<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</SPAN></h3>
<div class="chapquot">
<div>
<p>I reckon this always, that a man is never undone until he
be hanged.</p>
<p class="citation">Two Gentlemen of Verona.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>I now began to entertain sentiments of profound gratitude toward the
young officer, at Mobile, who kept me from going to Fort Pickens.
Rejecting the tempting request of my Philadelphia companion to remain
one day in Montgomery, that he might introduce me to Jefferson Davis,
I continued my "Journey Due North."</p>
<div class="sidenote">Effect of Capturing Fort Sumter.</div>
<p>When we reached the cars, my baggage was missing. The omnibus
agent, who was originally a New Yorker, and probably thought it
precarious for a man desiring to reach Washington to be detained,
even a few hours, kindly induced the conductor to detain the train
for five minutes while we drove back to the Exchange Hotel and found
the missing valise. The event proved that delay would have been
embarrassing, if not perilous.</p>
<p>A Georgian on the car-seat with me, while very careful not to let
others overhear his remarks, freely avowed Union sentiments, and
asserted that they were predominant among his neighbors. I longed to
respond earnestly and sincerely, but there was the possibility of a
trap, and I merely acquiesced.</p>
<p>The country was intoxicated by the capture of Sumter. A newspaper on
the train, several days old, in its regular Associated Press report,
contained the following:</p>
<div class="sidenote">Was­hing­ton to be Captured.</div>
<p class="quotdate">
<span class="smcap">Montgomery</span>, Ala., Friday, <i>April 12, 1861</i>.</p>
<p>An immense crowd serenaded President Davis and Mr. Walker, Secretary
of War, at the Exchange Hotel to-night. The former was not
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</SPAN></span>
well, and did not appear. Secretary Walker, in a few words of
electrical eloquence, told the news from Fort Sumter, declaring, in
conclusion, that before many hours the flag of the Confederacy would
float over that fortress. No man, he said, could tell where the war
this day commenced would end, but he would prophesy that the flag
which here streams to the breeze would float over the dome of the old
Capitol at Washington before the first of May. Let them test Southern
courage and resources, and it might float eventually over Faneuil
Hall itself.</p>
<p>An officer from General Bragg's camp informed me that all
preparations for capturing Fort Pickens were made, the United States
sentinels on duty upon a certain night being bribed; but that
"Nemo's" intimation of the intended attack frustrated it, a copy of
his letter having found its way into the post, and forewarned and
forearmed the commander.</p>
<p>Everybody was looking anxiously for news from the North. The
predictions of certain New York papers, that the northern people
would inaugurate war at home if the Government attempted "coercion,"
were received with entire credulity, and frequently quoted.</p>
<p>There was much admiration of Major Anderson's defense of Sumter; but
the opinion was general, that only a military sense of honor dictated
his conduct; that now, relieved from a soldier's responsibility, he
would resign and join the Rebels. "He is too brave a man to remain
with the Yankees," was the common remark. Far in the interior of
Georgia, I saw fragments of his flag-staff exhibited, and highly
prized as relics.</p>
<p>We dined at the little hamlet of West Point, on the line between
Alabama and Georgia, and stopped for two evening hours at the
bustling city of Atlanta. Our stay was enlivened by a fresh
conversation in the car about northern spies and reporters, who were
declared to be infesting the country, and worthy of hanging wherever
found. </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="sidenote">
<span class="smcap">Appre­hension about Arming the Negroes.</span></div>
<p>We spent the night in pursuit of sleep under difficulties, upon
a rough Georgia railway. The next morning, the scantiness of the
disappearing foliage indicated that we were going northward. In
Augusta, we passed through broad, pleasant shaded streets, and then
crossed the Savannah river into South Carolina. Companies of troops,
bound for Charleston, began to come on board the train, and were
greeted with cheering at all the stations. A young Carolinian, taking
me for a southerner, remarked:</p>
<p>"The only thing we fear in this war is that the Yankees will arm our
slaves and turn them against us."</p>
<p>This was the first statement of the kind I heard. Persons had said
many times in my presence that they were perfectly sure of the
slaves—who would all fight for their masters. In the last article
of faith they proved as deluded as those sanguine northerners who
believed that slave insurrections would everywhere immediately result
from hostilities.</p>
<p>At Lee's Station we met the morning train from Charleston. Within
two yards of my window, I saw a dark object disappear under the
cow-catcher; and a moment after, a woman, wringing her hands,
shrieked:</p>
<p>"My God! My God! Mr. Lee killed!"</p>
<p>Lying on the track was a shapeless, gory mass, which only
the clothing showed to be the remains of a human being. The
station-keeper, attempting to cross the road just in advance
of the train, was struck down and run over. His little son was
standing beside him at the very moment, and two of his daughters
looking on from the door of his residence, a few yards away. In the
first bewilderment of terror, they now stood wildly beating their
foreheads, and gasping for breath. In strange contrast with this
scene, a martial band was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</SPAN></span>
discoursing lively music, and people were loudly cheering the
soldiers. Buoyant Life and grim Death stood side by side and walked
hand in hand.</p>
<p>Our train plunged into deep pine woods, and wended through large
plantations, whose cool frame houses were shaded by palmetto-trees.
