<h3> CHAPTER XIV <br/><br/> EXPERIENCES AS JOURNALIST DURING THE CIVIL WAR </h3>
<p>My obligations to Wendell Phillips are mixed,
and one of them was an introduction to
<i>The Tribune</i>. In the autumn of 1861 I wanted
two things: a holiday, and a chance to see
something of the war and the negro question at short
range. At that time, Mr. Charles A. Dana was
managing editor of <i>The Tribune</i>, with Mr. Sydney
Howard Gay as his first lieutenant. Phillips gave
me a letter to Mr. Gay, the result of which was
that Mr. Dana asked me to go to South Carolina
for <i>The Tribune</i>.</p>
<p>A word about Mr. Dana. He had the reputation
at that time of being what the cabman called
that Mr. John Forster who was, among other things,
the friend and biographer of Dickens—"a
harbitrary gent." I suppose Mr. Dana was arbitrary;
in the sense that every commanding officer must
be arbitrary. But my relations with him, or my
service under him, lasted some months, during
the whole of which period I found him considerate
and kindly. He liked, I think, to assign a man
to duty and judge him by the result; which meant
that the man was left free to work out his
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P130"></SPAN>130}</span>
own salvation; or damnation, as the case might
be.</p>
<p>I was, of course, perfectly new to the business
of journalism and, equally of course, made many
mistakes. But Mr. Dana was not the kind of
manager who fastened on this mistake or that as
an occasion for chastising the offender. He judged
a man's work as a whole. In the office, I am told,
he sometimes thought it needful to speak plainly
in order to enforce a steady discipline. He had
been known to walk into the room of one of the
departmental editors, in full view and hearing of
the whole staff, and remark: "Mr. X, you were
disgracefully beaten this morning," in the tone
in which he might have said it was a fine day.
But the next morning Mr. X was not beaten;
nor the next.</p>
<p>Very possibly, between me and Mr. Dana's
wrath, if I roused it, stood Mr. Gay; a man of
soft manners and heart. I cannot remember that,
directly or indirectly, any reprimand ever came
to me from Mr. Dana. From Mr. Greeley there
came more than one; all well deserved. With the
business of managing the paper Mr. Greeley did
not much concern himself. With the results he
sometimes did, and when <i>The Tribune</i> did not
contain what he thought it ought to contain, he
was apt to make remarks on the omission. While
I was at Port Royal in South Carolina there was
a skirmish at Williamston in North Carolina, a
hundred miles away. Mr. Greeley thought I ought
to have been at Williamston. Very likely I ought.
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P131"></SPAN>131}</span>
But Lord Curzon had not at that time announced
his memorable definition of enterprising journalism;
"an intelligent anticipation of events that never
occur." That epigram, delivered in the House of
Commons, may be supplemented by an axiom.
The business of a war correspondent is to be, not
where he is ordered, but where he is wanted.</p>
<p>In the early days of the Civil War—or, for that
matter, in the late days—the American Press
had little of the authority it has since acquired.
The heads of great departments of Government
still held themselves responsible primarily to the
President. Berths on battleships were not then
at the disposal of the first journalists who wanted
one. When I asked Commodore Steadman of the
<i>Bienville</i> to take me to Port Royal he politely told
me it was against the naval regulations to allow
a civilian on board a ship of war. When I asked
him who had a dispensing power in such matters,
he said: "If the Secretary of the Navy should
order me to receive you as a guest, I should do so
with pleasure." I thanked him and with the
courage of which ignorance is the mother,
telegraphed Mr. Welles. No answer. I telegraphed
again, saying it was the wish of Mr. Dana that I
should go to South Carolina on the <i>Bienville</i>.
The effect of Mr. Dana's name was magical, and
this time an answer came; that Commodore
Steadman had orders to give me a berth. I
suppose the journalists of to-day will hardly
understand how there could have been a difficulty. But
there were to be many difficulties. Commodore
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P132"></SPAN>132}</span>
Steadman was as good as his word, and better;
and a kind host.</p>
<p>Admiral Dupont had captured the Port Royal
forts by the time I arrived. A finer example of
the old type of naval officer than Admiral Dupont
our naval service never had. Captain Raymond
Rodgers was his flag captain; another example
not less fine. General W. T. Sherman was in
command of the land forces. The winter passed
slowly away. There was not much to do except
study the negro question; which was perhaps more
attractive when studied at a distance. General
Butler, bringing the mind of a lawyer to bear on
the problems of war, and desiring a legal excuse
for annexing the personal property of the enemy
had announced that the negroes were "contraband
of war." For him, the maxim that laws are
silent amid arms did not hold good. He liked
to make laws the servant of arms. The negroes
naturally came soon to be known as contrabands.
