LAUNCELOT HALLIDAY
General Halliday was a distant cousin
of Mrs. Garnet. He had commanded the brigade
which included Garnet’s battalion, and had won
fame. Garnet, who felt himself undervalued by
Halliday, said this fame had been won by show rather
than by merit. And in truth, Halliday was not
so much a man of genuine successes as of an audacity
that stopped just short of the fantastical, and kept
him perpetually interesting.
“Launcelot’s failures,”
said Garnet, “make a finer show than most men’s
successes. He’d rather shine without succeeding,
than succeed without shining.”
The moment the war ended, Halliday
hurried back to his plantation, the largest in Blackland.
This county’s sole crop was cotton, and negroes
two-thirds of its population. His large family much
looked up to had called it home, though
often away from it, seeking social stir at the State
capital and elsewhere. On his return from the
war, the General brought with him a Northerner, an
officer in the very command to which he had surrendered.
Just then, you may remember, when Southerners saw
only ruin in their vast agricultural system, many Northerners
thought they saw a new birth. They felt the poetry
of Dixie’s long summers, the plantation life Uncle
Tom’s Cabin and fancied that with
Uncle Tom’s good-will and Northern money and
methods, there was quick fortune for them. Halliday
echoed these bright predictions with brave buoyancy
and perfect sincerity, and sold the conqueror his
entire estate. Then he moved his family to New
Orleans, and issued his card to his many friends,
announcing himself prepared to receive and sell any
shipments of cotton, and fill any orders for supplies,
with which they might entrust him. The Government’s
pardon, on which this fine rapidity was hypothecated,
came promptly “through a pardon broker,”
said Garnet.
But the General’s celerity was
resented. He boarded at the St. Charles, and,
famous, sociable, and fond of politics, came at once
into personal contact with the highest Federal authorities
in New Orleans. The happy dead earnest with which
he “accepted the situation” and “harmonized”
with these men sorely offended his old friends and
drew the fire of the newspapers. Even Judge March
demurred.
“President Garnet,” John
heard the beloved voice in front of him say, “gentlemen
may cry Peace, Peace, but there can be too much peace,
sir!”
The General came out in an open letter,
probably not so sententiously as we condense it here,
but in substance to this effect: “The king
never dies; citizenship never ceases; a bereaved citizenship
has no right to put on expensive mourning, and linger
through a dressy widowhood before it marries again....
There are men who, when their tree has been cut down
even with the ground, will try to sit in the shade
of the stump.... Such men are those who, now
that slavery is gone, still cling to a civil order
based on the old plantation system.... They are
like a wood-sawyer robbed of his saw-horse and trying
to saw wood in his lap.”
All these darts struck and stung,
but a little soft mud, such as any editor could supply,
would soon have drawn out the sting but
for an additional line or two, which gave poisonous
and mortal offense. Blackland and Clearwater
replied in a storm of indignation. The Suez Courier
bade him keep out of Dixie on peril of his life.
He came, nevertheless, canvassing for business, and
was not molested, but got very few shipments.
What he mainly secured were the flippant pledges of
such as required the largest possible advances indefinitely
ahead of the least possible cotton. Also a few
Yankees shipped to him.
“Gen’l Halliday, howdy,
sah?” It was dusk of the last day of this
tour. The voice came from a dark place on the
sidewalk in Suez. “Don’t you know
me, Gen’l? You often used to see me an’
Majo’ Gyarnet togetheh; yes, sah.
My name’s Cornelius Leggett, sah.”
“Why, Cornelius, to be sure!
I thought I smelt whiskey. What can I do for
you?”
“Gen’l, I has the honor
to espress to you, sah, my thanks faw the way
you espress yo’self in yo’ letteh
on the concerns an’ prospec’s o’
we’ colo’ed people, sah. An
likewise, they’s thousands would like to espress
the same espressions, sah.”
“Oh, that’s all right.”
“Gen’l, I represents a
quantity of ow people what’s move’ down
into Blackland fum Rosemont and other hill places.
They espress they’se’ves to me as they
agent that they like to confawm some prearrangement
with you, sah.”
“Are you all on one plantation?”
“Oh, no, sah, they ain’t
ezac’ly on no plantation. Me? Ob,
I been a-goin’ to the Freedman’ Bureau
school in Pulaski City as they agent.
“Sah? Yass, sah, at they espenses p-he!
“They? They mos’ly
strowed round in the woods in pole cabins an’
bresh arbors. Sah?
“Yaas, sah, livin’ on game an’
fish. Sah?
“Yaas, sah.