The negro men and women, who stood in the fields persuading
themselves that they were working, handled their hoes with
indescribable awkwardness. A sketch of their exact positions would
look ridiculously unnatural. They were in striking contrast with
the zeal and activity of the northern laborer, who moves under the
stimulus of freedom.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Looking at the Captured Fortress.</div>
<p>In the afternoon, we passed through the Magnolia Cemetery, and in
view of the State Arsenal, with the palmetto flag waving over it. The
Mills' House, in Charleston, was crowded with guests and citizens,
half of them in uniform. After I registered my name, a brawny fellow,
with a "plug-ugly" countenance, looked over my shoulder at the book,
and then regarded me with a long, impudent, scrutinizing stare, which
I endeavored to return with interest. In a few seconds his eyes
dropped, and he went back to his seat.</p>
<p>I strolled down the narrow streets, with their antiquated houses, to
the pleasant Battery, where several columbiads, with pyramidal piles
of solid shot between them, pointed at Fort Sumter. Down the harbor,
among a few snow-white sails, stood the already historic fortress.
The line of broken roof, visible above the walls, was torn and ragged
from Rebel shots. At the distance of two miles, it was impossible,
with the naked eye, to identify the two flags above it. A bystander
told me that they were the colors of South Carolina and of the
Confederacy.</p>
<p>The devices of treason flaunting in the breeze where
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</SPAN></span>
the Stars and Stripes, after being insulted for months, were so
lately lowered in dishonor, were not a pleasant spectacle, and I
turned slowly and sadly back to the hotel. In its reading-room,
among the four or five papers on file, was a copy of <cite>The
Tribune</cite>, whose familiar face was like the shadow of a great
rock in a weary land.</p>
<div class="sidenote">A Short Stay in Charleston.</div>
<p>The city reeled with excitement. In the evening martial music and
huzzas came floating up to my window from a meeting at the Charleston
Hotel, where the young Virginian Hotspur, Roger A. Pryor, was one of
the prominent speakers. Publicly and privately, the Charlestonians
were boasting over their late Cadmean victory. They had not heard
from the North.</p>
<p>I hoped to remain several days, but the public frenzy had grown so
uncontrollable, that every stranger was subjected to espionage. One
could hardly pick up a newspaper without seeing, or stand ten minutes
in a public place without hearing, of the arrest of some northerner,
charged with being a spy. While the lines of retreat were yet open,
it was judicious to flee from the wrath to come.</p>
<p>Designing to stop for a while in North Carolina, whose Rip Van
Winkle sleep seemed proof against any possible convulsion, I took
the midnight train northward. A number of Baltimoreans on board were
returning home, after assisting at the capture of Sumter. They were
voluble and boisterous Rebels, declaring in good set terms that
Maryland would shortly be revolutionized, Governor Hicks and Henry
Winter Davis hanged, and President Lincoln driven out of Washington.
