<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII.</SPAN></h3>
<div class="chapquot">
<div>
<p>——Whose tongue<br/>
Outvenoms all the worms of Nile.</p>
<p class="citation">Cymbeline.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div class="sidenote">Bloodthirstiness of Rebel Women.</div>
<p>No history of the war is likely to do full justice to the bitterness
of the Rebel women. Female influence tempted thousands of young
men to enter the Confederate service against their own wishes
and sympathies. Women sometimes evinced incredible rancor and
bloodthirstiness. The most startling illustration of the brutalizing
effect of Slavery appeared in the absence of that sweetness, charity,
and tenderness toward the suffering, which is the crowning grace of
womanhood.</p>
<p>A southern Unionist, the owner of many slaves, said to me:</p>
<p>"I suppose I have not struck any of my negroes for ten years. When
they need correcting, my wife always does it."</p>
<p>If he had a horse or a mule requiring occasional whipping, would
he put the scourge in the hands of his little daughter, and teach
her to wield it, from her tender years? How infinitely more must it
brutalize and corrupt her when the victim is a man—the most sacred
thing that God has made—his earthly image and his human temple!</p>
<div class="sidenote">The Battle of Memphis.</div>
<p>Before we captured Memphis, the sick and wounded Union prisoners
were in a condition of great want and suffering. Women of education,
wealth, and high social position visited the hospitals to minister
to Rebel patients.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</SPAN></span>
Frequently entering the Federal wards from curiosity, they used
toward the groaning patients expressions like this:</p>
<p>"I would like to give you one dose! You would never fight against the
South again!"</p>
<p>In what happy contrast to this shone the self-denying ministrations
of northern women, to friend and enemy alike!</p>
<p>In Memphis, on the evening of June 5th, General Jeff. Thompson,
commanding the Rebel cavalry, and Commodore Edward Montgomery,
commanding the Rebel flotilla, stated at the Gayoso House that there
would be a battle the next morning, in which the Yankee fleet would
be destroyed in just about two hours.</p>
<p>Just after daylight, the Rebel flotilla attacked ours, two miles
above the city. We had five iron-clads and several rams, which
were then experimental. They were light, agile little stern-wheel
boats, whose machinery was not at all protected against shots. The
battle occurred in full view of the city. Though it began soon
after daylight, it was witnessed by ten thousand people upon the
high bluff—an anxious, excited crowd. The Rebels dared not be too
demonstrative, and the Unionists dared not whisper a word of their
long-cherished and earnest hopes.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Gallant Exploits of the Rams.</div>
<p>While the two fleets were steaming toward each other, Colonel Ellet,
determined to succeed or to die, daringly pushed forward with his
little rams, the Monarch and Queen of the West. With these boats,
almost as fragile as pasteboard, he steamed directly into the Rebel
flotilla. One of his rams struck the great gunboat Sterling Price
with a terrific blow, crushing timbers and tearing away the entire
larboard wheel-house. The Price drifted helplessly down the stream
and stranded. Another of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</SPAN></span>
Ellet's rams ran at full speed into the General Lovell, cutting her
in twain. The Rebel boat filled and sunk.</p>
<p>From the shore, it was a most impressive sight. There was the Lovell,
with holiday decorations, crowded with men and firing her guns, when
the little ram struck her, crushing in her side, and she went down
like a plummet. In three minutes, even the tops of her tall chimneys
disappeared under water. Scores of swimming and drowning Rebels in
the river were rescued by boats from the Union fleet.</p>
<p>One of the rams now ran alongside and grappled the Beauregard, and,
through hose, drenched her decks with scalding water, while her
cannoneers dared not show their heads to Ellet's sharpshooters, who
were within a few feet of them. Another Rebel boat came up to strike
the ram, but the agile little craft let go her hold and backed out.
