NEW
ORLEANS, August, 1863.
Friday,
14th.
Doomed to be bored! To-night
Miriam drags me to a soiree musicale, and in
the midst of my toilet, I sit down with bare shoulders
to scratch a dozen lines in my new treasure which
has been by me for three days, untouched. I don’t
know what tempts me to do it except perversity; for
I have nothing to say.
I was in hopes that I would never
have occasion to refer to the disagreeable subject
that occupied the last pages of my old journal, but
the hope proves fallacious, and wherever I turn, the
same subject is renewed. So there is no longer
any reason in waiting until all mention can be avoided.
Yesterday a little, sly, snaky creature asked me if
I knew “the Hero of Port Hudson.”
“Yes,” I said briefly. “Unmistakable!
I see it in your face!” she remarked. “See
what?” “That you betray yourself.
Do you know that every one believes that you are engaged
to him?” In surprise I said no; such a thing
had never been mentioned before me until then.
“Well! they say so, and add, too, that you are
to be married as soon as the war is over.” “‘They’
are paying me an undeserved compliment,” I returned.
Where could such a report have originated? Not
certainly from him, and not, most assuredly, from
me. Where does Dame rumor spring from? He
is a stranger here, and I have never mentioned his
name except to the Peirces, who would no more report
such a thing than I would myself. I won’t
mind it if it does not reach his ears; but what assurance
have I that it will not? That would be unpleasant!
Why can’t “they say” let everybody
settle their own affairs?
Here comes Miriam after me! What
a bore! What a bore! And she looks as though
it was a pleasure to go out! How I hate it!
Glancing up the page, the date strikes
my eye. What tempted me to begin it Friday?
My dear Ada would shiver and declare the blank pages
were reserved for some very painful, awful, uncomfortable
record, or that “something” would happen
before the end of it. Nothing very exciting can
happen, except the restoration of peace; and to bring
that about, I would make a vow to write only on Fridays.
Sunday,
16th.
Coming out of church this morning
with Miriam, a young lady ran up with an important
air, as though about to create a sensation. “I
have a message for you both,” she said, fixing
her eyes on mine as though she sought something in
them. “I visit the prisoners frequently,
you know, and day before yesterday Captain Steadman
requested me to beg you to call, that he will not
take a refusal, but entreated you to come, if it were
only once.” The fates must be against me;
I had almost forgotten his existence, and having received
the same message frequently from another, I thoughtlessly
said, “You mean Colonel, do you not?”
Fortunately Miriam asked the same question at the instant
that I was beginning to believe I had done something
very foolish. The lady looked at me with her
calm, scrutinizing, disagreeable smile a
smile that had all the unpleasant insinuations eyes
and lips can convey, a smile that looked like “I
have your secret you can’t deceive
me” and said with her piercing
gaze, “No, not the Colonel. He was
very ill that day (did you know it?) and could not
see us. This was really the Captain.”
“He is very kind,” I stammered, and suggested
to Miriam that we had better pass on. The lady
was still eyeing me inquisitively. Decidedly,
this is unpleasant to have the reputation of being
engaged to a man that every girl is crazy to win!
If one only cared for him, it would not be so unpleasant;
but under the circumstances, ah ca!
why don’t they make him over to the young lady
whose father openly avows he would be charmed to have
him for a son-in-law? This report has cost me
more than one impertinent stare. The young ladies
think it a very enviable position. Let some of
them usurp it, then!
So the young lady, not having finished
her examination, proposed to accompany us part of
the way. As a recompense, we were regaled with
charming little anecdotes about herself, and her visits.
How she had sent a delightful little custard to the
Colonel (here was a side glance at my demure face)
and had carried an autographic album in her last visit,
and had insisted on their inscribing their names, and
writing a verse or so. “How interesting!”
was my mental comment. “Can a man respect
a woman who thrusts him her album, begging for a compliment
the first time they meet? What fools they must
think us, if they take such as these for specimens
of the genus!”
Did we know Captain Lanier? Know
him, no! but how vividly his face comes before me
when I look back to that grand smash-up at Port Hudson,
when his face was the last I saw before being thrown,
and the first I recognized when I roused myself from
my stupor and found myself in the arms of the young
Alabamian. At the sound of his name, I fairly
saw the last ray of sunset flashing over his handsome
face, as I saw it then. No, I did not know him.
He had spoken to me, begging to be allowed to hold
me, and I had answered, entreating him not to touch
me, and that was all I knew of him; but she did not
wait for the reply. She hurried on to say that
she had sent him a bouquet, with a piece of poetry,
and that he had been heard to exclaim, “How
beautiful!” on reading it. “And do
you know,” she continued, with an air that was
meant to be charmingly naif, but which was not very
successful, as naïveté at twenty-nine is rather flat,
“I am so much afraid he thinks it original!
I forgot to put quotation marks, and it would be so
funny in him to make the mistake! For you know
I have not much of the of that sort of
thing about me I am not a poet poetess,
author, you know.” Said Miriam in her blandest
tone, without a touch of sarcasm in her voice, “Oh,
if he has ever seen you, the mistake is natural!”
If I had spoken, my voice would have carried a sting
in it. So I waited until I could calmly say,
“You know him well, of course.” “No,
I never saw him before!” she answered with a
new outburst of naïveté.
Monday,
August 24th.