They averred with great vehemence and iteration that the Yankees were
all cowards, and could easily be "whipped out;" but when one, whose
denunciations had been peculiarly bitter, was asked: </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="sidenote">The Country on Fire.</div>
<p>"Are you going home through Washington?"</p>
<p>"Not I," was the reply<ins>.</ins> "Old Abe might have us
nabbed!<del>'</del><ins>"</ins></p>
<p>We were soon on the clayey soil of the Old North State, which, to the
eye, closely resembles those regions of Ohio near Lake Erie. Hour
after hour, we rode through the deep forests of tall pines, from
which the bark had been stripped for making rosin and turpentine.</p>
<p>My anticipations of quiet proved altogether delusive. President
Lincoln's Proclamation, calling for seventy-five thousand soldiers,
had just arrived by telegraph, and the country was on fire. It was
the first flush of excitement here, and the feeling was more intense
and demonstrative than in those States which had become accustomed
to the Revolution. Forts were being seized, negroes and white men
impressed to labor upon them, military companies forming, clergymen
taking up the musket, and women encouraging the determination to
fight the "Abolitionists." All Union sentiment was awed into utter
silence.</p>
<p>While the train was stopping at Wilmington, a telegram, announcing
that Virginia had passed a Secession ordinance, was received with
yells of applause. Sitting alone at one end of the car, I observed
three fellow-passengers, with whom I had formed a traveling
acquaintance, conferring earnestly. Their frequent glances toward
me indicated the subject of the conversation. As I had said nothing
to define my political position, I resolved to set myself right at
once, should they put me to the test. One of them approached me, and
remarked:</p>
<p>"We just have news that Virginia has seceded."</p>
<p>I replied, with considerable emphasis: "Good! That will give us all
the border States."</p>
<p>Apparently satisfied, he returned to his friends, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</SPAN></span>
they said no more to me upon the all-absorbing question.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Submitting to Rebel Scrutiny.</div>
<p>A fragment of conversation which occurred near me, will illustrate
the general tone of remark. A young man observed to a gentleman
beside him:</p>
<p>"We shall have possession of Washington before the first of June."</p>
<p>"Do you think so? Lincoln is going to call out an army of one hundred
and fifty thousand men."</p>
<p>"Oh, well, we can whip them out any morning before breakfast. Throw
three or four shells among those blue-bellied Yankees and they will
scatter like a flock of sheep!"</p>
<p>Up to this day I had earnestly hoped that a bloody conflict
between the two sections might be averted; but these remarks were
so frequent—the opinion that northerners were unmitigated
cowards seemed so universal,<SPAN name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"
href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">8</SPAN> that I began to look with
a great deal of complacency upon the prospect which the South enjoyed
of testing this faith. It was time to ascertain, once for all,
whether these gentlemen of the cotton and the canebrake were indeed
a superior race, destined to wield the scepter, or whether their
pretensions were mere arrogance and swagger.</p>
<p>It seemed impossible for the southern mind to comprehend that he
who never blusters, or flourishes the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</SPAN></span>
bowie-knife, who will endure a great deal before fighting, who would
rather suffer a wrong than do a wrong, is, when roused, the most
dangerous of adversaries—a fact so universal, that it has given
us the proverb, "Beware the fury of a patient man."</p>
<div class="sidenote">The North Heard From.</div>
<p>New York papers, issued after receiving intelligence of the
fall of Sumter, now reached us, and both in their news and
editorial columns indicated how suddenly that event had aroused
the whole North. The voice of every journal was for war. <cite>The
Herald</cite>, which one morning spoke bitterly against coercion,
received a visit during the day from several thousand tumultuous
citizens, who left it the alternative of running up the American flag
or having its office torn down. By the presence of the police, and
the intercession of leading Union men, its property was saved from
destruction. In next morning's paper appeared one of its periodical
and constitutional somersaults. Its four editorial articles all cried
"War to the knife!"</p>
<p>The Rebels were greatly surprised, half appalled, and doubly
exasperated at the unexpected change of all the northern papers which
they had counted friendly to them; but they also shouted "War!" even
louder than before.</p>
<p>At Goldsboro, where we stopped for supper, a small slab of marble,
standing upon the mantel in the hotel office, had these words upon it:</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>"Sacred to the memory of A. Lincoln, who died of a broken
neck, at Newburn, April 16, 1861."</p>
</div>
<div class="sidenote">An Inebriated Patriot.</div>
<p>Before the train started again, a young patriot, whose articulation
was impeded by whisky, passed through it, asking:</p>
<p>"S'thr any --- ---- Yankee onth'strain? F'thr's a --- ---- Union
man board these cars, Ic'nwhip him by ---. H'rahfr Jeff. Davis
nth'southrncnfdrcy!" He afterward
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</SPAN></span>
amused himself by firing his revolver from the car door. At the next
station he stepped out upon the platform, and repeated:</p>
<p>"H'rah fr Jeff. Davis n'th'Southrn Confdrcy!" Another patriot among
the bystanders at the station promptly responded:</p>
<p>"Good. Hurra for Jeff. Davis!"</p>
<p>"Yre th'man fr me," responded our passenger; "Come 'n' takeadrink.