The blow intended for her struck the Beauregard, which instantly went
down, "hoist with his own petar."</p>
<p>The Sumter and the Little Rebel, both disabled, were stranded on the
Arkansas shore. The Jeff. Thompson was set on fire and abandoned by
her crew. In a few minutes there was an enormous dazzling flash of
light, a measureless volume of black smoke, and a startling roar,
which seemed to shake the earth to its very center. For several
seconds the air was filled with falling timbers. Exploding her
magazine, the Rebel gunboat expired with a great pyrotechnic display.</p>
<p>The General Bragg received a fifty-pound shot, which tore off a
long plank under her water-mark, and she was captured in a sinking
condition. The Van Dorn, the only Rebel boat which survived the
conflict, turned and fled down the river.</p>
<p>The battle lasted just one hour and three minutes. It was the most
startling, dramatic, and memorable display
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</SPAN></span>
of the whole war. On our side, no one was injured except Colonel
Ellet, who had performed such unexampled feats with his little rams.
A splinter, which struck him in the leg, inflicted a fatal wound.</p>
<p>As our fleet landed, a number of news-boys sprang on shore, and, a
moment after, were running through the street, shouting:</p>
<p>"Here's your <cite>New-York Tribune</cite> and
<cite>Herald</cite>—only ten cents in silver!"</p>
<p>The correspondents, before the city was formally surrendered, had
strolled through the leading streets. At the Gayoso House they
registered their names immediately under those of the fugacious Rebel
general, and ordered dinner.</p>
<p>The Memphis Rebels, who had predicted a siege rivaling Saragossa and
Londonderry, were in a condition of stupor for two weeks after our
arrival. They rubbed their eyes wonderingly, to see Union officers
and Abolition journalists at large without any suggestions of hanging
or tarring and feathering. Remembering my last visit, it was with
peculiar satisfaction that I appended in enormous letters to my
signature upon the hotel register, the name of the journal I served.</p>
<div class="sidenote">A Sailor on a Lark.</div>
<p>On the day of the capture, an intoxicated seaman from one of the
gun-boats, who had been shut up for several months, went on shore
"skylarking." Offering his arms to the first two negro women he met,
he promenaded the whole length of Main street. The Memphis Rebels
were suffering for an outrage, and here was one just to their mind.</p>
<p>"If that is the way, sir," remarked one of them, "that your people
propose to treat southern gentlemen and ladies—if they intend to
thrust upon us such a disgusting spectacle of negro equality, it will
be perilous
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</SPAN></span>
for them. Do they expect to conciliate our people in this manner?"</p>
<p>I mildly suggested that the era of conciliation ceased when the era
of fighting began. The sailor was arrested and put in the guard-house.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Appearance of the Captured city.</div>
<p>Our officers mingled freely with the people. No citizens insulted our
soldiers in the streets; no woman repeated the disgraceful scenes of
New Orleans by spitting in the faces of the "invaders." The Unionists
received us as brothers from whom they had long been separated. One
lady brought out from its black hiding-place, in her chimney, a
National flag, which had been concealed there from the beginning of
the war. A Loyalist told me that, coming out of church on Sunday,
he was thrilled with the news that the Yankees had captured Fort
Donelson; but, with a grave face, he replied to his informant:</p>
<p>"That is sad business for us, is it not?"</p>
<p>Reaching home, with his wife and sister, they gave vent to their
exuberant joy. He could not huzza, and so he relieved himself by
leaping two or three times over a center-table!</p>
<p>There were many genuine Rebels whose eyes glared at us with the
hatred of caged tigers. Externally decorous, they would remark,
ominously, that they hoped our soldiers would not irritate the
people, lest it should deluge the streets with blood. They proposed
fabulous wagers that Sterling Price's troops could whip the whole
Union army; circulated daily reports that the Confederates had
recaptured New Orleans and Nashville, and talked mysteriously about
the fatality of the yellow fever, and the prospect that it would soon
break out.</p>
<p>Gladness shone from the eyes of all the negroes. Their dusky faces
were radiant with welcome, and many women, turbaned in bright
bandanas, thronged the office of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</SPAN></span>
the provost-marshal, applying for passage to the North. We found
Memphis as torpid as Syria, where Yusef Browne declared that he saw
only one man exhibit any sign of activity, and he was engaged in
tumbling from the roof of a house! But stores were soon opened, and
traders came crowding in from the North. Most of them were Jews.</p>
<p>Everywhere we saw the deep eyes and pronounced features of that
strange, enterprising people. I observed one of them, with the
Philistines upon him, marching to the military prison. The pickets
had caught him with ten thousand dollars' worth of boots and shoes,
which he was taking into Dixie. He bore the miscarriage with great
