A COINCIDENCE.
“Backward! turn backward,
O Time, in thy flight;
Make me a child again,
just for to-night.”
Take me to my early home at Fort Snelling,
and help me to live over again that happy time, when
I knew nothing of care and sorrow, and when the sight
of the dear old flag, run up, each morning, to the
roll of the drum, and the sentinel’s call, each
night, “All’s well around,” made
me feel secure and at home, even in what was then a
wilderness. Many pleasant scenes, and many startling
ones, come at my call. Some are more vivid than
others, and perhaps the most distinct of my early
remembrances is the arrival of the first steamboat.
It had been talked of and expected for a long time;
it is hard to realize in this age of rapid traveling
how deeply interested and excited every one felt in
anticipation of what was then a great event. It
was to bring us into more direct and easy communication
with the world; and small wonder that the prospect
of being at the head of steamboat navigation should
have caused excitement and rejoicing to those who had
been receiving their mails at intervals of months
instead of hours. To me, of course, child
that I was, it only meant a sight never before witnessed,
a something heard of, and seen in pictures, but never
realized. But even we children felt in listening
to our elders, that something great was about to happen.
At last, one bright summer morning,
while amusing myself on the piazza in the rear of
the officers’ quarters, there came a sound new
and very strange! All listened a moment in awe
and gratitude, and then, broke out, from many voices,
“The steamboat is coming! the steamboat is coming!”
And look! there is the smoke curling gracefully through
the trees; hark! to the puffing of the steam, startling
the echoes from a sleep co-eval with the creation;
now she rounds the point, and comes into full view.
I stand on tiptoe, but cannot see all I long to, till
Lieutenant David Hunter, my special favorite, catches
me up and holds me on the balustrade; and now I clap
my hands, and almost cry with delight, for there she
is, just landing, in all her pride and beauty, as
if she felt herself the Pioneer Steamboat, and
knew she would become historic.
Officers and soldiers, women and children,
are hurrying down the hill; terrified Indians rush
from their wigwams and look on in amazement,
utterly confounded, refusing to go near what they call
the “Bad Spirit.”
Greetings and congratulations warm
and heartfelt are exchanged; and speedily the mail
is opened, papers and letters are distributed; all
search eagerly for news from home, and my joy is turned
into grief for my friend Lieutenant Hunter, who learned,
by the very boat whose coming he hailed with so much
pleasure, that he is fatherless. All sympathize
deeply with him; few know how closely drawn together
are the occupants of a frontier post; but the common
joy, although dampened, was not destroyed, and civilities
were tendered to the captain and officers of the boat,
who were real gentlemen, and became great favorites
at the fort. They came again the next year, perhaps
more than once, and pleasant excursion parties on the
boat relieved the monotony of fort life.
The steamboat was the topic of conversation
for a long time. The day of its arrival became
an era from which we reckoned, and those of the first
occupants of Fort Snelling who still survive, can scarcely
recall a more delightful reminiscence than the arrival
of the first steamboat, in the summer of 1823.
Years passed away, childhood with its lightheartedness
gave way to youth, and that again to womanhood, and
then came middle life with its many cares, its griefs,
its joys too, and its unnumbered mercies, with bright
anticipations of a blessed rest from toil and pain, when
on one pleasant summer day in 1864, I find myself,
with a party of friends who have come to visit Fort Snelling and its many interesting surroundings, standing,
side by side with my mother, on the bastion of the
fort, recalling days and scenes gone by. Leaning
against the railing, and contemplating the river,
so beautiful from that height, she remarked to me:
“Can you remember, my child, when the first
steamboat came up this river?” I answered, “Yes,
oh yes! most distinctly do I remember it.”
And then we talk of the event, and recall the many
pleasant things connected with it, when, lo! a whistle,
and the loud puffing and snorting of the iron horse!
Captain Newson, standing near and listening to our
conversation, exclaimed, pointing over to Mendota,
“And there goes the first train of cars that
ever started out from Fort Snelling!”
Hushed and breathless, we gaze at
the fast vanishing train, feeling, as we stand there,
we two, alone, of all who saw that other great event,
over forty years ago, like links connecting
the buried past with the living present. And
we would fain weep as we think of those who stood
beside us then, now long since passed away but
living, loving friends are about us, and we will not
let our sadness mar their pleasure; so down in the
depth of our hearts we hide these tender recollections,
to indulge in when we are alone. I look long at
the beautiful river, and think, as it ripples and
laughs in the sunlight, that, could our ears catch
the language of its murmurings, we should hear:
“Men may come, and men
may go,
But I go on forever.”