A letter from Captain Bradford to
Miriam. My poor Adonis, that I used to ridicule
so unmercifully, what misfortunes have befallen him!
He writes that during the siege at Port Hudson he
had the top of his ear shot off (wonder if he lost
any of that beautiful golden fleece yclept his hair?),
and had the cap of his knee removed by a shell, besides
a third wound he does not specify. Fortunately
he is with kind friends. And he gives news of
Lydia, most acceptable since such a time has elapsed
since we heard from her.... He says, “Tell
Miss Sarah that the last I saw of John, he was crossing
the Mississippi in a skiff, his parole in his pocket,
his sweet little sister by his side,” (O you
wretch! at it again!) “and Somebody else in his
heart.” How considerate to volunteer the
last statement! Then followed half a page of
commendation for his bravery, daring, and skill during
the siege (the only kind word he ever spoke of him,
I dare say), all looking as though I was to take it
as an especial compliment to myself, and was expected
to look foolish, blush, and say “Thanky”
for it. As though I care!
Monday
night.
I consider myself outrageously imposed
upon! I am so indignant that I have spent a whole
evening making faces at myself. “Please,
Miss Sarah, look natural!” William petitions.
“I never saw you look cross before.”
Good reason! I never had more cause! However,
I stop in the midst of a hideous grimace, and join
in a game of hide the switch with the children to
forget my annoyance.
Of course a woman is at the bottom
of it. Last night while Ada and Marie were here,
a young lady whose name I decline to reveal for the
sake of the sex, stopped at the door with an English
officer, and asked to see me in the entry. I
had met her once before. Remember this, for that
is the chief cause of my anger. Of course they
were invited in; but she declined, saying she had
but a moment, and had a message to deliver to me alone,
so led me apart. “Of course you know who
it is from?” she began. I told a deliberate
falsehood, and said no, though I guessed instantly.
She told me the name then. She had visited the
prison the day before, and there had met the individual
whose name, joined to mine, has given me more trouble
and annoyance during the last few months than it would
be possible to mention. “And our entire
conversation was about you,” she said, as though
to flatter my vanity immensely. He told her then
that he had written repeatedly to me, without receiving
an answer, and at last had written again, in which
he had used some expressions which he feared had offended
my reserved disposition. Something had made me
angry, for without returning letter or message to
say I was not displeased, I had maintained a resolute
silence, which had given him more pain and uneasiness
than he could say. That during all this time
he had had no opportunity of explaining it to me,
and that now he begged her to tell me that he would
not offend me for worlds that he admired
me more than any one he had ever met, that he could
not help saying what he did, but was distressed at
offending me, etc. The longest explanation!
And she was directed to beg me to explain my silence,
and let him know if I was really offended, and also
leave no entreaty or argument untried to induce me
to visit the prison; he must see me.
As to visiting the prison, I told
her that was impossible. (O how glad I am that I never
did!) But as to the letters, told her “to assure
him that I had not thought of them in that light,
and had passed over the expressions he referred to
as idle words it would be ridiculous to take offense
at; and that my only reason for persevering in this
silence had been that Brother disapproved of my writing
to gentlemen, and I had promised that I would not
write to him. That I had feared he would misconstrue
my silence, and had wished to explain it to him, but
I had no means of doing so except by breaking my promise;
and so had preferred leaving all explanation to time,
and some future opportunity.”
“But you did not mean to pain
him, did you?” the dear little creature coaxingly
lisped, standing on tiptoe to kiss me as she spoke.
I assured her that I had not. “He has been
dangerously ill,” she continued, apologizingly,
“and sickness has made him more morbid and more
unhappy about it than he would otherwise have been.
It has distressed him a great deal.”
I felt awkwardly. How was it
that this girl, meeting him for the first and only
time in her life, had contrived to learn so much that
she had no right to know, and appeared here as mediator
between two who were strangers to her, so far usurping
a place she was not entitled to, as to apologize to
me for his sensitiveness, and to entreat me
to tell him he had not forfeited my esteem, as though
she was his most intimate friend, and I a passing
acquaintance? Failing to comprehend it, I deferred
it to a leisure moment to think over, and in the mean
time exerted myself to be affable.
I can’t say half she spoke of,
but as she was going she said, “Then will you
give me permission to say as many sweet things for
you as I can think of? I’m going there
to-morrow.” I told her I would be afraid
to give her carte blanche on such a subject;
but that she would really oblige me by explaining
about the letters. She promised, and after another
kiss, and a few whispered words, left me.
Maybe she exaggerated, though!
Uncharitable as the supposition was, it was a consolation.
I was unwilling to believe that any one who professed
to esteem me would make me the subject of conversation
with a stranger and such a conversation!
So my comfort was only in hoping that she had related
a combination of truth and fiction, and that he had
not been guilty of such folly.
Presently it grew clearer to me.
I must be growing in wickedness, to fathom that of
others, I who so short a time ago disbelieved in the
very existence of such a thing. I remembered having
heard that the young lady and her family were extremely
anxious to form his acquaintance, and that her cousin
had coolly informed Ada that she had selected him
among all others, and meant to have him for a “beau”
as soon as she could be introduced to him; I remembered
that the young lady herself had been very anxious
to discover whether the reputation common report had
given me had any foundation.