philosophy, bewailing neither his ducats nor his daughter, his boots
nor his liberty—smiling complacently, and finding consolation in
the vilest of cigars. But in his dark, sad eye was a gleam of latent
vengeance, which he doubtless wreaked upon the first unfortunate
customer who fell into his clutches after his release.</p>
<p>Glancing at the guests who crowded the dining-hall of the Gayoso, one
might have believed that the lost tribes of Israel were gathering
there for the Millennium.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Grant Orders Away the Jews.</div>
<p>Many of them engaged in contraband traffic, supplying the Rebels
with food, and even with ammunition. Some months after, these very
gross abuses induced Grant to issue a sweeping ukase expelling
all Jews from his department—an order which the President wisely
countermanded.</p>
<p>The Rebel authorities had destroyed all the cotton, sugar, and
molasses they could find; but these articles now began to emerge
from novel hiding-places. One gentleman had fifty bales of cotton in
his closed parlor. Hundreds of bales were concealed in the woods, in
lofts, and in cellars. Much sugar was buried. One man, entombing
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</SPAN></span>
fifteen hogsheads, neglected to throw up a mound to turn off the
water; when he dug for his sugar, its linked sweetness was <em>too</em> long
drawn out! The hogsheads were empty.</p>
<p>On the 17th of June, a little party of Union officers came galloping
into the city from the country. They were evidently no gala-day
soldiers. Their sun-browned faces, dusty clothing, and jaded horses
bespoke hard campaigns and long marches.</p>
<p>One horseman, in a blue cap and plain blouse, bore no mark of rank,
but was noticeable for the peculiar brilliancy of his dark, flashing
eye. This modest soldier was Major-General Lew. Wallace; and his
division arrived a few hours after. He established his quarters
at the Gayoso, in the same apartments which had been occupied
successively by four Rebel commanders, Pillow, Polk, Van Dorn, and
Price.</p>
<div class="sidenote">A Rebel Paper Supervised.</div>
<p><cite>The Memphis Argus</cite>, a bitter Secession sheet, had
been allowed to continue publication, though its tone was very
objectionable. General Wallace at once addressed to the proprietors
the following note:</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>"As the closing of your office might be injurious to
you pecuniarily, I send Messrs. Richardson, of <cite>The
New York Tribune</cite>, and Knox, of <cite>The New York
Herald</cite>,—two gentlemen of ample experience—to take
charge of the editorial department of your paper. The business and
management will be left to you."</p>
</div>
<p>The publishers, glad to continue upon any terms, acquiesced, and
thereafter every morning, before <cite>The Argus</cite> went to press, the
proof-sheets were sent to us for revision.</p>
<p>The first dress-parade of Wallace's original regiment, the Eleventh
Indiana Infantry, was attended by hundreds of Memphians, curious to
see northern troops
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</SPAN></span>
drawn up in line. They wore no bright trappings or holiday attire.
Their well-kept arms shone in the fading sunlight, a line of polished
steel; but their soiled uniforms had left their brightness behind
in many hard-fought battles. They went through the drill with rare
precision. The Rebel bystanders clapped their hands heartily,
with a certain unconscious pride that these soldiers were their
fellow-Americans. The spectacle dimmed their faith in their favorite
five-to-one theory.</p>
<p>"Well, John," asked one of them beside me, "how many regiments like
that do you think one of ours could whip?"</p>
<p>"I think that whipping one would be a pretty hard day's work!" was
the reply.</p>
<div class="sidenote">"A Dam Black-Harted Ablichiness."</div>
<p>Months before our arrival, a Union employé of the Memphis and Ohio
Railroad sold a watch to a Secession comrade. Vainly attempting to
collect the pay, he finally wrote a pressing letter. The debtor sent
back the dun with this reply:</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>"<span class="smcap">Sir</span>: My privet Apinion is Public
express is that you ar A Dam Black harted ablichiness and if I ever
hear of you open you mouth a gane you will get you head shave and
cent Back to you free nigar Land Whar you be along these are fackes
and you now I can prove them and I will Doet."</p>
</div>
<p>The Loyalist pocketed the affront, "ablichiness" and all, and
nursed his wrath to keep it warm. Meeting his debtor on the street,
after the arrival of our forces, he administered to him a merciless
flagellation. Before our Provost-Marshal it was decided to be a
case of "justifiable assault," and the prisoner was discharged from
custody.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Challenge from a Southern Woman.</div>
<p>In the deserted office of <cite>The Appeal</cite> we found the following
manuscript:— </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p class="center">"A CHALLENGE</p>
<p>"where as the wicked policy of the president—Making war
upon the South for refusing to submit to wrong too palpable for
Southerners to do. And where as it has become necessary for the
young Men of our country, My Brother, in the number To enlist to
do the dirty work of Driving the Mercenarys from our sunny south.