All fr Jeff. Davis here, ain't you?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"Thatsallrightth'n. But what d'you elect that ---- ---- Abolitionist,
Murphy, t'th' Leg'slature for?"</p>
<p>"<em>I'm</em> Murphy," replied the patriot, who had been standing in the
group, but now sprang forward belligerently. "Who calls <em>me</em> an
Abolitionist?"</p>
<p>"Beg y'r padon sr. Reck'n you ain't the man. But who <em>is</em> that
Abolitionist you 'lected here? 's name's Brown, 'sn't it? Yes, that's
it. ---- ---- Brown; y'ought t'hang <em>him</em>!"</p>
<p>Just then the whistle shrieked and the train moved on, amid shouts of
laughter.</p>
<p>At six o'clock next morning, we reached Richmond. Here, also, I had
hoped to stop, but the caldron was seething too hotly. Rebel flags
were everywhere flying, the newspapers all exulted over the passage
of the Secession ordinance, and some of them warned northerners and
Union men to leave the country forthwith. The tone of conversation,
too, was very bitter. The farther I went, the intenser the frenzy;
and, beginning to wonder whether there was any safe haven south of
Philadelphia or New York, I continued northward without a moment's
unnecessary delay.</p>
<p>The railway accommodations grew better in exact
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</SPAN></span>
ratio to our approach to Mason and Dixon's line, and northern
physiognomies were numerous on the train. At Ashland, a few miles
north of Richmond, the first palatable meal since leaving the Alabama
River was set before us. All the intervening distance, to the
epicurean eye, stretched out in a dreary perspective of bacon and
corn bread.</p>
<div class="sidenote">The Old Dominion in a Frenzy.</div>
<p>Half the passengers were soldiers. Every village bristled with
bayonets. At Fredericksburgh, one of the polished F. F. V.'s on
the platform presented his face at our window, and asked what the
unmentionable-to-ears-polite all these people were going north for?
As the passengers maintained an "heroic reticence," he exploded a
fresh oath, and went to the next car to pursue his investigations.</p>
<p>A citizen of Richmond, who occupied the seat with me, satisfied
that I was sound on the Secession question, assured me that it had
been very difficult to get the ordinance through the Convention;
that trouble was anticipated from Union men in Western Virginia;
that business in Richmond was utterly suspended, New York exchange
commanding a premium of fifteen per cent.</p>
<p>"We are fearful," he added, "of difficulty with our free negroes.
There are several thousand in Richmond, many of whom are intelligent,
and some wealthy. They show signs of turbulence, and we are
perfecting an organization to hold them in check. I sent the money
to New York this morning for a quantity of Sharp's rifles, ordering
them to be forwarded in dry-goods boxes, that they might not excite
suspicion."</p>
<p>He added, that Ben McCulloch was in Virginia, and had perfected a
plan by which, at the head of Rebel troops, he was about to capture
Washington. As we
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</SPAN></span>
progressed northward, the noisy Secession element grew small by
degrees, and beautifully less. At Acquia Creek, we left the cars and
took a steamer up the Potomac.</p>
<div class="sidenote">The Old Flag Once More.</div>
<p>A quiet gentleman, who had come on board at Richmond, impressed
me, through that mysterious freemasonry which exists among
journalists—indeed, between members of all professions—as
a representative of the Fourth Estate. In reply to inquiries, he
informed me that he had been reporting the Virginia Convention for
<cite>The Richmond Enquirer</cite>, but, being a New Yorker, had
concluded, like Jerry Blossom, he wanted "to go home." He described
the Convention, which at first had an emphatic majority for the
Government; but in time, one Union man after another was dragooned
into the ranks, until a bare Secession majority was obtained.</p>
<p>The ordinance explicitly provided that it should not take effect
until submitted to the popular vote; but the State authorities
immediately assumed that it would be ratified. Senator Mason wrote
a public letter, warning all Union men to leave the State; and
before the time for voting arrived, the Secessionists succeeded in
inaugurating a bloody conflict upon the soil, and bringing in armies
from the Gulf States. It was then ratified by a large majority.</p>
<p>We steamed up the Potomac, passed the quiet tomb at Mount Vernon,
which was soon to hear the clangor of contending armies, and early
in the afternoon came in sight of Washington. There, at last, thank
God! was the old Starry Banner, flying in triumph over the Capitol,
the White House, the departments, and hundreds of dwellings. Albeit
unused to the melting mood, my heart was full, and my eyelids
quivered as I saw it. Until that hour, I never knew how I loved the
old flag!</p>
<p>Walking down Pennsylvania avenue, I encountered
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</SPAN></span>
troops of old friends, and constantly wondered that I had been able
to spend ten weeks in the South, without meeting more than two or
three familiar acquaintances.</p>
<div class="sidenote">An Hour with President Lincoln.</div>
<p>A body-guard for the President, made up entirely of citizens of
Kansas, armed with Sharp's rifles, was on duty every night at the
White House. It contained two United States Senators, three members
and ex-members of Congress, the Chief-Justice of the Supreme Court,
and several editors and other prominent citizens of that patriotic
young State.</p>
<p>With two friends, I spent an hour at the White House. The President,
though overwhelmed with business, received us kindly, and economized
time by taking a cup of tea while conversing with us, and inquiring
very minutely about affairs in the seceding States.</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>"Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown,"</p>
</div>
<p>though the crown be only the chaplet of a Republic.</p>
<p>This man had filled the measure of American ambition, but the
remembered brightness of his face was in strange contrast with the
weary, haggard look it now wore, and his blushing honors seemed
pallid and ashen. There was the same honest, kindly tone—the same
fund of humorous anecdote—the same genuineness; but the old, free,
lingering laugh was gone.</p>
<p>"Mr. Douglas," remarked the President, "spent three hours with
me this afternoon. For several days he has been too unwell for
business, and has devoted his time to studying war-matters, until he
understands the military position better, perhaps, than any one of
the Cabinet. By the way," continued Mr. Lincoln, with his peculiar
twinkle of the eye, "the conversation turned upon the rendition of
slaves. 'You know,' said Douglas, 'that I am entirely sound on the
Fugitive Slave
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</SPAN></span>
Law. I am for enforcing it in all cases within its
true intent and meaning; but, after examining it carefully, I have
concluded that a negro insurrection is a case to which it does not
apply.'"</p>
<div class="sidenote">
<span class="smcap">Panic in Wash­ing­ton.</span></div>
<p>I had not come north a moment too early. The train which brought
me from Richmond to Acquia Creek was the last which the Rebel
authorities permitted to pass without interruption, and the steamer,
on reaching Washington, was seized by our own Government, and made
no more regular trips. Before I had been an hour in the Capital,
the telegraph wires were cut, and railway tracks in Maryland torn
up. Intelligence of the murderous attack of a Baltimore mob on the
Sixth Massachusetts regiment, <span lang="la">en route</span> for
Washington, startled the town from its propriety.</p>
<p>Chaos had come again. Washington was the seat of an intense panic. An
attack from the Rebels was hourly expected, and hundreds of families
fled from the city in terror. During the next two days, twenty-five
hundred well-officered, resolute men could undoubtedly have captured
the city. The air was filled with extravagant and startling rumors.
From Virginia, Union refugees were hourly arriving, often after
narrow escapes from the frenzied populace.</p>
<p>Massachusetts soldiers, who had safely run the Baltimore gantlet of
death, were quartered in the United States Senate Chamber. They had
mustered with characteristic promptness. At 5 o'clock one evening,
a telegram reached Boston asking for troops for the defense of the
imperiled Capital. At 9 o'clock the next morning, the first company,
having come twenty-five miles from the country, stacked arms in
Faneuil Hall. At 5 o'clock that night the Sixth Regiment, with full
ranks, started for Washington. They were fine-looking
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</SPAN></span>
fellows, but greatly embittered by their Baltimore experience. In a
very quiet, undemonstrative way, they manifested an earnest desire
for immediate and active service.</p>
<div class="sidenote">"<span class="smcap">Came Out to Fight!</span>"</div>
<p>The bewilderment and terror which had so long rested like a nightmare
on the National authorities—which for months had left almost every
leading Republican statesman timid and undecided—was at last over.
The echoes of the Charleston guns broke the spell! The masses had
been heard from! Then, as at later periods of the war, the popular
instinct was clearer and truer than all the wisdom of the politicians.</p>
<p>During the three days I spent in Washington, the city was virtually
blockaded, receiving neither mails, telegrams, nor re-enforcements.
Martial law, though not declared, was sadly needed. Most of the
Secessionists had left, but enough remained to serve as spies for the
Virginia Revolutionists.</p>
<p>I left for New York, by an evening train crowded with fleeing
families. Most of them went west from the Relay House, deterred from
passing through Baltimore by the reign of terror which the Rebels
had inaugurated. The most zealous Union papers advocated Secession
as their only means of personal and pecuniary safety. The State and
city authorities, though professedly loyal, bowed helpless before
the storm. Governor Sprague, with his Rhode Island volunteers, had
started for Washington. Mayor Brown telegraphed him, requesting that
they should not come through Baltimore, as it would exasperate the
people.</p>
<p>"The Rhode Island regiment," was Sprague's epigrammatic response,
"came out to fight, and may just as well fight in Maryland as in
Virginia." It passed unmolested! </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="sidenote">Baltimore under Rebel Rule.</div>
<p>We found Baltimore in a frenzy. The whole city seemed under arms. The
Union men were utterly silenced, and many had fled. The only person
I heard express undisguised loyalty was a young lady from Boston,
and only her sex protected her. Several persons had been arrested as
spies during the day, including two supposed correspondents of New
York papers.</p>
<p>Baltimore, for the time, was worse than any thing I had seen in
Charleston, New Orleans, or Mobile. Through the evening Barnum's
hotel was filled with soldiers. Stepping into the office to make
arrangements for going to Philadelphia, I encountered an old
acquaintance from Cincinnati, now commanding a Baltimore company
under arms:</p>
<p>"If Lincoln persists in attempting to send troops through Maryland,"
said he, "we are bound to have his head!"</p>
<p>Another Baltimorean came up and began to question me, but my
acquaintance promptly vouched for me as "a true southern man," and I
escaped annoyance. The same belief was expressed here which prevailed
throughout the whole South, that northern men were cowards; and
persons actually alluded to the attack upon the unarmed Massachusetts
troops as an act of bravery.</p>
<p>Leaving Baltimore, I took a carriage for the nearest northern railway
point. The roads were crowded with families leaving the city, and
infested by Rebel scouts and patrols. Union citizens were helpless.
One of them said to us:</p>
<p>"For God's sake, beg the Administration and the North not to let us
be crushed out!"</p>
<p>We hoped to take the Philadelphia cars, twenty-six miles out, but a
detachment of Baltimore soldiers that very morning had passed up the
railroad, destroying
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</SPAN></span>
every bridge; smoke was still rising from their ruins. We were
compelled to press on and on, until, in the evening, after a ride of
forty-six miles, we reached York, Pennsylvania.</p>
<div class="sidenote">The North Fully Aroused.</div>
<p>Here, at last, we could breathe freely. But both railroads being
monopolized by troops, we were compelled, wearily, to drive on to the
village of Columbia, on the Susquehanna river. There we began to see
that the North, as well as the South, was under martial rule. Armed
sentinels peremptorily ordered us to halt.</p>
<p>On identifying the driver, and learning my business, they allowed us
to proceed. At the bridge, the person in charge declined to open the
gate:</p>
<p>"I guess you can't cross to-night, sir," said he.</p>
<p>I replied by "guessing" that we could; but he continued:</p>
<p>"Our orders are positive, to let no one pass who is not personally
known to us."</p>
<p>He soon became convinced that I was not an emissary of the enemy; and
the sentinels escorted us across the bridge, a mile and a quarter in
length. We proceeded undisturbed to Lancaster, arriving there at two
o'clock, after a carriage-ride of seventy miles. Thence to New York,
communication was undisturbed.</p>
<p>The cold-blooded North was fully aroused. Rebel sympathizers found
themselves utterly swept away by a Niagara of public indignation. In
Pennsylvania, in New York, in New England, I heard only the sentiment
that talking must be ended, and acting begun; that, cost what it
might, in money and blood, all must unite to crush the gigantic
Treason which was closing its fangs upon the throat of the Republic.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Uprising of the Whole People.</div>
<p>The people seemed much more radical than the President. In all public
places, threats were heard that, if
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</SPAN></span>
the Administration faltered, it must be overturned, and a
dictatorship established. Against the Monumental City, feeling was
peculiarly bitter. All said:</p>
<p>"If National troops can not march unmolested through Baltimore, that
city has stood long enough! Not one stone shall be left upon another."</p>
<p>I had witnessed a good deal of earnestness and enthusiasm in the
South, but nothing at all approaching this wonderful uprising of the
whole people. All seemed imbued with the sentiment of those official
papers issued before Napoleon was First Consul, beginning, "In the
name of the French Republic, <em>one and indivisible</em>."</p>
<p>It was worth a lifetime to see it—to find down through
all the <span lang="fr">débris</span> of money-seeking, and
all the strata of politics, this underlying, primary formation of
loyalty—this unfaltering determination to vindicate the right
of the majority, the only basis of republican government.</p>
<p>The storm-cloud had burst; the Irrepressible Conflict was upon us.
Where would it end? What forecast or augury could tell? Revolutions
ride rough-shod over all probabilities; and who has mastered the
logic of civil war?</p>
<p>Here ended a personal experience, sometimes full of discomfort, but
always full of interest. It enabled me afterward to look at Secession
from the stand-point of those who inaugurated it; to comprehend Rebel
acts and utterances, which had otherwise been to me a sealed book. It
convinced me, too, of the thorough earnestness of the Revolutionists.
My published prediction, that we should have a seven years' war
unless the country used its utmost vigor and resources, seemed to
excite a mild suspicion of lunacy among my personal acquaintances.</p>
<div class="sidenote">
<span class="smcap">A Tribune Cor­res­pon­dent on Trial.</span></div>
<p>I was the last member of <cite>The Tribune</cite> staff to leave the South.
By rare good fortune, all its correspondents
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</SPAN></span>
escaped personal harm, while representatives of several other New
York journals were waited upon by vigilance committees, driven out,
and in some cases imprisoned. It was a favorite jest, that <cite>The
Tribune</cite> was the only northern paper whose <em>attachés</em> were
allowed in the South.</p>
<p>Its South Carolinian correspondence had a peculiar history.