There were some months during which they were
called hardly anything else. I called them so in
my letters. It was characteristic of Phillips that,
after a time, he wrote to me to suggest that Butler's
phrase had done its work and that the negro was a
negro: a man entitled to freedom on other grounds.</p>
<p>But it was long before the word passed out of
use. Butler had chosen the psychological moment.
The "contrabands"—with Mr. Phillips's
permission—who crowded the camps were mostly
from the cotton and rice plantations of South
Carolina and Georgia. If you were not already
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P133"></SPAN>133}</span>
a convinced Abolitionist, they were not likely to
convert you. But it was becoming daily clearer
that the negro had a military value; not at Port
Royal, however, where he was only a burden.
It was not an eventful winter at Port Royal.
There were expeditions by land and sea, and there
was the taking of Fort Pulaski, which I saw, but
I was glad to return to New York in the spring;
and then to join General Frémont in the
Shenandoah Valley. The name of that commander was
still one of promise. Except the name, there was
not much else for the purposes of war, but he had
a charm of manner and a touch of romance and a
staff on which one or two foreign adventurers had
places and did weird things. "General" Cluseret
was one; an impostor who afterward found a
congenial home in the Paris Commune, with other
impostors. That campaign came to nought, and
when General Pope, in July, 1862, was put in
command of the Army of Virginia, I found my
way to the headquarters of that redoubtable
warrior.</p>
<p>With him, in command of the Third Army
Corps, was General McDowell. I don't know why
one's memory chooses trivialities as proper objects
of its activity, but it sometimes does. One of the
most vivid among the impressions of those days
is the stout figure of General McDowell on his
horse, which he sat ill, his uniform awry, his sword
pushed behind him as far as it would go, his
strapless trousers ending abruptly halfway
between knee and ankle; then a space of bare flesh,
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P134"></SPAN>134}</span>
and then some inches of white stocking, and then
a shoe. But he had military gifts if not a military
air. He was talking with General Pope, whose
unhappy proclamation about his headquarters
in the saddle had already been issued. Unlike
McDowell, Pope looked a better soldier than he
was. His six weeks' generalship on the
Rappahannock ended with the Second Bull Run, which
there was now no Billy Russell to describe in
words that blistered yet were honest words; and
with Chantilly. The West suited Pope better
than the East, and to the West he returned.
In these six weeks he had made nothing but
mistakes and achieved only defeats.</p>
<p>Personally, General Pope was pleasant to deal
with. It was while he commanded the Army of
Virginia that Mr. Stanton, then Secretary of War,
or perhaps General Halleck, issued orders for the
expulsion of all correspondents from the armies
in the field. General Pope sent for me and told
me of the order. Impressed at that time with the
sternness of War Office rule, I answered meekly
that I supposed I must go. Said General Pope,
"This is not an official interview. I imagine you
needn't go till you get the order." A battle was
thought to be imminent; any respite was welcome.
I thanked him, went back to my tent, took what
I most needed, and rode off to an outpost where I
had a friend. The official notification may have
been sent to my tent but never reached me. And
so it happened that I saw such fighting as there
was on the Rappahannock, and at the Second
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P135"></SPAN>135}</span>
Bull Run, better called Manassas. Interesting
to a student of war; not inspiriting to a patriot;
and not now to be described even in the briefest
way. My only aim is to give the reader of to-day
some faint notion of what a war correspondent's
life in those days was like.</p>
<p>One incident I may note, as an example of
what may happen to a general who neglects the
most elementary rules and precautions of war.
At the end of a day's march, at sundown but the
heavens still light, General Pope bethought himself
that he should like to see what the country ahead
of him looked like. With his staff and a
bodyguard of some sixty sabres he rode up a low hill
with a broad crest, open ground about it for a
hundred yards, and beyond that in front a thick,
far-spreading forest line. General Pope and his
staff dismounted. The cavalry were ordered to
dismount and loosen their saddle-girths. Just as
this operation had been completed there came
from the wood beyond the open ground a rifle
volley. As we stood between the sunset and the
enemy we were a pretty fair target. There was
no time for orders. Everybody scrambled into
his saddle as best he could and away we went.</p>
<p>But the firing woke up the advance guard of
our army, and they also began firing. It soon
appeared that General Pope had unwittingly
passed outside his own lines, so that, as we rode
away from the fire of the Rebels we rode into the
fire of our own troops. It was hot enough but
luckily did not last long. The hill partly protected
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P136"></SPAN>136}</span>
us from the sharpshooters in grey, and our fire
was silenced after a moment. But the horses
were well frightened. It was impossible to pull
up. We scattered and the horses went on for a
mile or so. I never before so much respected the
intelligence of that animal. There was nothing
to do but sit down in the saddle, but the horses
never made a mistake at full speed over an
unknown country, stiff with fences and brooks, and
nobody came to grief; nor, which seems more
wonderful, was anybody hit by the bullets. A
good many remarks were made which hit General
Pope.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN id="chap15"></SPAN></p>
<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P137"></SPAN>137}</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />