BatonRouge, Louisiana,
March
9th, 1862.
Here I am, at your service, Madame
Idleness, waiting for any suggestion it may please
you to put in my weary brain, as a means to pass this
dull, cloudy Sunday afternoon; for the great Pike clock
over the way has this instant struck only half-past
three; and if a rain is added to the high wind that
has been blowing ever since the month commenced, and
prevents my going to Mrs. Brunot’s before dark,
I fear I shall fall a victim to “the blues”
for the first time in my life. Indeed it is dull.
Miriam went to Linwood with Lydia yesterday, and I
miss them beyond all expression. Miriam is so
funny! She says she cannot live without me, and
yet she can go away, and stay for months without missing
me in the slightest degree. Extremely funny!
And I well, it is absurd to fancy myself
alive without Miriam. She would rather not visit
with me, and yet, be it for an hour or a month, I
never halfway enjoy myself without her, away from
home. Miriam is my “Rock ahead” in
life; I’ll founder on her yet. It’s
a grand sight for people out of reach, who will not
come in contact with the breakers, but it is quite
another thing to me, perpetually dancing on those
sharp points in my little cockleshell that forms so
ludicrous a contrast to the grand scene around.
I am sure to founder!
I hold that every family has at heart
one genius, in some line, no matter what except
in our family, where each is a genius, in his own
way. Hem! And Miriam has a genius for the
piano. Now I never could bear to compete with
any one, knowing that it is the law of my being to
be inferior to others, consequently to fail, and failure
is so humiliating to me. So it is, that people
may force me to abandon any pursuit by competing with
me; for knowing that failure is inevitable, rather
than fight against destiny I give up de bonne grace.
Originally, I was said to have a talent for the piano,
as well as Miriam. Sister and Miss Isabella said
I would make a better musician than she, having more
patience and perseverance. However, I took hardly
six months’ lessons to her ever so many years;
heard how well she played, got disgusted with myself,
and gave up the piano at fourteen, with spasmodic fits
of playing every year or so. At sixteen, Harry
gave me a guitar. Here was a new field where
I would have no competitors. I knew no one who
played on it; so I set to work, and taught myself
to manage it, mother only teaching me how to tune
it. But Miriam took a fancy to it, and I taught
her all I knew; but as she gained, I lost my relish,
and if she had not soon abandoned it, I would know
nothing of it now. She does not know half that
I do about it; they tell me I play much better than
she; yet they let her play on it in company before
me, and I cannot pretend to play after. Why is
it? It is not vanity, or I would play,
confident of excelling her. It is not jealousy,
for I love to see her show her talents. It is
not selfishness; I love her too much to be selfish
to her. What is it then? “Simply lack
of self-esteem” I would say if there was no
phrenologist near to correct me, and point out that
well-developed hump at the extreme southern and heavenward
portion of my Morgan head. Self-esteem or not,
Mr. Phrenologist, the result is, that Miriam is by
far the best performer in Baton Rouge, and I would
rank forty-third even in the delectable village of
Jackson.
And yet I must have some ear for music.
To “know as many songs as Sarah” is a
family proverb; not very difficult songs, or very beautiful
ones, to be sure, besides being very indifferently
sung; but the tunes will run in my head, and
it must take some ear to catch them. People
say to me, “Of course you play?” to which
I invariably respond, “Oh, no, but Miriam plays
beautifully!” “You sing, I believe?”
“Not at all except for father”
(that is what I used to say) “and
the children. But Miriam sings.”
“You are fond of dancing?” “Very;
but I cannot dance as well as Miriam.”
“Of course, you are fond of society?”
“No, indeed! Miriam is, and she goes to
all the parties and returns all the visits for me.”
The consequence is, that if the person who questions
is a stranger, he goes off satisfied that “that
Miriam must be a great girl; but that little sister
of hers ! Well! a prig, to say
the least!”
So it is Miriam catches all my fish and
so it is, too, that it is not raining, and I’m
off.
April
7th.
Until that dreary 1861, I had no idea
of sorrow or grief.... How I love to think of
myself at that time! Not as myself, but
as some happy, careless child who danced through life,
loving God’s whole world too much to love any
particular one, outside of her own family. She
was more childish then yet I like her for
all her folly; I can say it now, for she is as dead
as though she was lying underground.
Now do not imagine that Sarah has
become an aged lady in the fifteen months that have
elapsed since, for it is no such thing; her heart does
ache occasionally, but that is a secret between her
and this little rosewood furnished room; and when
she gets over it, there is no one more fond of making
wheelbarrows of the children, or of catching Charlie
or mother by the foot and making them play lame chicken....
Now all this done by a young lady who remembers eighteen
months ago with so much regret that she has lost so
much of her high spirits might argue that
her spirits were before tremendous; and yet they were
not. That other Sarah was ladylike, I am sure,
in her wildest moments, but there is something hurried
and boisterous in this one’s tricks that reminds
me of some one who is making a merit of being jolly
under depressing circumstances. No! that is not
a nice Sarah now, to my taste.
The commencement of ’61 promised
much pleasure for the rest of the year, and though
Secession was talked about, I do not believe any one
anticipated the war that has been desolating our country
ever since, with no prospect of terminating for some
time to come. True the garrison was taken, but
then several pleasant officers of the Louisiana army
were stationed there, and made quite an agreeable addition
to our small parties, and we did not think for a moment
that trouble would grow out of it at least,
we girls did not. Next Louisiana seceded, but
still we did not trouble ourselves with gloomy anticipations,
for many strangers visited the town, and our parties,
rides, and walks grew gayer and more frequent.
One little party shall
I ever forget it? was on the 9th of March,
I think; such an odd, funny little party! Such
queer things happened! What a fool Mr. McG
made of himself! Even more so than usual.
But hush! It’s not fair to laugh at a lady under
peculiar circumstances. And he tried so hard
to make himself agreeable, poor fellow, that I ought
to like him for being so obedient to my commands.
“Say something new; something funny,”
I said, tired of a subject on which he had been expatiating
all the evening; for I had taken a long ride with him
before sunset, he had escorted me to Mrs. Brunot’s,
and here he was still at my side, and his conversation
did not interest me. To hear, with him, was to
obey. “Something funny? Well ”
here he commenced telling something about somebody,
the fun of which seemed to consist in the somebody’s
having “knocked his shins” against
something else. I only listened to the latter
part; I was bored, and showed it. “Shins!”
was I to laugh at such a story?
April
12th.
Day before yesterday, just about this
time of evening, as I came home from the graveyard,
Jimmy unexpectedly came in. Ever since the 12th
of February he has been waiting on the Yankees’
pleasure, in the Mississippi, at all places below
Columbus, and having been under fire for thirteen
days at Tiptonville, Island N having surrendered
Monday night; and Commodore Hollins thinking it high
time to take possession of the ironclad ram at New
Orleans, and give them a small party below the forts,
he carried off his little aide from the McRae Tuesday
morning, and left him here Thursday evening, to our
infinite delight, for we felt as though we would never
again see our dear little Jimmy. He has grown
so tall, and stout, that it is really astonishing,
considering the short time he has been away....
To our great distress, he jumped up from dinner, and
declared he must go to the city on the very next boat.
Commodore Hollins would need him, he must be at his
post, etc., and in twenty minutes he was off,
the rascal, before we could believe he had been here
at all. There is something in his eye that reminds
me of Harry, and tells me that, like Hal, he will die
young.
And these days that are going by remind
me of Hal, too. I am walking in our footsteps
of last year. The eighth was the day we gave him
a party, on his return home. I see him so distinctly
standing near the pier table, talking to Mr. Sparks,
whom he had met only that morning, and who, three
weeks after, had Harry’s blood upon his hands.
He is a murderer now, without aim or object in life,
as before; with only one desire to die and
death still flees from him, and he Dares not rid himself
of life.
All those dancing there that night
have undergone trial and affliction since. Father
is dead, and Harry. Mr. Trezevant lies at Corinth
with his skull fractured by a bullet; every young
man there has been in at least one battle since, and
every woman has cried over her son, brother, or sweetheart,
going away to the wars, or lying sick and wounded.
And yet we danced that night, and never thought of
bloodshed! The week before Louisiana seceded,
Jack Wheat stayed with us, and we all liked him so
much, and he thought so much of us; and
last week a week ago to-day he
was killed on the battle-field of Shiloh.
April
16th.
Among the many who visited us, in
the beginning of 1861, there was Mr. Bradford.
I took a dislike to him the first time I ever saw him,
and, being accustomed to say just what I pleased to
all the other gentlemen, tried it with him. It
was at dinner, and for a long while I had the advantage,
and though father would sometimes look grave, Gibbes,
and all at my end of the table, would scream with
laughter. At last Mr. Bradford commenced to retaliate,
and my dislike changed into respect for a man who
could make an excellent repartee with perfect good-breeding;
and after dinner, when the others took their leave,
and he asked permission to remain, during
his visit, which lasted until ten o’clock, he
had gone over such a variety of subjects, conversing
so well upon all, that Miriam and I were so interested
that we forgot to have the gas lit!
April
17th.
And another was silly little Mr. B r,
my little golden calf. What a don’t
call names! I owe him a grudge for “cold
hands,” and the other day, when I heard of his
being wounded at Shiloh, I could not help laughing
a little at Tom B r’s being
hurt. What was the use of throwing a nice, big
cannon ball, that might have knocked a man down, away
on that poor little fellow, when a pea from a popgun
would have made the same impression? Not but
what he is brave, but little Mr. B r
is so soft.
Then there was that rattle-brain Mr.
T t who, commencing one subject,
never ceased speaking until he had touched on all.
One evening he came in talking, and never paused even
for a reply until he bowed himself out, talking still,
when Mr. Bradford, who had been forced to silence
as well as the rest, threw himself back with a sigh
of relief and exclaimed, “This man talks like
a woman!” I thought it the best description
of Mr. T t’s conversation
I had ever heard. It was all on the surface,
no pretensions to anything except to put the greatest
possible number of words of no meaning in one sentence,
while speaking of the most trivial thing. Night
or day, Mr. T t never passed home
without crying out to me, “Ces jolis yeux
bleus!” and if the parlor were brightly
lighted so that all from the street might see us, and
be invisible to us themselves, I always nodded my
head to the outer darkness and laughed, no matter
who was present, though it sometimes created remark.
You see, I knew the joke. Coming from a party
escorted by Mr. B r, Miriam by
Mr. T t, we had to wait a long
time before Rose opened the door, which interval I
employed in dancing up and down the gallery followed
by my cavalier singing,
“Mes jolis yeux
bleus,
Bleus comme les
cieux,
Mes jolis yeux bleus
Ont ravi son âme,”
etc.;
which naïve remark Mr. B r,
not speaking French, lost entirely, and Mr. T t
endorsed it with his approbation and belief in it,
and ever afterwards called me “Ces jolis
yeux bleus.”
April
19th, 1862.
Another date in Hal’s short
history! I see myself walking home with Mr. McG
just after sundown, meeting Miriam and Dr. Woods at
the gate; only that was a Friday instead of a Saturday,
as this. From the other side, Mr. Sparks comes
up and joins us. We stand talking in the bright
moonlight which makes Miriam look white and statue-like.
I am holding roses in my hand, in return for which
one little pansy has been begged from my garden, and
is now figuring as a shirt-stud. I turn to speak
to that man of whom I said to Dr. Woods, before I
even knew his name, “Who is this man who passes
here so constantly? I feel that I shall hate him
to my dying day.” He told me his name was
Sparks, a good, harmless fellow, etc. And
afterwards, when I did know him, [Dr. Woods] would
ask every time we met, “Well! do you hate Sparks
yet?” I could not really hate any one in my
heart, so I always answered, “He is a good-natured
fool, but I will hate him yet.” But even
now I cannot: my only feeling is intense pity
for the man who has dealt us so severe a blow; who
made my dear father bow his gray head, and shed such
bitter tears.
