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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of What Answer?, by Anna E. Dickinson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: What Answer?
+
+Author: Anna E. Dickinson
+
+Release Date: March 18, 2005 [EBook #15402]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT ANSWER? ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Josephine Paolucci and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHAT ANSWER?
+
+
+Anna E. Dickinson
+
+1868
+
+
+
+
+WHAT ANSWER?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+ "_In flower of youth and beauty's pride._"
+
+ DRYDEN
+
+
+A crowded New York street,--Fifth Avenue at the height of the afternoon;
+a gallant and brilliant throng. Looking over the glittering array, the
+purple and fine linen, the sweeping robes, the exquisite equipages, the
+stately houses; the faces, delicate and refined, proud, self-satisfied,
+that gazed out from their windows on the street, or that glanced from
+the street to the windows, or at one another,--looking over all this,
+being a part of it, one might well say, "This is existence, and beside
+it there is none other. Let us dress, dine, and be merry! Life is good,
+and love is sweet, and both shall endure! Let us forget that hunger and
+sin, sorrow and self-sacrifice, want, struggle, and pain, have place in
+the world." Yet, even with the words, "poverty, frost-nipped in a summer
+suit," here and there hurried by; and once and again through the
+restless tide the sorrowful procession of the tomb made way.
+
+More than one eye was lifted, and many a pleasant greeting passed
+between these selected few who filled the street and a young man who
+lounged by one of the overlooking windows; and many a comment was
+uttered upon him when the greeting was made:--
+
+"A most eligible _parti_!"
+
+"Handsome as a god!"
+
+"O, immensely rich, I assure you!"
+
+"_Isn't_ he a beauty!"
+
+"Pity he wasn't born poor!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"O, because they say he carried off all the honors at college and
+law-school, and is altogether overstocked with brains for a man who has
+no need to use them."
+
+"Will he practise?"
+
+"Doubtful. Why should he?"
+
+"Ambition, power,--gratify one, gain the other."
+
+"Nonsense! He'll probably go abroad and travel for a while, come back,
+marry, and enjoy life."
+
+"He does that now, I fancy."
+
+"Looks so."
+
+And indeed he did. There was not only vigor and manly beauty, splendid
+in its present, but the "possibility of more to be in the full process
+of his ripening days,"--a form alert and elegant, which had not yet all
+of a man's muscle and strength; a face delicate, yet strong,--refined,
+yet full of latent power; a mass of rippling hair like burnished gold,
+flung back on the one side, sweeping low across brow and cheek on the
+other; eyes
+
+ "Of a deep, soft, lucent hue,--
+ Eyes too expressive to be blue,
+ Too lovely to be gray."
+
+People involuntarily thought of the pink and flower of chivalry as they
+looked at him, or imagined, in some indistinct fashion, that they heard
+the old songs of Percy and Douglas, or the later lays of the cavaliers,
+as they heard his voice,--a voice that was just now humming one of these
+same lays:--
+
+ "Then mounte! then mounte, brave gallants, all,
+ And don your helmes amaine;
+ Death's couriers, Fame and Honor, call
+ Us to the field againe."
+
+"Stuff!" he cried impatiently, looking wistfully at the men's faces
+going by,--"stuff! _We_ look like gallants to ride a tilt at the world,
+and die for Honor and Fame,--we!"
+
+"I thank God, Willie, you are not called upon for any such sacrifice."
+
+"Ah, little mother, well you may!" he answered, smiling, and taking her
+hand,--"well you may, for I am afraid I should fall dreadfully short
+when the time came; and then how ashamed you'd be of your big boy, who
+took his ease at home, with the great drums beating and the trumpets
+blowing outside. And yet--I should like to be tried!"
+
+"See, mother!" he broke out again,--"see what a life it is, getting and
+spending, living handsomely and doing the proper thing towards society,
+and all that,--rubbing through the world in the old hereditary way;
+though I needn't growl at it, for I enjoy it enough, and find it a
+pleasant enough way, Heaven knows. Lazy idler! enjoying the sunshine
+with the rest. Heigh-ho!"
+
+"You have your profession, Willie. There's work there, and opportunity
+sufficient to help others and do for yourself."
+
+"Ay, and I'll _do_ it! But there is so much that is poor and mean, and
+base and tricky, in it all,--so much to disgust and tire one,--all the
+time, day after day, for years. Now if it were only a huge giant that
+stands in your way, you could out rapier and have at him at once, and
+there an end,--laid out or triumphant. That's worth while!"
+
+"O youth, eager and beautiful," thought the mother who listened, "that
+in this phase is so alike the world over,--so impatient to do, so ready
+to brave encounters, so willing to dare and die! May the doing be
+faithful, and the encounters be patiently as well as bravely fought, and
+the fancy of heroic death be a reality of noble and earnest life. God
+grant it! Amen."
+
+"Meanwhile," said the gay voice,--"meanwhile it's a pleasant world; let
+us enjoy it! and as to do this is within the compass of a man's wit,
+therefore will I attempt the doing."
+
+While he was talking he had once more come to the window, and, looking
+out, fastened his eyes unconsciously but intently upon the face of a
+young girl who was slowly passing by,--unconsciously, yet so intently
+that, as if suddenly magnetized, a flicker of feeling went over it; the
+mouth, set with a steady sweetness, quivered a little; the eyes--dark,
+beautiful eyes--were lifted to his an instant, that was all. The mother
+beside him did not see; but she heard a long breath, almost a sigh,
+break from him as he started, then flashed out of the room, snatching
+his hat in the hall, and so on to the street, and away.
+
+Away after her, through block after block, across the crowded avenue to
+Broadway. "Who is she? where did she come from? _I_ never saw her
+before. I wonder if Mrs. Russell knows her, or Clara, or anybody! I will
+know where she lives, or where she is going at least,--that will be some
+clew! There! she is stopping that stage. I'll help her in! no, I
+won't,--she will think I am chasing her. Nonsense! do you suppose she
+saw you at the window? Of course! No, she didn't; don't be a fool!
+There! I'll get into the next stage. Now I'll keep watch of that, and
+she'll not know. So--all right! Go ahead, driver." And happy with some
+new happiness, eager, bright, the handsome young fellow sat watching
+that other stage, and the stylish little lace bonnet that was all he
+could see of his magnet, through the interminable journey down Broadway.
+
+How clear the air seemed! and the sun, how splendidly it shone! and
+what a glad look was upon all the people's faces! He felt like breaking
+out into gay little snatches of song, and moved his foot to the waltz
+measure that beat time in his brain till the irate old gentleman
+opposite, whom nature had made of a sour complexion and art assisted to
+corns, broke out with an angry exclamation. That drew his attention for
+a moment. A slackening of speed, a halt, and the stage was wedged in one
+of the inextricable "jams" on Broadway. Vain the search for _her_ stage
+then; looking over the backs of the poor, tired horses, or from the
+sidewalk,--here, there, at this one and that one,--all for naught! Stage
+and passenger, eyes, little lace bonnet, and all, had vanished away, as
+William Surrey confessed, and confessed with reluctance and discontent.
+
+"No matter!" he said presently,--"no matter! I shall see her again. I
+know it! I feel it! It is written in the book of the Fates! So now I
+shall content me with something"--that looks like her he did not say
+definitely, but felt it none the less, as, going over to the
+flower-basket near by, he picked out a little nosegay of mignonette and
+geranium, with a tea-rosebud in its centre, and pinned it at his
+button-hole. "Delicate and fine!" he thought,--"delicate and fine!" and
+with the repetition he looked from it down the long street after the
+interminable line of stages; and somehow the faint, sweet perfume, and
+the fair flower, and the dainty lace bonnet, were mingled in wild and
+charming confusion in his brain, till he shook himself, and laughed at
+himself, and quoted Shakespeare to excuse himself,--"A mad world, my
+masters!"--seeing this poor old earth of ours, as people always do,
+through their own eyes.
+
+"God bless ye! and long life to yer honor! and may the blessed Virgin
+give ye the desire of yer heart!" called the Irishwoman after him, as he
+put back the change in her hand and went gayly up the street. "Sure,
+he's somebody's darlint, the beauty! the saints preserve him!" she said,
+as she looked from the gold piece in her palm to the fair, sunny head,
+watching it till it was lost in the crowd from her grateful eyes.
+
+Evidently this young man was a favorite, for, as he passed along, many a
+face, worn by business and care, brightened as he smiled and spoke; many
+a countenance stamped with the trade-mark, preoccupied and hard, relaxed
+in a kindly recognition as he bowed and went by; and more than one found
+time, even in that busy whirl, to glance for a moment after him, or to
+remember him with a pleasant feeling, at least till the pavement had
+been crossed on which they met,--a long space at that hour of the day,
+and with so much more important matters--Bull and Bear, rise and fall,
+stock and account--claiming their attention.
+
+Evidently a favorite, for, turning off into one of the side streets,
+coming into his father's huge foundry, faces heated and dusty, tired,
+stained, and smoke-begrimed, glanced up from their work, from forge and
+fire and engine, with an expression that invited a look or word,--and
+look and word were both ready.
+
+"The boss is out, sir," said one of the foremen, "and if you please,
+and have got the time to spare, I'd like to have a word with you before
+he comes in."
+
+"All right, Jim! say your say."
+
+"Well, sir, you'll likely think I'm sticking my nose into what doesn't
+concern me. 'Tain't a very nice thing I've got to say, but if I don't
+say it I don't know who in thunder will; and, as it's my private opinion
+that somebody ought to, I'll just pitch in."
+
+"Very good; pitch in."
+
+"Very good it is then. Only it ain't. Very bad, more like. It's a nasty
+mess, and no mistake! and there's the cause of it!" pointing his brawny
+hand towards the door, upon which was marked, "Office. Private," and
+sniffing as though he smelt something bad in the air.
+
+"You don't mean my father!" flame shooting from the clear eyes.
+
+"Be damned if I do. Beg pardon. Of course I don't. I mean the fellow as
+is perched up on a high stool in that there office, this very minute,
+poking into his books."
+
+"Franklin?"
+
+"You've hit it. Franklin,--Abe Franklin,--that's the ticket."
+
+"What's the matter with him? what has he done?"
+
+"Done? nothing! not as I know of, anyway, except what's right and
+proper. 'Tain't what he's done or's like to do. It's what he is."
+
+"And what may that be?"
+
+"Well, he's a nigger! there's the long and short of it. Nobody here'd
+object to his working in this place, providing he was a runner, or an
+errand-boy, or anything that it's right and proper for a nigger to be;
+but to have him sitting in that office, writing letters for the boss,
+and going over the books, and superintending the accounts of the
+fellows, so that he knows just what they get on Saturday nights, and
+being as fine as a fiddle, is what the boys won't stand; and they swear
+they'll leave, every man of 'em, unless he has his walking
+papers,--double-quick too."
+
+"Very well; let them. There are other workmen, good as they, in this
+city of New York."
+
+"Hold on, sir! let me say my say first. There are seven hundred men
+working in this place: the most of 'em have worked here a long while.
+Good work, good pay. There ain't a man of 'em but likes Mr. Surrey, and
+would be sorry to lose the place; so, if they won't bear it, there ain't
+any that will. Wait a bit! I ain't through yet."
+
+"Go on,"--quietly enough spoken, but the mouth shook under its silky
+fringe, and a fiery spot burned on either cheek.
+
+"All right. Well, sir, I know all about Franklin. He's a bright one,
+smart enough to stock a lot of us with brains and have some to spare; he
+don't interfere with us, and does his work well, too, I reckon,--though
+that's neither here nor there, nor none of our business if the boss is
+satisfied; and he looks like a gentleman, and acts like one, there's no
+denying that! and as for his skin,--well!" a smile breaking over his
+good-looking face, "his skin's quite as white as mine now, anyway,"
+smearing his red-flannel arm over his grimy phiz; "but then, sir, it
+won't rub off. He's a nigger, and there's no getting round it.
+
+"All right, sir! give you your chance directly. Don't speak yet,--ain't
+through, if _you_ please. Well, sir, it's agen nature,--you may talk
+agen it, and work agen it, and fight agen it till all's blue, and what
+good'll it do? You can't get an Irishman, and, what's more, a free-born
+American citizen, to put himself on a level with a nigger,--not by no
+manner of means. No, sir; you can turn out the whole lot, and get
+another after it, and another after that, and so on to the end of the
+chapter, and you can't find men among 'em all that'll stay and have him
+strutting through 'em, up to his stool and his books, grand as a
+peacock."
+
+"Would they work _with_ him?"
+
+"At the same engines, and the like, do you mean?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Nary time, so 'tain't likely they'll work under him. Now, sir, you see
+I know what I'm saying, and I'm saying it to _you_, Mr. Surrey, and not
+to your father, because he won't take a word from me nor nobody
+else,--and here's just the case. Now I ain't bullying, you understand,
+and I say it because somebody else'd say it, if I didn't, uglier and
+rougher. Abe Franklin'll have to go out of this shop in precious short
+order, or every man here'll bolt next Saturday night. There! now I've
+done, sir, and you can fire away."
+
+But as he showed no signs of "firing away," and stood still, pondering,
+Jim broke out again:--
+
+"Beg pardon, sir. If I've said anything you don't like, sorry for it.
+It's because Mr. Surrey is so good an employer, and, if you'll let me
+say so, because I like you so well," glancing over him
+admiringly,--"for, you see, a good engineer takes to a clean-built
+machine wherever he sees it,--it's just because of this I thought it was
+better to tell you, and get you to tell the boss, and to save any row;
+for I'd hate mortally to have it in this shop where I've worked, man and
+boy, so many years. Will you please to speak to him, sir? and I hope you
+understand."
+
+"Thank you, Jim. Yes, I understand; and I'll speak to him."
+
+Was it that the sun was going down, or that some clouds were in the sky,
+or had the air of the shop oppressed him? Whatever it was, as he came
+out he walked with a slower step from which some of the spring had gone,
+and the people's faces looked not so happy; and, glancing down at his
+rosebud, he saw that its fair petals had been soiled by the smoke and
+grime in which he had been standing; and, while he looked a dead march
+came solemnly sounding up the street, and a soldier's funeral went
+by,--rare enough, in that autumn of 1860, to draw a curious crowd on
+either side; rare enough to make him pause and survey it; and as the
+line turned into another street, and the music came softened to his ear,
+he once more hummed the words of the song which had been haunting him
+all the day:--
+
+ "Then mounte! then mounte, brave gallants, all,
+ And don your helmes amaine;
+ Death's couriers, Fame and Honor, call
+ Us to the field againe,"--
+
+sang them to himself, but not with the gay, bright spirit of the
+morning. Then he seemed to see the cavaliers, brilliant and brave,
+riding out to the encounter. Now, in the same dim and fanciful way, he
+beheld them stretched, still and dead, upon the plain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+ "_Thou--drugging pain by patience._"
+
+ Arnold
+
+
+"Laces cleaned, and fluting and ruffling done here,"--that was what the
+little sign swinging outside the little green door said. And, coming
+under it into the cosey little rooms, you felt this was just the place
+in which to leave things soiled and torn, and come back to find them, by
+some mysterious process, immaculate and whole.
+
+Two rooms, with folding-doors between, in which through the day stood a
+counter, cut up on the one side into divers pigeon-holes rilled with
+small boxes and bundles, carefully pinned and labelled,--owner's name,
+time left, time to be called for, money due; neat and nice as a new pin,
+as every one said who had any dealings there.
+
+The counter was pushed back now, as always after seven o'clock, for the
+people who came in the evening were few; and then, when that was out of
+the way, it seemed more home-like and less shoppy, as Mrs. Franklin said
+every night, as she straightened things out, and peered through the
+window or looked from the front door, and wondered if "Abram weren't
+later than usual," though she knew right well he was punctual as
+clock-work,--good clock-work too,--when he was going to his toil or
+hurrying back to his home.
+
+Pleasant little rooms, with the cleanest and brightest of rag carpets on
+the floor; a paper on the walls, cheap enough, but gay with scarlet
+rosebuds and green leaves, rivalled by the vines and berries on the
+pretty chintz curtains; chairs of a dozen ages and patterns, but all of
+them with open, inviting countenances and a hospitable air; a wood fire
+that _looked_ like a wood fire crackling and sparkling on the hearth,
+shining and dancing over the ceiling and the floor and the walls,
+cutting queer capers with the big rocking-chair,--which turned into a
+giant with long arms,--and with the little figures on the mantel-shelf,
+and the books in their cases, softening and glorifying the two grand
+faces hanging in their frames opposite, and giving just light enough
+below them to let you read "John Brown" and "Phillips," if you had any
+occasion to read, and did not know those whom the world knows; and first
+and last, and through all, as if it loved her, and was loath to part
+with her for a moment, whether she poked the flame, or straightened a
+chair, or went out towards the little kitchen to lift a lid and smell a
+most savory stew, or came back to the supper-table to arrange and
+rearrange what was already faultless in its cleanliness and simplicity,
+wherever she went and whatever she did, this firelight fell warm about a
+woman, large and comfortable and handsome, with a motherly look to her
+person, and an expression that was all kindness in her comely face and
+dark, soft eyes,--eyes and face and form, though, that might as well
+have had "Pariah" written all over them, and "leper" stamped on their
+front, for any good, or beauty, or grace, that people could find in
+them; for the comely face was a dark face, and the voice, singing an old
+Methodist hymn, was no Anglo-Saxon treble, but an Anglo-African voice,
+rich and mellow, with the touch of pathos or sorrow always heard in
+these tones.
+
+"There!" she said, "there he is!" as a step, hasty yet halting, was
+heard on the pavement; and, turning up the light, she ran quickly to
+open the door, which, to be sure, was unfastened, and to give the
+greeting to her "boy," which, through many a year, had never been
+omitted.
+
+_Her_ boy,--you would have known that as soon as you saw him,--the same
+eyes, same face, the same kindly look; but the face was thinner and
+finer, and the brow was a student's brow, full of thought and
+speculation; and, looking from her hearty, vigorous form, you saw that
+his was slight to attenuation.
+
+"Sit down, sonny, sit down and rest. There! how tired you look!"
+bustling round him, smoothing his thin face and rough hair. "Now don't
+do that! let your old mother do it!" It pleased her to call herself old,
+though she was but just in her prime. "You've done enough for one day,
+I'm sure, waiting on other people, and walking with your poor lame foot
+till you're all but beat out. You be quiet now, and let somebody else
+wait on you." And, going down on her knees, she took up the lame foot,
+and began to unlace the cork-soled, high-cut shoe, and, drawing it out,
+you saw that it was shrunken and small, and that the leg was shorter
+than its fellow.
+
+"Poor little foot!" rubbing it tenderly, smoothing the stocking over it,
+and chafing it to bring warmth and life to its surface. Her "baby," she
+called it, for it was no bigger than when he was a little fellow. "Poor,
+tired foot! ain't it a dreadful long walk, sonny?"
+
+"Pretty long, mother; but I'd take twice that to do such work at the
+end."
+
+"Yes, indeed, it's good work, and Mr. Surrey's a good man, and a kind
+one, that's sure! I only wish some others had a little of his spirit.
+Such a shame to have you dragging all the way up here, when any dirty
+fellow that wants to can ride. I don't mind for myself so much, for I
+can walk about spry enough yet, and don't thank them for their old
+omnibuses nor cars; but it's too bad for you, so it is,--too bad!"
+
+"Never mind, mother! keep a brave heart. 'There's a good time coming
+soon, a good time coming!' as I heard Mr. Hutchinson sing the other
+night,--and it's true as gospel."
+
+"Maybe it is, sonny!" dubiously, "but I don't see it,--not a sign of
+it,--no indeed, not one! It gets worse and worse all the time, and it
+takes a deal of faith to hold on; but the good Lord knows best, and
+it'll be right after a while, anyhow! And now _that's_ straight!"
+pulling a soft slipper on the lame foot, and putting its mate by his
+side; then going off to pour out the tea, and dish up the stew, and add
+a touch or two to the appetizing supper-table.
+
+"It's as good as a feast,"--taking a bite out of her nice home-made
+bread,--"better'n a feast, to think of you in that place; and I can't
+scarcely realize it yet. It seems too fine to be true."
+
+"That's the way I've felt all the month, mother! It has been just like a
+dream to me, and I keep thinking surely I'm asleep and will waken to
+find this is just an air-castle I've been building, or 'a vision of the
+night,' as the good book says."
+
+"Well, it's a blessed vision, sure enough! and I hope to the good Lord
+it'll last;--but you won't if you make a vision of your supper in that
+way. You just eat, Abram! and have done your talking till you're
+through, if you can't do both at once. Talking's good, but eating's
+better when you're hungry; and it's my opinion you ought to be hungry,
+if you ain't."
+
+So the teacups were filled and emptied, and the spoons clattered, and
+the stew was eaten, and the baked potatoes devoured, and the
+bread-and-butter assaulted vigorously, and general havoc made with the
+good things and substantial things before and between them; and then,
+this duty faithfully performed, the wreck speedily vanished away; and
+cups and forks, spoons and plates, knives and dishes, cleaned and
+cupboarded, Mrs. Franklin came, and, drawing away the book over which he
+was poring, said, while she smoothed face and hair once more, "Come,
+Abram, what is it?"
+
+"What's what, mother?" with a little laugh.
+
+"Something ails you, sonny. That's plain enough. I know when anything's
+gone wrong with ye, sure, and something's gone wrong to-day."
+
+"O mother! you worry about me too much, indeed you do. If I'm a little
+tired or out of sorts,--which I haven't any right to be, not here,--or
+quiet, or anything, you think somebody's been hurting me, or abusing me,
+or that everything's gone wrong with me, when I do well enough all the
+time."
+
+"Now, Abram, you can't deceive me,--not that way. My eyes is mother's
+eyes, and they see plain enough, where you're concerned, without
+spectacles. Who's been putting on you to-day? Somebody. You don't carry
+that down look in your face and your eyes for nothing, I found that out
+long ago, and you've got it on to-night."
+
+"O mother!"
+
+"Don't you 'O mother' me! I ain't going to be put off in that way,
+Abram, an' you needn't think it. Has Mr. Surrey been saying anything
+hard to you?"
+
+"No, indeed, mother; you needn't ask that."
+
+"Nor none of the foremen?"
+
+"None."
+
+"Has Snipe been round?"
+
+"Hasn't been near the office since Mr. Surrey dismissed him."
+
+"Met him anywhere?"
+
+"Nein!" laughing, "I haven't laid eyes on him."
+
+"Well, the men have been saying or doing something then."
+
+"N-no; why, what an inquisitor it is!"
+
+"'N-no.' You don't say that full and plain, Abram. Something _has_ been
+going wrong with the men. Now what is it? Come, out with it."
+
+"Well, mother, if you _will_ know, you will, I suppose; and, as you
+never get tired of the story, I'll go over the whole tale.
+
+"So long as I was Mr. Surrey's office-boy, to make his fires, and sweep
+and dust, and keep things in order, the men were all good enough to me
+after their fashion; and if some of them growled because they thought he
+favored me, Mr. Given, or some one said, 'O, you know his mother was a
+servant of Mrs. Surrey for no end of years, and of course Mr. Surrey has
+a kind of interest in him'; and that put everything straight again.
+
+"Well! you know how good Mr. Willie has been to me ever since we were
+little boys in the same house,--he in the parlor and I in the kitchen;
+the books he's given me, and the chances he's made me, and the way he's
+put me in of learning and knowing. And he's been twice as kind to me
+ever since I refused that offer of his."
+
+"Yes, I know, but tell me about it again."
+
+"Well, Mr. Surrey sent me up to the house one day, just while Mr. Willie
+was at home from college, and he stopped me and had a talk with me, and
+asked me in his pleasant way, not as if I were a 'nigger,' but just as
+he'd talk to one of his mates, ever so many questions about myself and
+my studies and my plans; and I told him what I wanted,--how hard you
+worked, and how I hoped to fit myself to go into some little business of
+my own, not a barber-shop, or any such thing, but something that'd
+support you and keep you like a lady after while, and that would help me
+and my people at the same time. For, of course," I said, "every one of
+us that does anything more than the world expects us to do, or better,
+makes the world think so much the more and better of us all."
+
+"What did he say to that?"
+
+"I wish you'd seen him! He pushed back that beautiful hair of his, and
+his eyes shone, and his mouth trembled, though I could see he tried hard
+to hold it still, and put up his hand to cover it; and he said, in a
+solemn sort of way, 'Franklin, you've opened a window for me, and I
+sha'n't forget what I see through it to-day.' And then he offered to set
+me up in some business at once, and urged hard when I declined."
+
+"Say it all over again, sonny; what was it you told him?"
+
+"I said that would do well enough for a white man; that he could help,
+and the white man be helped, just as people were being and doing all the
+time, and no one would think a thought about it. But, sir," I said,
+"everybody says we can do nothing alone; that we're a poor, shiftless
+set; and it will be just one of the master race helping a nigger to
+climb and to stand where he couldn't climb or stand alone, and I'd
+rather fight my battle alone."
+
+"Yes, yes! well, go on, go on. I like to hear what followed."
+
+"Well, there was just a word or two more, and then he put out his hand
+and shook mine, and said good by. It was the first time I ever shook
+hands with a white _gentleman_. Some white hands have shaken mine, but
+they always made me feel that they _were_ white and that mine was black,
+and that it was a condescension. I felt that, when they didn't mean I
+should. But there was nothing between us. I didn't think of his skin,
+and, for once in my life, I quite forgot I was black, and didn't
+remember it again till I got out on the street and heard a dirty little
+ragamuffin cry, 'Hi! hi! don't that nagur think himself foine?' I
+suspect, in spite of my lameness, I had been holding up my head and
+walking like a man."
+
+In spite of his lameness he was holding up his head and walking like a
+man now; up and down and across the little room, trembling, excited, the
+words rushing in an eager flow from his mouth. His mother sat quietly
+rocking herself and knitting. She knew in this mood there was nothing
+to be said to him; and, indeed, what had she to say save that which
+would add fuel to the flame?
+
+"Well!"--a long sigh,--"after that Mr. Surrey doubled my wages, and was
+kinder to me than ever, and watched me, as I saw, quite closely; and
+that was the way he found out about Mr. Snipe.
+
+"You see Mr. Snipe had been very careless about keeping the books; would
+come down late in the mornings, just before Mr. Surrey came in, and go
+away early in the afternoons, as soon as he had left. Of course, the
+books got behindhand every month, and Mr. Snipe didn't want to stay and
+work overhours to make them up. One day he found out, by something I
+said, that I understood bookkeeping, and tried me, and then got me to
+take them home at night and go over them. I didn't know then how bad he
+was doing, and that I had no business to shield him, and all went smooth
+enough till the day I was too sick to get down to the office, and two of
+the books were at home. Then Mr. Surrey discovered the whole thing.
+There was a great row, it seems; and Mr. Surrey examined the books, and
+found, as he was pleased to say, that I'd kept them in first-rate style;
+so he dismissed Mr. Snipe on the spot, with six months' pay,--for you
+know he never does anything by halves,--and put me in his place.
+
+"The men don't like it, I know, and haven't liked it, but of course they
+can't say anything to him, and they haven't said anything to me; but
+I've seen all along that they looked at me with no friendly eyes, and
+for the last day or two I've heard a word here and there which makes me
+think there's trouble brewing,--bad enough, I'm afraid; maybe to the
+losing of my place, though Mr. Surrey has said nothing about it to me."
+
+Just here the little green door opened, and the foreman whom we have
+before seen--James Given as the register had him entered, Jim Given as
+every one knew him--came in; no longer with grimy face and flannel
+sleeves, but brave in all his Sunday finery, and as handsome a b'hoy,
+they said, at his engine-house, as any that ran with the machine; having
+on his arm a young lady whom he apostrophized as Sallie, as handsome and
+brave as he.
+
+"Evening,"--a nod of the head accompanying. "Miss Howard's traps done?"
+
+"I wish you wouldn't say 'traps,' Jim," corrected Sallie, _sotto voce_:
+"it's not proper. It's for a collar and pair of cuffs, Mrs. Franklin,"
+she added aloud, putting down a little check.
+
+"Not proper! goodness gracious me! there spoke Snipe! Come, Sallie,
+you've pranced round with that stuck-up jackanapes till you're getting
+spoiled entirely, so you are, and I scarcely know you. Not proper,--O
+my!"
+
+"Spoiled, am I? Thank you, sir, for the compliment! And you don't know
+me at all,--don't you? Very well, then I'll say good night, and leave;
+for it wouldn't be proper to take a young lady you don't know to the
+theatre,--now, would it? Good by!"--making for the door.
+
+"Now don't, Sallie, please."
+
+"Don't what?"
+
+"Don't talk that way."
+
+"Don't yourself, more like. You're just as cross as cross can be, and
+disagreeable, and hateful,--all because I happen to know there's some
+other man in the world besides yourself, and smile at him now and then.
+'Don't,' indeed!"
+
+"Come, Sallie, you're too hard on a fellow. It's your own fault, you
+know well enough, if you will be so handsome. Now, if you were an ugly
+old girl, or I was certain of you, I shouldn't feel so bad, nor act so
+neither. But when there's a lot of hungry chaps round, all gaping to
+gobble you up, and even poor little Snipes trying to peck and bite at
+you, and you won't say 'yes' nor 'no' to me, how do you expect a man to
+keep cool? Can't do it, nohow, and you needn't ask it. Human nature's
+human nature, I suppose, and mine ain't a quiet nor a patient one, not
+by no manner of means. Come, Sallie, own up; you wouldn't like me so
+well as I hope you do if it was,--now, would you?"
+
+Mrs. Franklin smiled, though she had heard not a word of the lovers'
+quarrel, as she put a pin in the back of the ruffled collar which Sallie
+had come to reclaim. A quarrel it had evidently been, and as evidently
+the lady was mollified, for she said, "Don't be absurd, Jim!" and Jim
+laughed and responded, "All right, Sallie, you're an angel! But come, we
+must hurry, or the curtain'll be up,"--and away went the dashing and
+handsome couple.
+
+Abram, shutting in the shutters, and fastening the door, sat down to a
+quiet evening's reading, while his mother knitted and sewed,--an evening
+the likeness of a thousand others of which they never tired; for this
+mother and son, to whom fate had dealt so hard a measure, upon whom the
+world had so persistently frowned, were more to each other than most
+mothers and sons whose lines had fallen in pleasanter
+places,--compensation, as Mr. Emerson says, being the law of existence
+the world over.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+ "_Every one has his day, from which he dates._"
+
+ OLD PROVERB
+
+
+You see, Surrey, the school is something extra, and the performances,
+and it will please Clara no end; so I thought I'd run over, and
+inveigled you into going along for fear it should be stupid, and I would
+need some recreation."
+
+"Which I am to afford?"
+
+"Verily."
+
+"As clown or grindstone?--to make laugh, or sharpen your wits upon?"
+
+"Far be it from me to dictate. Whichever suits our character best. On
+the whole, I think the last would be the most appropriate; the first I
+can swear wouldn't!"
+
+"_Pourquoi_?"
+
+"O, a woman's reason,--because!"
+
+"Because why? Am I cross?"
+
+"Not exactly."
+
+"Rough?"
+
+"As usual,--like a May breeze."
+
+"Cynical?"
+
+"As Epicurus."
+
+"Irritable?"
+
+"'A countenance [and manner] more in sorrow than in anger.' Something's
+wrong with you; who is she?"
+
+"She!"
+
+"Ay,--she. That was a wise Eastern king who put at the bottom of every
+trouble and mischief a woman."
+
+"Fine estimate."
+
+"Correct one. Evidently he had studied the genus thoroughly, and had a
+poor opinion of it."
+
+"No wonder."
+
+"Amazing! _you_ say 'no wonder'! Astounding words! speak them again."
+
+"No wonder,--seeing that he had a mother, and that she had such a son.
+He must needs have been a bad fellow or a fool to have originated so
+base a philosophy, and how then could he respect the source of such a
+stream as himself?"
+
+"Sir Launcelot,--squire of dames!"
+
+"Not Sir Launcelot, but squire of dames, I hope."
+
+"There you go again! Now I shall query once more, who is she?"
+
+"No woman."
+
+"No?"
+
+"No, though by your smiling you would seem to say so!"
+
+"Nay, I believe you, and am vastly relieved in the believing. Take
+advice from ten years of superior age, and fifty of experience, and have
+naught to do with them. Dost hear?"
+
+"I do."
+
+"And will heed?"
+
+"Which?--the words or the acts of my counsellor? who, of a surety,
+preaches wisely and does foolishly, or who does wisely and preaches
+foolishly; for preaching and practice do not agree."
+
+"Nay, man, thou art unreasonable; to perform either well is beyond the
+capacity of most humans, and I desire not to be blessed above my
+betters. Then let my rash deeds and my prudent words both be teachers
+unto thee. But if it be true that no woman is responsible for your grave
+countenance this morning, then am I wasting words, and will return to
+our muttons. What ails you?"
+
+"I am belligerent."
+
+"I see,--that means quarrelsome."
+
+"And hopeless."
+
+"Bad,--very! belligerent and hopeless! When you go into a fight always
+expect to win; the thought is half the victory."
+
+"Suppose you are an atom against the universe?" "Don't fight, succumb.
+There's a proverb,--a wise one,--Napoleon's, 'God is on the side of the
+strongest battalions.'"
+
+"A lie,--exploded at Waterloo. There's another proverb, 'One on the side
+of God is a majority.' How about that?"
+
+"Transcendental humbug."
+
+"A truth demonstrated at Wittenberg."
+
+"Are you aching for the martyr's palm?"
+
+"I am afraid not. On the whole, I think I'd rather enjoy life than
+quarrel with it. But"--with a sudden blaze--"I feel to-day like fighting
+the world."
+
+"Hey, presto! what now, young'un?"
+
+"I don't wonder you stare"--a little laugh. "I'm talking like a fool,
+and, for aught I know, feeling like one, aching to fight, and knowing
+that I might as well quarrel with the winds, or stab that water as it
+flows by."
+
+"As with what?"
+
+"The fellow I've just been getting a good look at."
+
+"What manner of fellow?"
+
+"Ignorant, selfish, brutal, devilish."
+
+"Tremendous! why don't you bind him over to keep the peace?"
+
+"Because he is like the judge of old time, neither fears God nor
+respects his image,--when his image is carved in ebony, and not ivory."
+
+"What do you call this fellow?"
+
+"Public Opinion."
+
+"This big fellow is abusing and devouring a poor little chap, eh? and
+the chap's black?"
+
+"True."
+
+"And sometimes the giant is a gentleman in purple and fine linen,
+otherwise broadcloth; and sometimes in hodden gray, otherwise homespun
+or slop-shop; and sometimes he cuts the poor little chap with a silver
+knife, which is rhetoric, and sometimes with a wooden spoon, which is
+raw-hide. Am I stating it all correctly?"
+
+"All correctly."
+
+"And you've been watching this operation when you had better have been
+minding your own business, and getting excited when you had better have
+kept cool, and now want to rush into the fight, drums beating and colors
+flying, to the rescue of the small one. Don't deny it,--it's all written
+out in your eyes."
+
+"I sha'n't deny it, except about the business and the keeping cool. It's
+any gentleman's business to interfere between a bully and a weakling
+that he's abusing; and his blood must be water that does not boil while
+he 'watches the operation' as you say, and goes in."
+
+"To get well pommelled for his pains, and do no good to any one, himself
+included. Let the weakling alone. A fellow that can't save himself is
+not worth saving. If he can't swim nor walk, let him drop under or go to
+the wall; that's my theory."
+
+"Anglo-Saxon theory--and practice."
+
+"Good theory, excellent practice,--in the main. What special phase of it
+has been disturbing your equanimity?"
+
+"You know the Franklins?"
+
+"Of course: Aunt Mina's son--what's his name?--is a sort of _protégé_
+of yours, I believe: what of him?"
+
+"He is cleanly?"
+
+"A nice question. Doubtless."