As soon as we were alone, I told mother
of our conversation in the entry, and said, “And
now I am certain that this girl has made use of my
name to become acquainted with him.”
Thursday,
10th September.
O my prophetic soul! part of your
forebodings are already verified! And in what
an unpleasant way!
Day before yesterday an English officer,
not the one who came here, but one totally unknown
to me, said at Mrs. Peirce’s he was going to
visit the Confederate prisoners. He was asked
if he knew any. Slightly, he said; but he was
going this time by request; he had any quantity of
messages to deliver to Colonel
from Miss Sarah Morgan. “How can that be
possible, since you are not acquainted with her?”
Ada demanded. He had the impudence to say that
the young lady I have already mentioned had requested
him to deliver them for her, since she found it impossible.
Fortunately for me, I have two friends left. Feeling
the indelicacy of the thing, and knowing that there
must be some mistake that might lead to unpleasant
consequences, Ada and Marie, my good angels, insisted
on hearing the messages. At first he refused,
saying that they were entrusted to him confidentially;
but being assured that they were really intimate with
me, whereas the other was a perfect stranger, and
that I would certainly not object to their hearing
what I could tell a gentleman, he yielded, fortunately
for my peace of mind, and told all.
I can’t repeat it. I was
too horrified to hear all, when they told me.
What struck me as being most shocking was my distorted
explanation about the letters. It now set forth
that I was not allowed to write myself, but would
be happy to have him write to me; then there was an
earnest assurance that my feelings toward him
had not changed in the least
Here I sprang from my chair and rushed
to the window for a breath of air, wringing my hands
in speechless distress. How a word more or less,
an idea omitted or added, a syllable misplaced, can
transform a whole sentence, and make what was before
harmless, really shocking!
And if it had not been for Ada and
Marie ! Blessed angels! they entreated
him not to deliver any of his messages, insisting that
there must be a mistake, that if he knew me he would
understand that it was impossible for me to have sent
such a message by a stranger. And although at
first he declared he felt obliged to discharge the
task imposed on him, they finally succeeded in persuading
him to relinquish the errand, promising to be responsible
for the consequences.
“Ah me!” I gasped last
night, making frantic grimaces in the dark, and pinching
myself in disgust, “why can’t they let
me alone?... O women women! I
wish he could marry all of you, so you would let me
alone! Take him, please; but en grace don’t
disgrace me in the excitement of the race!”
Friday,
25th.
Write me down a witch, a prophetess,
or what you will. I am certainly something!
All has come to pass on that very disagreeable subject
very much as I feared. Perhaps no one in my position
would speak freely on the subject; for that very reason
I shall not hesitate to discuss it.
Know, then, that this morning, He
went North along with many other Confederate prisoners,
to be exchanged. And he left he who
has written so incessantly and so imploringly for
me to visit his prison he left without
seeing me. Bon! Wonder what happened?
Evening.
I have learned more. He has not
yet left; part of the mystery is unraveled, only I
have neither patience nor desire to seek for more.
These women ! Hush! to slander is too much
like them; be yourself.
My sweet little lisper informed a
select circle of friends the other night, when questioned,
that the individual had not called on me, and, what
was more, would not do so. “Pray, how do
you happen to be so intimately acquainted with the
affairs of two who are strangers to you?” asked
a lady present. She declined saying how she had
obtained her information, only asserting that it was
so. “In fact, you cannot expect any
Confederate gentleman to call at the house of
Judge Morgan, a professed Unionist,” she continued.
So that is the story she told to keep him from seeing
me. She has told him that we had turned Yankees!
All her arts would not grieve me as much as one word
against Brother. My wrongs I can forget; but
one word of contempt for Brother I never forgive!
White with passion I said to my informant, “Will
you inform the young lady that her visit will never
be returned, that she is requested not to repeat hers,
and that I decline knowing any one who dares cast
the slightest reflection on the name of one who has
been both father and brother to me!” This evening
I was at a house where she was announced. Miriam
and I bade our hostess good-evening and left without
speaking to her. Anybody but Brother! No
one shall utter his name before me save with respect
and regard.
This young woman’s father is
a Captain in the Yankee navy, and her brother is a
Captain in the Yankee army, while three other brothers
are in the Confederate. Like herself, I have
three brothers fighting for the South; unlike her,
the only brother who avows himself a Unionist has
too much regard for his family to take up arms against
his own flesh and blood.
Tuesday,
October 6th.
I hope this will be the last occasion
on which I shall refer to the topic to which this
unfortunate book seems to have been devoted. But
it gives me a grim pleasure to add a link to the broken
chain of the curious story, now and then. Maybe
some day the missing links will be supplied me, and
then I can read the little humdrum romance of What
might have been, or What I’m glad never was,
as easily as Marie tells her rosary.
Well! the prisoners have gone at last,
to my unspeakable satisfaction. Day before yesterday
they left. Now I can go out as I please, without
fear of meeting him face to face. How odd that
I should feel like a culprit! But that is in
accordance with my usual judgment and consistency.
Friday, I had a severe fright. Coming up Camp
Street with Ada, after a ramble on Canal, we met two
Confederates. Everywhere that morning we had
met gray coats, but none that I recognized. Still,
without looking, I saw through my eyelids, as it were,
two hands timidly touch two gray caps, as though the
question “May I?” had not yet been answered.