<del>whose</del><ins>Whose</ins> soil is too holy for such wretches
to tramp And whose atmosphere is to pure for them to breathe</p>
<p>"For such an indignity afford to Civilization I Merely Challenge
any abolition or Black Republican lady of character if there
can be such a one found among the negro equality tribe. To Meet
Me at Masons and dixon line. With a pair of Colt's repeaters or
any other weapon they May Choose, That I May receive
<del>satis faction</del><ins>satisfaction</ins> for the insult."</p>
<p class="quotsig">"Victoria E. Goodwin."<br/> "Spring Dale, Miss.,
April 27, 1861."</p>
</div>
<p>Confederate currency was a curiosity of literature and finance.
Dray-tickets and checks, marked "Good for twenty-five cents," and a
great variety of shinplasters, were current. One, issued by a baker,
represented "twenty-five cents in drayage or confectionary," at the
option of the holder. Another guaranteed to the bearer "the sum of
five cents from the Mississippi and Tennessee Railroad Company, in
freight or passage!"</p>
<div class="sidenote">A Droll Species of Currency.</div>
<p>One of my acquaintances had purchased in Chicago, at ten cents a
dozen, lithographic <span lang="fr">fac-similes</span> of the regular
Confederate notes, promising to pay to the bearer ten dollars, six
months after a treaty of peace between the United States and the
Confederate States. A Memphis merchant, knowing that they were
counterfeit, manufactured only to sell as curiosities, considered
their execution so much better than the originals, that he gladly
gave Tennessee bank-notes in exchange for them. My friend subsisted
at his hotel for several days upon the proceeds of these <span
lang="fr">fac-similes</span>, and thought it cheap boarding. While
Curtis's army was in northern Arkansas, our officers found at a
village druggist's several large sheets of his
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</SPAN></span>
printed promises to pay, neither cut nor signed. At the next village
one of them purchased a canteen of whisky, and offered the grocer a
National treasury note in payment. The trader refused it; it was,
doubtless, good, but might cause him trouble after the army had
left. He would receive either gold or Confederate money. The officer
exhibited one of these blanks, and asked if he would take <em>that</em>. "O
yes," he replied; "it is as good money as I want!" And he actually
sold two hundred and fifty canteens of whisky for those unsigned
shinplasters, cut off from the sheets in his presence!</p>
<p>Late in June, General Grant, accompanied only by his personal staff,
often rode from Corinth to Memphis, ninety miles, through a region
infested by guerrillas.</p>
<p>The guests at the Gayoso House regarded with much curiosity the
quiet, slightly-stooping, rural-looking man in cotton coat and
broad-brimmed hat, talking little and smoking much, who was already
beginning to achieve world-wide reputation.</p>
<p>A party of native Arkansans, including a young lady, arrived in
Memphis, coming up the Mississippi in an open skiff. When leaving
home they expected to encounter some of our gun-boats in a few hours,
and provided themselves only with one day's food, and an ample supply
of champagne. Accustomed to luxury, and all unused to labor, in the
unpitying sun they rowed for five days against the strong current
of the Mississippi, burnt, sick, and famishing. For five nights
they slept upon the ground on the swampy shore, half devoured by
musquitoes. At last they found an ark of safety in the iron-clad St.