+
+"Respectable?"
+
+"What are you driving at?"
+
+"Intelligent?"
+
+"Most true."
+
+"Ambitious?"
+
+"Or his looks belie him."
+
+"Faithful, trusty, active, helpful, in every way devoted to my father's
+service and his work."
+
+"With Sancho, I believe it all because your worship says so."
+
+"Well, this man has just been discharged from my father's employ because
+seven hundred and forty-two other men gave notice to quit if he
+remained."
+
+"The reason?"
+
+"His skin."
+
+"The reason is not 'so deep as a well, nor so wide as a church-door, but
+it is enough.' Of course they wouldn't work with him, and my uncle
+Surrey, begging your pardon, should not have attempted anything so
+Quixotic."
+
+"His skin covering so many excellent qualities, and these qualities
+gaining recognition,--that was the cause. They worked with him so long
+as he was a servant of servants: so soon as he demonstrated that he
+could strike out strongly and swim, they knocked him under; and, proving
+that he could walk alone, they ran hastily to shove him to the wall."
+
+"What! quoting my own words against me?"
+
+"Anglo-Saxon says we are the masters: we monopolize the strength and
+courage, the beauty, intelligence, power. These creatures,--what are
+they? poor, worthless, lazy, ignorant, good for nothing but to be used
+as machines, to obey. When lo! one of these dumb machines suddenly
+starts forth with a man's face; this creature no longer obeys, but
+evinces a right to command; and Anglo-Saxon speedily breaks him in
+pieces."
+
+"Come, Willie, I hope you're not going to assert these people our
+equals,--that would be too much."
+
+"They have no intelligence, Anglo-Saxon declares,--then refuses them
+schools, while he takes of their money to help educate his own sons.
+They have no ambition,--then closes upon them every door of honorable
+advancement, and cries through the key-hole, Serve, or starve. They
+cannot stand alone, they have no faculty for rising,--then, if one of
+them finds foothold, the ground is undermined beneath him. If a head is
+seen above the crowd, the ladder is jerked away, and he is trampled into
+the dust where he is fallen. If he stays in the position to which
+Anglo-Saxon assigns him, he is a worthless nigger; if he protests
+against it, he is an insolent nigger; if he rises above it, he is a
+nigger not to be tolerated at all,--to be crushed and buried speedily."
+
+"Now, Willie, 'no more of this, an thou lovest me.' I came not out
+to-day to listen to an abolition harangue, nor a moral homily, but to
+have a good time, to be civil and merry withal, if you will allow it. Of
+course you don't like Franklin's discharge, and of course you have done
+something to compensate him. I know--you have found him another place.
+No,--you couldn't do that?
+
+"No, I couldn't."
+
+"Well, you've settled him somewhere,--confess."
+
+"He has some work for the present; some copying for me, and translating,
+for this unfortunate is a scholar, you know."
+
+"Very good; then let it rest. Granted the poor devils have a bad time of
+it, you're not bound to sacrifice yourself for them. If you go on at
+this pace, you'll bring up with the long-haired, bloomer reformers, and
+then--God help you. No, you needn't say another word,--I sha'n't
+listen,--not one; so. Here we are! school yonder,--well situated?"
+
+"Capitally."
+
+"Fine day."
+
+"Very."
+
+"Clara will be charmed to see you."
+
+"You flatter me. I hope so."
+
+"There, now you talk rationally. Don't relapse. We will go up and hear
+the pretty creatures read their little pieces, and sing their little
+songs, and see them take their nice blue-ribboned diplomas, and fall in
+love with their dear little faces, and flirt a bit this evening, and
+to-morrow I shall take Ma'm'selle Clara home to Mamma Russell, and you
+may go your ways."
+
+"The programme is satisfactory."
+
+"Good. Come on then."
+
+All Commencement days, at college or young ladies' school, if not twin
+brothers and sisters, are at least first cousins, with a strong family
+likeness. Who that has passed through one, or witnessed one, needs any
+description thereof to furbish up its memories. This of Professor Hale's
+belonged to the great tribe, and its form and features were of the old
+established type. The young ladies were charming; plenty of white gowns,
+plenty of flowers, plenty of smiles, blushes, tremors, hopes, and fears;
+little songs, little pieces, little addresses, to be sung, to be played,
+to be read, just as Tom Russell had foreshadowed, and proving to be--
+
+"Just the least of a bore!" as he added after listening awhile; "don't
+you think so, Surrey?"
+
+"Hush! don't talk."
+
+Tom stared; then followed his cousin's eye, fixed immovably upon one
+little spot on the platform. "By Jove!" he cried, "what a beauty! As
+Father Dryden would say, 'this is the porcelain clay of humankind.' No
+wonder you look. Who is she,--do you know?"
+
+"No."
+
+"No! short, clear, and decisive. Don't devour her, Will. Remember the
+sermon I preached you an hour ago. Come, look at this,"--thrusting a
+programme into his face,--"and stop staring. Why, boy, she has
+bewitched you,--or inspired you,"--surveying him sharply.
+
+And indeed it would seem so. Eyes, mouth, face, instinct with some
+subtle and thrilling emotion. As gay Tom Russell looked, he
+involuntarily stretched out his hand, as one would put it between
+another and some danger of which that other is unaware, and remembered
+what he had once said in talking of him,--"If Will Surrey's time does
+come, I hope the girl will be all right in every way, for he'll plunge
+headlong, and love like distraction itself,--no half-way; it will be a
+life-and-death affair for him." "Come, I must break in on this."
+
+"Surrey!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"There's a pretty girl."
+
+No answer.
+
+"There! over yonder. Third seat, second row. See her? Pretty?"
+
+"Very pretty."
+
+"Miss--Miss--what's her name? O, Miss Perry played that last thing very
+well for a school-girl, eh?"
+
+"Very well."
+
+"Admirable room this, for hearing; rare quality with chapels and halls;
+architects in planning generally tax ingenuity how to confuse sound. Now
+these girls don't make a great noise, yet you can distinguish every
+word,--can't you?"
+
+No response.
+
+"I say, can't you?"
+
+"Every word."
+
+Tom drew a long breath.
+
+"Professor Hale's a sensible old fellow; I like the way he conducts this
+school." (Mem. Tom didn't know a thing about it.) "Carries it on
+excellently." A pause.
+
+Silence.
+
+"Fine-looking, too. A man's physique has a deal to do with his success
+in the world. If he carries a letter of recommendation in his face,
+people take him on trust to begin with; and if he's a big fellow, like
+the Professor yonder, he imposes on folks awfully; they pop down on
+their knees to him, and clear the track for him, as if he had a right to
+it all. Bless me! I never thought of that before,--it's the reason you
+and I have got on so swimmingly,--is it not, now? Certainly. You think
+so? Of course."
+
+"Of course,"--sedately and gravely spoken.
+
+Tom groaned, for, with a face kind and bright, he was yet no beauty;
+while if Surrey had one crowning gift in this day of fast youths and
+self-satisfied Young America, it was that of modesty with regard to
+himself and any gifts and graces nature had blessed him withal.
+
+"Clara has a nice voice."
+
+"Very nice."
+
+"She is to sing, do you know?"
+
+"I know."
+
+"Do you know when?"
+
+No reply.
+
+"She sings the next piece. Are you ready to listen?"
+
+"Ready."
+
+"Good Lord!" cried Tom, in despair, "the fellow has lost his wits. He
+has turned parrot; he has done nothing but repeat my words for me since
+he sat here. He's an echo."
+
+"Echo of nothingness?" queried the parrot, smilingly.
+
+"Ah, you've come to yourself, have you? Capital! now stay awake. There's
+Clara to sing directly, and you are to cheer her, and look as if you
+enjoyed it, and throw her that bouquet when I tell you, and let her
+think it's a fine thing she has been doing; for this is a tremendous
+affair to her, poor child, of course."
+
+"How bright and happy she is! You will laugh at me, Tom, and indeed I
+don't know what has come over me, but somehow I feel quite sad, looking
+at those girls, and wondering what fate and time have in store for
+them."
+
+"Sunshine and bright hours."
+
+"The day cometh, and also the night,"--broke in the clear voice that was
+reading a selection from the Scriptures.
+
+Tom started, and Willie took from his button-hole just such a little
+nosegay as that he had bought on Broadway a fortnight before,--a
+geranium leaf, a bit of mignonette, and a delicate tea-rosebud, and,
+seeing it was drooping, laid it carefully upon the programme on his
+knee. "I don't want that to fade," he thought as he put it down, while
+he looked across the platform at the same face which he had so eagerly
+pursued through a labyrinth of carriages, stages, and people, and lost
+at last.
+
+"There! Clara is talking to your beauty. I wonder if she is to sing, or
+do anything. If she does, it will be something dainty and fine, I'll
+wager. Helloa! there's Clara up,--now for it."
+
+Clara's bright little voice suited her bright little face,--like her
+brother's, only a great deal prettier,--and the young men enjoyed both,
+aside from brotherly and cousinly feeling, cheered her "to the echo" as
+Willie said, threw their bouquets,--great, gorgeous things they had
+brought from the city to please her,--and wished there was more of it
+all when it was through.
+
+"What next?" said Willie.
+
+"Heaven preserve us! your favorite subject. Who would expect to tumble
+on such a theme here?--'Slavery; by Francesca Ercildoune.' Odd
+name,--and, by Jove! it's the beauty herself."
+
+They both leaned forward eagerly as she came from her seat; slender,
+shapely, every fibre fine and exquisite, no coarse graining from the
+dainty head to the dainty foot; the face, clear olive, delicate and
+beautiful,--
+
+ "The mouth with steady sweetness set,
+ And eyes conveying unaware
+ The distant hint of some regret
+ That harbored there,"--
+
+eyes deep, tender, and pathetic.
+
+"What's this?" said Tom. "Queer. It gives me a heartache to look at
+her."
+
+"A woman for whom to fight the world, or lose the world, and be
+compensated a million-fold if you died at her feet," thought Surrey, and
+said nothing.
+
+"What a strange subject for her to select!" broke in Tom.
+
+It was a strange one for the time and place, and she had been besought
+to drop it, and take another; but it should be that or nothing, she
+asserted,--so she was left to her own device.
+
+Oddly treated, too. Tom thought it would be a pretty lady-like essay,
+and said so; then sat astounded at what he saw and heard. Her face--this
+schoolgirl's face--grew pallid, her eyes mournful, her voice and manner
+sublime, as she summoned this Monster to the bar of God's justice and
+the humanity of the world; as she arraigned it; as she brought witness
+after witness to testify against it; as she proved its horrible
+atrocities and monstrous barbarities; as she went on to the close, and,
+lifting hand and face and voice together, thrilled out, "I look backward
+into the dim, distant past, but it is one night of oppression and
+despair; I turn to the present, but I hear naught save the mother's
+broken-hearted shriek, the infant's wail, the groan wrung from the
+strong man in agony; I look forward into the future, but the night grows
+darker, the shadows deeper and longer, the tempest wilder, and
+involuntarily I cry out, 'How long, O God, how long?'"
+
+"Heavens! what an actress she would make!" said somebody before them.
+
+"That's genius," said somebody behind them; "but what a subject to
+waste it upon!"
+
+"Very bad taste, I must say, to talk about such a thing here," said
+somebody beside them. "However, one can excuse a great deal to beauty
+like that."
+
+Surrey sat still, and felt as though he were on fire, filled with an
+insane desire to seize her in one arm like a knight of old, and hew his
+way through these beings, and out of this place, into some solitary spot
+where he could seat her and kneel at her feet, and die there if she
+refused to take him up; filled with all the sweet, extravagant,
+delicious pain that thrills the heart, full of passion and purity, of a
+young man who begins to love the first, overwhelming, only love of a
+lifetime.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+ "_'Tis an old tale, and often told._"
+
+ SIR WALTER SCOTT
+
+
+That evening some people who were near them were talking about it, and
+that made Tom ask Clara if her friend was in the habit of doing
+startling things.
+
+"Should you think so to look at her now?" queried Clara, looking across
+the room to where Miss Ercildoune stood.
+
+"Indeed I shouldn't," Tom replied; and indeed no one would who saw her
+then. "She's as sweet as a sugar-plum," he added, as he continued to
+look. "What does she mean by getting off such rampant discourses? She
+never wrote them herself,--don't tell _me_; at least somebody else put
+her up to it,--that strong-minded-looking teacher over yonder, for
+instance. _She_ looks capable of anything, and something worse, in the
+denouncing way; poor little beauty was her cat's-paw this morning."
+
+"O Tom, how you talk! She is nobody's cat's-paw. I can tell you she does
+her own thinking and acting too. If you'd just go and do something
+hateful, or impose on somebody,--one of the waiters, for
+instance,--you'd see her blaze up, fast enough."
+
+"Ah! philanthropic?"
+
+Clara looked puzzled. "I don't know; we have some girls here who are all
+the time talking about benevolence, and charity, and the like, and they
+have a little sewing-circle to make up things to be sold for the church
+mission, or something,--I don't know just what; but Francesca won't go
+near it."
+
+"Democratic, then, maybe."
+
+"No, she isn't, not a bit. She's a thorough little aristocrat: so
+exclusive she has nothing to say to the most of us. I wonder she ever
+took me for a friend, though I do love her dearly."
+
+Tom looked down at his bright little sister, and thought the wonder was
+not a very great one, but didn't say so; reserving his gallantries for
+somebody else's sister.
+
+"You seem greatly taken with her, Tom."
+
+"I own the soft impeachment."
+
+"Well, you'll have a fair chance, for she's coming home with me. I wrote
+to mamma, and she says, bring her by all means,--and Mr. Ercildoune
+gives his consent; so it is all settled."
+
+"Mr. Ercildoune! is there no Mrs. E.?"
+
+"None,--her mother died long ago; and her father has not been here, so I
+can't tell you anything about him. There: do you see that
+elegant-looking lady talking with Professor Hale? that is her aunt, Mrs.
+Lancaster. She is English, and is here only on a visit. She wants to
+take Francesca home with her in the spring, but I hope she won't."
+
+"Why, what is it to you?"
+
+"I am afraid she will stay, and then I shall never see her any more."
+
+"And why stay? do you fancy England so very fascinating?"
+
+"No, it is not that; but Francesca don't like America; she's forever
+saying something witty and sharp about our 'democratic institutions,' as
+she calls them; and, if you had looked this morning, you'd have seen
+that she didn't sing The Star-Spangled Banner with the rest of us. Her
+voice is splendid, and Professor Hale wanted her to lead, as she often
+does, but she wouldn't sing that, she said,--no, not for anything; and
+though we all begged, she refused,--flat."
+
+"Shocking! what total depravity! I wonder is she converting Surrey to
+her heresies."
+
+No, she wasn't; not unless silence is more potent than words; for after
+they had danced together Surrey brought her to one of the great windows
+facing towards the sea, and, leaning over her chair, there was stillness
+between them as their eyes went out into the night.
+
+A wild night! great clouds drifted across the moon, which shone out
+anon, with light intensified, defining the stripped trees and desolate
+landscape, and then the beach, and
+
+ "Marked with spray
+ The sunken reefs, and far away
+ The unquiet, bright Atlantic plain,"
+
+while through all sounded incessantly the mournful roar of buffeting
+wind and surging tide; and whether it was the scene, or the solemn
+undertone of the sea, the dance music, which a little while before had
+been so gay, sounded like a wail.
+
+How could it be otherwise? Passion is akin to pain. Love never yet
+penetrated an intense nature and made the heart light; sentiment has its
+smiles, its blushes, its brightness, its words of fancy and feeling,
+readily and at will; but when the internal sub-soiling is broken up, the
+heart swells with a steady and tremendous pressure till the breast feels
+like bursting; the lips are dumb, or open only to speak upon indifferent
+themes. Flowers may be played with, but one never yet cared to toy with
+flame.
+
+There are souls that are created for one another in the eternities,
+hearts that are predestined each to each, from the absolute necessities
+of their nature; and when this man and this woman come face to face,
+these hearts throb and are one; these souls recognize "my master!" "my
+mistress!" at the first glance, without words uttered or vows
+pronounced.
+
+These two young lives, so fresh, so beautiful; these beings, in many
+things such antipodes, so utterly dissimilar in person, so unlike, yet
+like; their whole acquaintance a glance on a crowded street and these
+few hours of meeting,--looked into one another's eyes, and felt their
+whole nature set each to each, as the vast tide "of the bright, rocking
+ocean sets to shore at the full moon."
+
+These things are possible. Friendship is excellent, and friendship may
+be called love; but it is not love. It may be more enduring and placidly
+satisfying in the end; it may be better, and wiser, and more prudent,
+for acquaintance to beget esteem, and esteem regard, and regard
+affection, and affection an interchange of peaceful vows: the result, a
+well-ordered life and home. All this is admirable, no doubt; an owl is a
+bird when you can get no other; but the love born of a moment, yet born
+of eternity, which comes but once in a lifetime, and to not one in a
+thousand lives, unquestioning, unthinking, investigating nothing,
+proving nothing, sufficient unto itself,--ah, that is divine; and this
+divine ecstasy filled these two souls.
+
+Unconsciously. They did not define nor comprehend. They listened to the
+sea where they sat, and felt tears start to their eyes, yet knew not
+why. They were silent, and thought they talked; or spoke, and said
+nothing. They danced; and as he held her hand and uttered a few words,
+almost whispered, the words sounded to the listening ear like a part of
+the music to which they kept time. They saw a multitude of people, and
+exchanged the compliments of the evening, yet these people made no more
+impression upon their thoughts than gossamer would have made upon their
+hands.
+
+"Come, Francesca!" said Clara Russell, breaking in upon this, "it is not
+fair for you to monopolize my cousin Will, who is the handsomest man in
+the room; and it isn't fair for Will to keep you all to himself in this
+fashion. Here is Tom, ready to scratch out his eyes with vexation
+because you won't dance with him; and here am I, dying to waltz with
+somebody who knows my step,--to say nothing of innumerable young ladies
+and gentlemen who have been casting indignant and beseeching glances
+this way: so, sir, face about, march!" and away the gay girl went with
+her prize, leaving Francesca to the tender mercies of half a dozen young
+men who crowded eagerly round her, and from whom Tom carried her off
+with triumph and rejoicing.
+
+The evening was over at last, and they were going away. Tom had said
+good night.
+
+"You are to be in New York, at my uncle's, Clara tells me."
+
+"It is true."
+
+"I may see you there?"
+
+For answer she put out her hand. He took it as he would have taken a
+delicate flower, laid his other hand softly, yet closely, over it, and,
+without any adieu spoken, went away.
+
+"Tom always declared Willie was a little queer, and I'm sure I begin to
+think so," said Clara, as she kissed her friend and departed to her
+room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+ "_A breathing sigh, a sigh for answer,
+ A little talking of outward things._"
+
+ JEAN INGELOW
+
+
+Ah, the weeks that followed! People ate and drank and slept, lived and
+loved and hated, were born and died,--the same world that it had been a
+little while before, yet not the same to them,--never to seem quite the
+same again. A little cloud had fallen between them and it, and changed
+to their eyes all its proportions and hues.
+
+They were incessantly together, riding, or driving, or walking, looking
+at pictures, dancing at parties, listening to opera or play.
+
+"It seems to me Will is going it at a pretty tremendous pace somewhere,"
+said Mr. Surrey to his wife, one morning, after this had endured for a
+space. "It would be well to look into it, and to know something of this
+girl."
+
+"You are right," she replied. "Yet I have such absolute faith in
+Willie's fine taste and sense that I feel no anxiety."
+
+"Nor I; yet I shall investigate a bit to-night at Augusta's."
+
+"Clara tells me that when Miss Ercildoune understood it was to be a
+great party, she insisted on ending her visit, or, at least, staying for
+a while with her aunt, but they would not hear of it."
+
+"Mrs. Lancaster goes back to England soon?"
+
+"Very soon."
+
+"Does any one know aught of Miss Ercildoune's family save that Mrs.
+Lancaster is her aunt?"
+
+"If 'any one' means me, I understand her father to be a gentleman of
+elegant leisure,--his home near Philadelphia; a widower, with one other
+child,--a son, I believe; that his wife was English, married abroad;
+that Mrs. Lancaster comes here with the best of letters, and, for
+herself, is most evidently a lady."
+
+"Good. Now I shall take a survey of the young lady herself."
+
+When night came, and with it a crowd to Mrs. Russell's rooms, the
+opportunity offered for the survey, and it was made scrutinizingly.
+Surrey was an only son, a well-beloved one, and what concerned him was
+investigated with utmost care.
+
+Scrutinizingly and satisfactorily. They were dancing, his sunny head
+bent till it almost touched the silky blackness of her hair. "Saxon and
+Norman," said somebody near who was watching them; "what a delicious
+contrast!"
+
+"They make an exquisite picture," thought the mother, as she looked
+with delight and dread: delight at the beauty; dread that fills the soul
+of any mother when she feels that she no longer holds her boy,--that his
+life has another keeper,--and queries, "What of the keeper?"
+
+"Well?" she said, looking up at her husband.
+
+"Well," he answered, with a tone that meant, well. "She's thorough-bred.
+Democratic or not, I will always insist, blood tells. Look at her: no
+one needs to ask _who_ she is. I'd take her on trust without a word."
+
+"So, then, you are not her critic, but her admirer."
+
+"Ah, my dear, criticism is lost in admiration, and I am glad to find it
+so."
+
+"And I. Willie saw with our eyes, as a boy; it is fortunate that we can
+see with his eyes, as a man."
+
+So, without any words spoken, after that night, both Mr. and Mrs. Surrey
+took this young girl into their hearts as they hoped soon to take her
+into their lives, and called her "daughter" in their thought, as a
+pleasant preparation for the uttered word by and by.
+
+Thus the weeks fled. No word had passed between these two to which the
+world might not have listened. Whatever language their hearts and their
+eyes spoke had not been interpreted by their lips. He had not yet
+touched her hand save as it met his, gloved or formal, or as it rested
+on his arm; and yet, as one walking through the dusk and stillness of a
+summer night feels a flower or falling leaf brush his check, and starts,
+shivering as from the touch of a disembodied soul, so this slight
+outward touch thrilled his inmost being; this hand, meeting his for an
+instant, shook his soul.
+
+Indefinite and undefined,--there was no thought beyond the moment; no
+wish to take this young girl into his arms and to call her "wife" had
+shaped itself in his brain. It was enough for both that they were in one
+another's presence, that they breathed the same air, that they could see
+each other as they raised their eyes, and exchange a word, a look, a
+smile. Whatever storm of emotion the future might hold for them was not
+manifest in this sunny and delightful present.
+
+Upon one subject alone did they disagree with feeling,--in other matters
+their very dissimilarity proving an added charm. This was a curious
+question to come between lovers. All his life Surrey had been a devotee
+of his country and its flag. While he was a boy Kossuth had come to
+these shores, and he yet remembered how he had cheered himself hoarse
+with pride and delight, as the eloquent voice and impassioned lips of
+the great Magyar sounded the praise of America, as the "refuge of the
+oppressed and the hope of the world." He yet remembered how when the
+hand, every gesture of which was instinct with power, was lifted to the
+flag,--the flag, stainless, spotless, without blemish or flaw; the flag
+which was "fair as the sun, clear as the moon," and to the oppressors of
+the earth "terrible as an army with banners,"--he yet remembered how, as
+this emblem of liberty was thus apostrophized and saluted, the tears
+had rushed to his boyish eyes, and his voice had said, for his heart,
+"Thank God, I am an American!"
+
+One day he made some such remark to her. She answered, "I, too, am an
+American, but I do not thank God for it."
+
+At another time he said, as some emigrants passed them in the street,
+"What a sense of pride it gives one in one's country, to see her so
+stretch out her arms to help and embrace the outcast and suffering of
+the whole world!"
+
+She smiled--bitterly, he thought; and replied, "O just and magnanimous
+country, to feed and clothe the stranger from without, while she
+outrages and destroys her children within!"
+
+"You do not love America," he said.
+
+"I do not love America," she responded.
+
+"And yet it is a wonderful country."
+
+"Ay," briefly, almost satirically, "a wonderful country, indeed!"
+
+"Still you stay here, live here."
+
+"Yes, it is my country. Whatever I think of it, I will not be driven
+away from it; it is my right to remain."
+
+"Her right to remain?" he thought; "what does she mean by that? she
+speaks as though conscience were involved in the thing. No matter; let
+us talk of something pleasanter."
+
+One day she gave him a clew. They were looking at the picture of a
+great statesman,--a man as famous for the grandeur of face and form as
+for the power and splendor of his intellect.
+
+"Unequalled! unapproachable!" exclaimed Surrey, at last.
+
+"I have seen its equal," she answered, very quietly, yet with a shiver
+of excitement in the tones.
+
+"When? where? how? I will take a journey to look at him. Who is he?
+where did he grow?"
+
+For response she put her hand into the pocket of her gown, and took out
+a velvet case. What could there be in that little blue thing to cause
+such emotion? As Surrey saw it in her hand, he grew hot, then cold, then
+fiery hot again. In an instant by this chill, this heat, this pain, his
+heart was laid bare to his own inspection. In an instant he knew that
+his arms would be empty did they hold a universe in which Francesca
+Ercildoune had no part, and that with her head on his heart the world
+might lapse from him unheeded; and, with this knowledge, she held
+tenderly and caressingly, as he saw, another man's picture in her hand.
+
+His own so shook that he could scarcely take the case from her, to open
+it; but, opened, his eyes devoured what was under them.
+
+A half-length,--the face and physique superb. Of what color were the
+hair and eyes the neutral tints of the picture gave no hint; the brow
+princely, breaking the perfect oval of the face; eyes piercing and full;
+the features rounded, yet clearly cut; the mouth with a curious
+combination of sadness and disdain. The face was not young, yet it was
+so instinct with magnificent vitality that even the picture impressed
+one more powerfully than most living men, and one involuntarily
+exclaimed on beholding it, "This man can never grow old, and death must
+here forego its claim!"
+
+Looking up from it with no admiration to express for the face, he saw
+Francesca's smiling on it with a sort of adoration, as she, reclaiming
+her property, said,--
+
+"My father's old friends have a great deal of enjoyment, and amusement
+too, from his beauty. One of them was the other day telling me of the
+excessive admiration people had always shown, and laughingly insisted
+that when papa was a young man, and appeared in public, in London or
+Paris, it was between two police officers to keep off the admiring
+crowd; and," laughing a gay little laugh herself, "of course I believed
+him! why shouldn't I?"
+
+He was looking at the picture again. "What an air of command he has!"
+
+"Yes. I remember hearing that when Daniel Webster was in London, and
+walked unattended through the streets, the coal-heavers and workmen took
+off their hats and stood bareheaded till he had gone by, thinking it was
+royalty that passed. I think they would do the same for papa."
+
+"If he looks like a king, I know somebody who looks like a princess,"
+thought the happy young fellow, gazing down upon the proud, dainty
+figure by his side; but he smiled as he said, "What a little aristocrat
+you are, Miss Ercildoune! what a pity you were born a Yankee!"
+
+"I am not a Yankee, Mr. Surrey," replied the little aristocrat, "if to
+be a Yankee is to be a native of America. I was born on the sea."
+
+"And your mother, I know, was English."
+
+"Yes, she was English."
+
+"Is it rude to ask if your father was the same?
+
+"No!" she answered emphatically, "my papa is a Virginian,--a Virginia
+gentleman,"--the last word spoken with an untransferable accent,--"there
+are few enough of them."
+
+"So, so!" thought Willie, "here my riddle is read.
+Southern--Virginia--gentleman. No wonder she has no love to spend on
+country or flag; no wonder we couldn't agree. And yet it can't be
+that,--what were the first words I ever heard from her mouth?" and,
+remembering that terrible denunciation of the "peculiar institution" of
+Virginia and of the South, he found himself puzzled the more.
+
+Just then there came into the picture-gallery, where they were wasting a
+pleasant morning, a young man to whom Surrey gave the slightest of
+recognitions,--well-dressed, booted, and gloved, yet lacking the
+nameless something which marks the gentleman. His glance, as it rested
+on Surrey, held no love, and, indeed, was rather malignant.
+
+"That fellow," said Surrey, indicating him, "has a queer story connected
+with him. He was discharged from my father's employ to give place to a
+man who could do his work better; and the strange part of it"--he
+watched her with an amused smile to see what effect the announcement
+would have upon her Virginia ladyship--"is that number two is a black
+man."
+
+A sudden heat flushed her cheeks: "Do you tell me your father made room
+for a black man in his employ, and at the expense of a white one?"
+
+"It is even so."
+
+"Is he there now?"
+
+Surrey's beautiful Saxon face crimsoned. "No: he is not," he said
+reluctantly.
+
+"Ah! did he, this black man,--did he not do his work well?"
+
+"Admirably."
+
+"Is it allowable, then, to ask why he was discarded?"
+
+"It is allowable, surely. He was dismissed because the choice lay
+between him and seven hundred men."
+
+"And you"--her face was very pale now, the flush all gone out of
+it--"you have nothing to do with your father's works, but you are his
+son,--did you do naught? protest, for instance?"
+
+"I protested--and yielded. The contest would have been not merely with
+seven hundred men, but with every machinist in the city. Justice
+_versus_ prejudice, and prejudice had it; as, indeed, I suppose it will
+for a good many generations to come: invincible it appears to be in the
+American mind."
+
+"Invincible! is it so?" She paused over the words, scrutinizing him
+meanwhile with an unconscious intensity.
+
+"And this black man,--what of him? He was flung out to starve and die;
+a proper fate, surely, for his presumption. Poor fool! how did he dare
+to think he could compete with his masters! You know nothing of _him _?"
+
+Surely he must be mistaken. What could this black man, or this matter,
+be to her? yet as he listened her voice sounded to his ear like that of
+one in mortal pain. What held him silent? Why did he not tell her, why
+did he not in some way make her comprehend, that he, delicate exclusive,
+and patrician, as the people of his set thought him, had gone to this
+man, had lifted him from his sorrow and despondency to courage and hope
+once more; had found him work; would see that the place he strove to
+fill in the world should be filled, could any help of his secure that
+end. Why did the modesty which was a part of him, and the high-bred
+reserve which shrank from letting his own mother know of the good deeds
+his life wrought, hold him silent now?
+
+In that silence something fell between them. What was it? But a moment,
+yet in that little space it seemed to him as though continents divided
+them, and seas rolled between. "Francesca!" he cried, under his
+breath,--he had never before called her by her Christian
+name,--"Francesca!" and stretched out his hand towards her, as a
+drowning man stretches forth his hand to life.
+
+"This room is stifling!" she said for answer; and her voice, dulled and
+unnatural, seemed to his strangely confused senses as though it came
+from a far distance,--"I am suffering: shall we go out to the air?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+ "_But more than loss about me clings._"
+
+ Jean Ingelow
+
+
+"No! no, I am mad to think it! I must have been dreaming! what could
+there have been in that talk to have such an effect as I have conjured
+up? She pitied Franklin! yes, she pities every one whom she thinks
+suffering or wronged. Dear little tender heart! of course it was the
+room,--didn't she say she was ill? it must have been awful; the heat and
+the closeness got into my head,--that's it. Bad air is as bad as whiskey
+on a man's brain. What a fool I made of myself! not even answering her
+questions. What did she think of me? Well."
+
+Surrey in despair pushed away the book over which he had been bending
+all the afternoon, seeing for every word Francesca, and on every page an
+image of her face. "I'll smoke myself into some sort of decent quiet,
+before I go up town, at least"; and taking his huge meerschaum,
+settling himself sedately, began his quieting operation with appalling
+energy. The soft rings, gray and delicate, taking curious and airy
+shapes, floated out and filled the room; but they were not soothing
+shapes, nor ministering spirits of comfort. They seemed filmy garments,
+and from their midst faces beautiful, yet faint and dim, looked at him,
+all of them like unto her face; but when he dropped his pipe and bent
+forward, the wreaths of smoke fell into lines that made the faces appear
+sad and bathed in tears, and the images faded from his sight.
+
+As the last one, with its visionary arms outstretched towards him,
+receded from him, and disappeared, he thought, "That is Francesca's
+spirit, bidding me an eternal adieu"--and, with the foolish thought, in
+spite of its foolishness, he shivered and stretched out his arms in
+return.
+
+"Of a verity," he then cried, "if nature failed to make me an idiot, I
+am doing my best to consummate that end, and become one of free choice.
+What folly possesses me? I will dissipate it at once,--I will see her in
+bodily shape,--that will put an end to such fancies,"--starting up, and
+beginning to pull on his gloves.
+
+"No! no, that will not do,"--pulling them off again. "She will think I
+am an uneasy ghost that pursues her. I must wait till this evening, but
+ah, what an age till evening!"
+
+Fortunately, all ages, even lovers' ages, have an end. The evening came;
+he was at the Fifth Avenue,--his card sent up,--his feet impatiently
+travelling to and fro upon the parlor carpet,--his heart beating with
+happiness and expectancy. A shadow darkened the door; he flew to meet
+the substance,--not a sweet face and graceful form, but a servant, big
+and commonplace, bringing him his own card and the announcement, "The
+ladies is both out, sir."
+
+"Impossible! take it up again."
+
+He said "impossible" because Francesca had that morning told him she
+would be at home in the evening.
+
+"All right, sir; but it's no use, for there's nobody there, I know"; and
+he vanished for a second attempt, unsuccessful as the first. Surrey went
+to the office, still determinedly incredulous.
+
+"Are Mrs. Lancaster and Miss Ercildoune not in?"
+
+"No, sir; both out. Keys here,"--showing them. "Left for one of the
+five-o'clock trains; rooms not given up; said they would be back in a
+few days."
+
+"From what depot did they leave?"
+
+"Don't know, sir. They didn't go in the coach; had a carriage, or I
+could tell you."
+
+"But they left a note, perhaps,--or some message?"
+
+"Nothing at all, sir; not a word, nor a scrap. Can I serve you in any
+way further?"
+
+"Thanks! not at all. Good evening."
+
+"Good evening, sir."
+
+That was all. What did it mean?--to vanish without a sign! an engagement
+for the evening, and not a line left in explanation or excuse! It was
+not like her. There must be something wrong, some mystery. He tormented
+himself with a thousand fancies and fears over what, he confessed, was
+probably a mere accident; wisely determined to do so no longer,--but
+did, spite of such excellent resolutions and intent.
+
+This took place on the evening of Saturday, the 13th of April, 1861. The
+events of the next few days doubtless augmented his anxiety and
+unhappiness. Sunday followed,--a day filled not with a Sabbath calm, but
+with the stillness felt in nature before some awful convulsion; the
+silence preceding earthquake, volcano, or blasting storm; a quiet broken
+from Maine to the Pacific slope when the next day shone, and men roused
+themselves from the sleep of a night to the duty of a day, from the
+sleep of generations, fast merging into death, at the trumpet-call to
+arms,--a cry which sounded through every State and every household in
+the land, which, more powerful than the old songs of Percy and Douglas,
+"brought children from their play, and old men from their
+chimney-corners," to emulate humanity in its strength and prime, and
+contest with it the opportunity to fight and die in a deathless cause.
+
+A cry which said, "There are wrongs to be redressed already long enough
+endured,--wrongs against the flag of the nation, against the integrity
+of the Union, against the life of the republic; wrongs against the cause
+of order, of law, of good government, against right, and justice, and
+liberty, against humanity and the world; not merely in the present, but
+in the great future, its countless ages and its generations yet unborn."
+
+To this cry there sounded one universal response, as men dropped their
+work at loom, or forge, or wheel, in counting-room, bank, and merchant's
+store, in pulpit, office, or platform, and with one accord rushed to
+arms, to save these rights so frightfully and arrogantly assailed.