Immediately after the Presidential election, Mr. Charles D. Brigham
went to Charleston as its representative. With the exception of two
or three weeks, he remained there from November until February,
writing almost daily letters. The Charlestonians were excited and
indignant, and arrested in all five or six persons whom they unjustly
suspected.</p>
<p>Finally, about the middle of February, Mr. Brigham was one day
taken into custody, and brought before Governor Pickens and his
cabinet counselors, among whom Ex-Governor McGrath was the principal
inquisitor. At this time the Southern Confederacy existed only in
embryo, and South Carolina claimed to be an independent republic.
The correspondent, who had great coolness and self-control, and knew
a good deal of human nature, maintained a serene exterior despite
the awkwardness of his position. After a rigid catechisation, he
was relieved to find that the tribunal did not surmise his real
character, but suspected him of being a spy of the Government.</p>
<p>His trial took place at the executive head-quarters, opposite the
Charleston Hotel, and lasted from nine o'clock in the morning until
nine at night. During the afternoon, the city being disturbed by one
of its daily reports that a Federal fleet had appeared off the bar,
he was turned over to Mr. Alexander H. Brown, a leading criminal
lawyer, famous for his skill in examining witnesses. Mr. Brown
questioned, re-questioned, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</SPAN></span>
cross-questioned the vagrant scribe, but was completely baffled by
him. He finally said:</p>
<p>"Mr. Brigham, while I think you are all right, this is a peculiar
emergency, and you must see that, under the circumstances, it will be
necessary for you to leave the South at once."</p>
<div class="sidenote">He is Warned to Depart.</div>
<p>The "sweet sorrow" of parting gladdened his journalistic heart; but,
at the bidding of prudence, he replied:</p>
<p>"I hope not, sir. It is very hard for one who, as you are bound to
admit, after the most rigid scrutiny, has done nothing improper, who
has deported himself as a gentleman should, who sympathizes with you
as far as a stranger can, to be driven out in this way."</p>
<p>The attorney replied, with that quiet significance which such remarks
possessed:</p>
<p>"I am sorry, sir, that it is not a question for argument."</p>
<p>The lucky journalist, while whispering he would ne'er consent,
consented. Whereupon the lawyer, who seemed to have some qualms of
conscience, invited him to join in a bottle of wine, and when they
had become a little convivial, suddenly asked:</p>
<p>"By the way, do you know who is writing the letters from here to <cite>The
Tribune</cite>?<ins>"</ins></p>
<p>"Why, no," was the answer. "I haven't seen a copy of that paper for
six months; but I supposed there was no such person, as I had read in
your journals that the letters were purely fictitious."</p>
<p>"There <em>is</em> such a man," replied Brown; "and thus far, though we have
arrested four or five persons, supposing that we had found him, he
completely baffles us. Now, when you get home to New York, can't you
ascertain who he is, and let us know?" </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="sidenote">
<span class="smcap">Tribune Rep­re­sen­tatives in Charleston.</span></div>
<p>Mr. Brigham, knowing exactly what tone to adopt with the "Chivalry,"
replied:</p>
<p>"Of course, sir, I would not act as a spy for you or anybody
else. However, such things have a kind of publicity; are talked of
in saloons and on street-corners. If I can learn in that way who
<cite>The Tribune</cite> correspondent is, I shall deem it my duty to
advise you."</p>
<p>The lawyer listened with credulity to this whisper of hope, though
a well-known Rebel detective, named Shoubac—a swarthy, greasy,
uncomfortable fellow, with a Jewish countenance—did not. He remarked
to the late prisoner:</p>
<p>"You haven't fooled <em>me</em>, if you have Brown."</p>
<p>But Mr. Brigham was allowed to depart in peace for New York.
<cite>The Tribune</cite> afterward had in Charleston five or six different
correspondents, usually keeping two there at a time for emergencies.
Often they did not know each other personally; and there was no
communication between them. When one was arrested, there was always
another in reserve to continue the correspondence. Mr. Brigham,
who remained in the home editorial rooms, retouched the letters
just enough to stamp them as the work of one hand, and the baffled
authorities went hopelessly up and down to cast out the evil spirit
which troubled their peace, and whose unsuspected name was legion.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2><SPAN name="II" id="II">II.</SPAN><br/> THE FIELD.</h2>
<hr class="chap" />
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