Louis.</p>
<p>During a fight at St. Charles, on the White River, the steam-drum of
the gun-boat Mound City was exploded by a Rebel shot. The terrified
gunners and seamen,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</SPAN></span>
many of them horribly scalded, jumped into the water. The
Confederates, from behind trees on the bank, deliberately shot the
scalded and drowning wretches!</p>
<div class="sidenote">A Clever Rebel Trick.</div>
<p>Halleck continued in command at Corinth. From some cause, his
official telegrams to General Curtis, in Arkansas, and Commodore
Davis, on the Mississippi, were not transmitted in cipher; and
the line was unguarded, though leading through an intensely Rebel
region. In July, the Memphis operators, from the difficult working
of their instruments, surmised that some outsider must be sharing
their telegraphic secrets. One day the transmission of a message was
suddenly interrupted by the ejaculation:</p>
<p>"Pshaw! Hurra for Jeff Davis!"</p>
<p>Individuality reveals itself as clearly in telegraphing as in the
footstep or handwriting. Mr. Hall, the Memphis operator, instantly
recognized the performer—by what the musicians would call his
"time"—as a former telegraphic associate in the North; and sent him
this message:</p>
<p>"Saville, if you don't want to be hung, you had better leave. Our
cavalry is closing in on all sides of you."</p>
<p>After a little pause, the surprised Rebel replied:</p>
<p>"How in the world did you know me? I have been here four days, and
learned about all your military secrets; but it is becoming a rather
tight place, and I think I <em>will</em> leave. Good-by, boys."</p>
<p>He made good his escape. In the woods he had cut the wire, inserted
one of his own, and by a pocket instrument perused our official
dispatches, stating the exact number and location of United States
troops in Memphis. Re-enforcements were immediately ordered in, to
guard against a Rebel dash.</p>
<div class="sidenote">A Bit of Sherman's Waggery.</div>
<p>Later in July, Sherman assumed command. One day,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</SPAN></span>
a bereaved man-owner visited him, to learn how he could reclaim his
runaway slaves.</p>
<p>"I know of only one way, sir," replied the general, "and that is,
through the United States marshal."</p>
<p>The unsuspecting planter went up and down the city inquiring for that
civil officer.</p>
<p>"Have you any business with him?" asked a Federal captain.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir. I want my negroes. General Sherman says he is the proper
person to return them."</p>
<p>"Undoubtedly he is. The law prescribes it."</p>
<p>"Is he in town?"</p>
<p>"I rather suspect not."</p>
<p>"When do you think he left?"</p>
<p>"About the time Sumter was fired on, I fancy."</p>
<p>At last it dawned upon the planter's brain that the Fugitive Slave
Law was void after the people drove out United States officers. He
went sadly back to Sherman, and asked if there was no other method of
recovering his chattels.</p>
<p>"None within my knowledge, sir."</p>
<p>"What can I do about it?"</p>
<p>"The law provided a remedy for you slaveholders in cases like this;
but you were dissatisfied and smashed the machine. If you don't like
your work, you had better set it to running again."</p>
<p>On the 7th and 8th of March, 1862, occurred the battle of
Pea Ridge, in Arkansas. Our troops were commanded by General
Curtis. Vandeveer's brigade made a forced march of forty-one
miles between 2 o'clock <span class="smcap">a. m.</span>, and 10
<span class="smcap">p. m.</span>, in order to participate in the
engagement. The fight was very severe, but the tenacity of the
western soldiers finally routed the Rebels.</p>
<p>There chanced to be only one New York correspondent
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</SPAN></span>
with Curtis's command. During the battle he was wounded by a fragment
of shell. He sent forward his report, with calm complacency,
presuming that it was exclusive.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Fictitious Battle Reports.</div>
<p>But two other New York journalists in St. Louis, hearing of the
battle, at once repaired to Rolla, the nearest railway point, though
one hundred and ninety-five miles distant from Pea Ridge. Perusing
the very meager official dispatches, knowing what troops were
engaged, and learning from an old countryman the topography of the
field, they wrote elaborate accounts of the two days' conflict.</p>
<p>Indebted to their imagination for their facts, they gave minute
details and a great variety of incidents. Their reports were
plausible and graphic. <cite>The London Times</cite> reproduced one
of them, pronouncing it the ablest and best battle account which
had been written during the American war. For months, the editors
who originally published these reports, did not know that they were
fictitious. They were written only as a Bohemian freak, and remained
the only accounts manufactured by any reputable journalist during the
war.</p>
<p>After the battle, Curtis's army, fifteen thousand strong, pursued