+
+One voice that went to swell this chorus was Surrey's; one hand quick to
+grasp rifle and cartridge-box, one soul eager to fling its body into the
+breach at this majestic call, was his. He felt to the full all the
+divine frenzy and passion of those first days of the war, days
+unequalled in the history of nations and of the world. All the elegant
+dilettanteism, the delicious idleness, the luxurious ease, fell away,
+and were as though they had never been. All the airy dreams of a renewed
+chivalrous age, of courage, of heroism, of sublime daring and
+self-sacrifice, took substance and shape, and were for him no longer
+visions of the night, but realities of the day.
+
+Still, while flags waved, drums beat, and cannon thundered; while
+friends said, "Go!" the world stood ready to cheer him on, and fame and
+honor and greater things than these beckoned him to come; while he felt
+the whirl and excitement of it all,--his heart cried ceaselessly, "Only
+let me see her--once--if but for a moment, before I go!" It was so
+little he asked of fate, yet too much to be granted.
+
+In vain he went every day, and many times a day, in the brief space left
+him, to her hotel. In vain he once more questioned clerk and servants;
+in vain haunted the house of his aunt, with the dim hope that Clara
+might hear from her, or that in some undefined way he might learn of
+her whereabouts, and so accomplish his desire.
+
+But the days passed, too slowly for the ardent young patriot, all too
+rapidly for the unhappy lover. Friday came. Early in the day multitudes
+of people began to collect in the street, growing in numbers and
+enthusiasm as the hours wore on, till, in the afternoon, the splendid
+thoroughfare of New York from Fourth Street down to the Cortlandt
+Ferry--a stretch of miles--was a solid mass of humanity; thousands and
+tens of thousands, doubled, quadrupled, and multiplied again.
+
+Through the morning this crowd in squads and companies traversed the
+streets, collected on the corners, congregating chiefly about the armory
+of their pet regiment, the Seventh, on Lafayette Square,--one great mass
+gazing unweariedly at its windows and walls, then moving on to be
+replaced by another of the like kind, which, having gone through the
+same performance, gave way in turn to yet others, eager to take its
+place.
+
+So the fever burned; the excitement continued and augmented till,
+towards three o'clock in the afternoon, the mighty throng stood still,
+and waited. It was no ordinary multitude; the wealth, refinement,
+fashion, the greatness and goodness of a vast city were there, pressed
+close against its coarser and darker and homelier elements. Men and
+women stood alike in the crowd, dainty patrician and toil-stained
+laborer, all thrilled by a common emotion, all vivified--if in unequal
+degree--by the same sublime enthusiasm. Overhead, from every window and
+doorway and housetop, in every space and spot that could sustain one, on
+ropes, on staffs, in human hands, waved, and curled, and floated, flags
+that were in multitude like the swells of the sea; silk, and bunting,
+and painted calico, from the great banner spreading its folds with an
+indescribable majesty, to the tiny toy shaken in a baby hand. Under all
+this glad and gay and splendid show, the faces seemed, perhaps by
+contrast, not sad, but grave; not sorrowful, but intense, and luminously
+solemn.
+
+Gradually the men of the Seventh marched out of their armory. Hands had
+been wrung, adieus said, last fond embraces and farewells given. The
+regiment formed in the open square, the crowd about it so dense as to
+seem stifling, the windows of its building rilled with the sweetest and
+finest and fairest of faces,--the mothers, wives, and sweethearts of
+these young splendid fellows just ready to march away.
+
+Surrey from his station gazed and gazed at the window where stood his
+mother, so well beloved, his relations and friends, many of them near
+and dear to him,--some of them with clear, bright eyes that turned from
+the forms of brothers in the ranks to seek his, and linger upon it
+wistfully and tenderly; yet looking at all these, even his mother, he
+looked beyond, as though in the empty space a face would appear, eyes
+would meet his, arms be stretched towards him, lips whisper a fond
+adieu, as he, breaking from the ranks, would take her to his embrace,
+and speak, at the same time, his love and farewell. A fruitless
+longing.
+
+Four o'clock struck over the great city, and the line moved out of the
+square, through Fourth Street, to Broadway. Then began a march, which
+whoso witnessed, though but a little child, will remember to his dying
+day, the story of which he will repeat to his children, and his
+children's children, and, these dead, it will be read by eyes that shall
+shine centuries hence, as one of the most memorable scenes in the great
+struggle for freedom.
+
+Hands were stretched forth to touch the cloth of their uniforms, and
+kissed when they were drawn back. Mothers held up their little children
+to gain inspiration for a lifetime. A roar of voices, continuous,
+unbroken, rent the skies; while, through the deafening cheers, men and
+women, with eyes blinded by tears, repeated, a million times, "God
+bless--God bless and keep them!" And so, down the magnificent avenue,
+through the countless, shouting multitude, through the whirlwind of
+enthusiasm and adoration, under the glorious sweep of flags, the grand
+regiment moved from the beginning of its march to its close,--till it
+was swept away towards the capital, around which were soon to roll such
+bloody waves of death.
+
+Meanwhile, where was Miss Ercildoune? Surrey had thought her behavior
+strange the last morning they spent together. How much stranger, how
+unaccountable, indeed, would it have seemed to him, could he have seen
+her through the afternoon following!
+
+"What is wrong with you? are you ill, Francesca?" her aunt had inquired
+as she came in, pulling off her hat with the air of one stifling, and
+throwing herself into a chair.
+
+"Ill! O no!"--with a quick laugh,--"what could have made you think so? I
+am quite well, thank you; but I will go to my room for a little while
+and rest. I think I am tired."
+
+"Do, dear, for I want you to take a trip up the Hudson this afternoon. I
+have to see some English people who are living at a little village a
+score of miles out of town, and then I must go on to Albany before I
+take you home. It will be pleasant at Tanglewood over the
+Sabbath,--unless you have some engagements to keep you here?"
+
+"O Aunt Alice, how glad I am! I was going home this afternoon without
+you. I thought you would come when you were ready; but this will do just
+as well,--anything to get out of town."
+
+"Anything to get out of town? why, Francesca, is it so hateful to you?
+'Going home! and this do almost as well!'--what does the child mean? is
+she the least little bit mad? I'm afraid so. She evidently needs some
+fresh country air, and rest from excitement. Go, dear, and take your
+nap, and refresh yourself before five o'clock; that is the time we
+leave."
+
+As the door closed between them, she shook her head dubiously. '"Going
+home this afternoon!' what does that signify? Has she been quarrelling
+with that young lover of hers, or refusing him? I should not care to ask
+any questions till she herself speaks; but I fear me something is
+wrong."
+
+She would not have feared, but been certain, could she have looked then
+and there into the next room. She would have seen that the trouble was
+something deeper than she dreamed. Francesca was sitting, her hands
+supporting an aching head, her large eyes fixed mournfully and immovably
+upon something which she seemed to contemplate with a relentless
+earnestness, as though forcing herself to a distressing task. What was
+this something? An image, a shadow in the air, which she had not evoked
+from the empty atmosphere, but from the depths of her own nature and
+soul,--the life and fate of a young girl. Herself! what cause, then, for
+mournful scrutiny? She, so young, so brilliant, so beautiful, upon whom
+fate had so kindly smiled, admired by many, tenderly and passionately
+loved by at least one heart,--surely it was a delightful picture to
+contemplate,--this life and its future; a picture to bring smiles to the
+lips, rather than tears to the eyes.
+
+Though, in fact, there were none dimming hers,--hot, dry eyes, full of
+fever and pain. What visions passed before them? what shadows of the
+life she inspected darkened them? what sunshine now and then fell upon
+it, reflecting itself in them, as she leaned forward to scan these
+bright spots, holding them in her gaze after other and gloomier ones had
+taken their places, as one leans forth from window or doorway to behold,
+long as possible, the vanishing form of some dear friend.
+
+Looking at these, she cried out, "Fool! to have been so happy, and not
+to have known what the happiness meant, and that it was not for
+me,--never for me! to have walked to the verge of an abyss,--to have
+plunged in, thinking the path led to heaven. Heaven for me! ah,--I
+forgot,--I forgot. I let an unconscious bliss seize me, possess me,
+exclude memory and thought,--lived in it as though it would endure
+forever."
+
+She got up and moved restlessly to and fro across the room, but
+presently came back to the seat she had abandoned, and to the inspection
+which, while it tortured her, she yet evidently compelled herself to
+pursue.
+
+"Come," she then said, "let us ask ourself some questions, constitute
+ourself confessor and penitent, and see what the result will prove."
+
+"Did you think fate would be more merciful to you than to others?"
+
+"No, I thought nothing about fate."
+
+"Did you suppose that he loved you sufficiently to destroy 'an
+invincible barrier?'"
+
+"I did not think of his love. I remembered no barrier. I only knew I was
+in heaven, and cared for naught beyond."
+
+"Do you see the barrier now?"
+
+"I do--I do."
+
+"Did _he_ help you to behold it; to discover, or to remember it? did he,
+or did he not?"
+
+"He did. Too true,--he did."
+
+"Does he love you?"
+
+"I--how should I know? his looks, his acts--I never thought--O Willie,
+Willie!"--her voice going out in a little gasping sob.
+
+"Come,--none of that. No sentiment,--face the facts. Think over all that
+was said, every word. Have you done so?"
+
+"I have,--every word."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Ah, stop torturing me. Do not ask me any more questions. I am going
+away,--flying like a coward. I will not tempt further suffering. And
+yet--once more--only once? could that do harm? Ah, God, my God, be
+merciful!" she cried, clasping her hands and lifting them above her
+bowed head. Then remembering, in the midst of her anguish, some words
+she had been reading that morning, she repeated them with a bitter
+emphasis,--"What can wringing of the hands do, that which is ordained to
+alter?" As she did so she tore asunder her clasped hands, to drop them
+clinched by her side,--the gesture of despair substituted for that of
+hope.
+
+"It is not Heaven I am to besiege!" she exclaimed. "Will I never learn
+that? Its justice cannot overcome the injustice of man. My God!" she
+cried then, with a sudden, terrible energy, "our punishment should be
+light, our rest sure, our paradise safe, at the end, since we have to
+make now such awful atonement; since men compel us to endure the pangs
+of purgatory, the tortures of hell, here upon earth."
+
+After that she sat for a long while silent, evidently revolving a
+thousand thoughts of every shape and hue, judging from the myriads of
+lights and shadows that flitted over her face. At last, rousing herself,
+she perceived that she had no more time to spend in this sorrowful
+employment,--that she must prepare to go away from him, as her heart
+said, forever. "Forever!" it repeated. "This, then, is the close of it
+all,--the miserable end!" With that thought she shut her slender hand,
+and struck it down hard, the blood almost starting from the driven nails
+and bruised flesh, unheeding; though a little space thereafter she
+smiled, beholding it, and muttered, "So--the drop of savage blood is
+telling at last!"
+
+Presently she was gone. It was a pleasant spot to which her aunt took
+her,--one of the pretty little villages scattered up and down the long
+sweep of the Hudson. Pleasant people they were too,--these English
+friends of Mrs. Lancaster,--who made her welcome, but did not intrude
+upon the solitude which they saw she desired.
+
+Sabbath morning they all went to the little chapel, and left her, as she
+wished, alone. Being so alone, after hearing their adieus, she went up
+to her room and sat down to devote herself once again to sorrowful
+contemplation,--not because she would, but because she must.
+
+Poor girl! the bright spring sunshine streamed over her where she
+sat;--not a cloud in the sky, not a dimming of mist or vapor on all the
+hills, and the broad river-sweep which, placid and beautiful, rolled
+along; the cattle far off on the brown fields rubbed their silky sides
+softly together, and gazed through the clear atmosphere with a lazy
+content, as though they saw the waving of green grass, and heard the
+rustle of wind in the thick boughs, so soon to bear their leafy burden.
+Stillness everywhere,--the blessed calm that even nature seems to feel
+on a sunny Sabbath morn. Stillness scarcely broken by the voices,
+mellowed and softened ere they reached her ear, chanting in the village
+church, to some sweet and solemn music, words spoken in infinite
+tenderness long ago, and which, through all the centuries, come with
+healing balm to many a sore and saddened heart: "Come unto me," the
+voices sang,--"come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and
+I will give you rest."
+
+"Ah, rest," she murmured while she listened,--"rest"; and with the
+repetition of the word the fever died out of her eyes, leaving them
+filled with such a look, more pitiful than any tears, as would have made
+a kind heart ache even to look at them; while her figure, alert and
+proud no longer, bent on the window ledge in such lonely and weary
+fashion that a strong arm would have involuntarily stretched out to
+shield it from any hardness or blow that might threaten, though the
+owner thereof were a stranger.
+
+There was something indescribably appealing and pathetic in her whole
+look and air. Outside the window stood a slender little bird which had
+fluttered there, spent and worn, and did not try to flit away any
+further. Too early had it flown from its southern abode; too early
+abandoned the warm airs, the flowers and leafage, of a more hospitable
+region, to find its way to a northern home; too early ventured into a
+rigorous clime; and now, shivering, faint, near to death, drooped its
+wings and hung its weary head, waiting for the end of its brief life to
+come.
+
+Francesca, looking up with woeful eyes, beheld it, and, opening the
+window, softly took it in. "Poor birdie!" she whispered, striving to
+warm it in her gentle hand and against her delicate cheek,--"poor little
+wanderer!--didst thou think to find thy mate, and build thy tiny nest,
+and be a happy mother through the long bright summer-time? Ah, my pet,
+what a sad close is this to all these pleasant dreams!"
+
+The frail little creature could not eat even the bits of crumbs which
+she put into its mouth, nor taste a drop of water. All her soothing
+presses failed to bring warmth and life to the tiny frame that presently
+stretched itself out, dead,--all its sweet songs sung, its brief, bright
+existence ended forever. "Ah, my little birdie, it is all over,"
+whispered Francesca, as she laid it softly down, and unconsciously
+lifted her hand to her own head with a self-pitying gesture that was
+sorrowful to behold.
+
+"Like me," she did not say; yet a penetrating eye looking at them--the
+slight bird lying dead, its brilliant plumage already dimmed, the young
+girl gazing at it--would perceive that alike these two were fitted for
+the warmth and sunshine, would perceive that both had been thwarted and
+defrauded of their fair inheritance, would perceive that one lay spent
+and dead in its early spring. What of the other?
+
+"Aunt Alice," said Francesca a few days after that, "can you go to New
+York this afternoon or to-morrow morning?"
+
+"Certainly, dear. I purposed returning to-day or early in the morning to
+see the Seventh march away. Of course you would like to be there."
+
+"Yes." She spoke slowly, and with seeming indifference. It was because
+she could scarcely control her voice to speak at all. "I should like to
+be there."
+
+Francesca knew, what her aunt did not, that Surrey was a member of the
+Seventh, and that he would march away with it to danger,--perhaps to
+death.
+
+So they were there, in a window overlooking the great avenue,--Mrs.
+Lancaster, foreigner though she was, thrilled to the heart's core by the
+magnificent pageant; Francesca straining her eyes up the long street,
+through the vast sea of faces, to fasten them upon just one face that
+she knew would presently appear in the throng.
+
+"Ah, heavens!" cried Mrs. Lancaster, "what a sight! look at those young
+men; they are the choice and fine of the city. See, see! there is
+Hunter, and Winthrop, and Pursuivant, and Mortimer, and Shaw, and
+Russell, and, yes--no--it is, over there--your friend, Surrey, himself.
+Did you know, Francesca?"
+
+Francesca did not reply. Mrs. Lancaster turned to see her lying white
+and cold in her chair. Endurance had failed at last.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+ "_The plain, unvarnished tale of my whole course of love._"
+
+ Shakespeare
+
+
+"What a handsome girl that is who always waits on us!" Francesca had
+once said to Clara Russell, as they came out of Hyacinth's with some
+dainty laces in their hands.
+
+"Very," Clara had answered.
+
+The handsome girl was Sallie.
+
+At another time Francesca, admiring some particular specimen of the
+pomps and vanities with which the store was crowded, was about carrying
+it away, but first experimented as to its fit.
+
+"O dear!" she cried, in dismay, "it is too short, and"--rummaging
+through the box--"there is not another like it, and it is the only one I
+want."
+
+"How provoking!" sympathized Clara.
+
+"I could very easily alter that," said Sallie, who was behind the
+counter; "I make these up for the shop, and I'll be glad to fix this for
+you, if you like it so much."
+
+"Thanks. You are very kind. Can you send it up to-morrow?"
+
+"This evening, if you wish it."
+
+"Very good; I shall be your debtor."
+
+"Well!" exclaimed Clara, as they turned away, this is the first time in
+all my shopping I ever found a girl ready to put herself out to serve
+one. They usually act as if they were conferring the most overwhelming
+favor by condescending to wait upon you at all."
+
+"Why, Clara, I'm sure I always find them civil."
+
+"I know they seem devoted to you. I wonder why. Oh!"--laughing and
+looking at her friend with honest admiration,--"it must be because you
+are so pretty."
+
+"Excellent,--how discerning you are!" smiled Francesca, in return.
+
+If Clara had had a little more discernment, she would have discovered
+that what wrought this miracle was a friendly courtesy, that never
+failed to either equal or subordinate.
+
+Six weeks after the Seventh had marched out of New York, Francesca,
+sitting in her aunt's room, was roused from evidently painful thought by
+the entrance of a servant, who announced, "If you please, a young woman
+to see you."
+
+"Name?"
+
+"She gave none, miss."
+
+"Send her up."
+
+Sallie came in. "Bird of Paradise" Francesca had called her more than
+once, she was so dashing and handsome; but the title would scarcely fit
+now, for she looked poor, and sad, and woefully dispirited.
+
+"Ah, Miss Sallie, is it you? Good morning."
+
+"Good morning, Miss Ercildoune." She stood, and looked as though she had
+something important to say. Presently Francesca had drawn it from
+her,--a little story of her own sorrows and troubles.
+
+"The reason I have come to you, Miss Ercildoune, when you are so nearly
+a stranger, is because you have always been so kind and pleasant to me
+when I waited on you at the store, and I thought you'd anyway listen to
+what I have to say."
+
+"Speak on, Sallie."
+
+"I've been at Hyacinth's now, over four years, ever since I left school.
+It's a good place, and they paid me well, but I had to keep two people
+out of it, my little brother Frank and myself; Frank and I are orphans.
+And I'm very fond of dress; I may as well confess that at once. So the
+consequence is, I haven't saved a cent against a rainy day. Well,"
+blushing scarlet, "I had a lover,--the best heart that ever beat,--but I
+liked to flirt, and plague him a little, and make him jealous; and at
+last he got dreadfully so about a young gentleman,--a Mr. Snipe, who was
+very attentive to me,--and talked to me about it in a way I didn't
+like. That made me worse. I don't know what possessed me; but after that
+I went out with Mr. Snipe a great deal more, to the theatre and the
+like, and let him spend his money on me, and get things for me, as
+freely as he chose. I didn't mean any harm, indeed I didn't,--but I
+liked to go about and have a good time; and then it made Jim show how
+much he cared for me, which, you see, was a great thing to me; and so
+this went on for a while, till Jim gave me a real lecture, and I got
+angry and wouldn't listen to anything he had to say, and sent him away
+in a huff"--here she choked--"to fight; to the war; and O dear! O dear!"
+breaking down utterly, and hiding her face in her shawl, "he'll be
+killed,--I know he will; and oh! what shall I do? My heart will break, I
+am sure."
+
+Francesca came and stood by her side, put her hand gently on her
+shoulder, and stroked her beautiful hair. "Poor girl!" she said, softly,
+"poor girl!" and then, so low that even Sallie could not hear, "You
+suffer, too: do we all suffer, then?"
+
+Presently Sallie looked up, and continued: "Up to that time, Mr. Snipe
+hadn't said anything to me, except that he admired me very much, and
+that I was pretty, too pretty to work so hard, and that I ought to live
+like a lady, and a good deal more of that kind of talk that I was silly
+enough to listen to; but when he found Jim was gone, first, he made fun
+of him for 'being such a great fool as to go and be shot at for
+nothing,' and then he--O Miss Ercildoune, I can't tell you what he
+said; it makes me choke just to think of it. How dared he? what had I
+done that he should believe me such a thing as that? I don't know what
+words I used when I did find them, and I don't care, but they must have
+stung. I can't tell you how he looked, but it was dreadful; and he said,
+'I'll bring down that proud spirit of yours yet, my lady. I'm not
+through with you,--don't think it,--not by a good deal'; and then he
+made me a fine bow, and laughed, and went out of the room.
+
+"The next day Mr. Dodd--that's one of our firm--gave me a week's notice
+to quit: 'work was slack,' he said, 'and they didn't want so many
+girls.' But I'm just as sure as sure can be that Mr. Snipe's at the
+bottom of it, for I've been at the store, as I told you, four years and
+more, and they always reckoned me one of their best hands, and Mr. Dodd
+and Mr. Snipe are great friends. Since then I've done nothing but try to
+get work. I must have been into a thousand stores, but it's true work is
+slack; there's not a thing been doing since the war commenced, and I
+can't get any place. I've been to Miss Russell and some of the ladies
+who used to come to the store, to see if they'd give me some fine
+sewing; but they hadn't any for me, and I don't know what in the world
+to do, for I understand nothing very well but to sew, and to stand in a
+store. I've spent all my money, what little I had, and--and--I've even
+sold some of my clothes, and I can't go on this way much longer. I
+haven't a relative in the world; nor a home, except in a boarding-house;
+and the girls I know all treat me cool, as though I had done something
+bad, because I've lost my place, I suppose, and am poor.
+
+"All along, at times, Mr. Snipe has been sending me things,--bouquets,
+and baskets of fruit, and sometimes a note, and, though I won't speak to
+him when I meet him on the street, he always smiles and bows as if he
+were intimate; and last night, when I was coming home, tired enough from
+my long search, he passed me and said, with such a look, 'You've gone
+down a peg or two, haven't you, Sallie? Come, I guess we'll be friends
+again before long.' You think it's queer I'm telling you all this. I
+can't help it; there's something about you that draws it all out of me.
+I came to ask you for work, and here I've been talking all this while
+about myself. You must excuse me; I don't think I would have said so
+much, if you hadn't looked so kind and so interested"; and so she
+had,--kind as kind could be, and interested as though the girl who
+talked had been her own sister.
+
+"I am glad you came, Sallie, and glad that you told me all this, if it
+has been any relief to you. You may be sure I will do what I can for
+you, but I am afraid that will not be a great deal, here; for I am a
+stranger in New York, and know very few people. Perhaps--Would you go
+away from here?"
+
+"Would I?--O wouldn't I? and be glad of the chance. I'd give anything to
+go where I couldn't get sight or sound of that horrid Snipe. Can't I go
+with you, Miss Ercildoune?"
+
+"I have no counter behind which to station you," said Francesca,
+smiling.
+
+"No, I know,--of course; but"--looking at the daintily arrayed
+figure--"you have plenty of elegant things to make, and I can do pretty
+much anything with my needle, if you'd like to trust me with some work.
+And then--I'm ashamed to ask so much of you, but a few words from you to
+your friends, I'm sure, would send me all that I could do, and more."
+
+"You think so?" Miss Ercildoune inquired, with a curious intonation to
+her voice, and the strangest expression darkening her face. "Very well,
+it shall be tried."
+
+Sallie was nonplussed by the tone and look, but she comprehended the
+closing words fully and with delight. "You will take me with you," she
+cried. "O, how good, how kind you are! how shall I ever be able to thank
+you?"
+
+"Don't thank me at all," said Miss Ercildoune, "at least not now. Wait
+till I have done something to deserve your gratitude."
+
+But Sallie was not to be silenced in any such fashion, and said her say
+with warmth and meaning; then, after some further talk about time and
+plans, went away carrying a bit of work which Miss Ercildoune had found,
+or made, for her, and for which she had paid in advance.
+
+"God bless her!" thought Sallie; "how nice and how thoughtful she is!
+Most ladies, if they'd done anything for me, would have given me some
+money and made a beggar of me, and I should have felt as mean as
+dish-water. But now"--she patted her little bundle and walked down the
+street, elated and happy.
+
+Francesca watched her out of the door with eyes that presently filled
+with tears. "Poor girl!" she whispered; "poor Sallie! her lover has gone
+to the wars with a shadow between them. Ah, that must not be; I must try
+to bring them together again, if he loves her dearly and truly. He might
+die,"--she shuddered at that,--"die, as other men die, in the heat and
+flame of battle. My God! my God! how shall I bear it? Dead! and without
+a word! Gone, and he will never know how well I love him! O Willie,
+Willie! my life, my love, my darling, come back, come back to me."
+
+Vain cry!--he cannot hear. Vain lifting of an agonized face, beautiful
+in its agony!--he cannot see. Vain stretching forth of longing hands and
+empty arms!--he is not there to take them to his embrace. Carry thy
+burden as others have carried it before thee, and learn what multitudes,
+in times past and in time present, have learned,--the lesson of
+endurance when happiness is denied, and of patience and silence when joy
+has been withheld. Go thou thy way, sorrowful and suffering soul, alone;
+and if thy own heart bleeds, strive thou to soothe its pangs, by
+medicining the wounds and healing the hurts of another.
+
+A few days thereafter, when Miss Ercildoune went over to Philadelphia,
+Sallie and Frank bore her company. She had become as thoroughly
+interested in them as though she had known and cared for them for a long
+while; and as she was one who was incapable of doing in an imperfect or
+partial way aught she attempted, and whose friendship never stopped
+short with pleasant sounding words, this interest had already bloomed
+beautifully, and was fast ripening into solid fruit.
+
+She had written in advance to desire that certain preparations should be
+made for her _protégés_,--preparations which had been faithfully
+attended to; and thus, reaching a strange city, they felt themselves not
+strangers, since they had a home ready to receive them, and this
+excellent friend by their side.
+
+The home consisted of two rooms, neat, cheerful, high up,--"the airier
+and healthier for that," as Sallie decided when she saw them.
+
+"I believe everything is in order," said the good-natured-looking old
+lady, the mistress of the establishment. "My lodgers are all gentlemen
+who take their meals out, and I shall be glad of some company. Any one
+whom Friend Comstock recommends will be all right, I know."
+
+As Mrs. Healey's style of designation indicated, Friend Comstock was a
+Quakeress, well known, greatly esteemed, an old friend of Miss
+Ercildoune, and of Miss Ercildoune's father. She it was to whom
+Francesca had written, and who had found this domicile for the
+wanderers, and who at the outset furnished Sallie with an abundance of
+fine and dainty sewing. Indeed, without giving the matter special
+thought, she was surprised to discover that, with one or two exceptions,
+the people Miss Ercildoune sent her were of the peaceful and quiet
+sect. This bird of brilliant plumage seemed ill assorted with the
+sober-hued flock.
+
+She found in this same bird a helper in more ways than one. It was not
+alone that she gave her employment and paid her well, nor that she sent
+her others able and willing to do the same. She found Frankie a good
+school, and saw him properly installed. She never came to them
+empty-handed; through the long, hot summer-time she brought them fruit
+and flowers from her home out of town; and when she came not herself, if
+the carriage was in the city it stopped with these same delightful
+burdens. Sallie declared her an angel, and Frank, with his mouth stuffed
+full, stood ready to echo the assertion.
+
+So the heated term wore away,--before it ended, telling heavily on
+Sallie. Her anxiety about Jim, her close confinement and constant work,
+the fever everywhere in the spiritual air through that first terrible
+summer of the war, bore her down.
+
+"You need rest," said Miss Ercildoune to her one day, looking at her
+with kindly solicitude,--"rest, and change, and fresh air, and freedom
+from care. I can't give you the last, but I can the first if you will
+accept them. You need some country living."
+
+"O Miss Ercildoune, will you let me do your work at your own home? I
+know it would do me good just to be under the same roof with you, and
+then I should have all the things you speak of combined and another one
+added. If you only will!"
+
+This was not the plan Francesca had proposed to herself. She had
+intended sending Sallie away to some pleasant country or seaside place,
+till she was refreshed and ready to come to her work once more. Sallie
+did not know what to make of the expression of the face that watched
+her, nor of the exclamation, "Why not? let me try her." But she had not
+long to consider, for Miss Ercildoune added, "Be it so. I will send in
+for you to-morrow, and you shall stay till you are better and stronger,
+or--till you please to come home,"--the last words spoken in a bitter
+and sorrowful tone.
+
+The next day Sallie found her way to the superb home of her employer.
+Superb it was, in every sense. Never before had she been in such a
+delightful region, never before realized how absolutely perfect breeding
+sets at ease all who come within the charm of its magic
+sphere,--employed, acquaintance, or friend.
+
+There was a shadow, however, in this house,--a shadow, the premonition
+of which she had seen more than once on the face of its mistress ere she
+ever beheld her home; a shadow to which, for a few days, she had no
+clew, but which was suddenly explained by the arrival of the master of
+this beautiful habitation; a shadow from which most people would have
+fled as from the breath of a pestilence, or the shade of the tomb; nay,
+one from which, but a few short months before, Sallie herself would have
+sped with feet from which she would have shaken the very dust of the
+threshold when she was beyond its doors,--but not now. Now, as she
+beheld it, she sat still to survey it, with surprise that deepened into
+indignation and compassion, that many a time filled her eyes with tears,
+and brought an added expression of respect to her voice when she spoke
+to these people who seemed to have all the good things that this world
+can offer, upon whom fortune had expended her treasures, yet--
+
+Whatever it was, Sallie came from that home with many an old senseless
+prejudice destroyed forever, with a new thought implanted in her soul,
+the blossoming of which was a noxious vapor in the nostrils of some who
+were compelled to inhale it, but as a sweet-smelling savor to more than
+one weary wayfarer, and to that God to whom the darkness and the light
+are alike, and who, we are told by His own word, is no respecter of
+persons.
+
+"Poor, dear Miss Ercildoune!" half sobbed, half scolded Sallie, as she
+sat at her work, blooming and, fresh, the day after her return. "What a
+tangled thread it is, to be sure," jerking at her knotty needleful.
+"Well, I know what I'll do,--I'll treat her as if she was a queen born
+and crowned, just so long as I have anything to do with her,--so I
+will." And she did.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+ "_For hearts of truest mettle
+ Absence doth join, and time doth settle._"
+
+ Anonymous
+
+
+It were a vain endeavor to attempt the telling of what filled the heart
+and soul of Surrey, as he marched away that day from New York, and
+through the days and weeks and months that followed. Fired by a sublime
+enthusiasm for his country; thirsting to drink of any cup her hand might
+present, that thus he might display his absolute devotion to her cause;
+burning with indignation at the wrongs she had suffered; thrilled with
+an adoring love for the idea she embodied; eager to make manifest this
+love at whatever cost of pain and sorrow and suffering to
+himself,--through all this the man never once was steeped in
+forgetfulness in the soldier; the divine passion of patriotism never
+once dulled the ache, or satisfied the desire, or answered the prayer,
+or filled the longing heart, that through the day marches and the night
+watches cried, and would not be appeased, for his darling.
+
+"Surely," he thought as he went down Broadway, as he reflected, as he
+considered the matter a thousand times thereafter,--"surely I was a fool
+not to have spoken to her then; not to have seen her, have devised, have
+forced some way to reach her, not to have met her face to face, and told
+her all the love with which she had filled my heart and possessed my
+soul. And then to have been such a coward when I did write to her, to
+have so said a say which was nothing"; and he groaned impatiently as he
+thought of the scene in his room and the letter which was its final
+result.
+
+How he had written once, and again, and yet again, letters short and
+long, letters short and burning, or lengthy and filled almost to the
+final line with delicate fancies and airy sentiment, ere he ventured to
+tell that of which all this was but the prelude; how, at the conclusion
+of each attempt, he had watched these luminous effusions blaze and burn
+as he regularly committed them to the flames; how he found it difficult
+to decide which he enjoyed the most,--writing them out, or seeing them
+burn; how at last he had put upon paper some such words as these:--
+
+"After these delightful weeks and months of intercourse, I am to go away
+from you, then, without a single word of parting, or a solitary sentence
+of adieu. Need I tell you how this pains me? I have in vain besieged the
+house that has held you; in vain made a thousand inquiries, a thousand
+efforts to discover your retreat and to reach your side, that I might
+once more see your face and take your hand ere I went from the sight and
+touch of both, perchance forever. This I find may not be. The hour
+strikes, and in a little space I shall march away from the city to which
+my heart clings with infinite fondness, since it is filled with
+associations of you. I have again and again striven to write that which
+will be worthy the eyes that are to read, and striven in vain. 'Tis a
+fine art to which I do not pretend. Then, in homely phrase, good by.
+Give me thy spiritual hand, and keep me, if thou wilt, in thy gentle
+remembrance. Adieu! a kind adieu, my friend; may the brighter stars
+smile on thee, and the better angels guard thy footsteps wherever thou
+mayst wander, keep thy heart and spirit bright, and let thy thoughts
+turn kindly back to me, I pray very, very often. And so, once more,
+farewell."
+
+Remembering all this, thinking what he would do and say were the doing
+and saying yet possible in an untried future, the time sped by. He
+waited and waited in vain. He looked, yet was gratified by no sight for
+which his eyes longed. He hoped, till hope gave place to despondency and
+almost despair: not a word came to him, not a line of answer or
+remembrance. This long silence was all the more intolerable, since the
+time that intervened did but the more vividly stamp upon his memory the
+delights of the past, and color with softer and more exquisite tints the
+recollection of vanished hours,--hours spent in galloping gayly by her
+side in the early morning, or idly and deliciously lounged away in
+picture-galleries or concert-rooms, or in a conversation carried on in
+some curious and subtle shape between two hearts and spirits with the
+help of very few uttered words; hours in which he had whirled her
+through many a fairy maze and turn of captivating dance-music, or in
+some less heated and crowded room, or cool conservatory, listened to the
+voice of the siren who walked by his side, "while the sweet wind did
+gently kiss the flowers and make no noise," and the strains of "flute,
+violin, bassoon," and the sounds of the "dancers dancing in tune,"
+coming to them on the still air of night, seemed like the sounds from
+another and a far-off world,--listened, listened, listened, while his
+silver-tongued enchantress builded castles in the air, or beguiled his
+thought, enthralled his heart, his soul and fancy, through many a golden
+hour.
+
+Thinking of all this, his heart well found expression for its feelings
+in the half-pleasing, half-sorrowful lines which almost unconsciously
+repeated themselves again and again in his brain:--
+
+ "Still o'er those scenes my memory wakes,
+ And fondly broods with miser care;
+ Time but the impression deeper makes,
+ As streams their channels deeper wear."
+
+Thinking of all this, he took comfort in spite of his trouble.
+"Perhaps," he said to himself, "he was mistaken. Perhaps"--O happy
+thought!--it was but make-believe displeasure which had so tortured
+him. Perhaps--yes, he would believe it--she had never received his
+letter; they had been careless, they had failed to give it her or to
+send it aright. He would write her once again, in language which would
+relieve his heart, and which she must comprehend. He loved her; perhaps,
+ah, perhaps she loved him a little in return: he would believe so till
+he was undeceived, and be infinitely happy in the belief.
+
+Is it not wondrous how even the tiniest grain of love will permeate the
+saddest and sorest recesses of the heart, and instantly cause it to
+pulsate with thoughts and emotions the sweetest and dearest in life? O
+Love, thou sweet, thou young and rose lipped cherubim, how does thy
+smile illuminate the universe! how does thy slightest touch electrify
+the soul! how gently and tenderly dost thou lead us up to heaven!
+
+With Surrey, to decide was to act. The second letter, full of sweetest
+yet intensest love,--his heart laid bare to her,--was written; was sent,
+enclosed in one to his aunt. Tom was away in another section, fighting
+manfully for the dear old flag, or the precious missive would have been
+intrusted to his care. He sent it thus that it might reach her sooner.
+Now that he had a fresh hope, he could not wait to write for her
+address, and forward it himself to her hands; he must adopt the
+speediest method of putting it in her possession.