The moon is rising still higher now,
and people are hurrying to the grand Meeting, where
the state of the country is to be discussed, and the
three young men bow and hurry off, too. Later,
at eleven o’clock, Miriam and I are up at Lydia’s
waiting (until the boat comes) with Miss Comstock
who is going away. As usual, I am teasing and
romping by turns. Harry suddenly stands in the
parlor door, looking very grave, and very quiet.
He is holding father’s stick in his hand, and
says he has come to take us over home. I was
laughing still, so I said, “Wait,” while
I prepared for some last piece of folly, but he smiled
for the first time, and throwing his arm around me,
said, “Come home, you rogue!” and laughing
still, I followed him.
He left us in the hall, saying he
must go to Charlie’s a moment, but to leave
the door open for him. So we went up, and I ran
in his room, and lighted his gas for him, as I did
every night when we went up together. In a little
while I heard him come in and go to his room.
I knew nothing then; but next day, going into mother’s
room, I saw him standing before the glass door of
her armoir, looking at a black coat he had on.
Involuntarily I cried out, “Oh, don’t,
Hal!” “Don’t what? Isn’t
it a nice coat?” he asked. “Yes; but
it is buttoned up to the throat, and I don’t
like to see it. It looks ” here
I went out as abruptly as I came in; that black coat
so tightly buttoned troubled me.
He came to our room after a while
and said he was going ten miles out in the country
for a few days. I begged him to stay, and reproached
him for going away so soon after he had come home.
But he said he must, adding, “Perhaps I am tired
of you, and want to see something new. I’ll
be so glad to get back in a few days.” Father
said yes, he must go, so he went without any further
explanation.
Walking out to Mr. Davidson’s
that evening, Lydia and I sat down on a fallen rail
beyond the Catholic graveyard, and there she told me
what had happened. The night before, sitting
on Dr. Woods’s gallery, with six or eight others
who had been singing, Hal called on Mr. Henderson
to sing. He complied by singing one that was not
nice. Old Mr. Sparks got up to leave, and Hal said,
“I hope we are not disturbing you?” No,
he said he was tired and would go home. As soon
as he was gone, his son, who I have since heard
was under the influence of opium, though
Hal always maintained that he was not, said
it was a shame to disturb his poor old father.
Hal answered, “You heard what he said.
We did not disturb him.” “You
are a liar!” the other cried. That is a
name that none of our family has either merited or
borne with; and quick as thought Hal sprang to his
feet and struck him across the face with the walking-stick
he held. The blow sent the lower part across
the balcony in the street, as the spring was loosened
by it, while the upper part, to which was fastened
the sword for it was father’s sword-cane remained
in his hand. I doubt that he ever before knew
the cane could come apart. Certainly he did not
perceive it, until the other whined piteously he was
taking advantage over an unarmed man; when, cursing
him, he (Harry) threw it after the body of the cane,
and said, “Now we are equal.”
The other’s answer was to draw a knife, and
was about to plunge it into Harry, who disdained to
flinch, when Mr. Henderson threw himself on Mr. Sparks
and dragged him off.
It was a little while after that Harry
came for us. The consequence of this was a challenge
from Mr. Sparks in the morning, which was accepted
by Harry’s friends, who appointed Monday, at
Greenwell, to meet. Lydia did not tell me that;
she said she thought it had been settled peaceably,
so I was not uneasy, and only wanted Harry to come
back from Seth David’s soon. The possibility
of his fighting never occurred to me.
Sunday evening I was on the front
steps with Miriam and Dr. Woods, talking of Harry
and wishing he would come. “You want Harry!”
the doctor repeated after me; “you had better
learn to live without him.” “What
an absurdity!” I said and wondered when he would
come. Still later, Miriam, father, and I were
in the parlor, when there was a tap on the window,
just above his head, and I saw a hand, for an instant.
Father hurried out, and we heard several voices; and
then steps going away. Mother came down and asked
who had been there, but we only knew that, whoever
it was, father had afterward gone with them. Mother
went on: “There is something going on,
which is to be kept from me. Every one seems
to know it, and to make a secret of it.”
I said nothing, for I had promised Lydia not to tell;
and even I did not know all.
When father came back, Harry was with
him. I saw by his nod, and “How are you,
girls,” how he wished us to take it, so neither
moved from our chairs, while he sat down on the sofa
and asked what kind of a sermon we had had. And
we talked of anything except what we were thinking
of, until we went upstairs.
Hal afterwards told me that he had
been arrested up there, and father went with him to
give bail; and that the sheriff had gone out to Greenwell
after Mr. Sparks. He told me all about it next
morning, saying he was glad it was all over, but sorry
for Mr. Sparks; for he had a blow on his face which
nothing would wash out. I said, “Hal, if
you had fought, much as I love you, I would
rather he had killed you than that you should have
killed him. I love you too much to be willing
to see blood on your hands.” First he laughed
at me, then said, “If I had killed him, I never
would have seen you again.”
We thought it was all over; so did
he. But Baton Rouge was wild about it. Mr.
Sparks was the bully of the town, having nothing else
to do, and whenever he got angry or drunk, would knock
down anybody he chose. That same night, before
Harry met him, he had slapped one man, and had dragged
another over the room by the hair; but these coolly
went home, and waited for a voluntary apology.
So the mothers, sisters, and intimate friends of those
who had patiently borne the blows, and being “woolled,”
vaunted the example of their heroes, and asked why
Dr. Morgan had not acted as they had done,
and waited for an apology? Then there was another
faction who cried only blood could wash out that blow
and make a gentleman of Mr. Sparks again, as
though he ever had been one! So knots
assembled at street corners, and discussed it, until
father said to us that Monday night, “These people
are so excited, and are trying so hard to make this
affair worse, that I would not be surprised if they
shot each other down in the street,” speaking
of Harry and the other.
Hal seemed to think of it no more,
though, and Wednesday said he must go to the city
and consult Brother as to where he should permanently
establish himself. I was sorry; yet glad that
he would then get away from all this trouble.
I don’t know that I ever saw him in higher spirits
than he was that day and evening, the 24th. Lilly
and Charlie were here until late, and he laughed and
talked so incessantly that we called him crazy.
We might have guessed by his extravagant spirits that
he was trying to conceal something from us....
He went away before daybreak, and I never saw him
again.
April
26th, 1862.
There is no word in the English language
that can express the state in which we are, and have
been, these last three days. Day before yesterday,
news came early in the morning of three of the enemy’s
boats passing the Forts, and then the excitement began.
It increased rapidly on hearing of the sinking of
eight of our gunboats in the engagement, the capture
of the Forts, and last night, of the burning of the
wharves and cotton in the city while the Yankees were
taking possession. To-day, the excitement has
reached the point of delirium. I believe I am
one of the most self-possessed in my small circle;
and yet I feel such a craving for news of Miriam,
and mother, and Jimmy, who are in the city, that I
suppose I am as wild as the rest. It is nonsense
to tell me I am cool, with all these patriotic and
enthusiastic sentiments. Nothing can be positively
ascertained, save that our gunboats are sunk, and
theirs are coming up to the city. Everything else
has been contradicted until we really do not know
whether the city has been taken or not. We only
know we had best be prepared for anything. So
day before yesterday, Lilly and I sewed up our jewelry,
which may be of use if we have to fly. I vow
I will not move one step, unless carried away.
Come what will, here I remain.
We went this morning to see the cotton
burning a sight never before witnessed,
and probably never again to be seen. Wagons, drays, everything
that can be driven or rolled, were loaded
with the bales and taken a few squares back to burn
on the commons. Negroes were running around,
cutting them open, piling them up, and setting them
afire. All were as busy as though their salvation
depended on disappointing the Yankees. Later,
Charlie sent for us to come to the river and see him
fire a flatboat loaded with the precious material
for which the Yankees are risking their bodies and
souls. Up and down the levee, as far as we could
see, negroes were rolling it down to the brink of the
river where they would set them afire and push the
bales in to float burning down the tide. Each
sent up its wreath of smoke and looked like a tiny
steamer puffing away. Only I doubt that from the
source to the mouth of the river there are as many
boats afloat on the Mississippi. The flatboat
was piled with as many bales as it could hold without
sinking. Most of them were cut open, while negroes
staved in the heads of barrels of alcohol, whiskey,
etc., and dashed bucketsful over the cotton.
Others built up little chimneys of pine every few feet,
lined with pine knots and loose cotton, to burn more
quickly. There, piled the length of the whole
levee, or burning in the river, lay the work of thousands
of negroes for more than a year past. It had come
from every side. Men stood by who owned the cotton
that was burning or waiting to burn. They either
helped, or looked on cheerfully. Charlie owned
but sixteen bales a matter of some fifteen
hundred dollars; but he was the head man of the whole
affair, and burned his own, as well as the property
of others. A single barrel of whiskey that was
thrown on the cotton, cost the man who gave it one
hundred and twenty-five dollars. (It shows what
a nation in earnest is capable of doing.) Only two
men got on the flatboat with Charlie when it was ready.
It was towed to the middle of the river, set afire
in every place, and then they jumped into a little
skiff fastened in front, and rowed to land. The
cotton floated down the Mississippi one sheet of living
flame, even in the sunlight. It would have been
grand at night. But then we will have fun watching
it this evening anyway; for they cannot get through
to-day, though no time is to be lost. Hundreds
of bales remained untouched. An incredible amount
of property has been destroyed to-day; but no one
begrudges it. Every grog-shop has been emptied,
and gutters and pavements are floating with liquors
of all kinds. So that if the Yankees are fond
of strong drink, they will fare ill.
Yesterday, Mr. Hutchinson and a Dr.
Moffat called to ask for me, with a message about
Jimmy. I was absent, but they saw Lilly.
Jimmy, they said, was safe. Though sick in bed,
he had sprung up and had rushed to the wharf at the
first tap of the alarm bell in New Orleans. But
as nothing could be done, he would probably be with
us to-day, bringing mother and Miriam. I have
neither heard nor seen more. The McRae, they
said, went to the bottom with the others. They
did not know whether any one aboard had escaped.
God be praised that Jimmy was not on her then!
The new boat to which he was appointed is not yet finished.
So he is saved! I am distressed about Captain
Huger, and could not refrain from crying, he was so
good to Jimmy. But I remembered Miss Cammack might
think it rather tender and obtrusive, so I dried my
eyes and began to hope he had escaped. Oh! how
glad I should be to know he has suffered no harm.
Mr. Hutchinson was on his way above, going to join
others where the final battle is to be fought on the
Mississippi. He had not even time to sit down;
so I was doubly grateful to him for his kindness.
I wish I could have thanked him for being so considerate
of me in my distress now. In her agitation, Lilly
gave him a letter I had been writing to George when
I was called away; and begged him to address it and
mail it at Vicksburg, or somewhere; for no mail will
leave here for Norfolk for a long while to come.
The odd part is, that he does not know George.
But he said he would gladly take charge of it and
remember the address, which Lilly told him was Richmond.
Well! if the Yankees get it they will take it for
an insane scrawl. I wanted to calm his anxiety
about us, though I was so wildly excited that I could
only say, “Don’t mind us! We are safe.
But fight, George! Fight for us!” The repetition
was ludicrous. I meant so much, too! I only
wanted him to understand he could best defend us there.
Ah! Mr. Yankee! if you had but your brothers
in this world, and their lives hanging by a thread,
you too might write wild letters! And if you want
to know what an excited girl can do, just call and
let me show you the use of a small seven-shooter and
a large carving-knife which vibrate between my belt
and my pocket, always ready for emergencies.