In vain I endeavored to meet their eyes, or give the
faintest token of greeting. I was too frightened
and embarrassed to speak, and only by a desperate
effort succeeded in bending my head in a doubtful
bow, that would have disgraced a dairy maid, after
we had passed. Then, disgusted with myself, I
endeavored to be comforted with the idea that they
had perhaps mistaken me for some one else; that having
known me at a time when I was unable to walk, they
could have no idea of my height and figure, or walk.
So I reasoned, turning down a side street. Lo!
at a respectable distance they were following!
We had occasion to go into a daguerreau salon.
While standing in the light, two gray uniforms, watching
us from the dark recess at the door, attracted my
attention. Pointing them out to Ada, I hurried
her past them downstairs to the street. Faster
and faster we walked, until at the corner I turned
to look. There they were again, sauntering leisurely
along. We turned into another street, mingled
in the crowd, and finally lost sight of them.
That fright lasted me an hour or two. Whose purse
have I stolen, that I am afraid to look these men in
the face?
But what has this to do with what
I meant to tell? How loosely and disconnectedly
my ideas run out with the ink from my pen! I meant
to say how sorry I am for my dear little lisper that
she failed in her efforts to conquer the “Hero”;
and here I have drifted off in a page of trash that
does not concern her in the least. Well! she did
not succeed, and whatever she told him was told in
vain, as far as she was concerned. He
was not to be caught! What an extraordinary man!
Dozens fighting for the preference, and he in real,
or pretended ignorance.
I must do him the justice to say he
is the most guileless, as well as the most honest
of mortals. He told the mother of a rich and pretty
daughter what he thought of me; that my superior did
not exist on earth, and my equal he had never met.
Ha! ha! this pathetic story makes me laugh in spite
of myself. Is it excess of innocence, or just
a rôle he adopted? Stop! His idle word is
as good as an oath. He could not pretend to what
he did not believe. He told her of his earnest
and sincere admiration words! words! hurry
on! She asked how it was then ? Here
he confessed, with a mixture of pride and penitence,
that he had written me letters which absolutely required
answers, and to which I had never deigned to reply
by even a word. That, mortified beyond measure
at my silent contempt, he had tried every means of
ascertaining the cause of my coldness, but I had never
vouchsafed an answer, but had left him to feel the
full force of my harsh treatment without one word
of explanation. That when he was paroled, he had
hoped that I would see him to tell him wherein he
had forfeited my esteem; but I had not invited him
to call, and mortified and repulsed as he had been,
it was impossible for him to call without my permission....
Did my little lisper change the message when the little
midshipman told her it had been intercepted because
too friendly? I know she met this martyred Lion
frequently after that and had many opportunities of
telling him the simple truth, but she evidently did
not.
He has gone away with sorely wounded
feelings, to say nothing more; for that I am sincerely
sorry; but I trust to his newly acquired freedom,
and his life of danger and excitement, to make him
forget the wrongs he believes himself to have suffered
at my hands. If it was all to be gone through
again (which thank Heaven, I will never be called upon
to endure again), I would follow Brother’s advice
as implicitly then as I did before. He is right,
and without seeing, I believe. They tell me of
his altered looks, and of his forced, reckless gaiety
which, so strangely out of keeping with his natural
character, but makes his assumed part more conspicuous.
No matter! He will recover! Nothing like
a sea voyage for disorders of all kinds. And we
will never meet again; that is another consolation.
“Notice: The public are
hereby informed through Mrs. ,
Chief Manager of the Theatre of High Tragedy, that
Miss Sarah M., having been proved unworthy and incompetent
to play the rôle of Ariadne, said part will hereafter
be filled by Miss Blank, of Blank Street, who plays
it with a fidelity so true to nature that she could
hardly be surpassed by the original.”
Monday,
November 9th.
Another odd link of the old, stale
story has come to me, all the way from New York.
A friend of mine, who went on the same boat with the
prisoners, wrote to her mother to tell her that she
had formed the acquaintance of the most charming,
fascinating gentleman among them, no other than my
once friend. Of course, she would have
been less than a woman if she had not gossiped when
she discovered who he was. So she sends me word
that he told her he had been made to believe, as long
as he was on parole in New Orleans, that we were all
Unionists now, and that Brother would not allow a
Confederate to enter the house. (O my little lisper,
was I unjust to you?) He told her that I had been very
kind to him when he was in prison, and he would have
forgotten the rest and gladly have called to thank
me in person for the kindness he so gratefully remembered,
if I alone had been concerned; but he felt he could
not force himself unasked into my brother’s house....
She told him how false it was.
Sunday,
November 22d.
A report has just reached us that
my poor dear Gibbes has been taken prisoner along
with the rest of Hayes’s brigade.
November
26th.
Yes! It is so, if his own handwriting
is any proof. Mr. Appleton has just sent Brother
a letter he had received from Gibbes, asking him to
let Brother know he was a prisoner, and we have heard,
through some one else, that he had been sent to Sandusky.
Brother has applied to have him paroled and sent here,
or even imprisoned here, if he cannot be paroled.
Monday,
November 30th.
Our distress about Gibbes has been
somewhat relieved by good news from Jimmy. The
jolliest sailor letter from him came this morning,
dated only the 4th instant from Cherbourg, detailing
his cruise on the Georgia from leaving England, to
Bahia, Trinidad, Cape of Good Hope, to France again.