+
+In a little space came answer from Mrs. Russell, enclosing the letter he
+had sent: a kindly epistle it was. He was a sort of idol with this same
+aunt, so she had put many things on paper that were steeped in
+gentleness and affection ere she said at the end, "I re-enclose your
+letter. I have seen Miss Ercildoune. She restores it to you; she
+implores you never to write her again,--to forget her. I add my
+entreaties to hers. She begs of me to beseech you not to try her by any
+further appeals, as she will but return them unopened." That was all.
+
+What could it mean? He loved her so absolutely, he had such exalted
+faith in her kindness, her gentleness, her fairness and superiority,--in
+_her_,--that he could not believe she would so thrust back his love,
+purely and chivalrously offered, with something that seemed like
+ignominy, unless she had a sufficient reason--or one she deemed
+such--for treating so cruelly him and the offering he laid at her feet.
+
+But she had spoken. It was for him, then, when she bade silence, to keep
+it; when she refused his gift, to refrain from thrusting it upon her
+attention and heart. But ah, the silence and the refraining! Ah, the
+time--the weary, sore, intolerable time--that followed! Summer, and
+autumn, and winter, and the seasons repeated once again, he tramped
+across the soil of Virginia, already wet with rebel and patriot blood;
+he felt the shame and agony of Bull Run; he was in the night struggle at
+Ball's Bluff, where those wondrous Harvard boys found it "sweet to die
+for their country," and discovered, for them, "death to be but one step
+onward in life." He lay in camp, chafing with impatience and
+indignation as the long months wore away, and the thousands of graves
+about Washington, filled by disease and inaction, made "all quiet along
+the Potomac." He went down to Yorktown; was in the sweat and fury of the
+seven days' fight; away in the far South, where fever and pestilence
+stood guard to seize those who were spared by the bullet and bayonet;
+and on many a field well lost or won. Through it all marching or
+fighting, sick, wounded thrice and again; praised, admired, heroic,
+promoted,--from private soldier to general,--through two years and more
+of such fiery experience, no part of the tender love was burned away,
+tarnished, or dimmed.
+
+Sometimes, indeed, he even smiled at himself for the constant thought,
+and felt that he must certainly be demented on this one point at least,
+since it colored every impression of his life, and, in some shape,
+thrust itself upon him at the most unseemly and foreign times.
+
+One evening, when the mail for the division came in, looking over the
+pile of letters, his eye was caught by one addressed to James Given. The
+name was familiar,--that of his father's old foreman, whom he knew to be
+somewhere in the army; doubtless the same man. Unquestionably, he
+thought, that was the reason he was so attracted to it; but why he
+should take up the delicate little missive, scan it again and again,
+hold it in his hand with the same touch with which he would have pressed
+a rare flower, and lay it down as reluctantly as he would have yielded a
+known and visible treasure,--that was the mystery. He had never seen
+Francesca's writing, but he stood possessed, almost assured, of the
+belief that this letter was penned by her hand; and at last parted with
+it slowly and unwillingly, as though it were the dear hand of which he
+mused; then took himself to task for this boyish weakness and folly.
+Nevertheless, he went in pursuit of Jim, not to question him,--he was
+too thorough a gentleman for that,--but led on partly by his desire to
+see a familiar face, partly by this folly, as he called it with a sort
+of amused disdain.
+
+Folly, however, it was not, save in such measure as the subtle
+telegraphings between spirit and spirit can be thus called. Unjustly so
+called they are, constantly; it being the habit of most people to
+denounce as heresy or ridicule as madness things too high for their
+sight or too deep for their comprehension. As these people would say,
+"oddly enough," or "by an extraordinary coincidence," this very letter
+was from Miss Ercildoune,--a letter which she wrote as she purposed, and
+as she well knew how to write, in behalf of Sallie. It was ostensibly on
+quite another theme; asking some information in regard to a comrade, but
+so cunningly devised and executed as to tell him in few words, and
+unsuspiciously, some news of Sallie,--news which she knew would delight
+his heart, and overthrow the little barrier which had stood between
+them, making both miserable, but which he would not, and she could not,
+clamber over or destroy. It did its work effectually, and made two
+hearts thoroughly happy,--this letter which had so strangely bewitched
+Surrey; which, in his heart, spite of the ridicule of his reason, he
+was so sure was hers; and which, indeed, was hers, though he knew not
+that till long afterward.
+
+"So," he thought, as he went through the camp, "Given is here, and near.
+I shall be glad to see a face from home, whatever kind of a face it may
+be, and Given's is a good one; it will be a pleasant rememberance."
+
+"Whither away?" called a voice behind him.
+
+"To the 29th," he answered the questioner, one of his officers and
+friends, who, coming up, took his arm,--"in pursuit of a man."
+
+"What's his name?"
+
+"Given,--christened James. What are you laughing at? do you know him?"
+
+"No, I don't know him, but I've heard some funny stories about him; he's
+a queer stick, I should think."
+
+"Something in that way.--Helloa! Brooks, back again?" to a fine,
+frank-looking young fellow,--"and were you successful?"
+
+"Yes, to both your questions. In addition I'll say, for your rejoicing,
+that I give in, cave, subside, have nothing more to say against your pet
+theory,--from this moment swear myself a rank abolitionist, or anything
+else you please, now and forever,--so help me all ye black gods and
+goddesses!"
+
+"Phew! what's all this?" cried Whittlesly, from the other side of his
+Colonel; "what are you driving at? I'll defy anybody to make head or
+tail of that answer."
+
+"Surrey understands."
+
+"Not I; your riddle's too much for me."
+
+"Didn't you go in pursuit of a dead man?" queried Whittlesly.
+
+"Just that."
+
+"Did the dead man convert you?"
+
+"No, Colonel, not precisely. And yet yes, too; that is, I suppose I
+shouldn't have been converted if he hadn't died, and I gone in search of
+him."
+
+"I believe it; you're such an obstinate case that you need one raised
+from the dead to have any effect on you."
+
+"Obstinate! O, hear the pig-headed fellow talk! You're a beauty to
+discourse on that point, aren't you!"
+
+"Surrey laughed, and stopped at the call of one of his men, who hailed
+him as he went by. Evidently a favorite here as in New York, in camp as
+at home; for in a moment he was surrounded by the men, who crowded about
+him, each with a question, or remark, to draw special attention to
+himself, and a word or smile from his commander. Whatever complaint they
+had to enter, or petition to make, or favor to beg, or wish to urge,
+whatever help they wanted or information they desired, was brought to
+him to solve or to grant, and--never being repulsed by their
+officer--they speedily knew and loved their friend. Thus it was that the
+two men standing at a little distance, watching the proceeding, were
+greatly amused at the motley drafts made upon his attention in the shape
+of tents, shoes, coats, letters to be sent or received, books borrowed
+and lent, a man sick, or a chicken captured. They brought their
+interests and cares to him,--these big, brown fellows,--as though they
+were children, and he a parent well beloved.
+
+"One might think him the father of the regiment," said Brooks, with a
+smile.
+
+"The mother, more like: it must be the woman element in him these
+fellows feel and love so."
+
+"Perhaps; but it would have another effect on them, if, for instance, he
+didn't carry that sabre-slash on his hand. They've seen him under steel
+and fire, and know where he's led them."
+
+"What is this you were joking about with him, a while ago?"
+
+"What! about turning abolitionist?"
+
+"Precisely."
+
+"O, you know he's rampant on the slavery question. I believe it's the
+only thing he ever loses his temper over, and he has lost it with me
+more than once. I've always been a rank heretic with regard to Cuffee,
+and the result was, we disagreed."
+
+"Yes, I know. But what connection has that with your expedition?"
+
+"Just what I want to know," added Surrey, coming up at the moment.
+
+"Ah! you're in time to hear the confession, are you?"
+
+"'An honest confession--'You know what the wise man says."
+
+"Come, don't flatter yourself we will think you so because you quote
+him. Be quiet, both of you, and let me go on to tell my tale."
+
+"Attention!"
+
+"Proceed!"
+
+"Thus, then. You understand what my errand was?"
+
+"Not exactly; Lieutenant Hunt was drowned somewhere, wasn't he?"
+
+"Yes: fell overboard from a tug; the men on board tried to save him, and
+then to recover his body, and couldn't do either. Some of his people
+came down here in pursuit of it, and I was detailed with a squad to help
+them in their search.
+
+"Well, the naval officers gave us every facility in their power; the
+river was dragged twice over, and the woods along-shore ransacked,
+hoping it might have been washed in and, maybe, buried; but there wasn't
+sight or trace of it. While we were hunting round we stumbled on a
+couple of darkies, who told us, after a bit of questioning, that darky
+number three, somewhere about, had found the body of a Federal officer
+on the river bank, and buried it. On that hint we acted, posted over to
+the fellow's shanty, and found, not him, but his wife, who was ready
+enough to tell us all she knew. She showed us some traps of the buried
+officer, among them a pair of spurs, which his brother recognized
+directly. When she was quite sure that we were all correct, and that the
+thing had fallen into the right hands, she fished out of some safe
+corner his wallet, with fifty-seven dollars in it. I confess I stared,
+for they were slaves, both of them, and evidently poor as Job's turkey,
+and it has always been one of my theories that a nigger invariably
+steals when he gets a chance. However, I wasn't going to give in at
+that."
+
+"Of course you weren't," said the Colonel. "Did you ever read about the
+man who was told that the facts did not sustain his theory, and of his
+sublime answer? 'Very well,' said he, 'so much the worse for the
+facts!'"
+
+"Come, Colonel, you talk too much. How am I ever to get on with my
+narrative, if you keep interrupting me in this style? Be quiet."
+
+"Word of command. Quiet. Quiet it is. Continue."
+
+"No, I said, of course they expect some reward,--that's it."
+
+"What an ass you must be!" broke in Whittlesly.
+
+"Hadn't you sense enough to see they could keep the whole of it, and
+nobody the wiser? and of course they couldn't have supposed any one was
+coming after it,--could they?
+
+"How am I to know what they thought? If you don't stop your comments,
+I'll stop the story; take your choice."
+
+"All right: go ahead."
+
+"While I was considering the case, in came the master of the mansion,--a
+thin, stooped, tired-looking little fellow,--'Sam,' he told us, was his
+name; then proceeded to narrate how he had found the body, and knew the
+uniform, and was kind and tender with it because of its dress, 'for you
+see, sah, we darkies is all Union folks'; how he had brought it up in
+the night, for fear of his Secesh master, and made a coffin for it, and
+buried it decently. After that he took us out to a little spot of fresh
+earth, covered with leaves and twigs, and, digging down, we came to a
+rough pine box made as well as the poor fellow knew how to put it
+together. Opening it, we found all that was left of poor Hunt,
+respectably clad in a coarse, clean white garment which Sam's wife had
+made as nicely as she could out of her one pair of sheets. 'It wa'n't
+much,' said the good soul, with tears in her eyes, 'it wa'n't much we's
+could do for him, but I washed him, and dressed him, peart as I could,
+and Sam and me, we buried him. We wished, both on us, that we could have
+done heaps more for him, but we did all that we could,'--which, indeed,
+was plain enough to be seen.
+
+"Before we went away, Sam brought from a little hole, which he burrowed
+in the floor of his cabin, a something, done up in dirty old rags; and
+when we opened it, what under the heavens do you suppose we found?
+You'll never guess. Three hundred dollars in bank-bills, and some
+important papers, which he had taken and hid,--concealed them even from
+his wife, because, he said, the guerillas often came round, and they
+might frighten her into giving them up if she knew they were there.
+
+"I collapsed at that, and stood with open mouth, watching for the next
+proceeding. I knew there was to be some more of it, and there was.
+Hunt's brother offered back half the money; _offered_ it! why, he tried
+to force it on the fellow, and couldn't. His master wouldn't let him
+buy himself and his wife,--I suspect, out of sheer cussedness,--and he
+hadn't any other use for money, he said. Besides, he didn't want to
+take, and wouldn't take, anything that looked like pay for doing aught
+for a 'Linkum sojer,' alive or dead.
+
+"'They'se going to make us all free, sometime,' he said, 'that's enough.
+Don't look like it, jest yet, I knows; but I lives in faith; it'll come
+byumby' When the fellow said that, I declare to you, Surrey, I felt like
+hiding my face. At last I began to comprehend what your indignation
+meant against the order forbidding slaves coming into our lines, and
+commanding their return when they succeed in entering. Just then we all
+seemed to me meaner than dirt."
+
+"As we are; and, as dirt, deserve to be trampled underfoot, beaten,
+defeated, till we're ready to stand up and fight like men in this
+struggle."
+
+"Amen to that, Colonel," added Whittlesly.
+
+"Well, I'm pretty nearly ready to say so myself," finished Brooks, half
+reluctantly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+ "_The best-laid schemes o' mice and men
+ Gang aft agley._"
+
+ BURNS
+
+
+They didn't find Jim in the camp of his regiment, so went up to
+head-quarters to institute inquiries.
+
+"Given?" a little thought and investigation. "Oh! Given is out on picket
+duty."
+
+"Whereabouts?"
+
+The direction indicated. "Thanks! we'll find him."
+
+Having commenced the search, Surrey was determined to end it ere he
+turned back, and his two friends bore him company. As they came down the
+road, they saw in the distance a great stalwart fellow, red-shirted and
+conspicuous, evidently absorbed in some singular task,--what they did
+not perceive, till, coming to closer quarters, they discovered, perched
+by his side, a tin cup filled with soap-suds, a pipe in his mouth, and
+that by the help of the two he was regaling himself with the pastime of
+blowing bubbles.
+
+"I'll wager that's Jim," said Surrey, before he saw his face.
+
+"It's like him, certainly: from what I've heard of him, I think he would
+die outright if he couldn't amuse himself in some shape."
+
+"Why, the fellow must be a curiosity worth coming here to see."
+
+"Pretty nearly."
+
+Surrey walked on a little in advance, and tapped him on the shoulder.
+Down came the pipe, up went the hand in a respectful military salute,
+but before it was finished he saw who was before him.
+
+"Wow!" he exclaimed, "if it ain't Mr. Willie Surrey. My! Ain't I glad to
+see you? How _do_ you do? The sight of you is as good as a month's pay."
+
+"Come, Given, don't stun me with compliments," cried Surrey, laughing
+and putting out his hand to grasp the big, red paw that came to meet it,
+and shake it heartily. "If I'd known you were over here, I'd have found
+you before, though my regiment hasn't been down here long."
+
+Jim at that looked sharply at the "eagles," and then over the alert,
+graceful person, finishing his inspection with an approving nod, and the
+emphatic declaration, "Well, if I know what's what, and I rayther reckon
+I do, you're about the right figger for an officer, and on the whole I'd
+sooner pull off my cap to you than any other fellow I've seen
+round,"--bringing his hand once more to the salute.
+
+"Why, Jim, you have turned courtier; army life is spoiling you,"
+protested the inspected one; protesting,--yet pleased, as any one might
+have been, at the evidently sincere admiration.
+
+"Nary time," Jim strenuously denied; and, these little courtesies being
+ended, they talked about enlistment, and home, and camp, and a score of
+things that interested officer and man alike. In the midst of the confab
+a dust was seen up the road, coming nearer, and presently out of it
+appeared a family carriage somewhat dilapidated and worse for wear, but
+still quite magnificent; enthroned on the back seat a fullblown F.F.V.
+with rather more than the ordinary measure of superciliousness belonging
+to his race; driven, of course, by his colored servant. Jim made for the
+middle of the road, and, holding his bayonet in such wise as to threaten
+at one charge horse, negro, and chivalry, roared out, "Tickets!"
+
+At such an extraordinary and unceremonious demand the knight flushed
+angrily, frowned, made an expressive gesture with his lips and his nose
+which suggestively indicated that there was something offensive in the
+air between the wind and his gentility, ending the pantomime by finding
+a pass and handing it over to his "nigger," then--not deigning to
+speak--motioned him and it to the threatening figure. As this black man
+came forward, Brooks, looking at him a moment, cried excitedly, "By
+Jove! it's Sam."
+
+"No? Hunt's Sam?"
+
+"Yes, the very same; and I suppose that's his cantankerous old master."
+
+Surrey ran forward to Jim, for the three had fallen back when the
+carriage came near, and said a few sentences to him quickly and
+earnestly.
+
+"All right, Colonel! just as you please," he replied. "You leave it to
+me; I'll fix him." Then, turning to Sam, who stood waiting, demanded,
+"Well, have you got it?"
+
+"Yes, massa."
+
+"Fork over,"--and looking at it a moment pronounced "All right! Move
+on!" elucidating the remark by a jerk at the coat-collar of the
+unsuspecting Sam, which sent him whirling up the road at a fine but
+uncomfortable rate of speed.
+
+"Now, sir, what do you want?" addressing the astounded chevalier, who
+sat speechlessly observant of this unlooked-for proceeding.
+
+"Want?" cried the irate Virginian, his anger loosening his tongue,
+"want? I want to go on, of course; that was my pass."
+
+"Was it now? I want to know! that's singular! Why didn't you offer it
+yourself then?"
+
+"Because I thought my nigger a fitter person to parley with a Lincoln
+vandal," loftily responded his eminence.
+
+"That's kind of you, I'm sure. Sorry I can't oblige you in
+return,--very; but you'll just have to turn tail and drive back again.
+That bit of paper says 'Pass the bearer,' and the bearer's already
+passed. You can't get two men through this picket on one man's pass, not
+if one is a nigger and t'other a skunk; so, sir, face about, march!"
+
+This was an unprepared-for dilemma. Mr. V. looked at the face of the
+"Lincoln vandal," but saw there no sign of relenting; then into the
+distance whither he was anxiously desirous to tend; glanced reflectively
+at the bayonet in the centre and the narrow space on either side the
+road; and finally called to his black man to come back.
+
+Sam approached with reluctance, and fell back with alacrity when the
+glittering steel was brandished towards his own breast.
+
+"Where's your pass, sirrah?" demanded Jim, with asperity.
+
+"Here, massa," said the chattel, presenting the same one which had
+already been examined.
+
+"Won't do," said Jim. "Can't come that game over this child. That passes
+you to Fairfax,--can't get any one from Fairfax on that ticket. Come,"
+flourishing the shooting-stick once more, "move along"; which Sam
+proceeded to do with extraordinary readiness.
+
+"Now, sir," turning to the again speechless chevalier, "if you stay here
+any longer, I shall take you under arrest to head-quarters:
+consequently, you'd better accept the advice of a disinterested friend,
+and make tracks, lively."
+
+By this time the scion of a latter-day chivalry seemed to comprehend the
+situation, seized his lines, wheeled about, and went off at a spanking
+trot over the "sacred soil,"--Jim shouting after him, "I say, Mr.
+F.F.V. if you meet any 'Lincoln vandals,' just give them my respects,
+will you?" to which as the knight gave no answer, we are left in doubt
+to this day whether Given's commission was ever executed.
+
+"There! my mind's relieved on that point," announced Jim, wiping his
+face with one hand and shaking the other after the retreating dust.
+"Mean old scoot! I'll teach him to insult one of our boys,--'Lincoln
+vandals' indeed! I'd like to have whanged him!" with a final shake and a
+final explosion, cooling off as rapidly as he had heated, and continuing
+the interrupted conversation with recovered temper and _sangfroid_.
+
+He was delighted at meeting Surrey, and Surrey was equally glad to see
+once more his old favorite, for Jim and he had been great friends when
+he was a little boy and had watched the big boy at work in his father's
+foundry,--a favoritism which, spite of years and changes, and wide
+distinctions of social position, had never altered nor cooled, and which
+showed itself now in many a pleasant shape and fashion so long as they
+were near together.
+
+They aided and abetted one another in more ways than one. Jim at
+Surrey's request, and by a plan of his proposing, succeeded in getting
+Sam's wife away from her home,--not from any liking for the expedition,
+or interest in either of the "niggers," as he stoutly asserted, but
+solely to please the Colonel. If that, indeed, were his only purpose, he
+succeeded to a charm, for when Surrey saw the two reunited, safe from
+the awful clutch of slavery, supplied with ample means for the journey
+and the settlement thereafter, and on their way to a good Northern home,
+he was more than pleased,--he was rejoiced, and said, "Thank God!" with
+all his heart, and reverently, as he watched them away.
+
+Before the summer ended Jim was down with what he called "a scratch"; a
+pretty ugly wound, the surgeon thought it, and the Colonel remembered
+and looked after him with unflagging interest and zeal. Many a book and
+paper, many a cooling drink and bit of fruit delicious to the parched
+throat and fevered lips, found their way to the little table by his
+side. Surrey was never too busy by reason of his duties, or among his
+own sick and wounded men, to find time for a chat, or a scrap of
+reading, or to write a letter for the prostrate and helpless fellow, who
+suffered without complaining, as, indeed, they did all about him, only
+relieving himself now and then by a suppressed growl.
+
+And so, with occasional episodes of individual interest, with marches
+and fightings, with extremes of heat and cold, of triumph and defeat,
+the long months wore away. These men were soldiers, each in his place in
+the great war with the record of which all the world is familiar, a tale
+written in blood, and flame, and tears,--terrible, yet heroic; ghastly,
+yet sublime. As soldiers in such a conflict, they did their duty and
+noble endeavor,--Jim, a nameless private in the ranks,--Surrey, not
+braver perchance, but so conspicuous with all the elements which fit for
+splendid command, so fortunate in opportunities for their display, so
+eminent in seizing them and using them to their fullest extent,
+regardless of danger and death, as to make his name known and honored by
+all who watched the progress of the fight, read its record with
+interest, and knew its heroes and leaders with pride and love.
+
+In the winter of '63 Jim's regiment was ordered away to South Carolina;
+and he who at parting looked with keen regret on the face of the man who
+had been so faithful and well tried a friend, would have looked upon it
+with something deeper and sadder, could he at the same time have gazed a
+little way into the future, and seen what it held in store for him.
+
+Four months after he marched away, Surrey's brigade was in that awful
+fight and carnage of Chancellorsville, where men fought like gods to
+counteract the blunders, and retrieve the disaster, induced by a stunned
+and helpless brain. There was he stricken down, at the head of his
+command, covered with dust and smoke; twice wounded, yet refusing to
+leave the field,--his head bound with a handkerchief, his eyes blazing
+like stars beneath its stained folds, his voice cheering on his men;
+three horses shot under him; on foot then; contending for every inch of
+the ground he was compelled to yield; giving way only as he was forced
+at the point of the bayonet; his men eager to emulate him, to follow him
+into the jaws of death, to fall by his side,--thus was he prostrated;
+not dead, as they thought and feared when they seized him and bore him
+at last from the field, but insensible, bleeding with frightful
+abundance, his right arm shattered to fragments; not dead, yet at
+death's door--and looking in.
+
+May blossoms had dropped, and June harvests were ripe on all the fields,
+ere he could take advantage of the unsolicited leave, and go home.
+Home--for which his heart longed!
+
+He was not, however, in too great haste to stop by the way, to pause in
+Washington, and do what he had sooner intended to accomplish,--solicit,
+as a special favor to himself, as an honor justly won by the man for
+whom he entreated it, a promotion for Jim. "It is impossible now," he
+was informed, "but the case should be noted and remembered. If anything
+could certainly secure the man an advance, it was the advocacy of
+General Surrey"; and so, not quite content, but still satisfied that
+Jim's time was in the near future, he went on his way.
+
+As the cars approached Philadelphia his heart beat so fast that it
+almost stifled him, and he leaned against the window heavily for air and
+support. It was useless to reason with himself, vain to call good
+judgment to his counsels and summon wisdom to his aid. This was her
+home. Somewhere in this city to which he was so rapidly hastening, she
+was moving up and down, had her being, was living and loving. After
+these long years his eyes so ached to see her, his heart was so hungry
+for her presence, that it seemed to him as though the sheer longing
+would call her out of her retreat, on to the streets through which he
+must pass, across his path, into the sight of his eyes and reach of his
+hand. He had thought that he felt all this before. He found, as the
+space diminished between them,--as, perchance, she was but a stone's
+throw from his side,--that the pain, and the longing, and the
+intolerable desire to behold her once again, increased a hundred-fold.
+
+Eager as he had been a little while before to reach his home, he was
+content to remain quietly here now. He laughed at himself as he stepped
+into a carriage, and, tired as he was,--for his amputated arm, not yet
+thoroughly healed, made him weak and worn,--drove through all the
+afternoon and evening, across miles and miles of heated, wearisome
+stones, possessed by the idea that somewhere, somehow, he should see
+her, he would find her before his quest was done.
+
+After that last painful rebuff, he did not dare to go to her home, could
+he find it, till he had secured from her, in some fashion, a word or
+sign. "This," he said, "is certainly doubly absurd, since she does not
+live in the city; but she is here to-day, I know,--she must be here";
+and persisted in his endeavor,--persisted, naturally, in vain; and went
+to bed, at last, exhausted; determined that to-morrow should find him on
+his journey farther north, whatever wish might plead for delay, yet with
+a final cry for her from the depths of his soul, as he stretched out his
+solitary arm, ere sinking to restless sleep, and dreams of battle and
+death--sleep unrefreshing, and dreams ill-omened; as he thought, again
+and again, rousing himself from their hold, and looking out to the
+night, impatient for the break of day.
+
+When day broke he was unable to rise with its dawn. The effect of all
+this tension on his already overtaxed nerves was to induce a fever in
+the unhealed arm, which, though not painful, was yet sufficient to hold
+him close prisoner for several days; a delay which chafed him, and which
+filled his family at home with an intolerable anxiety, not that they
+knew its cause,--_that_ would have been a relief,--but that they
+conjectured another, to them infinitely worse than sickness or
+suffering, bad and sorrowful as were these.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+ "_Gentlemen, let not prejudice prepossess you._"
+
+ Izaak Walton
+
+
+Car No. 14, Fifth Street line, Philadelphia, was crowded. Travelling
+bags, shawls, and dusters marked that people were making for the 11 A.M.
+New York train, Kensington depot. One pleasant-looking old gentleman
+whose face shone under a broad brim, and whose cleanly drabs were
+brought into distasteful proximity with the garments of a drunken
+coal-heaver, after a vain effort to edge away, relieved his mind by
+turning to his neighbor with the statement, "Consistency is a jewel."
+
+"Undoubtedly true, Mr. Greenleaf," answered the neighbor, "but what
+caused the remark?"
+
+"That,"--looking with mild disgust at the dirty and ragged leg sitting
+by his own. "Here's this filthy fellow, a nuisance to everybody near
+him, can ride in these cars, and a nice, respectable colored person
+can't. So I couldn't help thinking, and saying, that consistency is a
+jewel."
+
+"Well, it's a shame,--that's a fact; but of course nobody can interfere
+if the companies don't choose to let them ride; it's their concern, not
+ours."
+
+"There's a fine specimen now, out there on the sidewalk." The fine
+specimen was a large, powerfully made man, black as ebony, dressed in
+army blouse and trousers, one leg gone,--evidently very tired, for he
+leaned heavily on his crutches. The conductor, a kindly-faced young
+fellow, pulled the strap, and helped him on to the platform with a
+peremptory "Move up front, there!" to the people standing inside.
+
+"Why!" exclaimed the old Friend,--"do my eyes deceive me?" Then getting
+up, and taking the man by the arm, he seated him in his own place: "Thou
+art less able to stand than I."
+
+Tears rushed to his eyes as he said, "Thank you, sir! you are too kind."
+Evidently he was weak, and as evidently unaccustomed to find any one
+"too kind."
+
+"Thee has on the army blue; has thee been fighting any?"
+
+"Yes, sir!" he answered, promptly.
+
+"I didn't know black men were in the army; yet thee has lost a leg.
+Where did that go?"
+
+"At Newbern, sir."
+
+"At Newbern,--ah! long ago? and how did it happen?"
+
+"Fourteenth of March, sir. There was a land fight, and the gunboats
+came up to the rescue. Some of us black men were upon board a little
+schooner that carried one gun. 'Twasn't a great deal we could do with
+that, but we did the best we could; and got well peppered in return.
+This is what it did for me,"--looking down at the stump.
+
+"I guess thee is sorry now that thee didn't keep out of it, isn't thee?"
+
+"No, sir; no indeed, sir. If I had five hundred legs and fifty lives,
+I'd be glad to give them all in such a war as this."
+
+Here somebody got out; the old Friend sat down; and the coal-heaver,
+roused by the stir, lifted himself from his drunken sleep, and, looking
+round, saw who was beside him.
+
+A vile oath, an angry stare from his bloodshot eyes.
+
+"Ye ----, what are ye doin' here? out wid ye, quick!"
+
+"What's the matter?" queried the conductor, who was collecting
+somebody's fare.
+
+"The matther, is it? matther enough! what's this nasty nagur doin' here?
+Put him out, can't ye?"
+
+The conductor took no notice.
+
+"Conductor!" spoke up a well-dressed man, with the air and manner of a
+gentleman, "what does that card say?"
+
+The conductor looked at the card indicated, upon which was printed
+"Colored people not allowed in this car," legible enough to require less
+study than he saw fit to give it. "Well!" he said.
+
+"Well," was the answer,--"your duty is plain. Put that fellow out."
+
+The conductor hesitated,--looked round the car. Nobody spoke.
+
+"I'm sorry, my man! I hoped there would be no objection when I let you
+in; but our orders are strict, and, as the passengers ain't willing,
+you'll have to get off,"--jerking angrily at the bell.
+
+As the car slackened speed, a young officer, whom nobody noticed, got
+on.
+
+There was a moment's pause as the black man gathered up his crutches,
+and raised himself painfully. "Stop!" cried a thrilling and passionate
+voice,--"stand still! Of what stuff are you made to sit here and see a
+man, mangled and maimed in _your_ cause and for _your_ defence, insulted
+and outraged at the bidding of a drunken boor and a cowardly traitor?"
+The voice, the beautiful face, the intensity burning through both,
+electrified every soul to which she appealed. Hands were stretched out
+to draw back the crippled soldier; eyes that a moment before were turned
+away looked kindly at him; a Babel of voices broke out, "No, no," "let
+him stay," "it's a shame," "let him alone, conductor," "we ain't so bad
+as that," with more of the same kind; those who chose not to join in the
+chorus discreetly held their peace, and made no attempt to sing out of
+time and tune.
+
+The car started again. The _gentleman_, furious at the turn of the tide,
+cried out, "Ho, ho! here's a pretty preacher of the gospel of equality!
+why, ladies and gentlemen, this high-flyer, who presumes to lecture us,
+is nothing but a"--
+
+The sentence was cut short in mid-career, the insolent sneer dashed out
+of his face,--face and form prone on the floor of the car,--while over
+him bent and blazed the young officer, whose entrance, a little while
+before, nobody had heeded.
+
+Spurning the prostrate body at his feet, he turned to Francesca, for it
+was she, and stretched out his hand,--his left hand,--his only one. It
+was time; all the heat, and passion, and color, had died out, and she
+stood there shivering, a look of suffering in her face.
+
+"Miss Ercildoune! you are ill,--you need the air,--allow me!" drawing
+her hand through his arm, and taking her out with infinite deference and
+care.
+
+"Thank you! a moment's faintness,--it is over now," as they reached the
+sidewalk.
+
+"No, no, you are too ill to walk,--let me get you a carriage."
+
+Hailing one that was passing by, he put her in, his hand lingering on
+hers, lingering on the folds of her dress as he bent to arrange it; his
+eyes clinging to her face with a passionate, woeful tenderness. "It is
+two years since I saw you, since I have heard from you," he said, his
+voice hoarse with the effort to speak quietly.
+
+"Yes," she answered, "it is two years." Stooping her head to write upon
+a card, her lips moved as if they said something,--something that
+seemed like "I must! only once!" but of course that could not be. "It is
+my address," she then said, putting the card in his hand. "I shall be
+happy to see you in my own home."
+
+"This afternoon?" eagerly.
+
+She hesitated. "Whenever you may call. I thank you again,--and good
+morning."
+
+Meanwhile the car had moved on its course: outwardly, peaceful enough;
+inwardly, full of commotion. The conservative gentleman, gathering
+himself up from his prone estate, white with passion and chagrin, saw
+about him everywhere looks of scorn, and smiles of derision and
+contempt, and fled incontinently from the sight.
+
+His coal-heaving _confrère_, left to do battle alone, came to the charge
+valiant and unterrified. Another outbreak of blasphemy and obscenity
+were the weapons of assault; the ladies looked shocked, the gentlemen
+indignant and disgusted.
+
+"Friend," called the non-resistant broad-brim, beckoning peremptorily to
+the conductor,--"friend, come here."
+
+The conductor came.
+
+"If colored persons are not permitted to ride, I suppose it is equally
+against the rules of the company to allow nuisances in their cars. Isn't
+it?"
+
+"You are right, sir," assented the conductor, upon whose face a smile of
+comprehension began to beam.
+
+"Well, I don't know what thee thinks, or what these other people think,
+but I know of no worse nuisance than a filthy, blasphemous drunkard.
+There he sits,--remove him."
+
+There was a perfect shout of laughter and delight; and before the irate
+"citizen" comprehended what was intended, or could throw himself into a
+pugilistic attitude, he was seized, _sans_ ceremony, and ignominiously
+pushed and hustled from the car; the people therein, black soldier and
+all, drawing a long breath of relief, and going on their way rejoicing.
+Everybody's eyes were brighter; hearts beat faster, blood moved more
+quickly; everybody felt a sense of elation, and a kindness towards their
+neighbor and all the world. A cruel and senseless prejudice had been
+lost in an impulse, generous and just; and for a moment the sentiment
+which exalted their humanity, vivified and gladdened their souls.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+ "_The future seemed barred
+ By the corpse of a dead hope._"
+
+ OWEN MEREDITH
+
+
+So, then, after these long years he had seen her again. Having seen her,
+he wondered how he had lived without her. If the wearisome months seemed
+endless in passing, the morning hours were an eternity. "This
+afternoon?" he had said. "Be it so," she had answered. He did not dare
+to go till then.
+
+Thinking over the scene of the morning, he scarcely dared go at all. She
+had not offered her hand; she had expressed no pleasure, either by look
+or word, at meeting him again. He had forced her to say, "Come": she
+could do no less when he had just interfered to save her insult, and had
+begged the boon.
+
+"Insult!" his arm ached to strike another blow, as he remembered the
+sentence it had cut short. Of course the fellow had been drinking, but
+outrage of her was intolerable, whatever madness prompted it. The very
+sun must shine more brightly, and the wind blow softly, when she passed
+by. Ah me! were the whole world what an ardent lover prays for his
+mistress, there were no need of death to enjoy the bliss of heaven.
+
+What could he say? what do? how find words to speak the measured
+feelings of a friend? how control the beatings of his heart, the passion
+of his soul, that no sign should escape to wound or offend her? She had
+bade him to silence: was he sufficiently master of himself to strike the
+lighter keys without sounding some deep chords that would jar upon her
+ear?
+
+He tried to picture the scene of their second meeting. He repeated again
+and again her formal title, Miss Ercildoune, that he might familiarize
+his tongue and his ear to the sound, and not be on the instant betrayed
+into calling the name which he so often uttered in his thoughts. He said
+over some civil, kindly words of greeting, and endeavored to call up,
+and arrange in order, a theme upon which he should converse. "I shall
+not dare to be silent," he thought, "for if I am, my silence will tell
+the tale; and if that do not, she will hear it from the throbbings of my
+heart. I don't know though,"--he laughed a little, as he spoke
+aloud,--bitterly it would have been, had his voice been capable of
+bitterness,--"perhaps she will think the organism of the poor thing has
+become diseased in camp and fightings,"--putting his hand up to his
+throat and holding the swollen veins, where the blood was beating
+furiously.
+
+Presently he went down stairs and out to the street, in pursuit of some
+cut flowers which he found in a little cellar, a stone's throw from his
+hotel,--a fresh, damp little cellar, which smelt, he could not help
+thinking, like a grave. Coming out to the sunshine, he shook himself
+with disgust. "Faugh!" he thought, "what sick fancies and sentimental
+nonsense possess me? I am growing unwholesome. My dreams of the other
+night have come back to torment me in the day. These must put them to
+flight."