April
27th.
What a day! Last night came a
dispatch that New Orleans was under British protection,
and could not be bombarded; consequently, the enemy’s
gunboats would probably be here this morning, such
few as had succeeded in passing the Forts; from nine
to fifteen, it was said. And the Forts, they
said, had not surrendered. I went to church;
but I grew very anxious before it was over, feeling
that I was needed at home. When I returned, I
found Lilly wild with excitement, picking up hastily
whatever came to hand, preparing for instant flight,
she knew not where. The Yankees were in sight;
the town was to be burned; we were to run to the woods,
etc. If the house had to be burned, I had
to make up my mind to run, too. So my treasure-bag
tied around my waist as a bustle, a sack with a few
necessary articles hanging on my arm, some few quite
unnecessary ones, too, as I had not the heart to leave
the old and new prayer books father had given me,
and Miriam’s, too; pistol and carving-knife
ready, I stood awaiting the exodus. I heaped on
the bed the treasures I wanted to burn, matches lying
ready to fire the whole at the last minute. I
may here say that, when all was over, I found I had
omitted many things from the holocaust. This very
diary was not included. It would have afforded
vast amusement to the Yankees. There may yet
be occasion to burn them, and the house also.
People fortunately changed their minds about the auto-da-fe
just then; and the Yankees have not yet arrived, at
sundown. So, when the excitement calmed down,
poor Lilly tumbled in bed in a high fever in consequence
of terror and exertion.
[A page torn
out]
I was right in that prophecy.
For this was not the Will Pinckney I saw last.
So woebegone! so subdued, careworn, and sad! No
trace of his once merry self. He is good-looking,
which he never was before. But I would rather
never have seen him than have found him so changed.
I was talking to a ghost. His was a sad story.
He had held one bank of the river until forced to
retreat with his men, as their cartridges were exhausted,
and General Lovell omitted sending more. They
had to pass through swamps, wading seven and a half
miles, up to their waists in water. He gained
the edge of the swamp, saw they were over the worst,
and fell senseless. Two of his men brought him
milk, and “woke him up,” he said.
His men fell from exhaustion, were lost, and died in
the swamp; so that out of five hundred, but one hundred
escaped. This he told quietly and sadly, looking
so heart-broken that it was piteous to see such pain.
He showed me his feet, with thick clumsy shoes which
an old negro had pulled off to give him; for his were
lost in the swamp, and he came out bare-footed.
They reached the Lafourche River, I believe, seized
a boat, and arrived here last night. His wife
and child were aboard. Heaven knows how they
got there! The men he sent on to Port Hudson,
while he stopped here. I wanted to bring his wife
to stay with us; but he said she could not bear to
be seen, as she had run off just as she had happened
to be at that moment. In half an hour he would
be off to take her to his old home in a carriage.
There he would rejoin his men, on the railroad, and
march from Clinton to the Jackson road, and so on
to Corinth. A long journey for men so disheartened!
But they will conquer in the end. Beauregard’s
army will increase rapidly at this rate. The
whole country is aroused, and every man who owns a
gun, and many who do not, are on the road to Corinth.
We will conquer yet.
May
5th.
Vile old Yankee boats, four in number,
passed up this morning without stopping. After
all our excitement, this “silent contempt”
annihilated me! What in the world do they mean?
The river was covered with burning cotton; perhaps
they want to see where it came from.
May
9th.
Our lawful (?) owners have at last
arrived. About sunset, day before yesterday,
the Iroquois anchored here, and a graceful young Federal
stepped ashore, carrying a Yankee flag over his shoulder,
and asked the way to the Mayor’s office.
I like the style! If we girls of Baton Rouge
had been at the landing, instead of the men, that Yankee
would never have insulted us by flying his flag in
our faces! We would have opposed his landing
except under a flag of truce; but the men let him
alone, and he even found a poor Dutchman willing to
show him the road!
He did not accomplish much; said a
formal demand would be made next day, and asked if
it was safe for the men to come ashore and buy a few
necessaries, when he was assured the air of Baton Rouge
was very unhealthy for Yankee soldiers at night.
He promised very magnanimously not to shell us out
if we did not molest him; but I notice none of them
dare set their feet on terra firma, except the
officer who has now called three times on the Mayor,
and who is said to tremble visibly as he walks the
streets.
Last evening came the demand:
the town must be surrendered immediately; the Federal
flag must be raised; they would grant us the same terms
they granted New Orleans. Jolly terms those were!
The answer was worthy of a Southerner. It was,
“The town was defenseless; if we had cannon,
there were not men enough to resist; but if forty vessels
lay at the landing, it was intimated we
were in their power, and more ships coming up, we
would not surrender; if they wanted, they might come
and take us; if they wished the Federal flag hoisted
over the Arsenal, they might put it up for themselves,
the town had no control over Government property.”
Glorious! What a pity they did not shell the town!
But they are taking us at our word, and this morning
they are landing at the Garrison.
“All devices, signs, and flags
of the Confederacy shall be suppressed.”
So says Picayune Butler. Good. I devote all
my red, white, and blue silk to the manufacture of
Confederate flags. As soon as one is confiscated,
I make another, until my ribbon is exhausted, when
I will sport a duster emblazoned in high colors, “Hurra!
for the Bonny blue flag!” Henceforth, I wear
one pinned to my bosom not a duster, but
a little flag; the man who says take it off will have
to pull it off for himself; the man who dares attempt
it well! a pistol in my pocket fills up
the gap. I am capable, too.
This is a dreadful war, to make even
the hearts of women so bitter! I hardly know
myself these last few weeks. I, who have such
a horror of bloodshed, consider even killing in self-defense
murder, who cannot wish them the slightest evil, whose
only prayer is to have them sent back in peace to
their own country, I talk of killing
them! For what else do I wear a pistol and carving-knife?
I am afraid I will try them on the first one
who says an insolent word to me. Yes, and repent
for it ever after in sack-cloth and ashes. O!
if I was only a man! Then I could don the breeches,
and slay them with a will! If some few Southern
women were in the ranks, they could set the men an
example they would not blush to follow. Pshaw!
there are no women here! We are all
men!
May
10th.
Last night about one o’clock
I was wakened and told that mother and Miriam had
come. Oh, how glad I was! I tumbled out of
bed half asleep and hugged Miriam in a dream, but
waked up when I got to mother. They came up under
a flag of truce, on a boat going up for provisions,
which, by the way, was brought to by half a dozen Yankee
ships in succession, with a threat to send a broadside
into her if she did not stop the wretches
knew it must be under a flag of truce; no boats
leave, except by special order to procure provisions.
What tales they had to tell!
They were on the wharf, and saw the ships sail up
the river, saw the broadside fired into Will Pinckney’s
regiment, the boats we fired, our gunboats, floating
down to meet them all wrapped in flames; twenty thousand
bales of cotton blazing in a single pile; molasses
and sugar thrown over everything. They stood
there opposite to where one of the ships landed, expecting
a broadside, and resolute not to be shot in the back.
I wish I had been there! And Captain Huger is
not dead! They had hopes of his life for the first
time day before yesterday. Miriam saw the ball
that had just been extracted. He will probably
be lame for the rest of his life. It will be
a glory to him. For even the Federal officers
say that never did they see so gallant a little ship,
or one that fought so desperately as the McRae.
Men and officers fought like devils. Think of
all those great leviathans after the poor little “Widow
Mickey”! One came tearing down on her sideways,
while the Brooklyn fired on her from the other side,
when brave Captain Warley put the nose of the Manassas
under the first, and tilted her over so that the whole
broadside passed over, instead of through, the McRae,
who spit back its poor little fire at both. And
after all was lost, she carried the wounded and the
prisoners to New Orleans, and was scuttled by her
own men in port. Glorious Captain Huger!
And think of his sending word to Jimmy, suffering as
he was, that “his little brass cannon was game
to the last.” Oh! I hope he will recover.
Brave, dare-devil Captain Warley is prisoner, and on
the way to Fort Warren, that home of all brave, patriotic
men. We’ll have him out. And my poor
little Jimmy! If I have not spoken of him, it
is not because I have lost sight of him for a moment.
The day the McRae went down, he arose from his bed,
ill as he was, and determined to rejoin her, as his
own boat, the Mississippi, was not ready. When
he reached the St. Charles, he fell so very ill that
he had to be carried back to Brother’s.
Only his desperate illness saved him from being among
the killed or wounded on that gallant little ship.
A few days after, he learned the fate of the ship,
and was told that Captain Huger was dead. No
wonder he should cry so bitterly! For Captain
Huger was as tender and as kind to him as his own
dear father. God bless him for it! The enemy’s
ships were sailing up; so he threw a few articles in
a carpet-bag and started off for Richmond, Corinth,
anywhere, to fight. Sick, weak, hardly able to
stand, he went off, two weeks ago yesterday.
We know not where, and we have never heard from him
since. Whether he succumbed to that jaundice
and the rest, and lies dead or dying on the road,
God only knows. We can only wait and pray God
to send dear little Jimmy home in safety.
And this is WAR! Heaven save
me from like scenes and experiences again. I
was wild with excitement last night when Miriam described
how the soldiers, marching to the depot, waved their
hats to the crowds of women and children, shouting,
“God bless you, ladies! We will fight for
you!” and they, waving their handkerchiefs, sobbed
with one voice, “God bless you, Soldiers!
Fight for us!”
We, too, have been having our fun.
Early in the evening, four more gunboats sailed up
here. We saw them from the corner, three squares
off, crowded with men even up in the riggings.
The American flag was flying from every peak.
It was received in profound silence, by the hundreds
gathered on the banks. I could hardly refrain
from a groan. Much as I once loved that flag,
I hate it now! I came back and made myself a
Confederate flag about five inches long, slipped the
staff in my belt, pinned the flag to my shoulder,
and walked downtown, to the consternation of women
and children, who expected something awful to follow.
An old negro cried, “My young missus got her
flag flyin’, anyhow!” Nettie made one
and hid it in the folds of her dress. But we
were the only two who ventured. We went to the
State House terrace, and took a good look at the Brooklyn
which was crowded with people who took a good look
at us, likewise. The picket stationed at the Garrison
took alarm at half a dozen men on horseback and ran,
saying that the citizens were attacking. The
kind officers aboard the ship sent us word that if
they were molested, the town would be shelled.
Let them! Butchers! Does it take thirty
thousand men and millions of dollars to murder defenseless
women and children? O the great nation! Bravo!
May
11th.
I I am disgusted with myself.
No unusual thing, but I am peculiarly disgusted
this time. Last evening, I went to Mrs. Brunot’s,
without an idea of going beyond, with my flag flying
again. They were all going to the State House,
so I went with them; to my great distress, some fifteen
or twenty Federal officers were standing on the first
terrace, stared at like wild beasts by the curious
crowd. I had not expected to meet them, and felt
a painful conviction that I was unnecessarily attracting
attention, by an unladylike display of defiance, from
the crowd gathered there. But what was I to do?
I felt humiliated, conspicuous, everything that is
painful and disagreeable; but strike my
colors in the face of the enemy? Never! Nettie
and Sophie had them, too, but that was no consolation
for the shame I suffered by such a display so totally
distasteful to me. How I wished myself away, and
chafed at my folly, and hated myself for being there,
and every one for seeing me. I hope it will be
a lesson to me always to remember a lady can gain
nothing by such display.