“But they espress they doubts
that the Gove’ment ain’t goin’ to
give ’em no fahms, an’ they like to comprise
with you, Gen’l, ef you please, sah, to
git holt o’ some fahms o’ they own, you
know; sawt o’ payin’ faw’m bes’
way they kin; yass, sah. As you say in yo’
letteh, betteh give ’m lan’s than keep
’em vagabones; yass, sir. Betteh no terms
than none at all; yass, sah.” And
so on.
From this colloquy resulted the Negro
farm-village of Leggettstown. In 1866-68 it grew
up on the old Halliday place, which had reverted to
the General by mortgage. Neatest among its whitewashed
cabins, greenest with gourd-vines, and always the
nearest paid for, was that of the Reverend Leviticus
Wisdom, his wife, Virginia, and her step-daughter,
Johanna.
In the fall of 1869 General Halliday
came back to Suez to live. His wife, a son, and
daughter had died, two daughters had married and gone
to the Northwest, others were here and there.
A daughter of sixteen was with him they
two alone. The ebb-tide of the war values had
left him among the shoals; his black curls were full
of frost, his bank box was stuffed with plantation
mortgages, his notes were protested. He had come
to operate, from Suez as a base, several estates surrendered
to him by debtors and entrusted to his management
by his creditors. This he wished to do on what
seemed to him an original plan, of which Leggettstown
was only a clumsy sketch, a plan based on his belief
in the profound economic value of “villages
of small freeholding farmers, my dear sir!”
“It’s the natural crystal
of free conditions!” John heard him say in the
post-office corner of Weed & Usher’s drug-store.
Empty words to John. He noted
only the noble air of the speaker and his hearers.
Every man of the group had been a soldier. The
General showed much more polish than the others, but
they all had the strong graces of horsemen and masters,
and many a subtle sign of civilization and cult heated
and hammered through centuries of search for good government
and honorable fortune. John stopped and gazed.
“Come on, son,” said Judge
March almost sharply. John began to back away.
“There!” exclaimed the father as his son
sat down suddenly in a box of sawdust and cigar stumps.
He led him away to clean him off, adding, “You
hadn’t ought to stare at people as you walk away
fum them, my son.”
With rare exceptions, the General’s
daily hearers were silent, but resolute. They
did not analyze. Their motives were their feelings;
their feelings were their traditions, and their traditions
were back in the old entrenchments. The time
for large changes had slipped by. Haggard, of
the Courier, thought it “Equally just
and damning” to reprint from the General’s
odiously remembered letter of four years earlier, “If
we can’t make our Negroes white, let us make
them as white as we can,” and sign it “Social
Equality Launcelot.” Parson Tombs, sweet,
aged, and beloved, prayed from his pulpit with
the preface, “Thou knowest thy servant has never
mixed up politics and religion” that
“the machinations of them who seek to join together
what God hath put asunder may come to naught.”
Halliday laughed. “Why,
I’m only a private citizen trying to retrieve
my private fortunes.” But
“These are times when a man
can’t choose whether he’ll be public or
private!” said Garnet, and the Courier
made the bankrupt cotton factor public every day.
It quoted constantly from the unpardonable letter,
and charged him with “inflaming the basest cupidity
of our Helots,” and so on, and on. But
the General, with his silver-shot curls dancing half-way
down his shoulders, a six-shooter under each skirt
of his black velvet coat, and a knife down the back
of his neck, went on pushing his private enterprise.
“Private enterprise!”
cried Garnet. “His jackals will run him
for Congress.” And they did against
Garnet.
The times were seething. Halliday,
viewing matters impartially in the clear, calm light
of petroleum torches, justified Congress in acts which
Garnet termed “the spume of an insane revenge;”
while Garnet, with equal calmness of judgment, under
other petroleum torches, gloried in the “masterly
inactivity” of Dixie’s whitest and best which
Launcelot denounced as a foolish and wicked political
strike. All the corruptions bred by both
sides in a gigantic war and before it in
all the crudeness of the country’s first century were
pouring down and spouting up upon Dixie their rain
of pitch and ashes. Negroes swarmed about the
polls, elbowed their masters, and challenged their
votes. Ragged negresses talked loudly along the
sidewalk of one another as “ladies,” and
of their mistresses as “women.” White
men of fortune and station were masking, night-riding,
whipping and killing; and blue cavalry rattled again
through the rocky streets of Suez.
Such was life when dashing Fannie
Halliday joined the choir in Parson Tombs’s
church, becoming at once its leading spirit, and John
March suddenly showed a deep interest in the Scriptures.
He joined her Sunday-school class.