+
+The fancy which had sent him in pursuit of these flowers he confessed to
+be a childish one, but none the less soothing for that. He had
+remembered that the first day he beheld her a nosegay had decorated his
+button-hole; a fair, sweet-scented thing which seemed, in some subtle
+way, like her. He wanted now just such another,--some mignonette, and
+geranium, and a single tea-rosebud. Here they were,--the very
+counterparts of those which he had worn on a brighter and happier day.
+How like they were! how changed was he! In some moods he would have
+smiled at this bit of girlish folly as he fastened the little thing over
+his heart; now, something sounded in his throat that was pitifully like
+a sob. Don't smile at him! he was so young; so impassioned, yet gentle;
+and then he loved so utterly with the whole of his great, sore heart.
+
+By and by the time came to go, and eager, yet fearful, he went. It was
+a fresh, beautiful day in early June; and when the city, with its heat,
+and dust, and noise, was left behind, and all the leafy greenness--the
+soothing quiet of country sights and country sounds--met his ear and
+eye, a curious peace took possession of his soul. It was less the
+whisper of hope than the calm of assured reality. For the moment,
+unreasonable as it seemed, something made him blissfully sure of her
+love, spite of the rebuffs and coldness she had compelled him to endure.
+
+"This is the place, sir!" suddenly called his driver, stopping the
+horses in front of a stately avenue of trees, and jumping down to open
+the gates.
+
+"You need not drive in; you may wait here."
+
+This, then, was her home. He took in the exquisite beauty of the place
+with a keen pleasure. It was right that all things sweet and fine should
+be about her; he had before known that they were, but it delighted him
+to see them with his own eyes. Walking slowly towards the
+house,--slowly, for he was both impelled and retarded by the conflicting
+feelings that mastered him,--he heard her voice at a little distance,
+singing; and directly she came out of a by-path, and faced him. He need
+not have feared the meeting; at least, any display of emotion; she gave
+no opportunity for any such thing.
+
+A frankly extended hand,--an easy "Good afternoon, Mr. Surrey!" That was
+all. It was a cool, beautiful room into which she ushered him; a room
+filled with an atmosphere of peace, but which was anything but peaceful
+to him. He was restless, nervous; eager and excited, or absent and
+still. He determined to master his emotion, and give no outward sign of
+the tempest raging within.
+
+At the instant of this conclusion his eye was caught by an exquisite
+portrait miniature upon an easel near him. Bending over it, taking it
+into his hands, his eyes went to and fro from the pictured face to the
+human one, tracing the likeness in each. Marking his interest, Francesca
+said, "It is my mother."
+
+"If the eyes were dark, this would be your veritable image."
+
+"Or, if mine were blue, I should be a portrait of mamma, which would be
+better."
+
+"Better?"
+
+"Yes." She was looking at the picture with weary eyes, which he could
+not see. "I had rather be the shadow of her than the reality of myself:
+an absurd fancy!" she added, with a smile, suddenly remembering herself.
+
+"I would it were true!" he exclaimed.
+
+She looked a surprised inquiry. His thought was, "for then I should
+steal you, and wear you always on my heart." But of course he could
+speak no such lover's nonsense; so he said, "Because of the fitness of
+things; you wished to be a shadow, which is immaterial, and hence of the
+substance of angels."
+
+Truly he was improving. His effort to betray no love had led him into a
+ridiculous compliment. "What an idiot she will think me to say anything
+so silly!" he reflected; while Francesca was thinking, "He has ceased
+to love me, or he would not resort to flattery. It is well!" but the
+pang that shot through her heart belied the closing thought, and,
+glancing at him, the first was denied by the unconscious expression of
+his eyes. Seeing that, she directly took alarm, and commenced to talk
+upon a score of indifferent themes.
+
+He had never seen her in such a mood: gay, witty, brilliant,--full of a
+restless sparkle and fire; she would not speak an earnest word, nor hear
+one. She flung about bonmots, and chatted airy persiflage till his heart
+ached. At another time, in another condition, he would have been
+delighted, dazzled, at this strange display; but not now.
+
+In some careless fashion the war had been alluded to, and she spoke of
+Chancellorsville. "It was there you were last wounded?"
+
+"Yes," he answered, not even looking down at the empty sleeve.
+
+"It was there you lost your arm?"
+
+"Yes," he answered again, "I am sorry it was my sword-arm."
+
+"It was frightful,"--holding her breath. "Do you know you were reported
+mortally wounded? worse?"
+
+"I have heard that I was sent up with the slain," he replied,
+half-smiling.
+
+"It is true. I looked for your name in the columns of 'wounded' and
+'missing,' and read it at last in the list of 'killed.'"
+
+"For the sake of old times, I trust you were a little sorry to so read
+it," he said, sadly, for the tone hurt him.
+
+"Sorry? yes, I was sorry. Who, indeed, of your friends would not be?"
+
+"Who, indeed?" he repeated: "I am afraid the one whose regret I should
+most desire would sorrow the least."
+
+"It is very like," she answered, with seeming
+carelessness,--"disappointment is the rule of life."
+
+This would not do. He was getting upon dangerous ground. He would change
+the theme, and prevent any farther speech till he was better master of
+it. He begged for some music. She sat down at once and played for him;
+then sang at his desire. Rich as she was in the gifts of nature, her
+voice was the chief,--thrilling, flexible, with a sympathetic quality
+that in singing pathetic music brought tears, though the hearer
+understood not a word of the language in which she sang. In the old time
+he had never wearied listening, and now he besought her to repeat for
+him some of the dear, familiar songs. If these held for her any
+associations, he did not know it; she gave no outward sign,--sang to him
+as sweetly and calmly as to the veriest stranger. What else had he
+expected? Nothing; yet, with the unreasonableness of a lover, was
+disappointed that nothing appeared.
+
+Taking up a piece at random, without pausing to remember the words, he
+said, spreading it before her, "May I tax you a little farther? I am
+greedy, I know, but then how can I help it?"
+
+It was the song of the Princess.
+
+She hesitated a moment, and half closed the book. Had he been standing
+where he could see her face, he would have been shocked by its pallor.
+It was over directly: she recovered herself, and, opening the music with
+a resolute air, began to sing:--
+
+ "Ask me no more: the moon may draw the sea;
+ The cloud may stoop from heaven and take the shape,
+ With fold to fold, of mountain and of cape;
+ But, O too fond, when have I answered thee?
+ Ask me no more.
+
+ "Ask me no more: what answer should I give?
+ I love not hollow cheek or faded eye;
+ Yet, O my friend, I will not have thee die!
+ Ask me no more, lest I should bid thee live:
+ Ask me no more."
+
+She sang thus far with a clear, untrembling voice,--so clear and
+untrembling as to be almost metallic,--the restraint she had put upon
+herself making it unnatural. At the commencement she had estimated her
+strength, and said, "It is sufficient!" but she had overtaxed it, as she
+found in singing the last verse:--
+
+ "Ask me no more: thy fate and mine are sealed;
+ I strove against the stream and all in vain;
+ Let the great river take me to the main;
+ No more, dear love, for at a touch I yield:
+ Ask me no more."
+
+All the longing, the passion, the prayer of which a human soul is
+capable found expression in her voice. It broke through the affected
+coldness and calm, as the ocean breaks through its puny barriers when,
+after wind and tempest, all its mighty floods are out. Surrey had
+changed his place, and stood fronting her. As the last word fell, she
+looked at him, and the two faces saw in each but a reflection of the
+same passion and pain: pallid, with eyes burning from an inward
+fire,--swayed by the same emotion,--she bent forward as he, stretching
+forth his arms, in a stifling voice cried, "Come!"
+
+Bent, but for an instant; then, by a superhuman effort, turned from him,
+and put out her hand with a gesture of dissent, though she could not
+control her voice to speak a word.
+
+At that he came close to her, not touching her hand or even her dress,
+but looking into her face with imploring eyes, and whispering,
+"Francesca, my darling, speak to me! say that you love me! one word! You
+are breaking my heart!"
+
+Not a word.
+
+"Francesca!"
+
+She had mastered her voice. "Go!" she then said, beseechingly. "Oh, why
+did you ask me? why did I let you come?"
+
+"No, no," he answered. "I cannot go,--not till you answer me."
+
+"Ah!" she entreated, "do not ask! I can give no such answer as you
+desire. It is all wrong,--all a mistake. You do not comprehend."
+
+"Make me, then."
+
+She was silent.
+
+"Forgive me. I am rude: I cannot help it. I will not go unless you say,
+'I do not love you.' Nothing but this shall drive me away."
+
+Francesca's training in her childhood had been by a Catholic governess;
+she never quite lost its effect. Now she raised her hand to a little
+gold cross that hung at her neck, her fingers closing on it with a
+despairing clasp. "Ah, Christ, have pity!" her heart cried. "Blessed
+Mother of God, forgive me! have mercy upon me!"
+
+Her face was frightfully pale, but her voice did not tremble as she gave
+him her hand, and said gently, "Go, then, my friend. I do not love you."
+
+He took her hand, held it close for a moment, and then, without another
+look or word, put it tenderly down, and was gone.
+
+So absorbed was he in painful thought that, passing down the long avenue
+with bent head, he did not notice, nor even see, a gentleman who, coming
+from the opposite direction, looked at him at first carelessly, and then
+searchingly, as he went by.
+
+This gentleman, a man in the prime of life, handsome, stately, and
+evidently at home here, scrutinized the stranger with a singular
+intensity,--made a movement as though he would speak to him,--and then,
+drawing back, went with hasty steps towards the house.
+
+Had Willie looked up, beheld this face and its expression, returned the
+scrutiny of the one, and comprehended the meaning of the other, while
+memory recalled a picture once held in his hands, some things now
+obscured would have been revealed to him, and a problem been solved. As
+it was, he saw nothing, moved mechanically onward to the carriage,
+seated himself and said, "Home!"
+
+This young man was neither presumptuous nor vain. He had been once
+repulsed and but now utterly rejected. He had no reason to hope, and
+yet--perhaps it was his poetical and imaginative temperament--he could
+not resign himself to despair.
+
+Suddenly he started with an exclamation that was almost a cry. What was
+it? He remembered that, more than two years ago, on the last day he had
+been with her, he had begged the copy of a duet which they sometimes
+sang. It was in manuscript, and he desired to have it written out by her
+own hand. He had before petitioned, and she promised it; and when he
+thus again spoke of it, she laughed, and said, "What a memory it is, to
+be sure! I shall have to tie a bit of string on my finger to refresh
+it."
+
+"Is that efficacious?" he had asked.
+
+"Doubtless," she had replied, searching in her pocket for a scrap of
+anything that would serve.
+
+"Will this do?" he then queried, bringing forth a coil of gold wire
+which he had been commissioned to buy for some fanciful work of his
+mother.
+
+"Finely," she declared; "it is durable, it will give me a wide margin,
+it will be long in wearing out."
+
+"Nay, then, you must have something more fragile," he had objected.
+
+At that they both laughed, as he twisted a fragment of it on the little
+finger of her right hand. "There it is to stay," he asserted, "till your
+promise is redeemed." That was the last time he had seen her till
+to-day.
+
+Now, sitting, thinking of the interview just passed, suddenly he
+remembered, as one often recalls the vision of something seemingly
+unnoticed at the time, that, upon her right hand, the little finger of
+the right hand, there was a delicate ring,--a mere thread,--in fact, a
+wire of gold; the very one himself had tied there two years ago.
+
+In an instant, by one of those inexplicable connections of the brain or
+soul, he found himself living over an experience of his college youth.
+
+He had been spending the day in Boston with a dear friend, some score of
+years his senior; a man of the rarest culture, and of a most sweet and
+gentle nature withal; and when evening came they had drifted naturally
+to the theatre,--the fool's paradise it may be sometimes, but to them on
+that occasion a real paradise.
+
+He remembered well the play. It was Scott's _Bride of Lammermoor_. He
+had never read it, but, before the curtain rose, his friend had
+unfolded the story in so kind and skilful a manner as to have imbued him
+as fully with the spirit of the tale as though he had studied the book.
+
+What he chiefly recalled in the play was the scene in which Ravenswood
+comes back to Emily long after they had been plighted,--long after he
+had supposed her faithless,--long after he had been tossed on a sea of
+troubles, touching the seeming decay in her affections. Just as she is
+about to be enveloped in the toils which were spread for her,--just as
+she is about to surrender herself to the hated nuptials, and submit to
+the embrace of one whom she loathed more than she dreaded
+death,--Ravenswood, the man whom Heaven had made for her, presents
+himself.
+
+What followed was quiet, yet intensely dramatic. Ravenswood, wrought to
+the verge of despair, bursts upon the scene at the critical moment,
+detaches Emily from her party, and leads her slowly forward. He is
+unutterably sad. He questions her very tenderly; asks her whether she is
+not enforced; whether she is taking this step of her own free will and
+accord; whether she has indeed dismissed the dear, old fond love for him
+from her heart forever? He must hear it from her own lips. When timidly
+and feebly informed that such is indeed the case, he requests her to
+return a certain memento,--a silver trinket which had been given her as
+the symbol of his love on the occasion of their betrothal. Raising her
+hand to her throat she essays to draw it from her bosom. Her fingers
+rest upon the chain which binds it to her neck, but the o'erfraught
+heart is still,--the troubled, but unconscious head droops upon his
+shoulder,--he lifts the chain from its resting-place, and withdraws the
+token from her heart.
+
+Supporting her with one hand and holding this badge of a lost love with
+the other, he says, looking down upon her with a face of anguish, and in
+a voice of despair, "_And she could wear it thus!_"
+
+As this scene rose and lived before him, Surrey exclaimed, "Surely that
+must have been the perfection of art, to have produced an effect so
+lasting and profound,--'and she could wear it thus!'--ah," he said, as
+in response to some unexpressed thought, "but Emily loved Ravenswood.
+Why--?" Evidently he was endeavoring to answer a question that baffled
+him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+ "_And down on aching heart and brain
+ Blow after blow unbroken falls._"
+
+ BOKER
+
+
+"A letter for you, sir," said the clerk, as Surrey stopped at the desk
+for his key. It was a bulky epistle, addressed in his aunt Russell's
+hand, and he carried it off, wondering what she could have to say at
+such length.
+
+He was in no mood to read or to enjoy; but, nevertheless, tore open the
+cover, finding within it a double letter. Taking the envelope of one
+from the folds of the other, his eye fell first upon his mother's
+writing; a short note and a puzzling one.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"My dear Willie:--
+
+"I have tried to write you a letter, but cannot. I never wounded you if
+I could avoid it, and I do not wish to begin now. Augusta and I had a
+talk about you yesterday which crazed me with anxiety. She told me it
+was my place to write you what ought to be said under these trying
+circumstances, for we are sure you have remained in Philadelphia to see
+Miss Ercildoune. At first I said I would, and then my heart failed me. I
+was sure, too, that she could write, as she always does, much better
+than I; so I begged her to say all that was necessary, and I would send
+her this note to enclose with her letter. Read it, I entreat you, and
+then hasten, I pray you, hasten to us at once.
+
+"Take care of your arm, do not hurt yourself by any excitement; and,
+with dear love from your father, which he would send did he know I was
+writing, believe me always your devoted
+
+"MOTHER."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"'Trying circumstances!'--'Miss Ercildoune!'--what does it mean?" he
+cried, bewildered. "Come, let us see."
+
+The letter which he now opened was an old and much-fingered one,
+written--as he saw at the first glance--by his aunt to his mother. Why
+it was sent to him he could not conjecture; and, without attempting to
+so do, at once plunged into its pages:--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "CONTINENTAL HOTEL,
+ PHILADELPHIA, JUNE 27, 1861
+
+ "MY DEAR LAURA:--
+
+"I can readily understand with what astonishment you will read this
+letter, from the amazement I have experienced in collecting its details.
+I will not weary you with any personal narration, but tell my tale at
+once.
+
+"Miss Ercildoune, as you know, was my daughter's intimate at school,--a
+school, the admittance to which was of itself a guarantee of
+respectability. Of course I knew nothing of her family, nor of
+her,--save as Clara wrote me of her beauty and her accomplishments, and,
+above all, of her style,--till I met Mrs. Lancaster. Of her it is
+needless for me to speak. As you know, she is irreproachable, and her
+position is of the best. Consequently when Clara wrote me that her
+friend was to come to New York to her aunt, and begged to entertain her
+for a while, I added my request to her entreaty, and Miss Ercildoune
+came. Ill-fated visit! would it had never been made!
+
+"It is useless now to deny her gifts and graces. They are, reluctantly I
+confess, so rare and so conspicuous--have so many times been seen, and
+known, and praised by us all,--that it would put me in the most foolish
+of attitudes should I attempt to reconsider a verdict so frequently
+pronounced, or to eat my own words, uttered a thousand times.
+
+"It is also, I presume, useless to deny that we were well pleased--nay,
+delighted--with Willie's evident sentiment for her. Indeed, so
+thoroughly did she charm me, that, had I not seen how absolutely his
+heart was enlisted in her pursuit, she is the very girl whom I should
+have selected, could I have so done, as a wife for Tom and a daughter
+for myself.
+
+"I knew full well how deep was this feeling for her when he marched
+away, on that day so full of supreme splendor and pain, unable to see
+her and to say adieu. His eyes, his face, his manner, his very voice,
+marked his restlessness, his longing, and disappointment. I was
+positively angry with the girl for thwarting and hurting him so, and,
+whatever her excuse might be, for her absence at such a time. How
+constantly are we quarrelling with our best fates!
+
+"She remained in New York, as you know, for some weeks after the 19th;
+in fact, has been at home but for a little while. Once or twice, so
+provoked with her was I for disappointing our pet, I could not resist
+the temptation of saying some words about him which, if she cared for
+him, I knew would wound her: and, indeed, they did,--wounded her so
+deeply, as was manifest in her manner and her face, that I had not the
+heart to repeat the experiment.
+
+"One week ago I had a letter from Willie, enclosing another to her, and
+an entreaty, as he had written one which he was sure had miscarried,
+that I would see that this reached her hands in safety. So anxious was I
+to fulfil his request in its word and its spirit, and so certain that I
+could further his cause,--for I was sure this letter was a
+love-letter,--that I did not forward it by post, but, being compelled
+to come to Burlington, I determined to go on to Philadelphia, drive out
+to her home, and myself deliver the missive into her very hands. A most
+fortunate conclusion, as you will presently decide.
+
+"Last evening I reached the city,--rested, slept here,--and this morning
+was driven to her father's place. For all our sakes, I was somewhat
+anxious, under the circumstances, that this should be quite the thing;
+and I confess myself, on the instant of its sight, more than satisfied.
+It is really superb!--the grounds extensive, and laid out with the most
+absolute taste. The house, large and substantial, looks very like an
+English mansion; with a certain quaint style and antique elegance,
+refreshing to contemplate, after the crude newness and ostentatious
+vulgarity of almost everything one sees here in America. It is within as
+it is without. Although a great many lovely things are scattered about
+of recent make, the wood-work and the heavy furniture are aristocratic
+from their very age, and in their way, literally perfection.
+
+"Miss Ercildoune met me with not quite her usual grace and ease. She
+was, no doubt, surprised at my unexpected appearance, and--I then
+thought, as a consequence--slightly embarrassed. I soon afterwards
+discovered the constraint in her manner sprang from another cause.
+
+"I had reached the house just at lunch-time, and she would take me out
+to the table to eat something with her. I had hoped to see her father,
+and was disappointed when she informed me he was in the city. All I saw
+charmed me. The appointments of the table were like those of the house:
+everything exquisitely fine, and the silver massive and old,--not a new
+piece among it,--and marked with a monogram and crest.
+
+"I write you all this that you may the more thoroughly appreciate my
+absolute horror at the final _denouement_, and share my astonishment at
+the presumption of these people in daring to maintain such style.
+
+"I had given her Willie's letter before we left the parlor, with a
+significant word and smile, and was piqued to see that she did not
+blush,--in fact, became excessively white as she glanced at the writing,
+and with an unsteady hand put it into her pocket. After lunch she made
+no motion to look at it, and as I had my own reasons for desiring her to
+peruse it, I said, 'Miss Francesca, will you not read your letter? that
+I may know if there is any later news from our soldier.'
+
+"She hesitated a moment, and then said, with what I thought an unnatural
+manner, 'Certainly, if you so desire,' and, taking it out, broke the
+seal. 'Allow me,' she added, going towards a window,--as though she
+desired more light, but in reality, I knew, to turn her back upon
+me,--forgetting that a mirror, hanging opposite, would reveal her face
+with distinctness to my gaze.
+
+"It was pale to ghastliness, with a drawn, haggard look about the mouth
+and eyes that shocked as much as it amazed me; and before commencing to
+read she crushed the letter in her hands, pressing it to her heart with
+a gesture which was less of a caress than of a spasm.
+
+"However, as she read, all this changed; and before she finished said,
+'Ah, Willie, it is clear your cause needs no advocate.' Positively, I
+did not know a human countenance could express such happiness; there was
+something in it absolutely dazzling. And evidently entirely forgetful of
+me, she raised the paper to her mouth, and kissed it again and again,
+pressing her lips upon it with such clinging and passionate fondness as
+would have imbued it with life were that possible."
+
+Here Willie flung down his aunt's epistle and tore from his pocket this
+self-same letter. He had kept it,--carried it about with him,--for two
+reasons: because it was _hers_, he said,--this avowal of his love was
+hers, whether she refused it or no, and he had no right to destroy her
+property; and because, as he had nothing else she had worn or touched,
+he cherished this sacredly since it had been in her dear hands.
+
+Now he took it into his clasp as tenderly as though it were Francesca's
+face, and kissed it with the self-same clinging and passionate fondness
+as this of which he had just read. Here had her lips rested,--here; he
+felt their fragrance and softness thrilling him under the cold, dead
+paper, and pressed it to his heart while he continued to read:--
+
+"Before she turned, I walked to another window,--wishing to give her
+time to recover calmness, or at least self-control, and was at once
+absorbed in contemplating a gentleman whom I felt assured to be Mr.
+Ercildoune. He stood with his back to me, apparently giving some order
+to the coachman: thus I could not see his face, but I never before was
+so impressed with, so to speak, the personality of a man. His physique
+was grand, and his air and bearing magnificent, and I watched him with
+admiration as he walked slowly away. I presume he passed the window at
+which she was standing, for she called, 'Papa!' 'In a moment, dear,' he
+answered, and in a moment entered, and was presented; and I, raising my
+eyes to his face,--ah, how can I tell you what sight they beheld!
+
+"Self-possessed as I think I am, and as I certainly ought to be, I
+started back with an involuntary exclamation, a mingling doubtless of
+incredulity and disgust. This man, who stood before me with all the ease
+and self-assertion of a gentleman, was--you will never believe it, I
+fear--_a mulatto_!
+
+"Whatever effect my manner had on him was not perceptible. He had not
+seated himself, and, with a smile that was actually satirical, he bowed,
+uttered a few words of greeting, and went out of the room.
+
+"'How dared you?' I then cried, for astonishment had given place to
+rage, 'how dared you deceive me--deceive us all--so? how dared you palm
+yourself off as white and respectable, and thus be admitted to Mr.
+Hale's school and to the society and companionship of his pupils?' I
+could scarcely control myself when I thought of how shamefully we had
+all been cozened.
+
+"'Pardon me, madam,' she answered with effrontery,--effrontery under the
+circumstances,--'you forget yourself, and what is due from one lady to
+another.' (Did you ever hear of such presumption!) 'I practised no
+deceit upon Professor Hale. He knew papa well,--was his intimate friend
+at college, in England,--and was perfectly aware who was Mr.
+Ercildoune's daughter when she was admitted to his school. For myself, I
+had no confessions to make, and made none. I was your daughter's friend;
+as such, went to her house, and invited her here. I trust you have seen
+in me nothing unbecoming a gentlewoman, as, _up to this time_, I have
+beheld in you naught save the attributes of a lady. If we are to have
+any farther conversation, it must be conducted on the old plan, and not
+the extraordinary one you have just adopted; else I shall be compelled,
+in self-respect, to leave you alone in my own parlor.'
+
+"Imagine if you can the effect of this speech upon me. I assure you I
+was composed enough outwardly, if not inwardly, ere she ended her
+sentence. Having finished, I said, 'Pardon me, Miss Ercildoune, for any
+words which may have offended your dignity. I will confine myself for
+the rest of our interview to your own rules!'
+
+"'It is well,' she responded. I had spoken satirically, and expected to
+see her shrink under it, but she answered with perfect coolness and
+_sang froid_. I continued, 'You will not deny that you are a negro, at
+least a mulatto.'
+
+"'Pardon me, madam,' she replied; 'my father is a mulatto, my mother was
+an Englishwoman. Thus, to give you accurate information upon the
+subject, I am a quadroon.'
+
+"'Quadroon be it!' I answered, angrily again, I fear. 'Quadroon,
+mulatto, or negro, it is all one. I have no desire to split hairs of
+definition. You could not be more obnoxious were you black as Erebus. I
+have no farther words to pass upon the past or the present, but
+something to say of the future. You hold in your hands a letter--a
+love-letter, I am sure--a declaration, as I fear--from my nephew, Mr.
+Surrey. You will oblige me by at once sitting down, writing a peremptory
+and unqualified refusal to his proposal, if he has made you one,--a
+refusal that will admit of no hope and no double interpretation,--and
+give it into my keeping before I leave this room.'
+
+"When I first alluded to Willie's letter she had crimsoned, but before I
+closed she was so white I should have thought her fainting, but for the
+fire in her eyes. However, she spoke up clear enough when she said, 'And
+what, madam, if I deny your right to dictate any action whatever to me,
+however insignificant, and utterly refuse to obey your command?'
+
+"'At your peril do so,' I exclaimed. 'Refuse, and I will write the whole
+shameful story, with my own comments; and you may judge for yourself of
+the effect it will produce.'
+
+"At that she smiled,--an indescribable sort of smile,--and shut her
+fingers on the letter she held,--I could not help thinking as though it
+were a human hand. 'Very well, madam, write it. He has already told
+me'--
+
+"'That he loves you,' I broke in. 'Do you think he would continue to do
+so if he knew what you are?'
+
+"'He knows me as well now,' she answered, 'as he will after reading any
+letter of yours.'
+
+"'Incredible!' I exclaimed. 'When he wrote you that, he did not know, he
+could not have known, your birth, your race, the taint in your blood. I
+will never believe it.'
+
+"'No,' she said, 'I did not say he did. I said he knew _me_; so well, I
+think, judging from this,'--clasping his letter with the same curious
+pressure I had before noticed,--'that you could scarcely enlighten him
+farther. He knows my heart, and soul, and brain,--as I said, he knows
+_me_.'
+
+"'O, yes,' I answered,--or rather sneered, for I was uncontrollably
+indignant through all this,--'if you mean _that_, very likely. I am not
+talking lovers' metaphysics, but practical common-sense. He does not
+know the one thing at present essential for him to know; and he will
+abandon you, spurn you,--his love turned to scorn, his passion to
+contempt,--when he reads what I shall write him if you refuse to do what
+I demand!'
+
+"I expected to see her cower before me. Conceive, then, if you can, my
+sensations when she cried, 'Stop, madam! Say what you will to me;
+insult, outrage me, if you please, and have not the good breeding and
+dignity to forbear; but do not presume to so slander him. Do not presume
+to accuse him, who is all nobility and greatness of soul, of a
+sentiment so base, a prejudice so infamous. Study him, madam, know him
+better, ere you attempt to be his mouth-piece.'
+
+"As she uttered these words, a horrible foreboding seized me, or, to
+speak more truthfully, I so felt the certainty of what she spoke, that a
+shudder of terror ran over me. I thought of him, of his character, of
+his principles, of his insane sense of honor, of his terrible will under
+all that soft exterior,--the hand of steel under the silken glove; I saw
+that if I persisted and she still refused to yield I should lose all. On
+the instant I changed my attack.
+
+"'It is true,' I said, 'having asked you to become his wife, he will
+marry you; he will redeem his pledge though it ruin his life and blast
+his career, to say nothing of the effect an unending series of outrages
+and mortifications will have upon his temper and his heart. A pretty
+love, truly, yours must be,--whatever his is,--to condemn him to so
+terrible an ordeal, so frightful a fate.'
+
+"She shivered at that, and I went on,--blaming my folly in not
+remembering, being a woman, that it was with a woman and her weakness I
+had to deal.
+
+"'He is young,' I continued; 'he has probably a long life before him.
+Rich, handsome, brilliant,--a magnificent career opening to
+him,--position, ease, troops of friends,--you will ruthlessly ruin all
+this. Married to you, white as you are, the peculiarity of your birth
+would in some way be speedily known. His father would disinherit him (it
+was not necessary to tell her he has a fortune in his own right), his
+family disown him, his friends abandon him, society close its doors upon
+him, business refuse to seek him, honor and riches elude his grasp. If
+you do not know the strength of this prejudice, which you call infamous,
+pre-eminently in the circle to which he belongs, I cannot tell it you.
+Taking all this from him, what will you give him in return? Ruining his
+life, can your affection make amends? Blasting his career, will your
+love fill the gap? Do you flatter yourself by the supposition that you
+can be father, mother, relatives, friends, society, wealth, position,
+honor, career,--all,--to him? Your people are cursed in America, and
+they transfer their curse to any one mad enough, or generous enough
+(that was a diplomatic turn), to connect his fate with yours.'
+
+"Before I was through, I saw that I had carried my point. All the fine
+airs went out of my lady, and she looked broken and humbled enough. I
+might have said less, but I ached to say more to the insolent.
+
+"'Enough, madam,' she gasped, 'stop.' And then said, more to herself
+than to me, 'I could give heaven for him,'--the rest I rather guessed
+from the motion of her lips than from any sound,--'but I cannot ask him
+to give the world for me.'
+
+"'Will you write the letter?' I asked.
+
+"'No.'--She said the word with evident effort, and then, still more
+slowly, 'I will give you a message. Say "I implore you never to write me
+again,--to forget me. I beseech of you not to try me by any farther
+appeals, as I shall but return them unopened."' I wrote down the words
+as she spoke them. 'This is well,' I said when she finished; 'but it is
+not enough. I must have the letter.'
+
+"'The letter?' she said. 'What need of a letter? surely that is
+sufficient.'
+
+"'I do not mean your letter. I mean his,--the one which you hold in your
+hands.'
+
+"'This?' she queried, looking down on it,--'this?'
+
+"I thought the repetition senseless and affected, but I answered,
+'Yes,--that. He will not believe you are in earnest if you keep his
+avowal of love. You must give him up entirely. If you let me send that
+back, with your words, he shall never--at least from me--have clew or
+reason for your conduct. That will close the whole affair.'
+
+"'Close the whole affair,' she repeated after me, mechanically,--'close
+the whole affair.'
+
+"I was getting heartily tired of this, and had no desire to listen to an
+echo conversation; so, without answering, I stretched out my hand for
+it. She held it towards me, then drew it back and raised it to her heart
+with the same gesture I had marked when she first opened it,--a gesture
+as I said, of that, which was less of a caress than a spasm. Indeed, I
+think now that it was wholly physical and involuntary. Then she handed
+it to me, and, motioning towards the door, said, 'Go!'
+
+"I rose, and, infamous as I thought her past deceit, wearied as I was
+with the interview, small claim as she had upon me for the slightest
+consideration, I said 'You have done well, Miss Ercildoune! I commend
+you for your sensible decision, and for your ability, if late, to
+appreciate the situation. I wish you all success in life, I am sure;
+and, permit me to add, a future union with one of your own race, if that
+will bring you happiness.'
+
+"Heavens! what a face and what eyes she turned upon me as, rising, she
+once more pointed to the door, and cried, 'Go!' And indeed I went,--the
+girl actually frightened me.
+
+"When I got on to the lawn, I missed my bag and parasol, and had to
+return for them. I opened the door with some slight trepidation, but had
+no need for fear. She was lying prostrate upon the floor, as I saw on
+coming near, in a dead faint. She had evidently fallen so suddenly and
+with such force as to have hurt herself; her head had struck against an
+ornament of the bookcase, near which she had been standing; and a little
+stream of blood was trickling from her temple. It made me sick to behold
+it. As I looked at her where she lay, I could not but pity her a little,
+and think what a merciful fate it would be for her, and such as she, if
+they could all die,--and so put an end to what, I presume, though I
+never before thought of it, is really a very hard existence.
+
+"It was no time, however, to sentimentalize. I rang for a servant, and,
+having waited till one came, took my leave.
+
+"Of course all this is very shocking and painful, but I am glad I came.
+The matter is ended now in a satisfactory manner. I think it has been
+well done. Let us both keep our counsel, and the affair will soon
+become a memory with us, as it is nothing with every one else.
+
+ "Always your loving sister,
+
+ "AUGUSTA."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is better to be silent upon some themes than to say too little. Words
+would fail to express the emotions with which Willie read this history:
+let silence and imagination tell the tale.
+
+Flinging down the paper with a passionate cry, he saw yet another
+letter,--the one in which these had been enfolded,--a letter written to
+him, and by Mrs. Russell. As by a flash, he perceived that there had
+been some blunder here, by which he was the gainer; and, partly at
+least, comprehended it.
+
+These two, mother and aunt, fearing the old fire had not yet burned to
+ashes,--nay, from their knowledge of him, sure of it,--hearing naught of
+his illness, for he did not care to distress them by any account
+thereof, were satisfied that he had either met, or was remaining to
+compass a meeting, with Miss Ercildoune. His mother had not the courage,
+or the baseness, to write such a letter as that to which Mrs. Russell
+urged her,--a letter which should degrade his love in his own eyes, and
+recall him from an unworthy pursuit. "Very well!" Mrs. Russell had then
+said, "It will be better from you; it will look more like unwarranted
+interference from me; but I will write, and you shall send an
+accompanying line. Let me have it to-morrow."
+
+The next morning Mrs. Surrey was not well enough to drive out, and thus
+sent her note by a servant, enclosing with it the letter of June
+27th,--thinking that her sister might want it for reference. When it
+reached Mrs. Russell, it was almost mail-time, and with the simple
+thought, "So,--Laura has written it, after all," she enclosed it in her
+own, and sent it off, post-haste; not even looking at the unsealed
+envelope, as Mrs. Surrey had taken for granted she would, and thus
+failing to know of its double contents.
+
+Thus the very letter which they would have compassed land and sea to
+have prevented coming under his eyes, unwisely yet most fortunately kept
+in existence, was sent by themselves to his hands.
+
+Without pausing to read a line of that which his aunt had written him,
+he tore it into fragments, flung it into the empty grate; and, bounding
+down the stairs and on to the street, plunged into a carriage and was
+whirled away, all too slowly, to the home he had left but a little space
+before with such widely, such painfully different emotions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+ "_I could not love thee, dear, so much,
+ Loved I not honor more._"
+
+ LOVELACE
+
+
+Just after Surrey, for the third time, had passed through the avenue of
+trees, two men appeared in it, earnestly conversing. One, the older, was
+the same who had met Willie as he was going out, and had examined him
+with such curious interest. The other, in feature, form, and bearing,
+was so absolutely the counterpart of his companion that it was easy to
+recognize in them father and son,--a father and son whom it would be
+hard to match. "The finest type of the Anglo-Saxon race I have seen from
+America," was the verdict pronounced upon Mr. Ercildoune, when he was a
+young man studying abroad, by an enthusiastic and nationally ignorant
+Englishman; "but then, sir," he added, "what very dark complexions you
+Americans have! Is it universal?"
+
+"By no means, sir," was Mr. Ercildoune's reply. "There are some
+exceedingly fine ones among my countrymen. I come from the South: that
+is a bad climate for the tint of the skin."
+
+"Is it so?" exclaimed John Bull,--"worse than the North?"