I was not ashamed of the flag of my
country, I proved that by never attempting
to remove it in spite of my mortification, but
I was ashamed of my position; for these are evidently
gentlemen, not the Billy Wilson’s crew we were
threatened with. Fine, noble-looking men they
were, showing refinement and gentlemanly bearing in
every motion. One cannot help but admire such
foes! They set us an example worthy of our imitation,
and one we would be benefited by following. They
come as visitors without either pretensions to superiority,
or the insolence of conquerors; they walk quietly
their way, offering no annoyance to the citizens,
though they themselves are stared at most unmercifully,
and pursued by crowds of ragged little boys, while
even men gape at them with open mouths. They
prove themselves gentlemen, while many of our citizens
have proved themselves boors, and I admire them for
their conduct. With a conviction that I had allowed
myself to be influenced by bigoted, narrow-minded
people, in believing them to be unworthy of respect
or regard, I came home wonderfully changed in all my
newly acquired sentiments, resolved never more to
wound their feelings, who were so careful of ours,
by such unnecessary display. And I hung my flag
on the parlor mantel, there to wave, if it will, in
the shades of private life; but to make a show, make
me conspicuous and ill at ease, as I was yesterday, never
again!
There was a dozen officers in church
this morning, and the psalms for the 11th day seemed
so singularly appropriate to the feelings of the people,
that I felt uncomfortable for them. They answered
with us, though.
May
14th.
I am beginning to believe that we
are even of more importance in Baton Rouge than we
thought we were. It is laughable to hear the things
a certain set of people, who know they can’t
visit us, say about the whole family.... When
father was alive, they dared not talk about us aloud,
beyond calling us the “Proud Morgans” and
the “Aristocracy of Baton Rouge".... But
now father is gone, the people imagine we are public
property, to be criticized, vilified, and abused to
their hearts’ content....
And now, because they find absurdities
don’t succeed, they try improbabilities.
So yesterday the town was in a ferment because it was
reported the Federal officers had called on the Miss
Morgans, and all the gentlemen were anxious to hear
how they had been received. One had the grace
to say, “If they did, they received the best
lesson there that they could get in town; those young
ladies would meet them with the true Southern spirit.”
The rest did not know; they would like to find out.
I suppose the story originated from
the fact that we were unwilling to blackguard yes,
that is the word the Federal officers here,
and would not agree with many of our friends in saying
they were liars, thieves, murderers, scoundrels, the
scum of the earth, etc. Such epithets are
unworthy of ladies, I say, and do harm, rather than
advance our cause. Let them be what they will,
it shall not make me less the lady; I say it is unworthy
of anything except low newspaper war, such abuse, and
I will not join in.
I have a brother-in-law in the Federal
army whom I love and respect as much as any one in
the world, and shall not readily agree that his being
a Northerner would give him an irresistible desire
to pick my pockets, and take from him all power of
telling the truth. No! There are few men
I admire more than Major Drum, and I honor him for
his independence in doing what he believes right.
Let us have liberty of speech and action in our land,
I say, but not gross abuse and calumny. Shall
I acknowledge that the people we so recently called
our brothers are unworthy of consideration, and are
liars, cowards, dogs? Not I! If they conquer
us, I acknowledge them as a superior race; I will not
say that we were conquered by cowards, for where would
that place us? It will take a brave people to
gain us, and that the Northerners undoubtedly are.
I would scorn to have an inferior foe; I fight only
my equals. These women may acknowledge that cowards
have won battles in which their brothers were engaged,
but I, I will ever say mine fought against
brave men, and won the day. Which is most honorable?
I was never a Secessionist, for I
quietly adopted father’s views on political
subjects without meddling with them. But even
father went over with his State, and when so many
outrages were committed by the fanatical leaders of
the North, though he regretted the Union, said, “Fight
to the death for our liberty.” I say so,
too. I want to fight until we win the cause so
many have died for. I don’t believe in
Secession, but I do in Liberty. I want the South
to conquer, dictate its own terms, and go back to
the Union, for I believe that, apart, inevitable ruin
awaits both. It is a rope of sand, this Confederacy,
founded on the doctrine of Secession, and will not
last many years not five. The North
Cannot subdue us. We are too determined to be
free. They have no right to confiscate our property
to pay debts they themselves have incurred. Death
as a nation, rather than Union on such terms.
We will have our rights secured on so firm a basis
that it can never be shaken. If by power of overwhelming
numbers they conquer us, it will be a barren victory
over a desolate land. We, the natives of this
loved soil, will be beggars in a foreign land; we will
not submit to despotism under the garb of Liberty.
The North will find herself burdened with an unparalleled
debt, with nothing to show for it except deserted
towns, burning homes, a standing army which will govern
with no small caprice, and an impoverished land.
If that be treason, make the best of it!
May
17th.
One of these days, when peace is restored
and we are quietly settled in our allotted corners
of this wide world without any particularly exciting
event to alarm us; and with the knowledge of what is
now the future, and will then be the dead past; seeing
that all has been for the best for us in the end;
that all has come right in spite of us, we will wonder
how we could ever have been foolish enough to await
each hour in such breathless anxiety. We will
ask ourselves if it was really true that nightly,
as we lay down to sleep, we did not dare plan for
the morning, feeling that we might be homeless and
beggars before the dawn. How unreal it will then
seem! We will say it was our wild imagination,
perhaps. But how bitterly, horribly true it is
now!
Four days ago the Yankees left us,
to attack Vicksburg, leaving their flag flying in
the Garrison without a man to guard it, and with the
understanding that the town would be held responsible
for it. It was intended for a trap; and it succeeded.
For night before last, it was pulled down and torn
to pieces.
Now, unless Will will have the kindness
to sink a dozen of their ships up there, I
hear he has command of the lower batteries, they
will be back in a few days, and will execute their
threat of shelling the town. If they do, what
will become of us? All we expect in the way of
earthly property is as yet mere paper, which will be
so much trash if the South is ruined, as it consists
of debts due father by many planters for professional
services rendered, who, of course, will be ruined,
too, so all money is gone. That is nothing, we
will not be ashamed to earn our bread, so let it go.
But this house is at least a shelter
from the weather, all sentiment apart. And our
servants, too; how could they manage without us?
The Yankees, on the river, and a band of guerrillas
in the woods, are equally anxious to precipitate a
fight. Between the two fires, what chance for
us? It would take only a little while to burn
the city over our heads. They say the women and
children must be removed, these guerrillas. Where,
please? Charlie says we must go to Greenwell.
And have this house pillaged? For Butler has
decreed that no unoccupied house shall be respected.
If we stay through the battle, if the Federals are
victorious, we will suffer. For the officers here
were reported to have said, “If the people here
did not treat them decently, they would know what
it was when Billy Wilson’s crew arrived. They
would give them a lesson!” That select crowd
is now in New Orleans. Heaven help us when they
reach here! It is in these small cities that
the greatest outrages are perpetrated. What are
we to do?
A new proclamation from Butler has
just come. It seems that the ladies have an ugly
way of gathering their skirts when the Federals pass,
to avoid any possible contact. Some even turn
up their noses. Unladylike, to say the least.
But it is, maybe, owing to the odor they have, which
is said to be unbearable even at this early season
of the year. Butler says, whereas the so-called
ladies of New Orleans insult his men and officers,
he gives one and all permission to insult any or all
who so treat them, then and there, with the assurance
that the women will not receive the slightest protection
from the Government, and that the men will all be
justified. I did not have time to read it, but
repeat it as it was told to me by mother, who is in
utter despair at the brutality of the thing.
These men our brothers? Not mine! Let us
hope for the honor of their nation that Butler is
not counted among the gentlemen of the land.
And so, if any man should fancy he cared to kiss me,
he could do so under the pretext that I had pulled
my dress from under his feet! That will justify
them! And if we decline their visits, they can
insult us under the plea of a prior affront.
Oh! Gibbes! George! Jimmy! never did
we need your protection as sorely as now. And
not to know even whether you are alive! When
Charlie joins the army, we will be defenseless, indeed.
Come to my bosom, O my discarded carving-knife, laid
aside under the impression that these men were gentlemen.
We will be close friends once more. And if you
must have a sheath, perhaps I may find one for you
in the heart of the first man who attempts to Butlerize
me. I never dreamed of kissing any man save my
father and brothers. And why any one should care
to kiss any one else, I fail to understand. And
I do not propose to learn to make exceptions.
Still no word from the boys.
We hear that Norfolk has been evacuated; but no details.
George was there. Gibbes is wherever Johnston
is, presumably on the Rappahannock; but it is more
than six weeks since we have heard from either of
them, and all communication is cut off.
May
21st.
I have had such a search for shoes
this week that I am disgusted with shopping.
I am triumphant now, for after traversing the town
in every direction and finding nothing, I finally
discovered a pair of boots just made for a
little negro to go fishing with, and only an inch and
a half too long for me, besides being unbendable;
but I seized them with avidity, and the little negro
would have been outbid if I had not soon after discovered
a pair more seemly, if not more serviceable, which
I took without further difficulty. Behold my
tender feet cased in crocodile skin, patent-leather
tipped, low-quarter boy’s shoes, N!
“What a fall was there, my country,” from
my pretty English glove-kid, to sabots made of
some animal closely connected with the hippopotamus!
A dernier ressort, vraiment! for my choice was
that, or cooling my feet on the burning pavement au
naturel; I who have such a terror of any one seeing
my naked foot! And this is thanks to war and blockade!
Not a decent shoe in the whole community! N’importe!
“Better days are coming, we’ll all” have
shoes after a while perhaps!
Why did not Mark Tapley leave me a song calculated
to keep the spirits up, under depressing circumstances?
I need one very much, and have nothing more suggestive
than the old Methodist hymn, “Better days are
coming, we’ll all go right,” which I shout
so constantly, as our prospects darken, that it begins
to sound stale.
May
27th.
The cry is “Ho! for Greenwell!”
Very probably this day week will see us there.
I don’t want to go. If we were at peace,
and were to spend a few months of the warmest season
out there, none would be more eager and delighted
than I: but to leave our comfortable home, and
all it contains, for a rough pine cottage seventeen
miles away even from this scanty civilization, is
sad. It must be! We are hourly expecting
two regiments of Yankees to occupy the Garrison, and
some fifteen hundred of our men are awaiting them
a little way off, so the fight seems inevitable.
And we must go, leaving what little has already been
spared us to the tender mercies of Northern volunteers,
who, from the specimen of plundering they gave us
two weeks ago, will hardly leave us even the shelter
of our roof. O my dear Home! How can I help
but cry at leaving you forever? For if this fight
occurs, never again shall I pass the threshold of
this house, where we have been so happy and sad, the
scene of joyous meetings and mournful partings, the
place where we greeted each other with glad shouts
after even so short a parting, the place where Harry
and father kissed us good-bye and never came back again!
I know what Lavinia has suffered this
long year, by what we have suffered these last six
weeks. Poor Lavinia, so far away! How easier
poverty, if it must come, would be if we could bear
it together! I wonder if the real fate of the
boys, if we ever hear, can be so dreadful as this
suspense? Still no news of them. My poor
little Jimmy! And think how desperate Gibbes
and George will be when they read Butler’s proclamation,
and they not able to defend us! Gibbes was in
our late victory of Fredericksburg, I know.
In other days, going to Greenwell
was the signal for general noise and confusion.
All the boys gathered their guns and fishing-tackle,
and thousand and one amusements; father sent out provisions;
we helped mother pack; Hal and I tumbled over the
libraries to lay in a supply of reading material;
and all was bustle until the carriage drove to the
door at daylight one morning, and swept us off.
It is not so gay this time. I wandered around
this morning selecting books alone. We can only
take what is necessary, the rest being left to the
care of the Northern militia in general. I never
knew before how many articles were perfectly “indispensable”
to me. This or that little token or keepsake,
piles of letters I hate to burn, many dresses, etc.,
I cannot take conveniently, lie around me, and I hardly
know which to choose among them, yet half must
be sacrificed; I can only take one trunk.