Such a bright, dashing letter! We laughed extravagantly
over it when he told how they readily evaded the Vanderbilt,
knowing she would knock them into “pie”;
how he and the French Captain quarreled when he ordered
him to show his papers, and how he did not know French
abuse enough to enter into competition with him, so
went back a first and second time to Maury when the
man would not let him come aboard, whereupon Maury
brought the ship to with two or three shots and Jimmy
made a third attempt, and forced the Frenchman to show
his papers. He tells it in such a matter-of-fact
way! No extravagance, no idea of having been
in a dangerous situation, he a boy of eighteen, on
a French ship in spite of the Captain’s rage.
What a jolly life it must be! Now dashing in
storms and danger, now floating in sunshine and fun!
Wish I was a midshipman! Then how he changes,
in describing the prize with an assorted cargo that
they took, which contained all things from a needle
to pianos, from the reckless spurt in which he speaks
of the plundering, to where he tells of how the Captain,
having died several days before, was brought on the
Georgia while Maury read the service over the body
and consigned it to the deep by the flames of the
dead man’s own vessel. What noble, tender,
manly hearts it shows, those rough seamen stopping
in their work of destruction to perform the last rites
over their dead enemy. One can fancy their bare
heads and sunburned faces standing in solemn silence
around the poor dead man when he dropped into his
immense grave. God bless the “pirates”!
Thursday
night, December 31st, 1863.
The last of eighteen sixty-three is
passing away as I write.... Every New Year since
I was in my teens, I have sought a quiet spot where
I could whisper to myself Tennyson’s “Death
of the Old Year,” and even this bitter cold
night I steal into my freezing, fireless little room,
en robe de nuit, to keep up my old habit while
the others sleep....
“Old year, you shall not die;
We did so laugh and cry with you,
I’ve half a mind to die with you,
Old year, if you must die.”
No! Go and welcome! Bring
Peace and brighter days, O dawning New Year.
Die, faster and faster, Old One; I count your remaining
moments with almost savage glee.
Wednesday,
February 3d.
Last night we were thrown into the
most violent state of commotion by the unexpected
entrance of Captain Bradford. He has been brought
here a prisoner, from Asphodel, where he has been
ever since the surrender of Port Hudson, and taking
advantage of his tri-weekly parole, his first visit
was naturally here, as he has no other friends.
Poor creature, how he must have suffered!
The first glance at his altered face where suffering
and passion have both left their traces unmistakably
since we last met, and the mere sight of his poor lame
leg, filled my heart with compassion.
How he hates Mr. Halsey! I could
not forego the pleasure of provoking him into a discussion
about him, knowing how they hated each other.
He would not say anything against him; understand,
that as a gentleman and a companion, Mr. Halsey was
his warmest and best friend; there was no one he admired
more; but he must say that as a soldier, he was the
worst he had ever seen not that he was not
as brave and gallant a man as ever lived, but he neglected
his duties most shamefully while visiting Linwood
so constantly, eluding the sentinels daily as he asked
for neither pass nor permission, and consulting only
his inclinations instead of his superior officers
or his business. And that last night at Linwood,
when he absented himself without leave, why could he
not have signified to him, his Captain, that he wished
to say good-bye, instead of quietly doing as he pleased?
When the Colonel sent for a report of the number of
men, quantity of forage and ammunition, etc.,
and it was discovered that John Halsey was absent without
leave, with the books locked up and the keys in his
pocket even after this lapse of time, the
fire flashed through the ice as the Captain spoke.
Sergeant Halsey, I am sorry for you when you reported
yourself next day! All the fun that could have
been crowded into an evening at Linwood could not
have repaid you for the morning’s scene.
And after all, what was it beyond very empty pleasure,
with a great deal of laughter? He could have
dispensed with it just as well. Looking back,
I congratulate myself on being the only one who did
not ask him to stay.
5th.
Not dead! not dead! O my God!
Gibbes is not dead! Where O
dear God! Another?
Only a few days ago came a letter
so cheerful and hopeful we have waited
and prayed so patiently at my feet lies
one from Colonel Steadman saying he is dead.
Dead! Suddenly and without a moment’s warning
summoned to God! No! it cannot be! I am mad!
O God, have mercy on us! My poor mother!
And Lydia! Lydia! God comfort you! My
brain seems afire. Am I mad? Not yet!
God would not take him yet! He will come again!
Hush, God is good! Not dead! not dead!
O Gibbes, come back to us!
11th.
O God, O God, have mercy on us!
George is dead! Both in a week. George,
our sole hope our sole dependence.
March.
Dead! Dead! Both dead!
O my brothers! What have we lived for except
you? We, who would have so gladly laid down our
lives for yours, are left desolate to mourn over all
we loved and hoped for, weak and helpless; while you,
so strong, noble, and brave, have gone before us without
a murmur. God knows best. But it is hard O
so hard! to give them up....
If we had had any warning or preparation,
this would not have been so unspeakably awful.
But to shut one’s eyes to all dangers and risks,
and drown every rising fear with “God will send
them back; I will not doubt His mercy,” and
then suddenly to learn that your faith has been presumption and
God wills that you shall undergo bitter affliction it
is a fearful awakening! What glory have we ever
rendered to God that we should expect him to be so
merciful to us? Are not all things His, and is
not He infinitely more tender and compassionate than
we deserve?