+
+"Very much worse, sir, in more ways than one."
+
+Perhaps Robert Ercildoune was a trifle fairer than his father, but there
+was still perceptible the shade which marked him as effectually an
+outcast from the freedom of American society, and the rights of American
+citizenship, as though it had been the badge of crime or the strait
+jacket of a madman. Something of this was manifested in the conversation
+in which the two were engaged.
+
+"It is folly, Robert, for you to carry your refinement and culture into
+the ranks as a common soldier, to fight and to die, without thanks. You
+are made of too good stuff to serve simply as food for powder."
+
+"Better men than I, father, have gone there, and are there to-day; men
+in every way superior to me."
+
+"Perhaps,--yes, if you will have it so. But what are they? white men,
+fighting for their own country and flag, for their own rights of manhood
+and citizenship, for a present for themselves and a future for their
+children, for honor and fame. What is there for you?"
+
+"For one thing, just that of which you spoke. Perhaps not a present for
+me, but certainly a future for those that come after."
+
+"A future! How are you to know? what warrant or guarantee have you for
+any such future? Do you judge by the past? by the signs of to-day? I
+tell you this American nation will resort to any means--will pledge
+anything, by word or implication--to secure the end for which it fights;
+and will break its pledges just so soon as it can, and with whomsoever
+it can with impunity. You, and your children, and your children's
+children after you, will go to the wall unless it has need of you in the
+arena."
+
+"I do not think so. This whole nation is learning, through pain and
+loss, the lesson of justice; of expediency, doubtless, but still of
+justice; and I do not think it will be forgotten when the war is ended.
+This is our time to wipe off a thousand stigmas of contempt and
+reproach: this"--
+
+"Who is responsible for them? ourselves? What cast them there? our own
+actions? I trow not. Mark the facts. I pay taxes to support the public
+schools, and am compelled to have my children educated at home. I pay
+taxes to support the government, and am denied any representation or any
+voice in regard to the manner in which these taxes shall be expended. I
+hail a car on the street, and am laughed to scorn by the conductor,--or,
+admitted, at the order of the passengers am ignominiously expelled. I
+offer my money at the door of any place of public amusement, and it is
+flung back to me with an oath. I enter a train to New York, and am
+banished to the rear seat or the 'negro car.' I go to a hotel, open for
+the accommodation of the public, and am denied access; or am requested
+to keep my room, and not show myself in parlor, office, or at table. I
+come within a church, to worship the good God who is no respecter of
+persons, and am shown out of the door by one of his insolent creatures.
+I carry my intelligence to the polls on election morning, and am elbowed
+aside by an American boor or a foreign drunkard, and, with opprobrious
+epithets by law officers and rabble, am driven away. All this in the
+North; all this without excuse of slavery and of the feeling it
+engenders; all this from arrogant hatred and devilish malignity. At
+last, the country which has disowned me, the government which has never
+recognized save to outrage me, the flag which has refused to cover or to
+protect me, are in direct need and utmost extremity. Then do they cry
+for me and mine to come up to their help ere they perish. At least, they
+hold forth a bribe to secure me? at least, if they make no apology for
+the past, they offer compensation for the future? at least, they bid
+high for the services they desire? Not at all!
+
+"They say to one man, 'Here is twelve hundred dollars bounty with which
+to begin; here is sixteen dollars a month for pay; here is the law
+passed, and the money pledged, to secure you in comfort for the rest of
+life, if wounded or disabled, or help for your family, if killed. Here
+is every door set wide for you to rise, from post to post; money yours,
+advancement yours, honor, and fame, and glory yours; the love of a
+grateful country, the applause of an admiring world.'
+
+"They say to another man,--you, or me, or Sam out there in the
+field,--'There is no bounty for you, not a cent; there is pay for you,
+twelve dollars a month, the hire of a servant; there is no pension for
+you, or your family, if you be sent back from the front, wounded or
+dead; if you are taken prisoner you can be murdered with impunity, or be
+sold as a slave, without interference on our part. Fight like a lion! do
+acts of courage and splendor! and you shall never rise above the rank of
+a private soldier. For you there is neither money nor honor, rights
+secured, nor fame gained. Dying, you fall into a nameless grave: living,
+you come back to your old estate of insult and wrong. If you refuse
+these tempting offers, we brand you cowards. If, under these infamous
+restraints and disadvantages, you fail to equal the white troops by your
+side, you are written down--inferiors. If you equal them, you are still
+inferiors. If you perform miracles, and surpass them, you are, in a
+measure, worthy commendation at last; we consent to see in you human
+beings, fit for mention and admiration,--not as types of your color and
+of what you intrinsically are, but as exceptions; made such by the habit
+of association, and the force of surrounding circumstances.'
+
+"These are the terms the American people offer you, these the terms
+which you stoop to accept, these the proofs that they are learning a
+lesson of justice! So be it! there is need. Let them learn it to the
+full! let this war go on 'until the cities be wasted without inhabitant,
+and the houses without man, and the land be utterly destroyed.' Do not
+you interfere. Leave them to the teachings and the judgments of God."
+
+Ercildoune had spoken with such impassioned feeling, with such fire in
+his eyes, such terrible earnestness in his voice, that Robert could not,
+if he would, interrupt him; and, in the silence, found no words for the
+instant at his command. Ere he summoned them they saw some one
+approaching.
+
+"A fine looking fellow! fighting has been no child's play for him," said
+Robert, looking, as he spoke, at the empty sleeve.
+
+Mr. Ercildoune advanced to meet the stranger, and Surrey beheld the same
+face upon whose pictured semblance he had once gazed with such intense
+feelings, first of jealousy, and then of relief and admiration; the same
+splendor of life, and beauty, and vitality. Surrey knew him at once,
+knew that it was Francesca's father, and went up to him with extended
+hand. Mr. Ercildoune took the proffered hand, and shook it warmly. "I am
+happy to meet you, Mr. Surrey."
+
+"You know me?" said he with surprise. "I thought to present myself."
+
+"I have seen your picture."
+
+"And I yours. They must have held the mirror up to nature, for the
+originals to be so easily known. But may I ask where you saw mine?
+_yours_ was in Miss Ercildoune's possession."
+
+"As was yours," was answered after a moment's hesitation,--Surrey
+thought, with visible reluctance. His heart flew into his throat. "She
+has my picture,--she has spoken of me," he said to himself. "I wonder
+what her father will think,--what he will do. Come, I will to the point
+immediately."
+
+"Mr. Ercildoune," said he, aloud, "you know something of me? of my
+position and prospects?"
+
+"A great deal."
+
+"I trust, nothing disparaging or ignoble."
+
+"I know nothing for which any one could desire oblivion."
+
+"Thanks. Let me speak to you, then, of a matter which should have been
+long since proposed to you had I been permitted the opportunity. I love
+your daughter. I cannot speak about that, but you will understand all
+that I wish to say. I have twice--once by letter, once by speech--let
+her know this and my desire to call her wife. She has twice
+refused,--absolutely. You think this should cut off all hope?"
+
+Ercildoune had been watching him closely. "If she does not love you," he
+answered, at the pause.
+
+"I do not know. I went away from here a little while ago with her
+peremptory command not to return. I should not have dared disobey it had
+I not learned--thought--in fact, but for some circumstances--I beg your
+pardon--I do not know what I am saying. I believed if I saw her once
+more I could change her determination,--could induce her to give me
+another response,--and came with that hope."
+
+"Which has failed?"
+
+"Which has thus far failed that she will not at all see me; will hold no
+communication with me. I should be a ruffian did I force myself on her
+thus without excuse or reason. My own love would be no apology did I not
+think, did I not dare to hope, that it is not aversion to me that
+induces her to act as she has done. Believing so, may I beg a favor of
+you? may I entreat that you will induce her to see me, if only for a
+little while?"
+
+Ercildoune smiled a sad, bitter smile, as he answered, "Mr. Surrey, if
+my daughter does not love you, it would be hopeless for you or for me to
+assail her refusal. If she does, she has doubtless rejected you for a
+reason which you can read by simply looking into my face. No words of
+mine can destroy or do that away."
+
+"There is nothing to destroy; there is nothing to do away. Thank you for
+speaking of it, and making the way easy. There is nothing in all the
+wide world between us,--there can be nothing between us,--if she loves
+me; nothing to keep us apart save her indifference or lack of regard for
+me. I want to say so to her if she will give me the chance. Will you not
+help me to it?"
+
+"You comprehend all that I mean?"
+
+"I do. It is, as I have said, nothing. That love would not be worth the
+telling that considered extraneous circumstances, and not the object
+itself."
+
+"You have counted all the consequences? I think not. How, indeed, should
+you be able? Come with me a moment." The two went up to the house,
+across the wide veranda, into a room half library, half lounging-room,
+which, from a score of evidences strewn around, was plainly the special
+resort of the master. Over the mantel hung the life-size portrait of an
+excessively beautiful woman. A fine, _spirituelle_ face, with proud
+lines around the mouth and delicate nostrils, but with a tender,
+appealing look in the eyes, that claimed gentle treatment. This face
+said, "I was made for sunshine and balmy airs, but, if darkness and
+storm assail, I can walk through them unflinching, though the progress
+be short; I can die, and give no sign." Willie went hastily up to this,
+and stood, absorbed, before it. "Francesca is very like her mother,"
+said Ercildoune, coming to his side. It was his own thought, but he made
+no answer.
+
+"I will tell you something of her and myself; a very little story; you
+can draw the moral. My father, who was a Virginian, sent my brother and
+me to England when we were mere boys, to be trained and educated. After
+his fashion, doubtless, he loved us; for he saw that we had every
+advantage that wealth, and taste, and care could provide; and though he
+never sent for us, nor came to us, in all the years after we left his
+house,--and though we had no legal claim upon him,--he acknowledged us
+his children, and left us the entire proceeds of his immense estates,
+unincumbered. We were so young when we went abroad, had been so tenderly
+treated at home, had seen and known so absolutely nothing of the society
+about us, that we were ignorant as Arabs of the state of feeling and
+prejudice in America against such as we, who carried any trace of negro
+blood. Our treatment in England did but increase this oblivion.
+
+"We graduated at Oxford; my brother, who was two years older than I,
+waiting upon me that we might go together through Europe; and together
+we had three of the happiest years of life. On the Continent I met
+_her_. You see what she is; you know Francesca: it is useless for me to
+attempt to describe her. I loved her,--she loved me,--it was confessed.
+In a little while I called her wife; I would, if I could, tell you of
+the time that followed: I cannot. We had a beautiful home, youth,
+health, riches, friends, happiness, two noble boys. At last an evil fate
+brought us to America. I was to look after some business affairs which,
+my agent said, needed personal supervision. My brother, whose health had
+failed, was advised to try a sea-voyage, and change of scene and
+climate. My wife was enthusiastic about the glorious Republic,--the
+great, free America,--the land of my birth. We came, carrying with us
+letters from friends in England, that were an open sesame to the most
+jealously barred doors. They flew wide at our approach, but to be shut
+with speed when my face was seen; hands were cordially extended, and
+drawn back as from a loathsome contact when mine went to meet them. In
+brief, we were outlawed, ostracised, sacrificed on the altar of this
+devilish American prejudice,--wholly American, for it is found nowhere
+else in the world,--I for my color, she for connecting her fate with
+mine.
+
+"I was so held as to be unable to return at once, and she would not
+leave me. Then my brother drooped more and more. His disease needed the
+brightest and most cheerful influences. The social and moral atmosphere
+stifled him. He died; and we, with grief intensified by bitterness, laid
+him in the soil of his own country as though it had been that of the
+stranger and enemy.
+
+"At this time the anti-slavery movement was provoking profound thought
+and feeling in America. I at once identified myself with it; not because
+I was connected with the hated and despised race, but because I loathed
+all forms of tyranny, and fought against them with what measure of
+strength I possessed. Doubtless this made me a more conspicuous mark for
+the shafts of malice and cruelty, and as I could nowhere be hurt as
+through her, malignity exhausted its devices there. She was hooted at
+when she appeared with me on the streets; she was inundated with
+infamous letters; she was dragged before a court of _justice_ upon the
+plea that she had defied the law of the state against amalgamation,
+forbidding the marriage of white and colored; though at the time it was
+known that she was English, that we were married in England and by
+English law. One night, in the midst of the riots which in 1838
+disgraced this city, our house was surrounded by a mob, burned over us;
+and I, with a few faithful friends, barely succeeded in carrying her to
+a place of safety,--uncovered, save by her delicate night-robe and a
+shawl, hastily caught up as we hurried her away. The yelling fiends, the
+burning house, the awful horror of fright and danger, the shock to her
+health and strength, the storm,--for the night was a wild and
+tempestuous one, which drenched her to the skin,--from all these she
+might have recovered, had not her boy, her first-born, been carried into
+her, bruised and dead,--dead, through an accident of burning rafters and
+falling stones; an accident, they said; yet as really murdered as though
+they had wilfully and brutally stricken him down.
+
+"After that I saw that she, too, would die, were she not taken back to
+our old home. The preparations were hastily made; we turned our faces
+towards England; we hoped to reach it at least before another pair of
+eyes saw the light, but hoped in vain. There on the broad sea Francesca
+was born. There her mother died. There was she buried."
+
+It was with extreme difficulty Ercildoune had controlled his face and
+voice, through the last of this distressing recital, and with the final
+word he bowed his forehead on the picture-frame,--convulsed with
+agony,--while voiceless sobs, like spasms, shook his form. Surrey
+realized that no words were to be said here, and stood by, awed and
+silent. What hand, however tender, could be laid on such a wound as
+this?
+
+Presently he looked up, and continued: "I came back here, because, I
+said, here was my place. I had wealth, education, a thousand advantages
+which are denied the masses of people who are, like me, of mixed race. I
+came here to identify my fate with theirs; to work with and for them; to
+fight, till I died, against the cruel and merciless prejudice which
+grinds them down. I have a son, who has just entered the service of this
+country, perhaps to die under its flag. I have a daughter,"--Willie
+flushed and started forward;--"I asked you when I began this recital, if
+you had counted all the consequences. You know my story; you see with
+what fate you link yours; reflect! Francesca carries no mark of her
+birth; her father or brother could not come inside her home without
+shocking society by the scandal, were not the story earlier known. The
+man whom you struck down this morning is one of our neighbors; you saw
+and heard his brutal assault: are you ready to face more of the like
+kind? Better than you I know what sentence will be passed upon
+you,--what measure awarded. It is for your own sake I say these things;
+consider them. I have finished."
+
+Surrey had made to speak a half score of times, and as often checked
+himself,--partly that he should not interrupt his companion; partly that
+he might be master of his emotions, and say what he had to utter without
+heat or excitement.
+
+"Mr. Ercildoune," he now said, "listen to me. I should despise myself
+were I guilty of the wicked and vulgar prejudice universal in America. I
+should be beneath contempt did I submit or consent to it. Two years ago
+I loved Miss Ercildoune without knowing aught of her birth. She is the
+same now as then; should I love her the less? If anything hard or cruel
+is in her fate that love can soften, it shall be done. If any painful
+burdens have been thrown upon her life, I can carry, if not the whole,
+then a part of them. If I cannot put her into a safe shelter where no
+ill will befall her, I can at least take her into my arms and go with
+her through the world. It will be easier for us, I think,--I hope,--to
+face any fate if we are together. Ah, sir, do not prevent it; do not
+deny me this happiness. Be my ambassador, since she will not let me
+speak for myself, and plead my own cause."
+
+In his earnestness he had come close to Mr. Ercildoune, putting out his
+one hand with a gesture of entreaty, with a tone in his voice, and a
+look in his face, irresistible to hear and behold. Ercildoune took the
+hand, and held it in a close, firm grasp. Some strong emotion shook him.
+The expression, a combination of sadness and scorn, which commonly held
+possession of his eyes, went out of them, leaving them radiant. "No," he
+said, "I will say nothing for you. I would not for worlds spoil your
+plea; prevent her hearing, from your own mouth, what you have to say. I
+will send her to you,"--and, going to a door, gave the order to a
+servant, "Desire Miss Francesca to come to the parlor." Then, motioning
+Surrey to the room, he went away, buried in thought.
+
+Standing in the parlor, for he was too restless to sit, he tried to plan
+how he should meet her; to think of a sentence which at the outset
+should disarm her indignation at being thus thrust upon him, and convey
+in some measure the thought of which his heart was full, without
+trespassing on her reserve, or telling her of the letter which he had
+read. Then another fear seized him; it was two years since he had
+written,--two years since that painful and terrible scene had been
+enacted in the very room where he stood,--two years since she had
+confessed by deed and look that she loved him. Might she not have
+changed? might she not have struggled for the mastery of this feeling
+with only too certain success? might she not have learned to regard him
+with esteem, perchance,--with friendship,--sentiment,--anything but that
+which he desired or would claim at her hands? Silence and absence and
+time are pitiless destructives. Might they not? Aye, might they not? He
+paced to and fro, with quick, restless tread, at the thought. All his
+love and his longing cried out against such a cruel supposition. He
+stopped by the side of the bookcase against which she had fallen in that
+merciless and suffering struggle, and put his hand down on the little
+projection, which he knew had once cut and wounded her, with a strong,
+passionate clasp, as though it were herself he held. Just then he heard
+a step,--her step, yet how unlike!--coming down the stairs. Where he
+stood he could see her as she crossed the hall, coming unconsciously to
+meet him. All the brightness and airy grace seemed to have been drawn
+quite out of her. The alert, slender figure drooped as if it carried
+some palpable weight, and moved with a step slow and unsteady as that of
+sickness or age. Her face was pathetic in its sad pallor, and blue,
+sorrowful circles were drawn under the deep eyes, heavy and dim with
+the shedding of unnumbered tears. It almost broke his heart to look at
+her. A feeling, pitiful as a mother would have for her suffering baby,
+took possession of his soul,--a longing to shield and protect her. Tears
+blinded him; a great sob swelled in his throat; he made a step forward
+as she came into the room. "Papa," she said, without looking up, "you
+wanted me?" There was no response. "Papa!" In an instant an arm enfolded
+her; a presence, tender and strong, bent above her; a voice, husky with
+crowding emotions, yet sweet with all the sweetness of love, breathed,
+"My darling! my darling!" as _his_ fair, sunny hair swept her face.
+
+Even then she remembered another scene, remembered her promise; even
+then she thought of him, of his future, and struggled to release herself
+from his embrace.
+
+What did he say? what could he say? Where were the arguments he had
+planned, the entreaties he had purposed? where the words with which he
+was to tell his tale, combat her refusal, win her to a willing and happy
+assent? All gone.
+
+There was nothing but his heart and its caresses to speak for him.
+Silent, with the ineffable stillness he kissed her eyes, her mouth, held
+her to his breast with a passionate fondness,--a tender, yet masterful
+hold, which said, "Nothing shall separate us now." She felt it,
+recognized it, yielded without power to longer contend, clasped her arms
+about his neck, met his eyes, and dropped her face upon his heart with a
+long, tremulous sigh which confessed that heaven was won.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+ "_The golden hours, on angel wings,
+ Flew o'er me and my dearie._"
+
+ BURNS
+
+
+The evening that followed was of the brightest and happiest; even the
+adieus spoken to the soldier who was just leaving his home did not
+sadden it. They were in such a state of exaltation as to see everything
+with courageous and hopeful eyes, and sent Robert off with the feeling
+that all these horrible realities they had known so long were but bogies
+to frighten foolish children, and that he would come back to them
+wearing, at the very least, the stars of a major-general. Whatever
+sombre and painful thoughts filled Ercildoune's heart he held there,
+that no gloom might fall from him upon these fresh young lives, nor
+sadden the cheery expectancy of his son.
+
+Surrey, having carried the first line of defence, prepared for a
+vigorous assault upon the second. Like all eager lovers, his primary
+anxiety was to hear "Yes"; afterwards, the day. To that end he was
+pleading with every resource that love and impatience could lend; but
+Francesca shook her head, and smiled, and said that was a long way
+off,--that was not to be thought of, at least till the war was over, and
+her soldier safe at home; but he insisted that this was the flimsiest,
+and poorest of excuses; nay, that it was the very reverse of the true
+and sensible idea, which was of course wholly on his side. He had these
+few weeks at home, and then must away once more to chances of battle and
+death. He did not say this till he had exhausted every other entreaty;
+but at last, gathering her close to him with his one loving arm,--"how
+fortunate," he had before said, "that it is the left arm, because if it
+were the other I could not hold you so near my heart!"--so holding her,
+he glanced down at the empty sleeve, and whispered, "My darling! who
+knows? I have been wounded so often, and am now only a piece of a fellow
+to come to you. It may be something more next time, and then I shall
+never call you wife. It would make no difference hereafter, I know: we
+belong to each other for time and eternity. But then I should like to
+feel that we were something more to one another than even betrothed
+lovers, before the end comes, if come it does, untimely. Be generous,
+dearie, and say yes."
+
+He did not give utterance to another fear, which was that by some device
+she might again be taken away from him; that some cruel plan might be
+put in execution to separate them once more. He would not take the
+risk; he would bind her to him so securely that no device, however
+cunning,--no plan, however hard and shrewd,--could again divide them.
+
+She hesitated long; was long entreated; but the result was sure, since
+her own heart seconded every prayer he uttered. At last she consented;
+but insisted that he should go home at once, see the mother and father
+who were waiting for him with such anxious hearts, give to them--as was
+their due--at least a part of the time, and then, when her hasty
+bride-preparations were made, come back and take her wholly to himself.
+Thus it was arranged, and he left her.
+
+Into the mysteries which followed--the mysteries of hemming and
+stitching, of tucking and trimming, ruffling, embroidering, of all the
+hurry and delicious confusion of an elegant yet hasty bridal
+trousseau--let us not attempt to investigate.
+
+Doubtless through those days, through this sweet and happy whirl of
+emotion, Francesca had many anxious and painful hours: hours in which
+she looked at the future--for him more than for herself--with sorrowful
+anticipations and forebodings. But with each evening came a letter,
+written in the morning by his dear hand; a letter so full of happy,
+hopeful love, of resolute, manly spirit, that her cares and anxieties
+all took flight, and were but as a tale that is told, or as a dream of
+darkness when the sun shines upon a blessed reality.
+
+He wrote her that he had told his parents of his wishes and plans; and
+that, as he had known before, they were opposed, and opposed most
+bitterly; but he was sure that time would soften, and knowledge destroy
+this prejudice utterly. He wrote as he believed. They were so fond of
+him, so devoted to him who was their only child, that he was assured
+they would not and could not cast him off, nor hate that which he loved.
+He did not know that his father, who had never before been guilty of a
+base action,--his mother, who was fine to daintiness,--were both so
+warped by this senseless and cruel feeling--having seen Francesca and
+known all her beautiful and noble elements of personal character--as to
+have written her a letter which only a losel should have penned and an
+outcast read. She did not tell him. Being satisfied that they two
+belonged to one another; that if they were separated it would be as the
+tearing asunder of a perfect whole, leaving the parts rent and
+bleeding,--she would not listen to any voice that attempted, nor heed
+any hand that strove to drive an entering wedge, or to divide them. Why,
+then, should she trouble him by the knowledge that this effort had again
+been made, and by those he trusted and honored. Let it pass. The future
+must decide what the future must be, meanwhile, they were to live in a
+happy present.
+
+He learned of it, however, before he left his home. Finding that neither
+persuasions, threats, nor prayers could move him,--that he would be true
+to honor and love,--they told him of what they had done; laid bare the
+whole intensity of their feeling; and putting her on the one side,
+placing themselves on the other, said, "Choose,--this wife, or those who
+have loved you for a lifetime. Cleave to her, and your father disowns
+you, your mother renounces, your home shuts its doors upon you, never to
+open. With the world and its judgment we have nothing to do; that is
+between it and you; but no judgment of indifferent strangers shall be
+more severe than ours."
+
+A painful position; a cruel alternative; but not for an instant did he
+hesitate. Taking the two hands of father and mother into his solitary
+one, he said,--"Father, I have always found you a gentleman; mother, you
+have shown all the graces of the Christian character which you profess;
+yet in this you are supporting the most dishonorable sentiment, the most
+infidel unbelief, with which the age is shamed. You are defying the
+dictates of justice and the teachings of God. When you ask me to rank
+myself on your side, I cannot do it. Were my heart less wholly enlisted
+in this matter, my reason and sense of right would rebel. Here, then,
+for the present at least, we must say farewell." And so, with many a
+heart-ache and many a pang, he went away.
+
+As true love always grows with passing time, so his increased with the
+days, and intensified by the cruel heat which was poured upon it. He
+realized the torture to which, in a thousand ways, this darling of his
+heart had for a lifetime been subjected; and his tenderness and love--in
+which was an element of indignation and pathos--deepened with every
+fresh revelation of the passing hours. When he came back to her he had
+few words to speak, and no airy grace of sentence or caress to bestow;
+he followed her about in a curious, shadow-like way, with such a strain
+on his heart as made him many a time lift his hand to it, as if to check
+physical pain. For her, she was as one who had found a beloved master,
+able and willing to lighten all her burdens; a physician, whose
+slightest touch brought balm and healing to every aching wound. And so
+these two when the time came, spite of the absence of friends who should
+have been there, spite of warnings and denunciations and evil
+prophecies, stood up and said to those who listened what their hearts
+had long before confessed, that they were one for time and eternity;
+then, hand in hand, went out into the world.
+
+For the present it was a pleasant enough world to them. Surrey had a
+lovely little place on the Hudson to which he would carry her, and
+pleased himself by fitting it up with every convenience and beauty that
+taste could devise and wealth supply.
+
+How happy they were there! To be sure, nobody came to see them, but then
+they wished to see nobody; so every one was well satisfied. The
+delicious lovers' life of two years before was renewed, but with how
+much richer and deeper delights and blissfulness! They galloped on many
+a pleasant morning across miles and miles of country, down rocky slopes,
+and through wild and romantic glens. They drove lazily, on summer noons,
+through leafy fastnesses and cool forest paths; or sat idly by some
+little stream on the fresh, green moss, with a line dancing on the
+crystal water, amusing themselves by the fiction that it was fishing
+upon which they were intent, and not the dear delight of watching one
+another's faces reflected from the placid stream. They spent hours at
+home, reading bits of poems, or singing scraps of love-songs, talking a
+little, and then falling away into silence; or she sat perched on his
+knee or the elbow of his chair, smoothing his sunny hair, stroking his
+long, silky mustache, or looking into his answering eyes, till the world
+lapsed quite away from them, and they thought themselves in heaven.
+
+An idle, happy time! a time to make a worker sigh only to behold, and a
+Benthamite lift his hands in deprecation and despair. A time which would
+not last, because it could not, any more than apple-blossoms and May
+flowers, but which was sweet and fragrant past all describing while it
+endured.
+
+Some _kindly_ disposed person sent Surrey a city paper with an item
+marked in such wise as to make him understand its unpleasant import
+without the reading. "Come," he said, "we will have none of this; this
+owl does not belong to our sunshine,"--and so destroyed and forgot it.
+Others, however, saw that which he scorned to read. He had not been into
+the city since he called at his father's house, and walked into the
+reception room of his aunt, and been refused interview or speech at
+either place. "Very well," he thought, "I will go from this painful
+inhospitality and coldness to my Paradise"; and he went, and remained.
+
+The only letter he wrote was to his old friend and favorite cousin, Tom
+Russell,--who was away somewhere in the far South, and from whom he had
+not heard for many a day,--and hoped that he, at least, would not
+disappoint him; would not disappoint the hearty trust he had in his
+breadth of nature and manly sensibility.
+
+And so, with clouds doubtless in the sky, but which they did not
+see,--the sun shone so bright for them; and some discords in the minor
+keys which they did not heed,--the major music was so sweet and
+intoxicating,--the brief, glad hours wore away, and the time for
+parting, with hasty steps, had almost reached and faced them. Meanwhile,
+what was occurring to others, in other scenes and among other
+surroundings?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+ "_There are some deeds so grand
+ That their mighty doers stand
+ Ennobled, in a moment, more than kings._"
+
+ BOKER
+
+
+It was towards the evening of a blazing July day on Morris Island. The
+mail had just come in and been distributed. Jim, with some papers and a
+precious missive from Sallie in one hand, his supper in the other,
+betook himself to a cool spot by the river,--if, indeed, any spot could
+be called cool in that fiery sand,--and proceeded to devour the letter
+with wonderful avidity while the "grub," properly enough, stood
+unnoticed and uncared for. Presently he stopped, rubbed his eyes, and
+re-read a paragraph in the epistle before him, then re-rubbed, and read
+it again; and then, laying it down, gave utterance to a long whistle,
+expressive of unbounded astonishment, if not incredulity.
+
+The whistle was answered by its counterpart, and Jim, looking up,
+beheld his captain,--Coolidge by name,--a fast, bright New York boy,
+standing at a little distance, and staring with amazed eyes at a paper
+he held in his hands. Glancing from this to Jim, encountering his look,
+he burst out laughing and came towards him.
+
+"Helloa, Given!" he called: Jim was a favorite with him, as indeed with
+pretty much every one with whom he came in contact, officers and
+men,--"you, too, seem put out. I wonder if you've read anything as queer
+as that," handing him the paper and striking his finger down on an item;
+"read it." Jim read:--
+
+"MISCEGENATION. DISGRACEFUL FREAK IN HIGH LIFE. FRUIT OF AN ABOLITION
+WAR.--We are credibly informed that a young man belonging to one of the
+first families in the city, Mr. W.A.S.,--we spare his name for the sake
+of his relatives,--who has been engaged since its outset in this
+fratricidal war, has just given evidence of its legitimate effect by
+taking to his bosom a nigger wench as _his wife_. Of course he is
+disowned by his family, and spurned by his friends, even radical
+fanaticism not being yet ready for such a dose as this. However--" Jim
+did not finish the homily of which this was the presage, but, throwing
+the paper on the ground, indignantly drove his heel through it, tearing
+and soiling it, and then viciously kicked it into the river.
+
+Said the Captain when this operation was completed, having watched it
+with curious eyes, "Well, my man, are you aware of the fact that that is
+_my_ paper?"
+
+"Don't care if it is. What in thunder did you bring the damned
+Copperhead sheet to me for, if you didn't want it smashed? Ain't you
+ashamed of yourself having such a thing round? How'd you feel if you
+were picked up dead by a reb, with that stuff in your pocket? Say now!"
+
+Coolidge laughed,--he was always ready to laugh: that was probably why
+the men liked him so well, and stood in awe of him not a bit. "Feel?
+horridly, of course. Bad enough, being dead, to yet speak, and tell 'em
+that paper didn't represent my politics: 'd that do?"
+
+Jim shook his head dubiously.
+
+"What are you making such a devil of a row for, I'd like to know? it's
+too hot to get excited. 'Tain't likely you know anything about Willie
+Surrey."
+
+"O ho! it is Mr. Will, then, is it? Know him,--don't I, though? Like a
+book. Known him ever since he was knee-height of a grasshopper. I'd like
+to have that fellow"--shaking his fist toward the floating
+paper--"within arm's reach. Wouldn't I pummel him some? O no, of course
+not,--not at all. Only, if he wants a sound skin, I'd advise him, as a
+friend, to be scarce when I'm round, because it'd very likely be
+damaged."
+
+"You think it's all a Copperhead lie, then! I should have thought so, at
+first, only I know Surrey's capable of doing any Quixotic thing if he
+once gets his mind fixed on it."
+
+"I know what I know," Jim answered, slowly folding and unfolding
+Sallie's letter, which he still held in his hand. "I know all about that
+young lady he's been marrying. She's young, and she's
+handsome--handsome as a picture--and rich, and as good as an angel;
+that's about what she is, if Sallie Howard and I know B from a bull's
+foot."
+
+"Who is Sallie Howard?" queried the Captain.
+
+"She? O,"--very red in the face,--"she's a friend of mine, and she's
+Miss Ercildoune's seamstress."
+
+"Ercildoune? good name! Is she the _lady_ upon whom Surrey has been
+bestowing his--?"
+
+"Yes, she is; and here's her photograph. Sallie begged it of her, and
+sent it to me, once after she had done a kind thing by both of us. Looks
+like a 'nigger wench,' don't she?"
+
+The Captain seized the picture, and, having once fastened his eyes upon
+it, seemed incapable of removing them. "This? this her?" he cried.
+"Great Cæsar! I should think Surrey would have the fellow out at twenty
+paces in no time. Heavens, what a beauty!"
+
+Jim grinned sardonically: "She is rather pretty, now,--ain't she?"
+
+"Pretty! ugh, what an expression! pretty, indeed! I never saw anything
+so beautiful. But what a sad face it is!"
+
+"Sad! well, 'tain't much wonder. I guess her life's been sad enough, in
+spite of her youth, and her beauty, and her riches, and all the rest."
+
+"Why, how should that be?"
+
+"Suppose you take another squint at that face."
+
+"Well."
+
+"See anything peculiar about it?"
+
+"Nothing except its beauty."
+
+"Not about the eyes?"
+
+"No,--only I believe it is they that make the face so sorrowful."
+
+"Very like. You generally see just such big mournful-looking eyes in the
+faces of people that are called--octoroons."
+
+"What?" cried the Captain, dropping the picture in his surprise.
+
+"Just so," Jim answered, picking it up and dusting it carefully before
+restoring it to its place in his pocket-book.
+
+"So, then, it is part true, after all."
+
+"True!" exclaimed Jim, angrily,--"don't make an ass of yourself,
+Captain."
+
+"Why, Given, didn't you say yourself that she was an octoroon, or some
+such thing?"
+
+"Suppose I did,--what then?"
+
+"I should say, then, that Surrey has disgraced himself forever. He has
+not only outraged his family and his friends, and scandalized society,
+but he has run against nature itself. It's very plain God Almighty never
+intended the two races to come together."
+
+"O, he didn't, hey? Had a special despatch from him, that you know all
+about it? I've heard just such talk before from people who seemed to be
+pretty well posted about his intentions,--in this particular
+matter,--though I generally noticed they weren't chaps who were very
+intimate with him in any other way."
+
+The Captain laughed. "Thank you, Jim, for the compliment; but come, you
+aren't going to say that nature hasn't placed a barrier between these
+people and us? an instinct that repels an Anglo-Saxon from a negro
+always and everywhere?"
+
+"Ho, ho! that's good! why, Captain, if you keep on, you'll make me talk
+myself into a regular abolitionist. Instinct, hey? I'd like to know,
+then, where all the mulattoes, and the quadroons, and the octoroons come
+from,--the yellow-skins and brown-skins and skins so nigh white you
+can't tell 'em with your spectacles on! The darkies must have bleached
+out amazingly here in America, for you'd have to hunt with a long pole
+and a telescope to boot to find a straight-out black one anywhere
+round,--leastwise that's my observation."
+
+"That was slavery."
+
+"Yes 'twas,--and then the damned rascals talk about the
+amalgamationists, and all that, up North. 'Twan't the abolitionists;
+'twas the slaveholders and their friends that made a race of half-breeds
+all over the country; but, slavery or no slavery, they showed nature
+hadn't put any barriers between them,--and it seems to me an enough
+sight decenter and more respectable plan to marry fair and square than
+to sell your own children and the mother that bore them. Come, now,
+ain't it?"
+
+"Well, yes, if you come to that, I suppose it is!"
+
+"You _suppose_ it is! See here,--I've found out something since I've
+been down here, and have had time to think; 'tain't the living together
+that troubles squeamish stomachs; it's the marrying. That's what's the
+matter!"
+
+"Just about!" assented the Captain, with an amused look, "and here's a
+case in point. Surrey ought to have been shot for marrying one of that
+degraded race."
+
+"Bah! he married one of his own race, if I know how to calculate."
+
+"There, Jim, don't be a fool! If she's got any negro blood in her veins
+she's a nigger, and all your talk won't make her anything else."
+
+"I say, Captain, I've heard that some of your ancestors were Indians: is
+that so?"