May
30th,
GREENWELL.
After all our trials and tribulations,
here we are at last, and no limbs lost! How many
weeks ago was it since I wrote here? It seems
very long after all these events; let me try to recall
them.
Wednesday the 28th, a day
to be forever remembered, as luck would
have it, we rose very early, and had breakfast sooner
than usual, it would seem for the express design of
becoming famished before dinner. I picked up
some of my letters and papers and set them where I
could find them whenever we were ready to go to Greenwell,
burning a pile of trash and leaving a quantity equally
worthless, which were of no value even to myself except
from association. I was packing up my traveling-desk
with all Harry’s little articles that were left
to me, and other things, and I was saying to myself
that my affairs were in such confusion that if obliged
to run unexpectedly I would not know what to save,
when I heard Lilly’s voice downstairs, crying
as she ran in she had been out shopping “Mr.
Castle has killed a Federal officer on a ship, and
they are going to shell ” Bang!
went a cannon at the word, and that was all our warning.
Mother had just come in, and was lying
down, but sprang to her feet and added her screams
to the general confusion. Miriam, who had been
searching the libraries, ran up to quiet her; Lilly
gathered her children, crying hysterically all the
time, and ran to the front door with them as they
were; Lucy saved the baby, naked as she took her from
her bath, only throwing a quilt over her. I bethought
me of my “running-bag” which I had used
on a former case, and in a moment my few precious
articles were secured under my hoops, and with a sunbonnet
on, I stood ready for anything.
The firing still continued; they must
have fired half a dozen times before we could coax
mother off. What awful screams! I had hoped
never to hear them again, after Harry died. Charlie
had gone to Greenwell before daybreak, to prepare
the house, so we four women, with all those children
and servants, were left to save ourselves. I did
not forget my poor little Jimmy; I caught up his cage
and ran down. Just at this moment mother recovered
enough to insist on saving father’s papers which
was impossible, as she had not an idea of where the
important ones were. I heard Miriam plead, argue,
insist, command her to run; Lilly shriek, and cry
she should go; the children screaming within; women
running by without, crying and moaning; but I could
not join in. I was going I knew not where; it
was impossible to take my bird, for even if I could
carry him, he would starve. So I took him out
of his cage, kissed his little yellow head, and tossed
him up. He gave one feeble little chirp as if
to ascertain where to go, and then for the first and
last time I cried, laying my head against the gate-post,
and with my eyes too dim to see him. Oh, how it
hurt me to lose my little bird, one Jimmy had given
me, too!
But the next minute we were all off,
in safety. A square from home, I discovered that
boy shoes were not the most comfortable things to run
in, so I ran back, in spite of cannonading, entreaties,
etc., to get another pair. I got home, found
an old pair that were by no means respectable, which
I seized without hesitation; and being perfectly at
ease, thought it would be so nice to save at least
Miriam’s and my tooth-brushes, so slipped them
in my corsets. These in, of course we must have
a comb that was added then how
could we stand the sun without starch to cool our
faces? This included the powder-bag; then I must
save that beautiful lace collar; and my hair was tumbling
down, so in went the tucking-comb and hair-pins with
the rest; until, if there had been any one to speculate,
they would have wondered a long while at the singular
appearance of a girl who is considered as very slight,
usually. By this time, Miriam, alarmed for me,
returned to find me, though urged by Dr. Castleton
not to risk her life by attempting it, and we started
off together.
We had hardly gone a square when we
decided to return a second time, and get at least
a few articles for the children and ourselves, who
had nothing except what we happened to have on when
the shelling commenced. She picked up any little
things and threw them to me, while I filled a pillow-case
jerked from the bed, and placed my powder and brushes
in it with the rest. Before we could leave, mother,
alarmed for us both, came to find us, with Tiche.
All this time they had been shelling, but there was
quite a lull when she got there, and she commenced
picking up father’s papers, vowing all the time
she would not leave. Every argument we could
use was of no avail, and we were desperate as to what
course to pursue, when the shelling recommenced in
a few minutes. Then mother recommenced her screaming
and was ready to fly anywhere; and holding her box
of papers, with a faint idea of saving something, she
picked up two dirty underskirts and an old cloak.
By dint of Miriam’s vehement
appeals, aided by a great deal of pulling, we got
her down to the back door. We had given our pillow-case
to Tiche, who added another bundle and all our silver
to it, and had already departed.
As we stood in the door, four or five
shells sailed over our heads at the same time, seeming
to make a perfect corkscrew of the air, for
it sounded as though it went in circles. Miriam
cried, “Never mind the door!” mother screamed
anew, and I stayed behind to lock the door, with this
new music in my ears. We reached the back gate,
that was on the street, when another shell passed
us, and Miriam jumped behind the fence for protection.
We had only gone half a square when Dr. Castleton
begged us to take another street, as they were firing
up that one. We took his advice, but found our
new street worse than the old, for the shells seemed
to whistle their strange songs with redoubled vigor.
The height of my ambition was now attained. I
had heard Jimmy laugh about the singular sensation
produced by the rifled balls spinning around one’s
head; and here I heard the same peculiar sound, ran
the same risk, and was equal to the rest of the boys,
for was I not in the midst of flying shells, in the
middle of a bombardment? I think I was rather
proud of it.
We were alone on the road, all
had run away before, so I thought it was
for our especial entertainment, this little affair.
I cannot remember how long it lasted; I am positive
that the clock struck ten before I left home, but
I had been up so long, I know not what time it began,
though I am told it was between eight and nine.
We passed the graveyard, we did not even stop, and
about a mile and a half from home, when mother was
perfectly exhausted with fatigue and unable to proceed
farther, we met a gentleman in a buggy who kindly took
charge of her and our bundles. We could have
walked miles beyond, then, for as soon as she was
safe we felt as though a load had been removed from
our shoulders; and after exhorting her not to be uneasy
about us, and reminding her we had a pistol and a
dagger, I had secured a “for true”
one the day before, fortunately, she drove
off, and we trudged on alone, the only people in sight
on foot, though occasionally carriages and buggies
would pass, going towards town. One party of gentlemen
put their heads out and one said, “There are
Judge Morgan’s daughters sitting by the road!” but
I observed he did not offer them the slightest assistance.
However, others were very kind. One I never heard
of had volunteered to go for us, and bring us to mother,
when she was uneasy about our staying so long, when
we went home to get clothes. We heard him ring
and knock, but, thinking it must be next door, paid
no attention, so he went back and mother came herself.
We were two miles away when we sat
down by the road to rest, and have a laugh. Here
were two women married, and able to take care of themselves,
flying for their lives and leaving two lorn girls alone
on the road, to protect each other! To be sure,
neither could help us, and one was not able to walk,
and the other had helpless children to save; but it
was so funny when we talked about it, and thought how
sorry both would be when they regained their reason!
While we were yet resting, we saw a cart coming, and,
giving up all idea of our walking to Greenwell, called
the people to stop. To our great delight, it proved
to be a cart loaded with Mrs. Brunot’s affairs,
driven by two of her negroes, who kindly took us up
with them, on the top of their luggage; and we drove
off in state, as much pleased at riding in that novel
place as though we were accustomed to ride in wheelbarrows.
Miriam was in a hollow between a flour barrel and
a mattress; and I at the end, astride, I am afraid,
of a tremendous bundle, for my face was down the road
and each foot resting very near the sides of the cart.
I tried to make a better arrangement, though, after
a while. These servants were good enough to lend
us their umbrella, without which I am afraid we would
have suffered severely, for the day was intensely
warm.
Three miles from town we began to
overtake the fugitives. Hundreds of women and
children were walking along, some bareheaded, and in
all costumes. Little girls of twelve and fourteen
were wandering on alone. I called to one I knew,
and asked where her mother was; she didn’t know;
she would walk on until she found out. It seems
her mother lost a nursing baby, too, which was not
found until ten that night. White and black were
all mixed together, and were as confidential as though
related. All called to us and asked where we were
going, and many we knew laughed at us for riding on
a cart; but as they had walked only five miles, I
imagined they would like even these poor accommodations
if they were in their reach.
The negroes deserve the greatest praise
for their conduct. Hundreds were walking with
babies or bundles; ask them what they had saved, it
was invariably, “My mistress’s clothes,
or silver, or baby.” Ask what they had
for themselves, it was, “Bless your heart, honey,
I was glad to get away with mistress’s things;
I didn’t think ’bout mine.”
It was a heart-rending scene.
Women searching for their babies along the road, where
they had been lost; others sitting in the dust crying
and wringing their hands; for by this time we had not
an idea but what Baton Rouge was either in ashes,
or being plundered, and we had saved nothing.
I had one dress, Miriam two, but Tiche had them, and
we had lost her before we left home.
Presently we came on a guerrilla camp.
Men and horses were resting on each side of the road,
some sick, some moving about carrying water to the
women and children, and all looking like a monster
barbecue, for as far as the eye could see through
the woods, was the same repetition of men and horses.
They would ask for the news, and one, drunk with excitement
or whiskey, informed us that it was our own fault if
we had saved nothing, the people must have been
fools not to have known trouble would come before
long, and that it was the fault of the men, who were
aware of it, that the women were thus forced to fly.
In vain we pleaded that there was no warning, no means
of foreseeing this; he cried, “You are
ruined; so am I; and my brothers, too! And by
there is nothing left but to
die now, and I’ll die!” “Good!”
I said. “But die fighting for us!”
He waved his hand, black with powder, and shouted,
“That I will!” after us. That was
the only swearing guerrilla we met; the others seemed
to have too much respect for us to talk loud.
Lucy had met us before this; early
in the action, Lilly had sent her back to get some
baby-clothes, but a shell exploding within a few feet
of her, she took alarm, and ran up another road, for
three miles, when she cut across the plantations and
regained the Greenwell route. It is fortunate
that, without consultation, the thought of running
here should have seized us all.
May
31st.
I was interrupted so frequently yesterday
that I know not how I continued to write so much.
First, I was sent for, to go to Mrs. Brunot, who had
just heard of her son’s death, and who was alone
with Dena; and some hours after, I was sent for, to
see Fanny, now Mrs. Trezevant, who had just come with
her husband to bring us news of George. A Mrs.
Montgomery, who saw him every day at Norfolk, said
Jimmy was with him, and though very sick at first,
was now in good health. The first news in all
that long time! When the city was evacuated,
George went with his regiment seven miles from Richmond,
Jimmy to the city itself, as aide to Com. Hollins.
This lady brought George’s opal ring and diamond
pin. Howell and Mr. Badger, who had just joined
the guerrillas as independents, spent the day with
me. We were all in such confusion that I felt
ashamed: every one as dirty as possible; I had
on the same dress I had escaped in, which, though
then perfectly clean, was now rather dirty.
But they knew what a time we had had.
To return to my journal.
Lucy met mother some long way ahead
of us, whose conscience was already reproaching her
for leaving us, and in answer to her “What has
become of my poor girls?” ran down the road
to find us, for Lucy thinks the world can’t
keep on moving without us. When she met us, she
walked by the cart, and it was with difficulty we
persuaded her to ride a mile; she said she felt “used”
to walking now. About five miles from home, we
overtook mother. The gentleman had been obliged
to go for his wife, so Mary gave her her seat on the
cart, and walked with Lucy three miles beyond, where
we heard that Lilly and the children had arrived in
a cart, early in the day. All the talk by the
roadside was of burning homes, houses knocked to pieces
by balls, famine, murder, desolation; so I comforted
myself singing, “Better days are coming”
and “I hope to die shouting, the Lord will provide”;
while Lucy toiled through the sun and dust, and answered
with a chorus of “I’m a-runnin’,
a-runnin’ up to glo-ry!”
