On the 6th of October I found on my
table a letter of introduction and the card of Captain
Arthur Merton, U.S.A. (2d Infantry), 12 Rue du Roi
de Rome.
The note was simple but positive.
My uncle, Harry Wellwood, a cynical, pessimistic old
bachelor and a rank Copperhead, wrote me to make the
captain welcome, which meant much to those who knew
my uncle. On that day the evening mail was large.
Alphonse laid the letters on my table, and as he lingered
I said, “Well, what is it?”
“Monsieur may not observe that
three letters from America have been opened in the
post-office.”
I said, “Yes.” In
fact, it was common and of course annoying. One
of these letters was from my uncle. He wrote:
I gave Arthur Merton
an open letter to you, but I add this
to state that he is
one of the few decent gentlemen in the
army of the North.
He inherited his father’s share
in the mine of which I am part owner, and has
therefore no need to serve an evil cause.
He was born in New Orleans of Northern parents, spent
two years in the School of Mines in Paris, and
until this wretched war broke out has lived for
some years among mining camps and in the ruffian
life of the far West. It is a fair chance
which side turns up, the ways of the salon, the accuracy
of the man of science, or the savagery of the Rockies.
You will like him.
He has been twice wounded, and then
had the good sense to acquire the mild typhoid
fever which gave him an excuse to ask for leave
of absence. He has no diplomatic or political
errand, and goes abroad merely to recruit his
health. Things here are not yet quite as
bad as I could desire to see them. Antietam
was unfortunate, but in the end the European States
will recognize the South and end the war. I shall
then reside in Richmond.
Yours truly,
Harry
Wellwood.
I hoped that the imperial government
profited by my uncle’s letter. It was or
may have been of use, as things turned out, in freeing
Captain Merton from police observation, which at this
time rarely failed to keep under notice every American.
I was kept busy at the legation two
thirds of the following day. At five I set out
in a coupe having Alphonse on the seat with the coachman.
He left cards for me at a half-dozen houses, and then
I told him to order the driver to leave me at Rue
du Roi de Rome, N. Captain Merton’s
address.
As I sat in the carriage and looked
out at the exterior gaiety of the open-air life of
Paris, my mind naturally turned in contrast to the
war at home and the terrible death harvest of Antietam,
news of which had lately reached Europe. The
sense of isolation in a land of hostile opinion often
oppressed me, and rarely was as despotic as on this
afternoon. I turned for relief to speculative
thought of the numberless dramas of the lives of the
busy multitude among which I drove. I wondered
how many lived simple and uneventful days, like mine,
in the pursuit of mere official or domestic duties.
Not the utmost imaginative ingenuity of the novelist
could have anticipated, as I rode along amidst the
hurries and the leisures of a Parisian afternoon,
that my next hour or two was about to bring into the
monotony of office life an adventure as strange as
any which I could have conceived as possible for any
human unit of these numberless men and women.
Captain Merton lived so far away from
the quarter in which I had been leaving cards that
it was close to dusk when I got out of the carriage
at the hotel I sought.
I meant to return on foot, but hearing
thunder, and rain beginning to fall heavily, I told
Alphonse to keep the carriage. The captain was
not at home. I had taken his card from my pocket
to assure me in regard to the address, and as I hurried
to reenter my coupe I put it in my card-case for future
reference.