We have deceived ourselves wilfully
about both. After the first dismay on hearing
of Gibbes’s capture, we readily listened to the
assertions of our friends that Johnson’s Island
was the healthiest place in the world; that he would
be better off, comfortably clothed and under shelter,
than exposed to shot and shell, half fed, and lying
on the bare ground during Ewell’s winter campaign.
We were thankful for his safety, knowing Brother would
leave nothing undone that could add to his comfort.
And besides that, there was the sure hope of his having
him paroled. On that hope we lived all winter now
confident that in a little while he would be with
us, then again doubting for a while, only to have
the hope grow surer afterwards. And so we waited
and prayed, never doubting he would come at last.
He himself believed it, though striving not to be
too hopeful lest he should disappoint us, as well as
himself. Yet he wrote cheerfully and bravely to
the last. Towards the middle of January, Brother
was sure of succeeding, as all the prisoners had been
placed under Butler’s control. Ah me!
How could we be so blind? We were sure he would
be with us in a few weeks! I wrote to him that
I had prepared his room.
On the 30th of January came his last
letter, addressed to me, though meant for Lavinia.
It was dated the 12th the day George died.
All his letters pleaded that I would write more frequently he
loved to hear from me; so I had been writing to him
every ten days. On the 3d of February I sent
my last. Friday the 5th, as I was running through
Miriam’s room, I saw Brother pass the door, and
heard him ask Miriam for mother. The voice, the
bowed head, the look of utter despair on his face,
struck through me like a knife. “Gibbes!
Gibbes!” was my sole thought; but Miriam and
I stood motionless looking at each other without a
word. “Gibbes is dead,” said mother
as he stood before her. He did not speak; and
then we went in.
We did not ask how, or when.
That he was dead was enough for us. But after
a while he told us Uncle James had written that he
had died at two o’clock on Thursday the 21st.
Still we did not know how he had died. Several
letters that had been brought remained unopened on
the floor. One, Brother opened, hoping to learn
something more. It was from Colonel Steadman
to Miriam and me, written a few hours after his death,
and contained the sad story of our dear brother’s
last hours.
He had been in Colonel Steadman’s
ward of the hospital for more than a week, with headache
and sore throat, but it was thought nothing; he seemed
to improve, and expected to be discharged in a few
days. On the 21st he complained that his throat
pained him again. After prescribing for him,
and talking cheerfully with him for some time, Colonel
Steadman left him surrounded by his friends, to attend
to his other patients. He had hardly reached
his room when some one ran to him saying Captain Morgan
was dying. He hurried to his bedside, and found
him dead. Captain Steadman, sick in the next bed,
and those around him, said he had been talking pleasantly
with them, when he sat up to reach his cup of water
on the table. As soon as he drank it he seemed
to suffocate; and after tossing his arms wildly in
the air, and making several fearful efforts to breathe,
he died.
“Hush, mother, hush,”
I said when I heard her cries. “We have
Brother and George and Jimmy left, and Lydia has lost
all!” Heaven pity us! George had gone before only
He in mercy kept the knowledge of it from us for a
while longer.
On Thursday the 11th, as we sat talking
to mother, striving to make her forget the weary days
we had cried through with that fearful sound of “Dead!
Dead!” ringing ever in our ears, some one asked
for Miriam. She went down, and presently I heard
her thanking somebody for a letter. “You
could not have brought me anything more acceptable!
It is from my sister, though she can hardly have heard
from us yet!” I ran back, and sitting at mother’s
feet, told her Miriam was coming with a letter from
Lydia. Mother cried at the mention of her name.
O my little sister! You know how dear you are
to us! “Mother! Mother!” a horrible
voice cried, and before I could think who it was,
Miriam rushed in, holding an open letter in her hand,
and perfectly wild. “George is dead!”
she shrieked, and fell heavily to the ground.
O my God! I could have prayed
Thee to take mother, too, when I looked at her.
I thought I almost hoped she was dead, and
that pang spared! But I was wild myself.
I could have screamed! laughed! “It
is false! Do you hear me, mother? God would
not take both! George is not dead!” I cried,
trying in vain to arouse her from her horrible state
or bring one ray of reason to her eye. I spoke
to a body alive only to pain; not a sound of my voice
seemed to reach her; only fearful moans showed she
was yet alive.
Miriam lay raving on the ground.
Poor Miriam! her heart’s idol torn away.
God help my darling! I did not understand that
George could die until I looked at her.
In vain I strove to raise her from the ground, or
check her wild shrieks for death. “George!
only George!” she would cry; until at last,
with the horror of seeing both die before me, I mastered
strength enough to go for the servant and bid her run
quickly for Brother.
How long I stood there alone, I never
knew. I remember Ada coming in hurriedly and
asking what it was. I told her George was dead.
It was a relief to see her cry. I could not;
but I felt the pain afresh, as though it were her
brother she was crying over, not mine. And the
sight of her tears brought mine, too. We could
only cry over mother and Miriam; we could not rouse
them; we did not know what to do.
Some one called me in the entry.
I went, not understanding what I was doing. A
lady came to me, told me her name, and said something
about George; but I could not follow what she said.
It was as though she was talking in a dream.
I believe she repeated the words several times, for
at last she shook me and said, “Listen!