It was three o’clock when we
reached Mr. David’s and found Lilly. How
warm and tired we were! A hasty meal, which tasted
like a feast after our fatigue, gave us fresh strength,
and Lilly and Miriam got in an old cart with the children
to drive out here, leaving me with mother and Dellie
to follow next day. About sunset, Charlie came
flying down the road, on his way to town. I decided
to go, and after an obstinate debate with mother,
in which I am afraid I showed more determination than
amiability, I wrung a reluctant consent from her, and,
promising not to enter if it was being fired or plundered,
drove off in triumph. It was a desperate enterprise
for a young girl, to enter a town full of soldiers
on such an expedition at night; but I knew Charlie
could take care of me, and if he was killed I could
take care of myself; so I went.
It was long after nine when we got
there, and my first act was to look around the deserted
house. What a scene of confusion! armoirs spread
open, with clothes tumbled in every direction, inside
and out; ribbons, laces on floors; chairs overturned;
my desk wide open covered with letters, trinkets,
etc.; bureau drawers half out, the bed filled
with odds and ends of everything. I no longer
recognized my little room. On the bolster was
a little box, at the sight of which I burst out laughing.
Five minutes before the alarm, Miriam had been selecting
those articles she meant to take to Greenwell, and,
holding up her box, said, “If we were forced
to run for our lives without a moment’s warning,
I’d risk my life to save this, rather than leave
it!” Yet here lay the box, and she was safe
at Greenwell!
It took me two hours to pack father’s
papers, then I packed Miriam’s trunk, then some
of mother’s and mine, listening all the while
for a cannon; for men were constantly tramping past
the house, and only on condition our guerrillas did
not disturb them had they promised not to recommence
the shelling. Charlie went out to hear the news,
and I packed alone.
It seems the only thing that saved
the town was two gentlemen who rowed out to the ships,
and informed the illustrious commander that there
were no men there to be hurt, and he was only killing
women and children. The answer was, “He
was sorry he had hurt them; he thought of course the
town had been evacuated before the men were fools enough
to fire on them, and had only shelled the principal
streets to intimidate the people.” These
streets were the very ones crowded with flying women
and children, which they must have seen with their
own eyes, for those lying parallel to the river led
to the Garrison at one end and the crevasse at the
other, which cut off all the lower roads, so that the
streets he shelled were the only ones that the women
could follow, unless they wished to be drowned.
As for the firing, four guerrillas were rash enough
to fire on a yawl which was about to land without a
flag of truce, killing one, wounding three, one of
whom afterwards died.
They were the only ones in town, there
was not a cannon in our hands, even if a dozen men
could be collected, and this cannonading was kept
up in return for half a dozen shots from as many rifles,
without even a show of resistance after! So ended
the momentous shelling of Baton Rouge, during which
the valiant Farragut killed one whole woman, wounded
three, struck some twenty houses several times apiece,
and indirectly caused the death of two little children
who were drowned in their flight, one poor little
baby that was born in the woods, and several cases
of the same kind, besides those who will yet die from
the fatigue, as Mrs. W. D. Phillips who had not left
her room since January, who was carried out in her
nightgown, and is now supposed to be in a dying condition.
The man who took mother told us he had taken a dying
woman in the act of expiring in
his buggy, from her bed, and had left her a little
way off, where she had probably breathed her last
a few moments after. There were many similar cases.
Hurrah for the illustrious Farragut, the Woman Killer!!!
It was three o’clock before
I left off packing, and took refuge in a tub of cold
water, from the dust and heat of the morning.
What a luxury the water was! and when I changed my
underclothes I felt like a new being. To be sure
I pulled off the skin of my heel entirely, where it
had been blistered by the walk, dust, sun, etc.,
but that was a trifle, though still quite sore now.
For three hours I dreamed of rifled shells and battles,
and at half-past six I was up and at work again.
Mother came soon after, and after hard work we got
safely off at three, saving nothing but our clothes
and silver. All else is gone. It cost me
a pang to leave my guitar, and Miriam’s piano,
but it seems there was no help for it, so I had to
submit.
It was dark night when we reached
here. A bright fire was blazing in front, but
the house looked so desolate that I wanted to cry.
Miriam cried when I told her her piano was left behind.
Supper was a new sensation, after having been without
anything except a glass of clabber (no saucers)
and a piece of bread since half-past six. I laid
down on the hard floor to rest my weary bones, thankful
that I was so fortunate as to be able to lie down
at all. In my dozing state, I heard the wagon
come, and Miriam ordering a mattress to be put in the
room for me. I could make out, “Very well!
you may take that one to Miss Eliza, but the next
one shall be brought to Miss Sarah!” Poor Miriam!
She is always fighting my battles. She and the
servants are always taking my part against the rest
of the world.... She and Lucy made a bed and
rolled me in it with no more questions, and left me
with damp eyes at the thought of how good and tender
every one is to me. Poor Lucy picked me a dish
of blackberries to await my arrival, and I was just
as grateful for it, though they were eaten by some
one else before I came.
Early yesterday morning, Miriam, Nettie,
and Sophie, who did not then know of their brother’s
death, went to town in a cart, determined to save
some things, Miriam to save her piano. As soon
as they were halfway, news reached us that any one
was allowed to enter, but none allowed to leave the
town, and all vehicles confiscated as soon as they
reached there. Alarmed for their safety, mother
started off to find them, and we have heard of none
of them since. What will happen next? I
am not uneasy. They dare not harm them. It
is glorious to shell a town full of women, but to
kill four lone ones is not exciting enough.
June
1st, Sunday.
From the news brought by one or two
persons who managed to reach here yesterday, I am
more uneasy about mother and the girls. A gentleman
tells me that no one is permitted to leave without
a pass, and of these, only such as are separated from
their families, who may have left before. All
families are prohibited to leave, and furniture and
other valuables also. Here is an agreeable arrangement!
I saw the “pass,” just such as we give
our negroes, signed by a Wisconsin colonel. Think
of being obliged to ask permission from some low plowman
to go in or out of our own house! Cannon are planted
as far out as Colonel Davidson’s, six of them
at our graveyard, and one or more on all the other
roads. If the guerrillas do not attempt their
capture, I shall take it upon myself to suggest it
to the very next one I see. Even if they cannot
use them, it will frighten the Yankees, who are in
a state of constant alarm about them. Their reason
for keeping people in town is that they hope they
will not be attacked so long as our own friends remain;
thereby placing us above themselves in the scale of
humanity, since they acknowledge we are not brute enough
to kill women and children as they did not hesitate
to do.
Farragut pleads that he could not
restrain his men, they were so enraged when the order
was once given to fire, and says they would
strike a few houses, though he ordered them to fire
solely at horses, and the clouds of dust in the street,
where guerrillas were supposed to be. The dust
was by no means thick enough to conceal that these
“guerrillas” were women, carrying babies
instead of guns, and the horses were drawing buggies
in which many a sick woman was lying.
A young lady who applied to the Yankee
general for a pass to come out here, having doubtless
spoken of the number of women here who had fled, and
the position of the place, was advised to remain in
town and write to the ladies to return immediately,
and assure them that they would be respected and protected,
etc., but that it was madness to remain at Greenwell,
for a terrific battle would be fought there in a few
days, and they would be exposed to the greatest danger.
The girl wrote the letter, but, Mr. Fox, we are not
quite such fools as to return there to afford you
the protection our petticoats would secure to you,
thereby preventing you from receiving condign punishment
for the injuries and loss of property already inflicted
upon us by you. No! we remain here; and
if you are not laid low before you pass the Comite
Bridge, we can take to the woods again, and camp out,
as many a poor woman is doing now, a few miles from
town. Many citizens have been arrested, and after
being confined a while, and closely questioned, have
been released, if the information is satisfactory.
A negro man is informing on all cotton burners and
violent Secessionists, etc.
Sunday
night.
The girls have just got back, riding
in a mule team, on top of baggage, but without either
mother or any of our affairs. Our condition is
perfectly desperate. Miriam had an interview with
General Williams, which was by no means satisfactory.
He gave her a pass to leave, and bring us back, for
he says there is no safety here for us; he will restrain
his men in town, and protect the women, but once outside,
he will answer neither for his men, nor the women
and children. As soon as he gets horses enough,
he passes this road, going to Camp Moore with his
cavalry, and then we are in greater danger than ever.
Any house shut up shall be occupied by soldiers.
Five thousand are there now, five more expected.
What shall we do? Mother remained, sending Miriam
for me, determined to keep us there, rather than sacrifice
both our lives and property by remaining here.
But then two weeks from now the yellow
fever will break out; mother has the greatest horror
of it, and we have never had it; dying is not much
in the present state of our affairs, but the survivor
will suffer even more than we do now. If we stay,
how shall we live? I have seventeen hundred dollars
in Confederate notes now in my “running-bag,”
and three or four in silver. The former will
not be received there, the latter might last two days.
If we save our house and furniture, it is at the price
of starving. I am of opinion that we should send
for mother, and with what money we have, make our
way somewhere in the interior, to some city where we
can communicate with the boys, and be advised by them.
This is not living. Home is lost beyond all hope
of recovery; if we wait, what we have already saved
will go, too; so we had better leave at once, with
what clothing we have, which will certainly establish
us on the footing of ladies, if we chance to fall
among vulgar people who never look beyond. I
fear the guerrillas will attack the town to-night;
if they do, God help mother!
General Williams offered Miriam an
escort when he found she was without a protector,
in the most fatherly way; he must be a good man.
She thanked him, but said “she felt perfectly
safe on that road.” He bit his lip,
understanding the allusion, and did not insist.
She was to deliver a message from parties in town
to the first guerrillas they met, concerning the safest
roads, and presently six met them, and entered into
conversation. She told them of the proffered escort,
when one sprang forward crying, “Why didn’t
you accept, Miss? The next time, ask for
one, and if it is at all disagreeable to you, I
am the very man to rid you of such an inconvenience!
I’ll see that you are not annoyed long.”
I am glad it was not sent; she would have reproached
herself with murder forever after. I wonder if
the General would have risked it?
BATON
ROUGE,
June
3d.
Well! Day before yesterday, I
almost vowed I would not return, and last evening
I reached here. Verily, consistency, thou art
a jewel! I determined to get to town to lay both
sides of the question before mother; saving home and
property, by remaining, thereby cutting ourselves
off forever from the boys and dying of yellow fever;
or flying to Mississippi, losing all save our lives.
So as Mrs. Brunot was panic-stricken and determined
to die in town rather than be starved at Greenwell,
and was going in on the same wagon that came out the
night before, I got up with her and Nettie, and left
Greenwell at ten yesterday morning, bringing nothing
except this old book, which I would rather not lose,
as it has been an old and kind friend during these
days of trouble. At first, I avoided all mention
of political affairs, but now there is nothing else
to be thought of; if it is not burnt for treason,
I will like to look it over some day if
I live. I left Greenwell, without ever looking
around it, beyond one walk to the hotel, so I may
say I hardly know what it looks like. Miriam stayed,
much against her will, I fear, to bring in our trunks,
if I could send a wagon.
A guerrilla picket stopped us before
we had gone a mile, and seemed disposed to turn us
back. We said we must pass; our all was at stake.
They then entreated us not to enter, saying it was
not safe. I asked if they meant to burn it; “We
will help try it,” was the answer. I begged
them to delay the experiment until we could get away.
One waved his hat to me and said he would fight for
me. Hope he will at a distance.