+
+"Yes: my great-grandmother was an Indian chief's daughter,--so they say;
+and you might as well claim royalty when you have the chance."
+
+"Bless me! your great-grandmother, eh? Come, now, what do you call
+yourself,--an Injun?"
+
+"No, I don't. I call myself an Anglo-Saxon."
+
+"What, not call yourself an Injun,--when your great-grandmother was one?
+Here's a pretty go!"
+
+"Nonsense! 'tisn't likely that filtered Indian blood can take precedence
+and mastery of all the Anglo-Saxon material it's run through since
+then."
+
+"Hurray! now you've said it. Lookee here, Captain. You say the
+Anglo-Saxon's the master race of the world."
+
+"Of course I do."
+
+"Of course you do,--being a sensible fellow. So do I; and you say the
+negro blood is mighty poor stuff, and the race a long way behind ours."
+
+"Of course, again."
+
+"Now, Captain, just take a sober squint at your own logic. You back
+Anglo-Saxon against the field; very well! here's Miss Ercildoune, we'll
+say, one eighth negro, seven eighths Anglo-Saxon. You make that one
+eighth stronger than all the other seven eighths: you make that little
+bit of negro master of all the lot of Anglo-Saxon. Now I have such a
+good opinion of my own race that if it were t'other way about, I'd think
+the one eighth Saxon strong enough to beat the seven eighths nigger.
+That's sound, isn't it? consequently, I call anybody that's got any
+mixture at all, and that knows anything, and keeps a clean face,--and
+ain't a rebel, nor yet a Copperhead,--I call him, if it's a him, and
+her, if it's a she, one of us. And I mean to say to any such from
+henceforth, 'Here's your chance,--go in, and win, if you can,--and
+anybody be damn'd that stops you!'"
+
+"Blow away, Jim," laughed the Captain, "I like to hear you; and it's
+good talk if you don't mean it."
+
+"I'll be blamed if I don't."
+
+"Come, you're talking now,--you're saying a lot more than you'll live up
+to,--you know that as well as I. People always do when they're gassing."
+
+"Well, blow or no blow, it's truth, whether I live up to it or not." And
+he, evidently with not all the steam worked off, began to gather sticks
+and build a fire to fry his bit of pork and warm the cold coffee.
+
+Just then they heard the plash of oars keeping time to the cadence of a
+plantation hymn, which came floating solemn and clear through the
+night:--
+
+ "My brudder sittin' on de tree ob life,
+ An' he yearde when Jordan roll.
+ Roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll,
+ Roll Jordan, roll!"
+
+They both paused to listen as the refrain was again and again repeated.
+
+"There's nigger for you," broke out Jim, "what'n thunder'd they mean by
+such gibberish as that?"
+
+The Captain laughed. "Come, Given, don't quarrel with what's above your
+comprehension. Doubtless there's a spiritual meaning hidden away
+somewhere, which your unsanctified ears can't interpret."
+
+"Spiritual fiddlestick!"
+
+"Worse and worse! what a heathen you're demonstrating yourself! Violins
+are no part of the heavenly chorus."
+
+"Much you know about it! Hark,--they're at it again"; and again the
+voices and break of oars came through the night:--
+
+ "O march, de angel march! O march, de angel march!
+ O my soul arise in heaven, Lord, for to yearde when Jordan roll!
+ Roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll."
+
+"Well, I confess that's a little bit above my comprehension,--that is.
+Spiritual or something else. Lazy vermin! they'll paddle round in them
+boats, or lie about in the sun, and hoot all day and all night about
+'de good Lord' and 'de day ob jubilee,'--and think God Almighty is going
+to interfere in their special behalf, and do big things for them
+generally."
+
+"It's a fact; they do all seem to be waiting for something."
+
+"Well, I reckon they needn't wait any longer. The day of miracles is
+gone by, for such as them, anyway. They ain't worth the salt that feeds
+them, so far as I can discover."
+
+Through the wash of the waters they could hear from the voices, as they
+sang, that their possessors were evidently drawing nearer.
+
+"Sense or not," said the Captain, "I never listen to them without a
+queer feeling. What they sing is generally ridiculous enough, but their
+voices are the most pathetic things in the world."
+
+Here the hymn stopped; a boat was pulled up, and presently they saw two
+men coming from the sands and into the light of their fire,--ragged,
+dirty; one shabby old garment--a pair of tow pantaloons--on each;
+bareheaded, barefooted,--great, clumsy feet, stupid and heavy-looking
+heads; slouching walk, stooping shoulders; something eager yet
+deprecating in their black faces.
+
+"Look at 'em, Captain; now you just take a fair look at 'em; and then
+say that Mr. Surrey's wife belongs to the same family,--own kith and
+kin,--you ca-a-n't do it."
+
+"Faugh! for heaven's sake, shut up! of course, when it comes to this, I
+can't say anything of the kind."
+
+"'Nuff said. You see, I believe in Mr. Surrey, and what's more, I
+believe in Miss Ercildoune,--have reason to; and when I hear anybody
+mixing her up with these onry, good-for-nothing niggers, it's more'n I
+can stand, so don't let's have any more of it"; and turning with an air
+which said that subject was ended, Jim took up his forgotten coffee,
+pulled apart some brands and put the big tin cup on the coals, and then
+bent over it absorbed, sniffing the savory steam which presently came up
+from it. Meanwhile the two men were skulking about among the trees,
+watching, yet not coming near,--"at their usual work of waiting," as the
+Captain said.
+
+"Proper enough, too, let 'em wait. Waiting's their business. Now,"
+taking off his tin and looking towards them, "what d'ye s'pose those
+anemiles want? Pity the boat hadn't tipped over before they got here.
+Camp's overrun now with just such scoots. Here, you!" he called.
+
+The men came near. "Where'd you come from?"
+
+One of them pointed back to the boat, seen dimly on the sand.
+
+"Was that you howling a while ago, 'Roll Jordan,' or something?"
+
+"Yes, massa."
+
+"And where did you come from?--no, you needn't look back there again,--I
+mean, where did you and the boat too come from?"
+
+"Come from Mass' George Wingate's place, massa."
+
+"Far from here?"
+
+"Big way, massa."
+
+"What brought you here? what did you come for?"
+
+"If you please, massa, 'cause the Linkum sojers was yere, an' de big
+guns, an' we yearde dat all our people's free when dey gets yere."
+
+"Free! what'll such fellows as you do with freedom, hey?"
+
+The two looked at their interrogator, then at one another, opened their
+mouths as to speak, and shut them hopelessly,--unable to put into words
+that which was struggling in their darkened brains,--and then with a
+laugh, a laugh that sounded woefully like a sob, answered, "Dunno,
+massa."
+
+"What fools!" cried Jim, angrily; but the Captain, who was watching them
+keenly, thought of a line he had once read, "There is a laughter sadder
+than tears." "True enough,--poor devils!" he added to himself.
+
+"Are you hungry?" Jim proceeded.
+
+"I hope massa don't think we's come yere for to git suthin' to eat,"
+said the smaller of the two, a little, thin, haggard-looking
+fellow,--"we's no beggars. Some ob de darkies is, but we's not dem
+kind,--Jim an' me,--we's willin' to work, ain't we, Jim?"
+
+"Jim!" soliloquized Given,--"my name, hey? we'll take a squint at this
+fellow."
+
+The squint showed two impoverished-looking wretches, with a starved look
+in their eyes, which he did not comprehend, and a starved look in their
+faces and forms, which he did.
+
+"Come, now, are you hungry?" he queried once more.
+
+"If ye please, massa," began the little one who was spokesman,--'little
+folks always are gas-bags,' Jim was fond of saying from his six feet of
+height,--"if ye please, massa, we's had nothin' to eat but berries an'
+roots an' sich like truck for long while."
+
+"Well, why by the devil haven't you had something else then? what've you
+been doing with yourselves for 'long while'? what d'ye mean, coming here
+starved to death, making a fellow sick to look at you? Hold your gab,
+and eat up that pork," pushing over his tin plate, "'n' that bread,"
+sending it after, "'n' that hard tack,--'tain't very good, but it's
+better'n roots, I reckon, or berries either,--'n' gobble up that coffee,
+double-quick, mind; and don't you open your heads to talk till the
+grub's gone, slick and clean. Ugh!" he said to the Captain,--"sight o'
+them fellows just took my appetite away; couldn't eat to save my soul;
+lucky they came to devour the rations; pity to throw them away." The
+Captain smiled,--he knew Jim. "Poor cusses!" he added presently, "eat
+like cannibals, don't they? hope they enjoy it. Had enough?" seeing they
+had devoured everything put before them.
+
+"Thankee, massa. Yes, massa. Bery kind, massa. Had quite 'nuff."
+
+"Well, now, you, sir!" looking at the little one,--"by the way, what's
+your name?"
+
+"'Bijah, if ye please, massa."
+
+"'Bijah? Abijah, hey? well, I don't please; however, it's none of my
+name. Well, 'Bijah, how came you two to be looking like a couple of
+animated skeletons? that's the next question."
+
+"Yes, massa."
+
+"I say, how came you to be starved? Hai'n't they nothing but roots and
+berries up your way? Mass' George Wingate must have a jolly time,
+feasting, in that case. Come, what's your story? Out with the whole pack
+of lies at once."
+
+"I hope massa thinks we wouldn't tell nuffin but de truf," said Jim, who
+had not before spoken save to say, "Thankee,"--"cause if he don't bleeve
+us, ain't no use in talkin'."
+
+"You shut up! I ain't conversing with you, rawbones! Speak when you're
+spoken to! Come, 'Bijah, fire away."
+
+"Bery good, massa. Ye see I'se Mass' George Wingate's boy. Mass' George
+he lives in de back country, good long way from de coast,--over a
+hundred miles, Jim calklates,--an' Jim's smart at calklating; well,
+Mass' George he's not berry good to his people; never was, an' he's been
+wuss'n ever since the Linkum sojers cum round his way, 'cause it's made
+feed scurce ye see, an' a lot of de boys dey tuck to runnin' away,--so
+what wid one ting an' anoder, his temper got spiled, an' he was mighty
+hard on us all de time.
+
+"At las' I got tired of bein' cuffed an' knocked round, an' den I yearde
+dat if our people, any of dem, got to de Fedral lines dey was free, so I
+said, 'Cum, 'Bijah,--freedom's wuth tryin' for'; an' one dark night I
+did up some hoe-cake an' a piece of pork an' started. I trabbeled
+hard's I could all night,--'bout fifteen mile, I reckon,--an' den as
+'twas gittin' toward mornin' I hid away in a swamp. Ye see I felt
+drefful bad, for I could year way off, but plain enuff, de bayin' of de
+hounds, an' I knew dat de men an' de guns an' de dogs was all after me;
+but de day passed an' dey didn't come. So de next night I started off
+agen, an' run an' walked hard all night, an' towards mornin' I went up
+to a little house standen off from de road, thinking it was a nigger
+house, an' jest as I got up to it out walked a white woman scarin' me
+awfully, an' de fust ting she axed me was what I wanted."
+
+"Tight slave!" interrupted Jim,--"what d'ye do then?"
+
+"Well, massa, ye see I saw mighty quick I was in for a lie anyhow, so I
+said, 'Is massa at home?' 'Yes,' says she,--an' sure nuff, he cum right
+out. 'Hello, nigger!' he said when he seed me, 'whar you cum from? so I
+tells him from Pocotaligo, an' before he could ax any more queshuns, I
+went on an' tole him we cotched fifty Yankees down dere yesterday, an'
+massa he was so tickled dat he let me go to Barnwells to see my family,
+an' den I said I'd got off de track an' was dead beat an' drefful
+hungry, an' would he please to sell me suthin to eat. At dat de woman
+streaked right into de house, an' got me some bread an' meat, an' tole
+me to eat it up an' not talk about payin,'--'we don't charge good,
+faithful niggers nothin',' she said,--so I thanked her an' eat it all
+up, an' den, when de man had tole me how to go, I went right long till I
+got out ob sight ob de little house, an' den I got into de woods, an'
+turned right round de oder way an' made tracks fast as I could in dat
+direcshun."
+
+"Ho! ho! you're about what I call a 'cute nigger," laughed Jim. "Come,
+go on,--this gets interesting."
+
+"Well, directly I yearde de dogs. Dere was a pond little way off; so I
+tuck to it, an' waded out till I could just touch my toes an' keep my
+nose above water so's to breathe. Presently dey all cum down, an' I
+yearde Mass' George say, 'I'll hunt dat nigger till I find him if takes
+a month. I'se goin' to make a zample of him,'--so I shook some at dat,
+for I know'd what Mass' George's zamples was. Arter while one ob de men
+says, 'He ain't yere,--he'd shown hisself before dis, if he was,' an' I
+spose I would, for I was pretty nearly choked, only I said to myself
+when I went in, 'I'll go to de bottom before I'll come up to be tuck,'
+so I jest held on by my toes an' waited.
+
+"I didn't dare to cum out when dey rode away to try a new scent, an'
+when I did I jest skulked round de edge ob de pond, ready to take to it
+agen if I yearde dem, an' when night cum I started off an' run an'
+walked agen hard's I could, an' den at day-dawn I tuck to anoder pond,
+an' went on a log dat was stickin' in de water, and broke down some
+rushes an' bushes enuf to lie down on an' cover me up, an' den I slept
+all day, for I was drefful tired an' most starved too. Next evenin' when
+it got dark, I went on agen, an' trabblin through de woods I seed a
+little light, an' sartin dis time dat it was a darkey's cabin, I made
+for it, an' it was. It was his'n,"--pointing to the big fellow who
+stood beside him, and who nodded his head in assent.
+
+"I had a palaver before he'd let me in, but when I was in I seed what de
+matter was. He had a sojer dere, a Linkum sojer, bad wounded, what he'd
+found in de woods,--he was a runaway hisself, ye see, like me,--an' he'd
+tuck him to dis ole cabin an'd been nussin him on for good while. When I
+seed dat I felt drefful bad, for I knowed dey was a huntin for me yet,
+an' I tought if de dogs got on de trail dey'd get to dis cabin, sure:
+an' den dey'd both be tuck. So I up an' tole dem, an' de sojer he says,
+'Come, Jim, you've done quite enuff fur me, my boy. If you're in danger
+now, be off with you fast as you can,--an' God reward you, for I never
+can, for all you've done for me.'
+
+"'No,' says Jim, 'Capen, ye needn't talk in dat way, for I'se not goin
+to budge widout you. You got wounded fur me an' my people, an' now I'll
+stick by you an' face any thing fur you if it's Death hisself!' That's
+just what Jim said; an' de sojer he put his hand up to his face, an' I
+seed it tremble bad,--he was weak, you see,--an' some big tears cum out
+troo his fingers onto de back ob it.
+
+"Den Jim says, 'Dis isn't a safe place for any on us, an' we'll have to
+take to our heels agen, an' so de sooner we's off de better.' So he did
+up some vittels,--all he had dere,--an' gave 'em to me to tote,--an' den
+before de Capen could sneeze he had him up on his back, an' we was off.
+
+"It was pretty hard work I kin tell you, strong as Jim was, an' we'd
+have to stop an' rest putty ofen; an' den, Jim an' I, we'd tote him
+atween us on some boughs; an' den we had to lie by, some days, all
+day,--an' we trabbled putty slow, cause we'd lost our bearing an' was in
+a secesh country, we knowed,--an' we had nudin but berries an' sich to
+eat, an' got nigh starved.
+
+"One night we cum onto half a dozen fellows skulkin' in de woods, an' at
+fust dey made fight, but d'rectly dey know'd we was friends, fur dey was
+some more Linkum sojers, an' dey'd lost dere way, or ruther, dey know'd
+where dey was, but dey didn't know how to git way from dere. Dey was
+'scaped pris'ners, dey told us; when I yearde where 'twas I know'd de
+way to de coast, an' said I'd show 'em de way if dey'd cum long wid us,
+so dey did; an' we got 'long all right till we got to de ribber up by
+Mass' Rhett's place."
+
+"Yes, I know where it is," said the Captain.
+
+"Den what to do was de puzzle. De country was all full ob secesh
+pickets, an' dere was de ribber, an' we had no boat,--so Jim, he says,
+'I know what to do; fust I'll hide you yere,' an' he did all safe in de
+woods; 'an' den I'll git ye suthin to eat from de niggers round,' an' he
+did dat too, do he couldn't git much, for fear he'd be seen; an' den we,
+he and I, made some ropes out ob de tall grass like dat we'd ofen made
+fur mats, an' tied dem together wid some oder grass, an' stuck a board
+in, an' den made fur de Yankee camp, an' yere we is."
+
+"Yes," said the black man Jim, here,--breaking silence,--"we'll show you
+de way back if you kin go up in a boat dey can rest in, fur dey's most
+all clean done out, an' de capen's wound is awful bad yit."
+
+"This captain,--what's his name?" inquired Coolidge.
+
+"His name is here," said Jim, carefully drawing forth a paper from his
+rags,--"he has on dis some figgers an' a map of de country he took
+before he got wounded, an' some words he writ wid a bit of burnt stick
+just before we cum away,--an' he giv it to me, an' tole me to bring it
+to camp, fur fear something might happen to him while we was away."
+
+"My God!" cried Coolidge when he had opened the paper, and with hasty
+eyes scanned its contents, "it's Tom Russell; I know him well. This must
+be sent up to head-quarters, and I'll get an order, and a boat, and some
+men, to go for them at once." All of which was promptly done.
+
+"See here! I speak to be one of the fellows what goes," Jim emphatically
+announced.
+
+"All right. I reckon we'll both go, Given, if the General will let
+us,--and I think he will,"--which was a safe guess and a true one. The
+boat was soon ready and manned. 'Bijah, too weak to pull an oar, was
+left behind; and Jim, really not fit to do aught save guide them, still
+insisted on taking his share of work. They found the place at last, and
+the men; and taking them on board,--Russell having to be moved slowly
+and carefully,--they began to pull for home.
+
+The tide was going out, and the river low: that, with the heavy laden
+boat, made their progress lingering; a fact which distressed them all,
+as they knew the night to be almost spent, and that the shores were so
+lined with batteries, open and masked, and the country about so scoured
+by rebels, as to make it almost sure death to them if they were not
+beyond the lines before the morning broke.
+
+The water was steadily and perceptibly ebbing,--the rowing growing more
+and more insecure,--the danger becoming imminent.
+
+"Ease her off, there! ease her off!" cried the Captain,--as a harsh,
+gravelly sound smote on his ear, and at the same moment a shot whizzed
+past them, showing that they were discovered,--"ease her off, there! or
+we're stuck!"
+
+The warning came too late,--indeed, could not have been obeyed, had it
+come earlier. The boat struck; her bottom grating hard on the wet sand.
+
+"Great God! she's on a bar," cried Coolidge, "and the tide's running
+out, fast."
+
+"Yes, and them damned rebs are safe enough from _our_ fire," said one of
+the men.
+
+A few scattering shot fell about them.
+
+"They're going to make their mark on us, anyway," put in another.
+
+"And we can't send 'em anything in return, blast 'em!" growled a third.
+
+"That's the worst of it," broke out a fourth, "to be shot at like a rat
+in a hole."
+
+All said in a breath, and the balls by this time falling thick and
+fast,--a fiery, awful rain of death. The men were no cowards, and the
+captain was brave enough; but what could they do? To stand up was but to
+make figure-heads at which the concealed enemy could fire with ghastly
+certainty; to fire in return was to waste their ammunition in the air.
+The men flung themselves face foremost on the deck, silent and watchful.
+
+Through it all Jim had been sitting crouched over his oar. He, unarmed,
+could not have fought had the chance offered; breaking out, once and
+again, into the solemn-sounding chant which he had been singing when he
+came up in his boat the evening before:--
+
+ "O my soul arise in heaven, Lord, for to yearde when
+ Jordan roll,
+ Roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll,"--
+
+the words falling in with the sound of the water as it lapsed from them.
+
+"Stop that infernal noise, will you?" cried one of the men, impatiently.
+The noise stopped.
+
+"Hush, Harry,--don't swear!" expostulated another, beside whom was lying
+a man mortally wounded. "This is awful! 'tain't like going in fair and
+square, on your chance."
+
+"That's so,--it's enough to make a fellow pray," was the answer.
+
+Here Russell, putting up his hand, took hold of Jim's brawny black one
+with a gesture gentle as a woman's. It hurt him to hear his faithful
+friend even spoken to harshly. All this, while the hideous shower of
+death was dropping about them; the water was ebbing, ebbing,--falling
+and running out fast to sea, leaving them higher and drier on the sands;
+the gray dawn was steadily brightening into day.
+
+At this fearful pass a sublime scene was enacted. "Sirs!" said a
+voice,--it was Jim's voice, and in it sounded something so earnest and
+strange, that the men involuntarily turned their heads to look at him.
+Then this man stood up,--a black man,--a little while before a
+slave,--the great muscles swollen and gnarled with unpaid toil, the
+marks of the lash and the branding-iron yet plain upon his person, the
+shadows of a lifetime of wrongs and sufferings looking out of his eyes.
+"Sirs!" he said, simply, "somebody's got to die to get us out of dis,
+and it may as well be me,"--plunged overboard, put his toil-hardened
+shoulders to the boat; a struggle, a gasp, a mighty wrench,--pushed it
+off clear; then fell, face foremost, pierced by a dozen bullets. Free at
+last!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+ "_Ye died to live._"
+
+ BOKER
+
+
+The next day Jim was recounting this scene to some men in camp,
+describing it with feeling and earnestness, and winding up the narration
+by the declaration, "and the first man that says a nigger ain't as good
+as a white man, and a damn'd sight better'n those graybacks over yonder,
+well"--
+
+"Well, suppose he does?"--interrupted one of the men.
+
+"O, nothing, Billy Dodge,--only he and I'll have a few words to pass on
+the subject, that's all"; doubling up his fist and examining the big
+cords and muscles on it with curious and well-satisfied interest.
+
+"See here, Billy!" put in one of his comrades, "don't you go to having
+any argument with Jim,--he's a dabster with his tongue, Jim is."
+
+"Yes, and a devil with his fist," growled a sullen-looking fellow.
+
+"Just so,"--assented Jim,--"when a blackguard's round to feel it."
+
+"Well, Given, do you like the darkies well enough to take off your cap
+to them?" queried a sergeant standing near.
+
+"What are you driving at now, hey?"
+
+"O, not much; but you'll have to play second fiddle to them to-night.
+The General thinks they're as good as the rest of us, and a little bit
+better, and has sent over for the Fifty-fourth to lead the charge this
+evening. What have you got to say to that?"
+
+"Bull, for them! that's what I've got to say. Any objection?" looking
+round him.
+
+"Nary objec!" "They deserve it!" "They fought like tigers over on James
+Island!" "I hope they'll pepper the rebs well!"--"It ought to be a free
+fight, and no quarter, with them!" "Yes, for they get none if they're
+taken!" "Go in, Fifty-fourth!" These and the like exclamations broke
+from the men on all sides, with absolute heartiness and good will.
+
+"It seems to me," sneered a dapper little officer who had been looking
+and listening, "that the niggers have plenty of advocates here."
+
+Two or three of the men looked at Jim. "You may bet your pile on that,
+Major!" said he, with becoming gravity; "we love our friends, and we
+hate our enemies, and it's the dark-complected fellows that are the
+first down this way."
+
+"Pretty-looking set of friends!"
+
+"Well, they ain't much to look at, that's a fact; but I never heard of
+anybody saying you was to turn a cold shoulder on a helper because he
+was homely, except,"--this as the Major was walking away, "except a
+secesh, or a fool, or one of little Mac's staff officers."
+
+"Homely? what are you gassing about?" objected a little fellow from
+Massachusetts; "the Fifty-fourth is as fine-looking a set of men as
+shoulder rifles anywhere in the army."
+
+"Jack's sensitive about the credit of his State," chaffed a big Ohioan.
+"He wants to crack up these fellows, seeing they're his comrades. I say,
+Johnny, are all the white men down your way such little shavers as you?"
+
+"For a fellow that's all legs and no brains, you talk too much,"
+answered Johnny. "Have any of you seen the Fifty-fourth?"
+
+"I haven't." "Nor I." "Yes, I saw them at Port Royal." "And I." "And I."
+
+"Well, the Twenty-third was at Beaufort while they were there, and I
+used to go over to their camp and talk with them. I never saw fellows so
+in earnest; they seemed ready to die on the instant, if they could help
+their people, or walk into the slaveholders any, first. They were just
+full of it; and yet it seemed absurd to call 'em a black regiment; they
+were pretty much all colors, and some of 'em as white as I am."
+
+"Lord," said Jim, "that's not saying much, you've got a smutty face."
+
+The men laughed, Jack with the rest, as he dabbed at his heated,
+powder-stained countenance. "Come," said he, "that's no fair,--they're
+as white as I am, then, when I've just scrubbed; and some of them are
+first-raters, too; none of your rag, tag, and bobtail. There's one I
+remember, a man from Philadelphia, who walks round like a prince. He's a
+gentleman, every inch,--and he's rich,--and about the handsomest-looking
+specimen of humanity I've set eyes upon for an age."
+
+"Rich, is he? how do you know he's rich?"
+
+"I was over one night with Captain Ware, and he and this man got to
+talking about the pay for the Fifty-fourth. The government promised them
+regular pay, you see, and then when it got 'em refused to stick to its
+agreement, and they would take no less, so they haven't seen a dime
+since they enlisted; and it's a darned mean piece of business, that's my
+opinion of the matter, and I don't care who knows it," looking round
+belligerently.
+
+"Come, Bantam, don't crow so loud," interrupted the big Ohioan;
+"nobody's going to fight you on that statement; it's a shame, and no
+mistake. But what about your paragon?"
+
+"I'll tell you. The Captain was trying to convince him that they had
+better take what they could get till they got the whole, and that, after
+all, it was but a paltry difference. 'But,' said the man, 'it's not the
+money, though plenty of us are poor enough to make that an item. It's
+the badge of disgrace, the stigma attached, the dishonor to the
+government. If it were only two cents we wouldn't submit to it, for the
+difference would be made because we are colored, and we're not going to
+help degrade our own people, not if we starve for it. Besides, it's our
+flag, and our government now, and we've got to defend the honor of both
+against any assailants, North or South,--whether they're Republican
+Congressmen or rebel soldiers.' The Captain looked puzzled at that, and
+asked what he meant. 'Why,' said he, 'the United States government
+enlisted us as soldiers. Being such, we don't intend to disgrace the
+service by accepting the pay of servants.'"
+
+"That's the kind of talk," bawled Jim from a fence-rail upon which he
+was balancing. "I'd like to have a shake of that fellow's paw. What's
+his name, d'ye know?"
+
+"Ercildoune."
+
+"Hey?"
+
+"Ercildoune."
+
+"Jemime! Ercildoune,--from Philadelphia, you say?"
+
+"Yes,--do you know him?"
+
+"Well, no,--I don't exactly know him, but I think I know something about
+him. His pa's rich as a nob, if it's the one I mean,"--and then finished
+sotto voce, "it's Mrs. Surrey's brother, sure as a gun!"
+
+"Well, he ought to be rich, if he ain't. As we, that's the Captain and
+me, were walking away, the Captain said to one of the officers of the
+Fifty-fourth who'd been listening to the talk, 'It's easy for that man
+to preach self-denial for a principle. He's rich, I've heard. It don't
+hurt him any; but it's rather selfish to hold some of the rest up to
+his standard; and I presume that such a man as he has no end of
+influence with them!'
+
+"'As he should,' said his officer. 'Ercildoune has brains enough to
+stock a regiment, and refinement, and genius, and cultivation that would
+assure him the highest position in society or professional life anywhere
+out of America. He won't leave it though; for in spite of its wrongs to
+him he sees its greatness and goodness,--says that it is _his_, and that
+it is to be saved, it and all its benefits, for Americans,--no matter
+what the color of their skin,--of whom he is one. He sees plain enough
+that this war is going to break the slave's chain, and ultimately the
+stronger chain of prejudice that binds his people to the grindstone, and
+he's full of enthusiasm for it, accordingly; though I'm free to confess,
+the magnanimity of these colored men from the North who fight, on faith,
+for the government, is to me something amazing.'"
+
+"'Why,' said the Captain,--'why, any more from the North than from the
+South?'"
+
+"Why? the blacks down here can at least fight their ex-masters, and pay
+off some old scores; but for a man from the North who is free already,
+and so has nothing to gain in that way,--whose rights as a man and a
+citizen are denied,--for such a man to enlist and to fight, without
+bounty, pay, honor, or promotion,--without the promise of gaining
+anything whatever for himself,--condemned to a thankless task on the one
+side,--to a merciless death or even worse fate on the other,--facing
+all this because he has faith that the great republic will ultimately be
+redeemed; that some hands will gather in the harvest of this bloody
+sowing, though he be lying dead under it,--I tell you, the more I see of
+these men, the more I know of them, the more am I filled with admiration
+and astonishment.
+
+"Now here's this one of whom we are talking, Ercildoune, born with a
+silver spoon in his mouth: instead of eating with it, in peace and
+elegance, in some European home, look at him here. You said something
+about his lack of self-sacrifice. He's doing 'what he is from a
+principle; and beyond that, it's no wonder the men care for him: he has
+spent a small fortune on the most needy of them since they
+enlisted,--finding out which of them have families, or any one dependent
+on them, and helping them in the finest and most delicate way possible.
+There are others like him here, and it's a fortunate circumstance, for
+there's not a man but would suffer, himself,--and, what's more, let his
+family suffer at home,--before he'd give up the idea for which they are
+contending now."
+
+"'Well, good luck to them!' said the Captain as we came away; and so say
+I," finished Jack.
+
+"And I,"--"And I," responded some of the men. "We must see this man when
+they come over here."
+
+"I'll bet you a shilling," said Jim, pulling out a bit of currency,
+"that he'll make his mark to-night."
+
+"Lend us the change, Given, and I'll take you up," said one of the men.
+
+The others laughed. "He don't mean it," said Jim: which, indeed, he
+didn't. Nobody seemed inclined to run any risks by betting on the other
+side of so likely a proposition.
+
+This talk took place late in the afternoon, near the head-quarters of
+the commanding General; and the men directly scattered to prepare for
+the work of the evening: some to clean a bayonet, or furbish up a rifle;
+others to chat and laugh over the chances and to lay plans for the
+morrow,--the morrow which was for them never to dawn on earth; and yet
+others to sit down in their tents and write letters to the dear ones at
+home, making what might, they knew, be a final-farewell,--for the fight
+impending was to be a fierce one,--or to read a chapter in a little book
+carried from some quiet fireside, balancing accounts perchance, in
+anticipation of the call of the Great Captain to come up higher.
+
+Through the whole afternoon there had been a tremendous cannonading of
+the fort from the gunboats and the land forces: the smooth, regular
+engineer lines were broken, and the fresh-sodded embankments torn and
+roughened by the unceasing rain of shot and shell.
+
+About six o'clock there came moving up the island, over the burning
+sands and under the burning sky, a stalwart, splendid-appearing set of
+men, who looked equal to any daring, and capable of any heroism; men
+whom nothing could daunt and few things subdue. Now, weary,
+travel-stained, with the mire and the rain of a two days' tramp;
+weakened by the incessant strain and lack of food, having taken nothing
+for forty-eight hours save some crackers and cold coffee; with gaps in
+their ranks made by the death of comrades who had fallen in battle but a
+little time before,--under all these disadvantages, it was plain to be
+seen of what stuff these men were made, and for what work they were
+ready.
+
+As this regiment, the famous Fifty-fourth, came up the island to take
+its place at the head of the storming party in the assault on Wagner, it
+was cheered from all sides by the white soldiers, who recognized and
+honored the heroism which it had already shown, and of which it was soon
+to give such new and sublime proof.
+
+The evening, or rather the afternoon, was a lurid and sultry one. Great
+masses of clouds, heavy and black, were piled in the western sky,
+fringed here and there by an angry red, and torn by vivid streams of
+lightning. Not a breath of wind shook the leaves or stirred the high,
+rank grass by the water-side; a portentous and awful stillness filled
+the air,--the stillness felt by nature before a devastating storm.
+Quiet, with the like awful and portentous calm, the black regiment,
+headed by its young, fair-haired, knightly colonel, marched to its
+destined place and action.
+
+When within about six hundred yards of the fort it was halted at the
+head of the regiments already stationed, and the line of battle formed.
+The prospect was such as might daunt the courage of old and well-tried
+veterans, but these soldiers of a few weeks seemed but impatient to take
+the odds, and to make light of impossibilities. A slightly rising
+ground, raked by a murderous fire, to within a little distance of the
+battery; a ditch holding three feet of water; a straight lift of
+parapet, thirty feet high; an impregnable position, held by a desperate
+and invincible foe.
+
+Here the men were addressed in a few brief and burning words by their
+heroic commander. Here they were besought to glorify their whole race by
+the lustre of their deeds; here their faces shone with a look which
+said, "Though men, we are ready to do deeds, to achieve triumphs, worthy
+the gods!" here the word of command was given:--
+
+"We are ordered and expected to take Battery Wagner at the point of the
+bayonet. Are you ready?"
+
+"Ay, ay, sir! ready!" was the answer.
+
+And the order went pealing down the line, "Ready! Close ranks! Charge
+bayonets! Forward! Double-quick, march!"--and away they went, under a
+scattering fire, in one compact line till within one hundred feet of the
+fort, when the storm of death broke upon them. Every gun belched forth
+its great shot and shell; every rifle whizzed out its sharp-singing,
+death-freighted messenger. The men wavered not for an
+instant;--forward,--forward they went; plunged into the ditch; waded
+through the deep water, no longer of muddy hue, but stained crimson with
+their blood; and commenced to climb the parapet. The foremost line fell,
+and then the next, and the next. The ground was strewn with the wrecks
+of humanity, scattered prostrate, silent, where they fell,--or rolling
+under the very feet of the living comrades who swept onward to fill
+their places. On, over the piled-up mounds of dead and dying, of wounded
+and slain, to the mouth of the battery; seizing the guns; bayoneting the
+gunners at their posts; planting their flag and struggling around it;
+their leader on the walls, sword in hand, his blue eyes blazing, his
+fair face aflame, his clear voice calling out, "Forward, my brave
+boys!"--then plunging into the hell of battle before him. Forward it
+was. They followed him, gathered about him, gained an angle of the fort,
+and fought where he fell, around his prostrate body, over his peaceful
+heart,--shielding its dead silence by their living, pulsating
+ones,--till they, too, were stricken down; then hacked, hewn, battered,
+mangled, heroic, yet overcome, the remnant was beaten back.
+
+Ably sustained by their supporters, Anglo-African and Anglo-Saxon vied
+together to carry off the palm of courage and glory. All the world knows
+the last fought with heroism sublime: all the world forgets this and
+them in contemplating the deeds and the death of their compatriots. Said
+Napoleon at Austerlitz to a young Russian officer, overwhelmed with
+shame at yielding his sword, "Young man, be consoled: those who are
+conquered by my soldiers may still have titles to glory." To say that on
+that memorable night the last were surpassed by the first is still to
+leave ample margin on which to write in glowing characters the record of
+their deeds.
+
+As the men were clambering up the parapet their color-sergeant was shot
+dead, the colors trailing stained and wet in the dust beside him.
+Ercildoune, who was just behind, sprang forward, seized the staff from
+his dying hand, and mounted with it upward. A ball struck his right arm,
+yet ere it could fall shattered by his side, his left hand caught the
+flag and carried it onward. Even in the mad sweep of assault and death
+the men around him found breath and time to hurrah, and those behind him
+pressed more gallantly forward to follow such a lead. He kept in his
+place, the colors flying,--though faint with loss of blood and wrung
+with agony,--up the slippery steep; up to the walls of the fort; on the
+wall itself, planting the flag where the men made that brief, splendid
+stand, and melted away like snow before furnace-heat. Here a bayonet
+thrust met him and brought him down, a great wound in his brave breast,
+but he did not yield; dropping to his knees, pressing his unbroken arm
+upon the gaping wound,--bracing himself against a dead comrade,--the
+colors still flew; an inspiration to the men about him; a defiance to
+the foe.