Rouse yourself! the letter is about George!”
Yes, I said; he is dead. She said I must read
the letter; but I could not see, so she read it aloud.
It was from Dr. Mitchell, his friend who was with
him when he died, telling of his sickness and death.
He died on Tuesday the 12th of January, after an illness
of six days, conscious to the last and awaiting the
end as only a Christian, and one who has led so beautiful
a life, could, with the Grace of God, look for it.
He sent messages to his brothers and sisters, and
bade them tell his mother his last thoughts were of
her, and that he died trusting in the mercy of the
Saviour. George! our pride! our beautiful, angel
brother! Could he die? Surely God has
sent all these afflictions within these three years
to teach us that our hopes must be placed Above, and
that it is blasphemy to have earthly idols!
The letter said that the physicians
had mistaken his malady, which was inflammation of
the bowels, and he had died from being treated for
something else. It seemed horrible cruelty to
read me that part; I knew that if mother or Miriam
ever heard of it, it would kill them. So I begged
Mrs. Mitchell never to let them hear of it. She
seemed to think nothing of the pain it would inflict;
how could she help telling if they asked? she said.
I told her I must insist on her not mentioning it;
it would only add suffering to what was already insupportable;
if they asked for the letter, offer to read it aloud,
but say positively that she would not allow any one
to touch it except herself, and then she might pass
it over in silence. I roused Miriam then and sent
her to hear it read. She insisted on reading
it herself, and half dead with grief held out her
hands, begging piteously to be suffered to read it
alone. I watched then until I was sure Mrs. Mitchell
would keep her promise. Horrible as I knew it
to be from strange lips, I knew by what I experienced
that I had saved her from a shock that might cost her
her life; and then I went back to mother.
No need to conceal what I felt there!
She neither spoke nor saw. If I had shrieked
that he died of ill treatment, she would not have
understood. But I sat there silently with that
horrible secret, wondering if God would help me bear
it, or if despair would deprive me of self-control
and force me presently to cry it aloud, though it
should kill them both.
At last Brother came. I had to
meet him downstairs and tell him. God spare me
the sight of a strong man’s grief! Then
Sister came in, knowing as little as he. Poor
Sister! I could have blessed her for every tear
she shed. It was a comfort to see some one who
had life or feeling left. I felt as though the
whole world was dead. Nothing was real, nothing
existed except horrible speechless pain. Life
was a fearful dream through which but one thought
ran “Dead Dead!”
Miriam had been taken to her room
more dead than alive Mother lay speechless
in hers. The shock of this second blow had obliterated,
with them, all recollection of the first. It
was a mercy I envied them; for I remembered both,
until loss of consciousness would have seemed a blessing.
I shall never forget mother’s shriek of horror
when towards evening she recalled it. O those
dreadful days of misery and wretchedness! It
seems almost sacrilege to refer to them now. They
are buried in our hearts with our boys thought
of with prayers and tears.
How will the world seem to us now?
What will life be without the boys? When this
terrible strife is over, and so many thousands return
to their homes, what will peace bring us of all we
hoped? Jimmy! Dear Lord, spare us that one!
November
2d, 1864.
This morning we heard Jimmy is engaged
to Helen Trenholm, daughter of the Secretary of the
Confederate States. He wrote asking Brother’s
consent, saying they had been engaged since August,
though he had had no opportunity of writing until
that day the middle of September. I
cried myself blind. It seems that our last one
is gone. But this is the first selfish burst
of feeling. Later I shall come to my senses and
love my sister that is to be. But my darling!
my darling! O Jimmy! How can I give you
up? You have been so close to me since Harry died!
Alone now; best so.
N Dauphiné ST.,
Saturday night, December
31st, 1864.
One year ago, in my little room in
the Camp Street house, I sat shivering over Tennyson
and my desk, selfishly rejoicing over the departure
of a year that had brought pain and discomfort only
to me, and eagerly welcoming the dawning of the New
One whose first days were to bring death to George
and Gibbes, and whose latter part was to separate
me from Miriam, and brings me news of Jimmy’s
approaching marriage. O sad, dreary, fearful
Old Year! I see you go with pain! Bitter
as you have been, how do we know what the coming one
has in store for us? What new changes will it
bring? Which of us will it take? I am afraid
of eighteen sixty-five, and have felt a vague dread
of it for several years past.
Nothing remains as it was a few months
ago. Miriam went to Lilly, in the Confederacy,
on the 19th of October (ah! Miriam!), and mother
and I have been boarding with Mrs. Postlethwaite ever
since. I miss her sadly. Not as much, though,
as I would were I less engaged. For since the
first week in August, I have been teaching the children
for Sister; and since we have been here, I go to them
every morning instead of their coming to me.
Starting out at half-past eight daily, and returning
a little before three, does not leave me much time
for melancholy reflections. And there is no necessity
for indulging in them at present; they only give pain.
N CAMP ST.,
April
19th, 1865.
“All things are taken from us,
and become portions and parcels of the dreadful pasts."...
Thursday the 13th came the dreadful
tidings of the surrender of Lee and his army on the
9th. Everybody cried, but I would not, satisfied
that God will still save us, even though all should
apparently be lost. Followed at intervals of
two or three hours by the announcement of the capture
of Richmond, Selma, Mobile, and Johnston’s army,
even the stanchest Southerners were hopeless.