They asked if we had no protectors; “None,”
we said. “Don’t go, then”; and
they all looked so sorry for us. We said we must;
starvation, and another panic awaited us out there,
our brothers were fighting, our fathers dead; we had
only our own judgment to rely on, and that told us
home was the best place for us; if the town must burn,
let us burn in our houses, rather than be murdered
in the woods. They looked still more sorry, but
still begged us not to remain. We would, though,
and one young boy called out as we drove off, “What’s
the name of that young lady who refused the escort?”
I told him, and they too expressed the greatest regret
that she had not accepted. We met many on the
road, nearly all of whom talked to us, and as they
were most respectful in their manner (though they
saw us in a mule team!), we gave them all the information
we could, which was all news to them, though very little.
Such a ride in the hot sun, perched up in the air!
One of the servants remarked, “Miss Sarah ain’t
ashamed to ride in a wagon!” With truth I replied,
“No, I was never so high before.”
Two miles from home we met the first
Federal pickets, and then they grew more numerous,
until we came on a large camp near our graveyard,
filled with soldiers and cannon. From first to
last none refrained from laughing at us; not aloud,
but they would grin and be inwardly convulsed with
laughter as we passed. One laughed so comically
that I dropped my veil hastily for fear he would see
me smile. I could not help it; if any one smiled
at me while I was dying, I believe I would return
it. We passed crowds, for it was now five o’clock,
and all seemed to be promenading. There were
several officers standing at the corner, near our
house, who were very much amused at our vehicle.
I did not feel like smiling then. After reducing
us to riding in a mule team, they were heartless enough
to laugh! I forgot them presently, and gave my
whole attention to getting out respectably. Now
getting in a wagon is bad enough; but getting
out ! I hardly know how I managed it.
I had fully three feet to step down before reaching
the wheel; once there, the driver picked me up and
set me on the pavement. The net I had gathered
my hair in, fell in my descent, and my hair swept down
halfway between my knee and ankle in one stream.
As I turned to get my little bundle, the officers
had moved their position to one directly opposite
to me, where they could examine me at leisure.
Queens used to ride drawn by oxen hundreds of years
ago, so I played this was old times, the mules were
oxen, I a queen, and stalked off in a style I am satisfied
would have imposed on Juno herself. When I saw
them as I turned, they were perfectly quiet; but Nettie
says up to that moment they had been in convulsions
of laughter, with their handkerchiefs to their faces.
It was not polite!
I found mother safe, but the house
was in the most horrible confusion. Jimmy’s
empty cage stood by the door; it had the same effect
on me that empty coffins produce on others. Oh,
my birdie! At six, I could no longer stand my
hunger. I had fasted for twelve hours, with the
exception of a mouthful of hoe-cake at eleven; I that
never fasted in my life! except last Ash
Wednesday when Lydia and I tried it for breakfast,
and got so sick we were glad to atone for it at dinner.
So I got a little piece of bread and corn beef from
Mrs. Daigre’s servant, for there was not a morsel
here, and I did not know where or what to buy.
Presently some kind friend sent me a great short-cake,
a dish of strawberry preserves, and some butter, which
I was grateful for, for the fact that the old negro
was giving me part of her supper made me rather sparing,
though she cried, “Eat it all, honey! I
get plenty more!”
Mother went to Cousin Will’s,
and I went to Mrs. Brunot’s to sleep, and so
ended my first day’s ride on a mule team.
Bah! A lady can make anything respectable by
the way she does it! What do I care if I had
been driving mules? Better that than walk seventeen
miles.
I met Dr. DuChene and Dr. Castleton
twice each, this morning. They were as kind to
me as they were to the girls the other day. The
latter saved them a disagreeable visit, while here.
He and those three were packing some things in the
hall, when two officers passed, and prepared to come
in, seeing three good-looking girls seemingly alone,
for Miriam’s dress hid Dr. Castleton as he leaned
over the box. Just then she moved, the Doctor
raised his head, and the officers started back with
an “Ah!” of surprise. The Doctor
called them as they turned away, and asked for a pass
for the young ladies. They came back bowing and
smiling, said they would write one in the house, but
they were told very dryly that there were no writing
accommodations there. They tried the fascinating,
and were much mortified by the coldness they met.
Dear me! “Why wasn’t I born old and
ugly?” Suppose I should unconsciously entrap
some magnificent Yankee! What an awful thing
it would be!!
Sentinels are stationed at every corner;
Dr. Castleton piloted me safely through one expedition;
but on the next, we had to part company, and I passed
through a crowd of at least fifty, alone. They
were playing cards in the ditch, and swearing dreadfully,
these pious Yankees; many were marching up and down,
some sleeping on the pavement, others picking
odious bugs out of each other’s heads! I
thought of the guerrillas, yellow fever, and all,
and wished they were all safe at home with their mothers
and sisters, and we at peace again.
What a day I have had! Here mother
and I are alone, not a servant on the lot. We
will sleep here to-night, and I know she will be too
nervous to let me sleep. The dirt and confusion
were extraordinary in the house. I could not
stand it, so I applied myself to making it better.
I actually swept two whole rooms! I ruined my
hands at gardening, so it made no difference.
I replaced piles of books, crockery, china, that Miriam
had left packed for Greenwell; I discovered I could
empty a dirty hearth, dust, move heavy weights, make
myself generally useful and dirty, and all this is
thanks to the Yankees! Poor me! This time
last year I thought I would never walk again!
If I am not laid up forever after the fatigue of this
last week, I shall always maintain I have a Constitution.
But it all seems nothing in this confusion; everything
is almost as bad as ever. Besides that, I have
been flying around to get Miriam a wagon. I know
she is half distracted at being there alone.
Mother chose staying with all its evils. Charlie’s
life would pay the penalty of a cotton burner if he
returned, so Lilly remains at Greenwell with him.
We three will get on as best we can here. I wrote
to the country to get a wagon, sent a pass from Headquarters,
but I will never know if it reached her until I see
her in town. I hope it will; I would be better
satisfied with Miriam.
June
4th.
Miriam and Mattie drove in, in the
little buggy, last evening after sunset, to find out
what we were to do. Our condition is desperate.
Beauregard is about attacking these Federals.
They say he is coming from Corinth, and the fight
will be in town. If true, we are lost again.
Starvation at Greenwell, fever and bullets here, will
put an end to us soon enough. There is no refuge
for us, no one to consult. Brother, whose judgment
we rely on as implicitly as we did on father’s,
we hear has gone to New York; there is no one to advise
or direct us, for, if he is gone, there is no man
in Louisiana whose decision I would blindly abide
by. Let us stay and die. We can only die
once; we can suffer a thousand deaths with suspense
and uncertainty; the shortest is the best. Do
you think the few words here can give an idea of our
agony and despair? Nothing can express it.
I feel a thousand years old to-day. I have shed
the bitterest tears to-day that I have shed since
father died. I can’t stand it much longer;
I’ll give way presently, and I know my heart
will break. Shame! Where is God? A fig
for your religion, if it only lasts while the sun
shines! “Better days are coming” I
can’t!
Troops are constantly passing and
repassing. They have scoured the country for
ten miles out, in search of guerrillas. We are
here without servants, clothing, or the bare necessaries
of life: suppose they should seize them on the
way! I procured a pass for the wagon, but it
now seems doubtful if I can get the latter a
very faint chance. Well! let them go; our home
next; then we can die sure enough. With God’s
help, I can stand anything yet in store for me.
“I hope to die shouting, the Lord will provide!”
Poor Lavinia! if she could only see us! I am
glad she does not know our condition.
5
P.M.
What a day of agony, doubt, uncertainty,
and despair! Heaven save me from another such!
Every hour fresh difficulties arose, until I believe
we were almost crazy, every one of us.
As Miriam was about stepping in the
buggy, to go to Greenwell to bring in our trunks,
mother’s heart misgave her, and she decided to
sacrifice her property rather than remain in this
state any longer. After a desperate discussion
which proved that each argument was death, she decided
to go back to Greenwell and give up the keys of the
house to General Williams, and let him do as he pleased,
rather than have it broken open during her absence.
Mattie and Mr. Tunnard were present at the discussion,
which ended by the latter stepping in the buggy and
driving Miriam to the Garrison. General Williams
called her by name, and asked her about Major Drum.
It seems all these people, native and foreign, know
us, while we know none. Miriam told him our condition,
how our brothers were away, father dead, and mother
afraid to remain, yet unwilling to lose her property
by going away; how we three were alone and unprotected
here, but would remain rather than have our home confiscated.
He assured her the house should not be touched, that
it would be respected in our absence as though we
were in it, and he would place a sentinel at the door
to guard it against his own men who might be disposed
to enter. The latter she declined, but he said
he would send his aide to mark the house, that it
might be known. A moment after they got back,
the aide, Mr. Biddle (I have his name to so many passes
that I know it now), came to the door. Mr. Tunnard
left him there, uncertain how we would receive a Christian,
and I went out and asked him in. He looked uncertain
of his reception, too, when we put an end to his doubt
by treating him as we invariably treat gentlemen who
appear such. He behaved remarkably well under
the trying circumstances, and insisted on a sentinel;
for, he said, though they would respect the property,
there were many bad characters among the soldiers who
might attempt to rob it, and the sentinel would protect
it. After a visit of ten minutes, devoted exclusively
to the affair, he arose and took his leave, leaving
me under the impression that he was a gentleman wherever
he came from, even if there were a few grammatical
errors in the pass he wrote me yesterday; but “thou
that judgest another, dost thou sin?”
Well, now we say, fly to Greenwell.
Yes! and by to-night, a most exaggerated account of
the whole affair will be spread over the whole country,
and we will be equally suspected by our own people.
Those who spread useless falsehoods about us will
gladly have a foundation for a monstrous one.
Didn’t Camp Moore ring with the story of our
entertaining the Federal officers? Didn’t
they spread the report that Miriam danced with one
to the tune of “Yankee Doodle” in the State
House garden? What will they stop at now?
O! if I was only a man, and knew what to do!
Night.
We were so distressed by the false
position in which we would be placed by a Federal
sentinel, that we did not know what course to pursue.
As all our friends shook their heads and said it was
dangerous, we knew full well what our enemies would
say. If we win Baton Rouge, as I pray we will,
they will say we asked protection from Yankees against
our own men, are consequently traitors, and our property
will be confiscated by our own Government. To
decline General Williams’s kind offer exposes
the house to being plundered. In our dilemma,
we made up our minds to stay, so we could say the
sentinel was unnecessary.
Presently a file of six soldiers marched
to the gate, an officer came to the steps and introduced
himself as Colonel McMillan, of 21st Indiana Volunteers.
He asked if this was Mrs. Morgan’s; the General
had ordered a guard placed around the house; he would
suggest placing them in different parts of the yard.
“Madam, the pickets await your orders.”
Miriam in a desperate fright undertook to speak for
mother, and asked if he thought there was any necessity.
No, but it was an additional security, he said.
“Then, if no actual necessity, we will relieve
you of the disagreeable duty, as we expect to remain
in town,” she said. He was very kind, and
discussed the whole affair with us, saying when we
made up our minds to leave, we told him
after we could not decide, to write him
word, and he would place a guard around to prevent
his men and the negroes from breaking in. It
was a singular situation: our brothers off fighting
them, while these Federal officers leaned over our
fence, and an officer standing on our steps offered
to protect us. These people are certainly very
kind to us. General Williams especially must
be a dear old gentleman; he is so good.
How many good, and how many mean people
these troubles have shown us! I am beginning
to see my true friends, now; there is a large number
of them, too. Everybody from whom we least expected
attention has agreeably surprised us....
General Williams will believe we are
insane from our changing so often.
His guard positively refused.
June
5th.
