, putting up his hand,
took hold of Jim’s brawny black one with a gesture
gentle as a woman’s. It hurt him to hear
his faithful friend even spoken to harshly. All
this, while the hideous shower of death was dropping
about them; the water was ebbing, ebbing, falling
and running out fast to sea, leaving them higher and
drier on the sands; the gray dawn was steadily brightening
into day.
At this fearful pass a sublime scene
was enacted. “Sirs!” said a voice, it
was Jim’s voice, and in it sounded something
so earnest and strange, that the men involuntarily
turned their heads to look at him. Then this
man stood up, a black man, a
little while before a slave, the great
muscles swollen and gnarled with unpaid toil, the
marks of the lash and the branding-iron yet plain upon
his person, the shadows of a lifetime of wrongs and
sufferings looking out of his eyes. “Sirs!”
he said, simply, “somebody’s got to die
to get us out of dis, and it may as well be me,” plunged
overboard, put his toil-hardened shoulders to the
boat; a struggle, a gasp, a mighty wrench, pushed
it off clear; then fell, face foremost, pierced by
a dozen bullets. Free at last!