Every one proclaimed Peace, and the only matter under
consideration was whether Jeff Davis, all politicians,
every man above the rank of Captain in the army and
above that of Lieutenant in the navy, should be hanged
immediately, or some graciously pardoned.
Henry Ward Beecher humanely pleaded mercy for us,
supported by a small minority. Davis and all leading
men must be executed; the blood of the others
would serve to irrigate the country. Under this
lively prospect, Peace, blessed Peace! was the cry.
I whispered, “Never! Let a great earthquake
swallow us up first! Let us leave our land and
emigrate to any desert spot of the earth, rather than
return to the Union, even as it Was!”
Six days this has lasted. Blessed
with the silently obstinate disposition, I would not
dispute, but felt my heart swell, repeating, “God
is our refuge and our strength, a very present help
in time of trouble,” and could not for an instant
believe this could end in an overthrow.
This morning, when I went down to
breakfast at seven, Brother read the announcement
of the assassination of Lincoln and Secretary Seward.
“Vengeance is mine; I will repay,
saith the Lord.” This is murder! God
have mercy on those who did it!
Charlotte Corday killed Marat in his
bath, and is held up in history as one of Liberty’s
martyrs, and one of the heroines of her country.
To me, it is all murder. Let historians extol
blood-shedding; it is woman’s place to abhor
it. And because I know that they would have apotheosized
any man who had crucified Jeff Davis, I abhor this,
and call it foul murder, unworthy of our cause and
God grant it was only the temporary insanity of a
desperate man that committed this crime! Let
not his blood be visited on our nation, Lord!
Across the way, a large building,
undoubtedly inhabited by officers, is being draped
in black. Immense streamers of black and white
hang from the balcony. Downtown, I understand,
all shops are closed, and all wrapped in mourning.
And I hardly dare pray God to bless us, with the crape
hanging over the way. It would have been banners,
if our President had been killed, though!
Saturday,
22d April.
To see a whole city draped in mourning
is certainly an imposing spectacle, and becomes almost
grand when it is considered as an expression of universal
affliction. So it is, in one sense. For the
more violently “Secesh” the inmates, the
more thankful they are for Lincoln’s death,
the more profusely the houses are decked with the
emblems of woe. They all look to me like “not
sorry for him, but dreadfully grieved to be forced
to this demonstration.” So all things have
indeed assumed a funereal aspect. Men who have
hated Lincoln with all their souls, under terror of
confiscation and imprisonment which they understand
is the alternative, tie black crape from every practicable
knob and point to save their homes. Last evening
the B s were all in tears, preparing
their mourning. What sensibility! What patriotism!
a stranger would have exclaimed. But Bella’s
first remark was: “Is it not horrible?
This vile, vile old crape! Think of hanging
it out when ” Tears of rage finished
the sentence. One would have thought pity for
the murdered man had very little to do with it.
Coming back in the cars, I had a rencontre
that makes me gnash my teeth yet. It was after
dark, and I was the only lady in a car crowded with
gentlemen. I placed little Miriam on my lap to
make room for some of them, when a great, dark man,
all in black, entered, and took the seat and my left
hand at the same instant, saying, “Good-evening,
Miss Sarah.” Frightened beyond measure
to recognize Captain Todd of the Yankee army in
my interlocutor, I, however, preserved a quiet exterior,
and without the slightest demonstration answered, as
though replying to an internal question. “Mr.
Todd.” “It is a long while since we
met,” he ventured. “Four years,”
I returned mechanically. “You have been
well?” “My health has been bad.”
“I have been ill myself”; and determined
to break the ice he diverged with “Baton Rouge
has changed sadly.” “I hope I shall
never see it again. We have suffered too much
to recall home with any pleasure.” “I
understand you have suffered severely,” he said,
glancing at my black dress. “We have yet
one left in the army, though,” I could not help
saying. He, too, had a brother there, he said.
He pulled the check-string as we reached
the house, adding, “This is it,” and absurdly
correcting himself with “Where do you live?” “211.
I thank you. Good-evening”; the last with
emphasis as he prepared to follow. He returned
the salutation, and I hurriedly regained the house.
Monsieur stood over the way. A look through the
blinds showed him returning to his domicile, several
doors below.
I returned to my own painful reflections.
The Mr. Todd who was my “sweetheart” when
I was twelve and he twenty-four, who was my brother’s
friend, and daily at our home, was put away from among
our acquaintance at the beginning of the war.
This one, I should not know. Cords of candy and
mountains of bouquets bestowed in childish days will
not make my country’s enemy my friend now that
I am a woman.
Tuesday,
May 2d, 1865.
While praying for the return of those
who have fought so nobly for us, how I have dreaded
their first days at home! Since the boys died,
I have constantly thought of what pain it would bring
to see their comrades return without them to
see families reunited, and know that ours never could
be again, save in heaven. Last Saturday, the 29th
of April, seven hundred and fifty paroled Louisianians
from Lee’s army were brought here the
sole survivors of ten regiments who left four years
ago so full of hope and determination. On the
29th of April, 1861, George left New Orleans with
his regiment. On the fourth anniversary of that
day, they came back; but George and Gibbes have long
been lying in their graves....
June
15th.
Our Confederacy has gone with one
crash the report of the pistol fired at
Lincoln.