Last night I determined to stay.
Miriam went after our trunks at daylight. A few
hours after, Lilly wrote we must go back. McClellan’s
army was cut to pieces and driven back to Maryland,
by Jackson; the Federals were being driven into the
swamp from Richmond, too. Beauregard is undoubtedly
coming to attack Baton Rouge; his fire would burn
the town, if the gunboats do not; the Yankees will
shell, at all events, if forced to retire. It
cannot stand. We can’t go to New Orleans.
Butler says he will lay it in ashes if he is forced
to evacuate it, from yellow fever or other causes.
Both must be burned. Greenwell is not worth the
powder it would cost, so we must stand the chance
of murder and starvation there, rather than the certainty
of being placed between two fires here. Well,
I see nothing but bloodshed and beggary staring us
in the face. Let it come. “I hope to
die shouting, the Lord will provide.”
June
6th.
We dined at Mrs. Brunot’s yesterday,
and sitting on the gallery later, had the full benefit
of a Yankee drill. They stopped in front of the
house and went through some very curious manoeuvres,
and then marched out to their drill-ground beyond.
In returning, the whole regiment drew up directly
before us, and we were dreadfully quiet for five minutes,
the most uncomfortable I have experienced for some
time. For it was absurd to look at the sky, and
I looked in vain for one man with downcast eyes whereon
I might rest mine; but from the officers down to the
last private, they were all looking at us. I believe
I would have cried with embarrassment if the command
had not been given at that moment. They drilled
splendidly, and knew it, too, so went through it as
though they had not been at it for an hour before.
One conceited, red-headed lieutenant smiled at us
in the most fascinating way; perhaps he smiled to
think how fine he was, and what an impression he was
making.
We got back to our solitary house
before twilight, and were sitting on the balcony,
when Mr. Biddle entered. He came to ask if the
guard had been placed here last night. It seems
to me it would have saved him such a long walk if
he had asked Colonel McMillan. He sat down, though,
and got talking in the moonlight, and people passing,
some citizens, some officers, looked wonderingly at
this unheard-of occurrence. I won’t be
rude to any one in my own house, Yankee or Southern,
say what they will. He talked a great deal, and
was very entertaining; what tempted him, I cannot
imagine. It was two hours before he thought of
leaving. He was certainly very kind. He spoke
of the scarcity of flour in town; said they had quantities
at the Garrison, and asked permission to send us a
barrel, which of course we refused. It showed
a very good heart, though. He offered to take
charge of any letters I would write; said he had heard
General Williams speak of Harry; and when he at last
left, I was still more pleased with him for this kindness
to us. He says Captain Huger is dead. I
am very, very much distressed. They are related,
he says. He talked so reasonably of the war, that
it was quite a novelty after reading the abusive newspapers
of both sides. I like him, and was sorry I could
not ask him to repeat his visit. We are unaccustomed
to treat gentlemen that way; but it won’t do
in the present state to act as we please. Mob
governs.
Mother kept me awake all night to
listen to the mice in the garret. Every time
I would doze she would ask, “What’s that?”
and insist that the mice were men. I had to get
up and look for an imaginary host, so I am tired enough
this morning.
Miriam has just got in with all the
servants, our baggage is on the way, so we will be
obliged to stay whether we will or no. I don’t
care; it is all the same, starve or burn. Oh!
I forgot. Mr. Biddle did not write that
pass! It was his clerk. He speaks very
grammatically, so far as I can judge!!
June
8th, Sunday.
These people mean to kill us with
kindness. There is such a thing as being too
kind. Yesterday General Williams sent a barrel
of flour to mother, accompanied by a note begging
her to accept it “in consideration of the present
condition of the circulating currency,” and
the intention was so kind, the way it was done so delicate,
that there was no refusing it. I had to write
her thanks, and got in a violent fit of the “trembles”
at the idea of writing to a stranger. One consolation
is, that I am not a very big fool, for it took only
three lines to prove myself one. If I had been
a thundering big one, I would have occupied two pages
to show myself fully. And to think it is out of
our power to prove them our appreciation of the kindness
we have universally met with! Many officers were
in church this morning, and as they passed us while
we waited for the door to be opened, General Williams
bowed profoundly, another followed his example; we
returned the salute, of course. But by to-morrow,
those he did not bow to will cry treason against us.
Let them howl. I am tired of lies, scandal, and
deceit. All the loudest gossips have been frightened
into the country, but enough remain to keep them well
supplied with town talk.... It is such a consolation
to turn to the dear good people of the world after
coming in contact with such cattle. Here, for
instance, is Mr. Bonnecase on whom we have not the
slightest claims. Every day since we have been
here, he has sent a great pitcher of milk, knowing
our cow is out; one day he sent rice, the next sardines,
yesterday two bottles of Port and Madeira, which cannot
be purchased in the whole South. What a duck
of an old man! That is only one instance.
June
10th.
This morning while I was attending
to my flowers ... several soldiers stopped in front
of me, and holding on the fence, commenced to talk
about some brave Colonel, and a shooting affair last
night. When all had gone except one who was watching
me attentively, as he seemed to wish to tell me, I
let him go ahead. The story was that Colonel
McMillan was shot through the shoulder, breast, and
liver, by three guerrillas while four miles from town
last night, on a scout. He was a quarter of a
mile from his own men at the time, killed one who shot
him, took the other two prisoners, and fell from his
horse himself, when he got within the lines.
The soldier said these two guerrillas would probably
be hanged, while the six we saw pass captives, Sunday,
would probably be sent to Fort Jackson for life.
I think the guerrilla affair mere murder, I confess;
but what a dreadful fate for these young men!
One who passed Sunday was Jimmy’s schoolmate,
a boy of sixteen; another, Willie Garig, the pet of
a whole family of good, honest country people....
These soldiers will get in the habit
of talking to me after a while, through my own fault.
Yesterday I could not resist the temptation to ask
the fate of the six guerrillas, and stopped two volunteers
who were going by, to ask them. They discussed
the fate of the country, told me Fort Pillow and Vicksburg
were evacuated, the Mississippi opened from source
to mouth; I told them of Banks’s and McClellan’s
defeat; they assured me it would all be over in a
month, which I fervently pray may be so;
told me they were from Michigan (one was Mr. Bee, he
said, cousin of our General); and they would probably
have talked all day if I had not bowed myself away
with thanks for their information.
It made me ashamed to contrast the
quiet, gentlemanly, liberal way these volunteers spoke
of us and our cause, with the rabid, fanatical, abusive
violence of our own female Secession declaimers.
Thank Heaven, I have never yet made my appearance
as a Billingsgate orator on these occasions.
All my violent feelings, which in moments of intense
excitement were really violent, I have recorded in
this book; I am happy to say only the reasonable dislike
to seeing my country subjugated has been confided
to the public ear, when necessary; and that even now,
I confess that nothing but the reign of terror and
gross prejudice by which I was surrounded at that
time could justify many expressions I have here applied
to them. Fact is, these people have disarmed
me by their kindness. I expected to be in a crowd
of ruffian soldiers, who would think nothing of cutting
your throat or doing anything they felt like; and
I find, among all these thousands, not one who offers
the slightest annoyance or disrespect. The former
is the thing as it is believed by the whole country,
the latter the true state of affairs. I admire
foes who show so much consideration for our feelings.
Contrast these with our volunteers
from New Orleans all gentlemen who
came to take the Garrison from Major Haskins.
Several of them passing our gate where we were standing
with the Brunots, one exclaimed, “What pretty
girls!” It was a stage aside that we were supposed
not to hear. “Yes,” said another;
“beautiful! but they look as though they could
be fast.” Fast! and we were not even speaking!
not even looking at them! Sophie and I were walking
presently, and met half a dozen. We had to stop
to let them pass the crossing; they did not think of
making way for us; N sighed such a
sigh! N followed, and so on, when they all
sighed in chorus for our edification, while we dared
not raise our eyes from the ground. That is the
time I would have made use of a dagger. Two passed
in a buggy, and trusting to our not recognizing them
from the rapidity of their vehicle, kissed their hands
to us until they were out of sight! All went
back to New Orleans vowing Baton Rouge had the prettiest
girls in the world. These were our own people,
the elite of New Orleans, loyal Southerners and gentlemen.
These Northerners pass us satisfied with a simple
glance; some take off their hats, for all these officers
know our name, though we may not know theirs; how,
I can’t say.
When I heard of Colonel McMillan’s
misfortune, mother conspired with me to send over
some bandages, and something Tiche manufactured of
flour under the name of “nourishment,”
for he is across the street at Heroman’s.
Miriam objected on account of what “our people”
will say, and what we will suffer for it if the guerrillas
reach town, but we persuaded her we were right....
You can imagine our condition at present, many years
hence, Sarah, when you reflect that it is the brave,
noble-hearted, generous Miriam who is afraid to do
that deed on account of “public opinion,”
which indeed is “down” on us. At Greenwell
they are frantic about our returning to town, and call
us traitors, Yankees, and vow vengeance.... A
lady said to me, “The guerrillas have a black
list containing the names of those remaining in town.
All the men are to be hanged, their houses burned,
and all the women are to be tarred and feathered.”
I said, “Madam, if I believed them capable of
such a vile threat, even, much less the execution,
I would see them cut down without a feeling of compassion”
(which is not true), “and swear I was a Yankee
rather than claim being a native of the same country
with such brutes.” She has a long tongue;
when I next hear of it, it will be that I told
the story, and called them brutes and hoped they would
be shot, etc. And so goes the world.
No one will think of saying that I did not believe
them guilty of the thought, even. Our three brothers
may be sick or wounded at this minute; what I do for
this man, God will send some one to do for them, and
with that belief I do it....
June
11th.
Last evening mother and Miriam went
to the Arsenal to see if they would be allowed to
do anything for the prisoners. General Williams
received them, and fascinated Miriam by his manner,
as usual. Poor Miriam is always being fascinated,
according to her own account. He sent for little
Nathan Castle and Willie Garig, and left them alone
in the room with them, showing his confidence and
delicacy by walking away. The poor young men
were very grateful to be remembered; one had his eyes
too full of tears to speak. Mr. Garig told Miriam
that when the story of her refusing the escort was
told in camp, the woods rang with shouts of “Three
cheers for Miss Morgan!” They said they were
treated very well, and had no want, except clean clothes,
and to let their mothers know they were well and content.
I have been hard at work mending three
or four suits of the boys’ clothing for those
poor young men. Some needed thread and needle
very much, but it was the best we could do. So
I packed them all up not forgetting a row
of pins and sent Tiche off with the bundle,
perched real Congo fashion on her many-colored head-handkerchief,
which was tied in the most superb Creole style in
honor of the occasion.
June
16th, Monday.
My poor old diary comes to a very
abrupt end, to my great distress. The hardest
thing in the world is to break off journalizing when
you are once accustomed to it, and mine has proved
such a resource to me in these dark days of trouble
that I feel as though I were saying good-bye to an
old and tried friend. Thanks to my liberal supply
of pens, ink, and paper, how many inexpressibly dreary
days I have filled up to my own satisfaction, if not
to that of others! How many disagreeable affairs
it has caused me to pass over without another thought,
how many times it has proved a relief to me where
my tongue was forced to remain quiet! Without
the blessed materials, I would have fallen victim to
despair and “the Blues” long since; but
they have kept my eyes fixed on “Better days
a-coming” while slightly alluding to present
woes; kept me from making a fool of myself many a
day; acted as lightning rod to my mental thunder,
and have made me happy generally. For all of which
I cry, “Vivent pen, ink, and paper!”
and add with regret, “Adieu, my mental Conductor.
I fear this unchained lightning will strike somewhere,
in your absence!”