its winding way through the interior of Arkansas. It maintained no
communications, carrying its base of supplies along with it. When out
of provisions, it would seize and run all the neighboring corn-mills,
until it obtained a supply of meal for one or two weeks, and then
move forward.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Curtis's Great March through Arkansas.</div>
<p>Day after day, the Memphis Rebels told us, with ill-concealed glee,
that Curtis's army, after terrific slaughter, had all been captured,
or was just about to surrender. For weeks we had no reliable
intelligence from it. But suddenly it appeared at Helena, on the
Mississippi,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</SPAN></span>
seventy-five miles below Memphis, having marched more than six
hundred miles through the enemy's country. Despite the unhealthy
climate, the soldiers arrived in excellent sanitary condition, weary
and ragged, but well, and with an immense train of followers. It was
a common jest, that every private came in with one horse, one mule,
and two negroes.</p>
<p>The army correspondents, disgusted with the hardships and unwholesome
fare of Missouri, Arkansas, Tennessee, and Mississippi, often
predicted, with what they thought extravagant humor:—</p>
<p>"When Cincinnati or Chicago becomes the seat of war, all this will
be changed. We will take our ease at our inn, and view battles
æsthetically."</p>
<p>But in September, this jest became the literal truth. Bragg, leaving
Buell far behind in Tennessee, invaded Kentucky, and seriously
threatened Cincinnati.</p>
<p>Martial law was declared, and all Cincinnati began arming, drilling,
or digging. In one day, twenty-five thousand citizens enrolled their
names, and were organized into companies. Four thousand worked upon
the Covington fortifications. Newspaper proprietors were in the
trenches. Congressmen, actors, and artists, carried muskets or did
staff duty.</p>
<p>A few sneaks were dragged from their hiding-places in back kitchens,
garrets, and cellars. One fellow was found in his wife's clothing,
scrubbing away at the wash-tub. He was suddenly stripped of his
crinoline by the German guard, who, with shouts of laughter, bore him
away to a working-party.</p>
<p>New regiments of volunteers came pouring in from Indiana,
Michigan, and the other Northwestern States. The farmers, young
and old, arrived by thousands, with their shot-guns and their
old squirrel-rifles. The market houses,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</SPAN></span>
public buildings, and streets, were crowded with them. They came even
from New York and Pennsylvania, until General Wallace was compelled
to telegraph in all directions that no more were needed.</p>
<p>One of these country boys had no weapon except an old Revolutionary
sword. Quite a crowd gathered one morning upon Sycamore street, where
he took out his rusty blade, scrutinized its blunt edge, knelt down,
and carefully whetted it for half an hour upon a door-stone; then,
finding it satisfactorily sharp, replaced it in the scabbard, and
turned away with a satisfied look. His gravity and solemnity made it
very ludicrous.</p>
<p>Buell, before starting northward in pursuit of Bragg, was about to
evacuate Nashville. Andrew Johnson, Military Governor of Tennessee,
implored, expostulated, and stormed, but without effect. He solemnly
declared that, if all the rest of the army left, he would remain with
his four Middle Tennessee regiments, defend the city to the last,
and perish in its ashes, before it should be given up to the enemy.
Buell finally left a garrison, which, though weak in numbers, proved
sufficient to hold Nashville.</p>
<div class="sidenote">"The Siege of Cincinnati."</div>
<p>The siege of Cincinnati proved of short duration. Buell's veterans,
and the enthusiastic new volunteers soon sent the Rebels flying
homeward. Then, as through the whole war, their appearance north of
Tennessee and Virginia was the sure index of disaster to their arms.
Southern military genius did not prove adapted to the establishment
of a navy, or to fighting on Northern soil.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Gloomiest Days of the War.</div>
<p>Maryland invaded, Frankfort abandoned, Nashville evacuated, Tennessee
and Kentucky given up almost without a fight, the Rebels threatening
the great commercial metropolis of Ohio—these were the disastrous,
humiliating tidings of the hour. These were, perhaps,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</SPAN></span>
the gloomiest days that had been seen during the war. We were paying
the bitter penalty of many years of National wrong.</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"God works no otherwise; no mighty birth<br/></span>
<span class="i2">But comes with throes of mortal agony;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">No man-child among nations of the earth<br/></span>
<span class="i2">But findeth its baptism in a stormy sea."<br/></span></div>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</SPAN></span></p>
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