+
+At last when the shattered ranks fell back, sullenly and slowly
+retreating, it was seen by those who watched him,--men lying for three
+hundred rods around in every form of wounded suffering,--that he was
+painfully working his way downward, still holding aloft the flag, bent
+evidently on saving it, and saving it as flag had rarely, if ever, been
+saved before.
+
+Some of the men had crawled, some had been carried, some hastily caught
+up and helped by comrades to a sheltered tent out of range of the fire;
+a hospital tent, they called it, if anything could bear that name which
+was but a place where men could lie to suffer and expire, without a
+bandage, a surgeon, or even a drop of cooling water to moisten parched
+and dying lips. Among these was Jim. He had a small field-glass in his
+pocket, and forgot or ignored his pain in his eager interest of watching
+through this the progress of the man and the flag, and reporting
+accounts to his no less eager companions. Black soldiers and white were
+alike mad with excitement over the deed; and fear lest the colors which
+had not yet dipped should at last bite the ground.
+
+Now and then he paused at some impediment: it was where the dead and
+dying were piled so thickly as to compel him to make a detour. Now and
+then he rested a moment to press his arm tighter against his torn and
+open breast. The rain fell in such torrents, the evening shadows were
+gathering so thickly, that they could scarcely trace his course, long
+before it was ended.
+
+Slowly, painfully, he dragged himself onward,--step by step down the
+hill, inch by inch across the ground,--to the door of the hospital; and
+then, while dying eyes brightened,--dying hands and even shattered
+stumps were thrown into the air,--in brief, while dying men held back
+their souls from the eternities to cheer him,--gasped out, "I did--but
+do--my duty, boys,--and the dear--old flag--never once--touched the
+ground,"--and then, away from the reach and sight of its foes, in the
+midst of its defenders, who loved and were dying for it, the flag at
+last fell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Meanwhile, other troops had gone up to the encounter; other regiments
+strove to win what these men had failed to gain; and through the night,
+and the storm, and the terrific reception, did their gallant
+endeavor--in vain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The next day a flag of truce went up to beg the body of the heroic young
+chief who had so led that marvellous assault. It came back without him.
+A ditch, deep and wide, had been dug; his body, and those of twenty-two
+of his men found dead upon and about him, flung into it in one common
+heap and the word sent back was, "We have buried him with his niggers."
+
+It was well done. The fair, sweet face and gallant breast lie peacefully
+enough under their stately monument of ebony.
+
+It was well done. What more fitting close of such a life,--what fate
+more welcome to him who had fought with them, had loved, and believed in
+them, had led them to death,--than to lie with them when they died?
+
+It was well done. Slavery buried these men, black and white,
+together,--black and white in a common grave. Let Liberty see to it,
+then, that black and white be raised together in a life better than the
+old.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+ "_Spirits are not finely touched
+ But to fine issues._"
+
+ SHAKESPEARE
+
+
+Surrey was to depart for his command on Monday night, and as there were
+various matters which demanded his attention in town ere leaving, he
+drove Francesca to the city on the preceding Sunday,--a soft clear
+summer evening, full of pleasant sights and sounds. They scarcely spoke
+as, hand in hand, they sat drinking in the scene whilst the old gray,
+for they wished no high-stepping prancers for this ride, jogged on the
+even tenor of his way. Above them, the blue of the sky never before
+seemed so deep and tender, while in it floated fleecy clouds of delicate
+amber, rose, and gold, like gossamer robes of happy spirits invisible to
+human eyes. The leaves and grass just stirred in the breeze, making a
+slight, musical murmur, and across them fell long shadows cast by the
+westering sun. A sentiment so sweet and pleasurable as to be tinged with
+pain, took possession of these young, susceptible souls, as the
+influences of the time closed about them. In our happiest moments, our
+moments of utmost exaltation, it is always thus:--when earth most nearly
+approaches the beatitudes of heaven, and the spirit stretches forward
+with a vain longing for the far off, which seems but a little way
+beyond; the unattained and dim, which for a space come near.
+
+"Darling!" said Surrey softly, "does it not seem easy now to die?"
+
+"Yes, Willie," she whispered, "I feel as though it would be stepping
+over a very little stream to some new and beautiful shore."
+
+Doubtless, when a pure and great soul is close to eternity, ministering
+angels draw nigh to one soon to be of their number, and cast something
+of the peace and glory of their presence on the spirit yet held by its
+cerements of clay.
+
+At last the ride and the evening had an end. The country and its dear
+delights were mere memories,--fresh, it is true, but memories still, and
+no longer realities,--in the luxurious rooms of their hotel.
+
+Evidently Surrey had something to say, which he hesitated and feared to
+utter. Again and again, when Francesca was talking of his plans and
+purposes, trusting and hoping that he might see no hard service, nor be
+called upon for any exposing duty, "not yet awhile," she prayed, at
+least,--again and again he made as if to speak, and then, ere she could
+notice the movement, shook his head with a gesture of silence, or--she
+seeing it, and asking what it was he had to say--found ready utterance
+for some other thought, and whispered to himself, "not yet; not quite
+yet. Let her rest in peace a little space longer."
+
+They sat talking far into the night, this last night that they could
+spend together in so long a time,--how long, God, with whom are hid the
+secrets of the future, could alone tell. They talked of what had passed,
+which was ended,--and of what was to come, which was not sure but full
+of hope,--but of both with a feeling that quickened their heart-throbs,
+and brought happy tears to their eyes.
+
+Twice or thrice a sound from some far distance, undecided, yet full of a
+solemn melody, came through the open window, borne to their ears on the
+still air of night,--something so undefined as not consciously to arrest
+their attention, yet still penetrating their nerves and affecting some
+fine, inner sense of feeling, for both shivered as though a chill wind
+had blown across them, and Surrey--half ashamed of the confession--said,
+"I don't know what possesses me, but I hear dead marches as plainly as
+though I were following a soldier's funeral."
+
+Francesca at that grew white, crept closer to his breast, and spread out
+her arms as if to defend him by that slight shield from some impending
+danger; then both laughed at these foolish and superstitious fancies,
+and went on with their cheerful and tender talk.
+
+Whatever the sound was, it grew plainer and came nearer; and, pausing to
+listen, they discovered it was a mighty swell of human voices and the
+marching of many feet.
+
+"A regiment going through," said they, and ran to the window to see if
+it passed their way, looking for it up the long street, which lay solemn
+and still in the moonlight. On either side the palace-like houses stood
+stately and dark, like giant sentinels guarding the magnificent avenue,
+from whence was banished every sight and sound of the busy life of day;
+not a noise, not a footfall, not a solitary soul abroad, not a wave nor
+a vestige of the great restless sea of humanity which a little space
+before surged through it, and which, in a little while to come, would
+rise and swell to its full, and then ebb, and fall, and drop away once
+more into silence and nothingness.
+
+Through this white stillness there came marching a regiment of men,
+without fife or drum, moving to the music of a refrain which lifted and
+fell on the quiet air. It was the Battle Hymn of the Republic,--and the
+two listeners presently distinguished the words,--
+
+ "In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea,
+ With a glory in his bosom that transfigures you and me;
+ As he died to make men holy, let us die to make men free,
+ While God is marching on."
+
+The effect of this; the thousand voices which sang; the marching of
+twice one thousand feet; the majesty of the words; the deserted street;
+the clear moonlight streaming over the men, reflected from their
+gleaming bayonets, brightening the faded blue of their uniforms,
+illumining their faces which, one and all, seemed to wear--and probably
+_did_ wear--a look more solemn and earnest than that of common life and
+feeling,--the combined effect of it all was something indescribably
+impressive:--inspiring, yet solemn.
+
+They stood watching and listening till the pageant had vanished, and
+then turned back into their room, Francesca taking up the refrain and
+singing the line,
+
+ "As he died to make men holy, let us die to make men free,
+ While God is marching on."
+
+Surrey's face brightened at the rapt expression of hers. "Sing it again,
+dearie!" he said. She sang it again. "Do you mean it?" he asked then.
+"Can you sing it, and mean it with all your heart, for me?"
+
+She looked at him with an expression of anxiety and pain. "What are you
+asking, Willie?"
+
+He sat down; taking her upon his knee, and with the old fond gesture,
+holding her head to his heart,--"I should have told you before, dearie,
+but I did not wish to throw any shadow on the happy days we have been
+spending together; they were few and brief enough without marring them;
+and I was certain of the effect it would have upon you, by your
+incessant anxiety for Robert."
+
+She drew a long, gasping sigh, and started away from his hold: "O
+Willie, you are not going to--"
+
+His arm drew her back to her resting-place. "I do not return to my
+command, darling. I am to raise a black brigade."
+
+"Freedmen?"
+
+"Yes, dearie."
+
+"O Willie,--and that act just passed!"
+
+"It is true; yet, after all, it is but one risk more."
+
+"One? O Willie, it is a thousand. You had that many chances of escape
+where you were; you might be wounded and captured a score of times, and
+come home safe at last; but this!"
+
+"I know."
+
+"To go into every battle with the sentence of death hanging over you; to
+know that if you are anywhere captured, anyhow made prisoner, you are
+condemned to die,--O Willie, I can't bear it; I can't bear it! I shall
+die, or go mad, to carry such a thought all the time."
+
+For answer he only held her close, with his face resting upon her hair,
+and in the stillness they could hear each other's heart beat.
+
+"It is God's service," he said, at last.
+
+"I know."
+
+"It will end slavery and the war more effectually than aught else."
+
+"I know."
+
+"It will make these freedmen, wherever they fight, free men. It will
+give them and their people a sense of dignity and power that might
+otherwise take generations to secure."
+
+"I know."
+
+"And I. Both feeling and knowing this, who so fit to yield and to do for
+such a cause? If those who see do not advance, the blind will never
+walk."
+
+Silence for a space again fell between them. Francesca moved in his arm.
+
+"Dearie." She looked up. "I want to do no half service. I go into this
+heart and soul, but I do not wish to go alone. It will be so much to me
+to know that you are quite willing, and bade me go. Think what it is."
+
+She did. For an instant all sacrifices appeared easy, all burdens light.
+She could send him out to death unfaltering. One of those sublime moods
+in which martyrdom seems glorious filled and possessed her. She took
+away her clinging arms from his neck, and said, "Go,--whether it be for
+life or for death; whether you come back to me or go up to God; I am
+willing--glad--to yield you to such a cause."
+
+It was finished. There was nothing more to be said. Both had climbed the
+mount of sacrifice, and sat still with God.
+
+After a while the cool gray dawn stole into their room. The night had
+passed in this communion, and another day come.
+
+There were many "last things" which claimed Surrey's attention; and he,
+wishing to get through them early so as to have the afternoon and
+evening undisturbed with Francesca, plunged into a stinging bath to
+refresh him for the day, breakfasted, and was gone.
+
+He attended to his business, came across many an old acquaintance and
+friend, some of whom greeted him coldly; a few cut him dead; whilst
+others put out their hands with cordial frankness, and one or two
+congratulated him heartily upon his new condition and happiness. These
+last gave him fresh courage for the task which he had set himself. If
+friends regarded the matter thus, surely they--his father and
+mother--would relent, when he came to say what might be a final adieu.
+
+He ran up the steps, rang the bell, and, speaking a pleasant word to the
+old servant, went directly to his mother's room. His father had not yet
+gone down town; thus he found them together. They started at seeing him,
+and his mother, forgetting for the instant all her pride, chagrin, and
+anger, had her arms about his neck, with the cry, "O Willie, Willie,"
+which came from the depths of her heart; then seeing her husband's face,
+and recovering herself, sat down cold and still.
+
+It was a painful interview. He could not leave without seeing them once
+more; he longed for a loving good by; but after that first outburst he
+almost wished he had not forced the meeting. He did not speak of his
+wife, nor did they; but a barrier as of adamant was raised between them,
+and he felt as though congealing in the breath of an iceberg. At length
+he rose to go.
+
+"Father!" he said then, "perhaps you will care to know that I do not
+return to my old command, but have been commissioned to raise a brigade
+from the freedmen."
+
+Both father and mother knew the awful peril of this service, and both
+cried, half in suffering, half in anger, "This is your wife's work!"
+while his father added, with a passionate exclamation, "It is right,
+quite right, that you should identify yourself with her people. Well, go
+your way. You have made your bed; lie in it."
+
+The blood flushed into Surrey's face. He opened his lips, and shut them
+again. At last he said, "Father, will you never forego this cruel
+prejudice?"
+
+"Never!" answered his mother, quickly. "Never!" repeated his father,
+with bitter emphasis. "It is a feeling that will never die out, and
+ought never to die out, so long as any of the race remain in America.
+She belongs to it, that is enough."
+
+Surrey urged no further; but with few words, constrained on their
+part,--though under its covering of pride the mother's heart was
+bleeding for him,--sad and earnest on his, the farewell was spoken, and
+they watched him out of the room. How and when would they see him again?
+
+There was one other call upon his time. The day was wearing into the
+afternoon, but he would not neglect it. This was to see his old
+_protégé_, Abram Franklin, in whom he had never lost interest, and for
+whose welfare he had cared, though he had not seen him in more than two
+years. He knew that Abram was ill, had been so for a long time, and
+wished to see him and speak to him a few friendly and cheering
+words,--sure, from what the boy's own hand had written, that this would
+be his last opportunity upon earth to so do.
+
+Thus he went on from his father's stately palace up Fifth Avenue, turned
+into the quiet side street, and knocked at the little green door. Mrs.
+Franklin came to open it, her handsome face thinner and sadder than of
+old. She caught Surrey's hand between both of hers with a delighted cry:
+"Is it you, Mr. Willie? How glad I am to see you! How glad Abram will
+be! How good of you to come!" And, holding his hand as she used when he
+was a boy, she led him up stairs to the sick-room. This room was even
+cosier than the two below; its curtains and paper cheerfuller; its
+furniture of quainter and more hospitable aspect; its windows letting in
+more light and air; everything clean and homely, and pleasant for weary,
+suffering eyes to look upon.
+
+Abram was propped up in bed, his dark, intelligent face worn to a
+shadow, fiery spots breaking through the tawny hue upon cheeks and lips,
+his eyes bright with fever. Surrey saw, as he came and sat beside him,
+that for him earthly sorrow and toil were almost ended.
+
+He had brought some fruit and flowers, and a little book. This last
+Abram, having thanked him eagerly for all, stretched out his hand to
+examine.
+
+"You see, Mr. Willie, I have not gotten over my old love," he said, as
+his fingers closed upon it. "Whittier? 'In War-Time'? That is fine. I
+can read about it, if I can't do anything in it," and he lay for a while
+quietly turning over the pages. Mrs. Franklin had gone out to do an
+errand, and the two were alone.
+
+"Do you know, Mr. Willie," said Abram, putting his finger upon the
+titles of two successive poems, "The Waiting," and "The Summons," "I had
+hard work to submit to this sickness a few months ago? I fought against
+it strong; do you know why?"
+
+"Not your special reason. What was it?"
+
+"I had waited so long, you see,--I, and my people,--for a chance. It
+made me quite wild to watch this big fight go on, and know that it was
+all about us, and not be allowed to participate; and at last when the
+chance came, and the summons, and the way was opened, I couldn't answer,
+nor go. It's not the dying I care for; I'd be willing to die the first
+battle I was in; but I want to do something for the cause before death
+comes."
+
+The book was lying open where it had fallen from his hand, and Surrey,
+glancing down at the very poem of which he spoke, said gently, "Here is
+your answer, Franklin, better than any I can make; it ought to comfort
+you; listen, it is God's truth!
+
+ 'O power to do! O baffled will!
+ O prayer and action! ye are one;
+ Who may not strive may yet fulfil
+ The harder task of standing still,
+ And good but wished with God is done!'"
+
+"It is so," said Abram. "You act and I pray, and you act for me and
+mine. I'd like to be under you when you get the troops you were telling
+me about; but--God knows best."
+
+Surrey sat gazing earnestly into space, crowded by emotions called up by
+these last words, whilst Abram lay watching him with admiring and loving
+eyes. "For me and mine," he repeated softly, his look fastening on the
+blue sleeve, which hung, limp and empty, near his hand. This he put out
+cautiously, but drew it back at some slight movement from his companion;
+then, seeing that he was still absorbed, advanced it, once more, and
+slowly, timidly, gently, lifted it to his mouth, pressing his lips upon
+it as upon a shrine. "For me and mine!" he whispered,--"for me and
+mine!" tears dimming the pathetic, dying eyes.
+
+The peaceful quiet was broken by a tempest of awful sound,--groans and
+shrieks and yells mingled in horrible discord, blended with the
+trampling of many feet,--noises which seemed to their startled and
+excited fancies like those of hell itself. The next moment a door was
+flung open; and Mrs. Franklin, bruised, lame, her garments torn, blood
+flowing from a cut on her head, staggered into the room. "O Lord! O Lord
+Jesus!" she cried, "the day of wrath has come!" and fell, shuddering and
+crying, on the floor.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+ "_Will the future come? It seems that we may almost ask
+ this question, when we see such terrible shadow._"
+
+ VICTOR HUGO
+
+
+Here it will be necessary to consider some facts which, while they are
+rather in the domain of the grave recorder of historical events, than in
+that of the narrator of personal experiences, are yet essential to the
+comprehension of the scenes in which Surrey and Francesca took such
+tragic parts.
+
+Following the proclamation for a draft in the city of New York, there
+had been heard on all sides from the newspaper press which sympathized
+with and aided the rebellion, premonitions of the coming storm;
+denunciations of the war, the government, the soldiers, of the harmless
+and inoffensive negroes; angry incitings of the poor man to hatred
+against the rich, since the rich man could save himself from the
+necessity of serving in the ranks by the payment of three hundred
+dollars of commutation money; incendiary appeals to the worst passions
+of the most ignorant portion of the community; and open calls to
+insurrection and arms to resist the peaceable enforcement of a law
+enacted in furtherance of the defence of the nation's life.
+
+Doubtless this outbreak had been intended at the time of the darkest and
+most disastrous days of the Republic; when the often-defeated and sorely
+dispirited Army of the Potomac was marching northward to cover
+Washington and Baltimore, and the victorious legions of traitors under
+Lee were swelling across the border, into a loyal State; when Grant
+stood in seemingly hopeless waiting before Vicksburg, and Banks before
+Port Hudson; and the whole people of the North, depressed and
+disheartened by the continued series of defeats to our arms, were
+beginning to look each at his neighbor, and whisper with white lips,
+"Perhaps, after all, this struggle is to be in vain."
+
+Had it been attempted at this precise time, it would, without question,
+have been, not a riot, but an insurrection,--would have been a portion
+of the army of rebellion, organized and effective for the prosecution of
+the war, and not a mob, hideous and devilish in its work of destruction,
+yet still a mob; and as such to be beaten down and dispersed in a
+comparatively short space of time.
+
+On the morning of Monday, the thirteenth of July, began this outbreak,
+unparalleled in atrocities by anything in American history, and
+equalled only by the horrors of the worst days of the French Revolution.
+Gangs of men and boys, composed of railroad _employées_, workers in
+machine-shops, and a vast crowd of those who lived by preying upon
+others, thieves, pimps, professional ruffians,--the scum of the
+city,--jail-birds, or those who were running with swift feet to enter
+the prison-doors, began to gather on the corners, and in streets and
+alleys where they lived; from thence issuing forth they visited the
+great establishments on the line of their advance, commanding their
+instant close and the companionship of the workmen,--many of them
+peaceful and orderly men,--on pain of the destruction of one and a
+murderous assault upon the other, did not their orders meet with instant
+compliance.
+
+A body of these, five or six hundred strong, gathered about one of the
+enrolling-offices in the upper part of the city, where the draft was
+quietly proceeding, and opened the assault upon it by a shower of clubs,
+bricks, and paving-stones torn from the streets, following it up by a
+furious rush into the office. Lists, records, books, the drafting-wheel,
+every article of furniture or work in the room was rent in pieces, and
+strewn about the floor or flung into the street; while the law officers,
+the newspaper reporters,--who are expected to be everywhere,--and the
+few peaceable spectators, were compelled to make a hasty retreat through
+an opportune rear exit, accelerated by the curses and blows of the
+assailants.
+
+A safe in the room, which contained some of the hated records, was
+fallen upon by the men, who strove to wrench open its impregnable lock
+with their naked hands, and, baffled, beat them on its iron doors and
+sides till they were stained with blood, in a mad frenzy of senseless
+hate and fury. And then, finding every portable article
+destroyed,--their thirst for ruin growing by the little drink it had
+had,--and believing, or rather hoping, that the officers had taken
+refuge in the upper rooms, set fire to the house, and stood watching the
+slow and steady lift of the flames, filling the air with demoniac
+shrieks and yells, while they waited for the prey to escape from some
+door or window, from the merciless fire to their merciless hands. One of
+these, who was on the other side of the street, courageously stepped
+forward, and, telling them that they had utterly demolished all they
+came to seek, informed them that helpless women and little children were
+in the house, and besought them to extinguish the flames and leave the
+ruined premises; to disperse, or at least to seek some other scene.
+
+By his dress recognizing in him a government official, so far from
+hearing or heeding his humane appeal, they set upon him with sticks and
+clubs, and beat him till his eyes were blind with blood, and he--bruised
+and mangled--succeeded in escaping to the handful of police who stood
+helpless before this howling crew, now increased to thousands. With
+difficulty and pain the inoffensive tenants escaped from the rapidly
+spreading fire, which, having devoured the house originally lighted,
+swept across the neighboring buildings till the whole block stood a mass
+of burning flames. The firemen came up tardily and reluctantly, many of
+them of the same class as the miscreants who surrounded them, and who
+cheered at their approach, but either made no attempt to perform their
+duty, or so feeble and farcical a one, as to bring disgrace upon a
+service they so generally honor and ennoble.
+
+At last, when there was here nothing more to accomplish, the mob,
+swollen to a frightful size, including myriads of wretched, drunken
+women, and the half-grown, vagabond boys of the pavements, rushed
+through the intervening streets, stopping cars and insulting peaceable
+citizens on their way, to an armory where were manufactured and stored
+carbines and guns for the government. In anticipation of the attack,
+this, earlier in the day, had been fortified by a police squad capable
+of coping with an ordinary crowd of ruffians, but as chaff before fire
+in the presence of these murderous thousands. Here, as before, the
+attack was begun by a rain of missiles gathered from the streets; less
+fatal, doubtless, than more civilized arms, but frightful in the ghastly
+wounds and injuries they inflicted. Of this no notice was taken by those
+who were stationed within; it was repeated. At last, finding they were
+treated with contemptuous silence, and that no sign of surrender was
+offered, the crowd swayed back,--then forward,--in a combined attempt to
+force the wide entrance-doors. Heavy hammers and sledges, which had been
+brought from forges and workshops, caught up hastily as they gathered
+the mechanics into their ranks, were used with frightful violence to
+beat them in,--at last successfully. The foremost assailants began to
+climb the stairs, but were checked, and for the moment driven back by
+the fire of the officers, who at last had been commanded to resort to
+their revolvers. A half-score fell wounded; and one, who had been acting
+in some sort as their leader,--a big, brutal, Irish ruffian,--dropped
+dead.
+
+The pause was but for an instant. As the smoke cleared away there was a
+general and ferocious onslaught upon the armory; curses, oaths,
+revilings, hideous and obscene blasphemy, with terrible yells and cries,
+filled the air in every accent of the English tongue save that spoken by
+a native American. Such were there mingled with the sea of sound, but
+they were so few and weak as to be unnoticeable in the roar of voices.
+The paving stones flew like hail, until the street was torn into gaps
+and ruts, and every window-pane, and sash, and doorway, was smashed or
+broken. Meanwhile, divers attempts were made to fire the building, but
+failed through haste or ineffectual materials, or the vigilant
+watchfulness of the besieged. In the midst of this gallant defence, word
+was brought to the defenders from head-quarters that nothing could be
+done for their support; and that, if they would save their lives, they
+must make a quick and orderly retreat. Fortunately, there was a side
+passage with which the mob was unacquainted, and, one by one they
+succeeded in gaining this, and vanishing. A few, too faithful or too
+plucky to retreat before such a foe, persisted in remaining at their
+posts till the fire, which had at last been communicated to the
+building, crept unpleasantly near; then, by dropping from sill to sill
+of the broken windows, or sliding by their hands and feet down the rough
+pipes and stones, reached the pavement,--but not without injuries and
+blows, and broken bones, which disabled for a lifetime, if indeed they
+did not die in the hospitals to which a few of the more mercifully
+disposed carried them.
+
+The work thus begun, continued,--gathering in force and fury as the day
+wore on. Police stations, enrolling-offices, rooms or buildings used in
+any way by government authority, or obnoxious as representing the
+dignity of law, were gutted, destroyed, then left to the mercy of the
+flames. Newspaper offices, whose issues had been a fire in the rear of
+the nation's armies by extenuating and defending treason, and through
+violent and incendiary appeals stirring up "lewd fellows of the baser
+sort" to this very carnival of ruin and blood, were cheered as the crowd
+went by. Those that had been faithful to loyalty and law were hooted,
+stoned, and even stormed by the army of miscreants who were only driven
+off by the gallant and determined charge of the police, and in one place
+by the equally gallant, and certainly unique defence, which came from
+turning the boiling water from the engines upon the howling wretches,
+who, unprepared for any such warm reception as this, beat a precipitate
+and general retreat. Before night fell it was no longer one vast crowd
+collected in a single section, but great numbers of gatherings,
+scattered over the whole length and breadth of the city,--some of them
+engaged in actual work of demolition and ruin; others with clubs and
+weapons in their hands, prowling round apparently with no definite
+atrocity to perpetrate, but ready for any iniquity that might
+offer,--and, by way of pastime, chasing every stray police officer, or
+solitary soldier, or inoffensive negro, who crossed the line of their
+vision; these three objects--the badge of a defender of the law,--the
+uniform of the Union army,--the skin of a helpless and outraged
+race--acted upon these madmen as water acts upon a rabid dog.
+
+Late in the afternoon a crowd which could have numbered not less than
+ten thousand, the majority of whom were ragged, frowzy, drunken women,
+gathered about the Orphan Asylum for Colored Children,--a large and
+beautiful building, and one of the most admirable and noble charities of
+the city. When it became evident, from the menacing cries and groans of
+the multitude, that danger, if not destruction, was meditated to the
+harmless and inoffensive inmates, a flag of truce appeared, and an
+appeal was made in their behalf, by the principal, to every sentiment of
+humanity which these beings might possess,--a vain appeal! Whatever
+human feeling had ever, if ever, filled these souls was utterly drowned
+and washed away in the tide of rapine and blood in which they had been
+steeping themselves. The few officers who stood guard over the doors,
+and manfully faced these demoniac legions, were beaten down and flung
+to one side, helpless and stunned whilst the vast crowd rushed in. All
+the articles upon which they could seize--beds, bedding, carpets,
+furniture,--the very garments of the fleeing inmates, some of these torn
+from their persons as they sped by--were carried into the streets, and
+hurried off by the women and children who stood ready to receive the
+goods which their husbands, sons, and fathers flung to their care. The
+little ones, many of them, assailed and beaten; all,--orphans and
+caretakers,--exposed to every indignity and every danger, driven on to
+the street,--the building was fired. This had been attempted whilst the
+helpless children--some of them scarce more than babies--were still in
+their rooms; but this devilish consummation was prevented by the heroism
+of one man. He, the Chief of the Fire Department, strove by voice and
+arm to stay the endeavor; and when, overcome by superior numbers, the
+brands had been lit and piled, with naked hands, and in the face of
+threatened death, he tore asunder the glowing embers, and trod them
+under foot. Again the effort was made, and again failed through the
+determined and heroic opposition of this solitary soul. Then, on the
+front steps, in the midst of these drunken and infuriate thousands, he
+stood up and besought them, if they cared nothing for themselves nor for
+these hapless orphans, that they would not bring lasting disgrace upon
+the city by destroying one of its noblest charities, which had for its
+object nothing but good.
+
+He was answered on all sides by yells and execrations, and frenzied
+shrieks of "Down with the nagurs!" coupled with every oath and every
+curse that malignant hate of the blacks could devise, and drunken, Irish
+tongues could speak. It had been decreed that this building was to be
+razed to the ground. The house was fired in a thousand places, and in
+less than two hours the walls crashed in,--a mass of smoking, blackened
+ruins; whilst the children wandered through the streets, a prey to
+beings who were wild beasts in everything save the superior ingenuity of
+man to agonize and torture his victims.
+
+Frightful as the day had been, the night was yet more hideous; since to
+the horrors which were seen was added the greater horror of deeds which
+might be committed in the darkness; or, if they were seen, it was by the
+lurid glare of burning buildings,--the red flames of which--flung upon
+the stained and brutal faces, the torn and tattered garments, of men and
+women who danced and howled around the scene of ruin they had
+caused--made the whole aspect of affairs seem more like a gathering of
+fiends rejoicing in Pandemonium than aught with which creatures of flesh
+and blood had to do.
+
+Standing on some elevated point, looking over the great city, which
+presented, as usual, at night, a solemn and impressive show, the
+spectator was thrilled with a fearful admiration by the sights and
+sounds which gave to it a mysterious and awful interest. A thousand
+fires streamed up against the sky, making darkness visible; and from all
+sides came a combination of noises such as might be heard from an
+asylum in which were gathered the madmen of the world.
+
+The next morning's sun rose on a city which was ruled by a reign of
+terror. Had the police possessed the heads of Hydra and the arms of
+Briareus, and had these heads all seen, these arms all fought, they
+would have been powerless against the multitude of opposers. Outbreaks
+were made, crowds gathered, houses burned, streets barricaded, fights
+enacted, in a score of places at once. Where the officers appeared they
+were irretrievably beaten and overcome; their stand, were it ever so
+short, but inflaming the passions of the mob to fresh deeds of violence.
+Stores were closed; the business portion of the city deserted; the large
+works and factories emptied of men, who had been sent home by their
+employers, or were swept into the ranks of the marauding bands. The city
+cars, omnibuses, hacks, were unable to run, and remained under shelter.
+Every telegraph wire was cut, the posts torn up, the operators driven
+from their offices. The mayor, seeing that civil power was helpless to
+stem this tide, desired to call the military to his aid, and place the
+city under martial law, but was opposed by the Governor,--a governor,
+who, but a few days before, had pronounced the war a failure; and not
+only predicted, but encouraged this mob rule, which was now crushing
+everything beneath its heavy and ensanguined feet. This man, through
+almost two days of these awful scenes, remained at a quiet seaside
+retreat but a few miles from the city. Coming to it on the afternoon of
+the second day,--instead of ordering cannon planted in the streets,
+giving these creatures opportunity to retire to their homes, and, in the
+event of refusal, blowing them there by powder and ball,--he first went
+to the point where was collected the chiefest mob, and proceeded to
+address them. Before him stood incendiaries, thieves, and murderers, who
+even then were sacking dwelling-houses, and butchering powerless and
+inoffensive beings. These wretches he apostrophized as "My friends,"
+repeating the title again and again in the course of his harangue,
+assuring them that he was there as a proof of his friendship,--which he
+had demonstrated by "sending his adjutant-general to Washington, to have
+the draft stopped"; begging them to "wait for his return"; "to separate
+now as good citizens"; with the promise that they "might assemble again
+whenever they wished to so do"; meanwhile, he would "take care of their
+rights." This model speech was incessantly interrupted by tremendous
+cheering and frantic demonstrations of delight,--one great fellow almost
+crushing the Governor in his enthusiastic embrace. This ended, he
+entered a carriage, and was driven through the blackened, smoking scenes
+of Monday's devastations; through fresh vistas of outrage, of the day's
+execution; bland, gracious, smiling. Wherever he appeared, cheer upon
+cheer rent the air from these crowds of drunken blasphemers; and in one
+place the carriage in which he sat was actually lifted from the ground,
+and carried some rods, by hands yet red with deeds of arson and murder;
+while from all sides voices cried out, "Will ye stop the draft,
+Gov'nur?" "Bully boy!" "Ye're the man for us!" "Hooray for Gov'nur
+Saymoor!" Thus, through the midst of this admiring and applauding crowd,
+this high officer of the law, sworn to maintain public peace, moved to
+his hotel, where he was met by a despatch from Washington, informing him
+that five regiments were under arms and on their way to put an end to
+this bloody assistance to the Southern war.
+
+His allies in newspaper offices attempted to throw the blame upon the
+loyal press and portion of the community. This was but a repetition of
+the cry, raised by traitors in arms, that the government, struggling for
+life in their deadly hold, was responsible for the war: "If thou wouldst
+but consent to be murdered peaceably, there could be no strife."
+
+These editors outraged common sense, truth, and decency, by speaking of
+the riots as an "uprising of the people to defend their liberties,"--"an
+opposition on the part of the workingmen to an unjust and oppressive
+law, enacted in favor of the men of wealth and standing." As though the
+_people_ of the great metropolis were incendiaries, robbers, and
+assassins; as though the poor were to demonstrate their indignation
+against the rich by hunting and stoning defenceless women and children;
+torturing and murdering men whose only offence was the color God gave
+them, or men wearing the self-same uniform as that which they declared
+was to be thrust upon them at the behest of the rich and the great.
+
+It was absurd and futile to characterize this new Reign of Terror as
+anything but an effort on the part of Northern rebels to help Southern
+ones, at the most critical moment of the war,--with the State militia
+and available troops absent in a neighboring Commonwealth,--and the
+loyal people unprepared. These editors and their coadjutors, men of
+brains and ability, were of that most poisonous growth,--traitors to the
+Government and the flag of their country,--renegade Americans. Let it,
+however, be written plainly and graven deeply, that the tribes of
+savages--the hordes of ruffians--found ready to do their loathsome
+bidding, were not of native growth, nor American born.
+
+While it is true that there were some glib-tongued fellows who spoke the
+language without foreign accent, all of them of the lowest order of
+Democratic ward-politicians, of creatures skulking from the outstretched
+arm of avenging law; while the most degraded of the German population
+were represented; while it is also true that there were Irish, and
+Catholic Irish too,--industrious, sober, intelligent people,--who
+indignantly refused participation in these outrages, and mourned over
+the barbarities which were disgracing their national name; it is
+pre-eminently true,--proven by thousands of witnesses, and testified to
+by numberless tongues,--that the masses, the rank and file, the almost
+entire body of rioters, were the worst classes of Irish emigrants,
+infuriated by artful appeals, and maddened by the atrocious whiskey of
+thousands of grog-shops.
+
+By far the most infamous part of these cruelties was that which wreaked
+every species of torture and lingering death upon the colored people of
+the city,--men, women, and children, old and young, strong and feeble
+alike. Hundreds of these fell victims to the prejudice fostered by
+public opinion, incorporated in our statute-books, sanctioned by our
+laws, which here and thus found legitimate outgrowth and action. The
+horrors which blanched the face of Christendom were but the bloody
+harvest of fields sown by society, by cultured men and women, by speech,
+and book, and press, by professions and politics, nay, by the pulpit
+itself, and the men who there make God's truth a lie,--garbling or
+denying the inspired declaration that "He has made of one blood all
+people to dwell upon the face of the earth"; and that he, the All-Just
+and Merciful One, "is no respecter of persons."
+
+This riot, begun ostensibly to oppose the enforcement of a single law,
+developed itself into a burning and pillaging assault upon the homes and
+property of peaceful citizens. To realize this, it was only necessary to
+walk the streets, if that were possible, through those days of riot and
+conflagration, observe the materials gathered into the vast, moving
+multitudes, and scrutinize the faces of those of whom they were
+composed,--deformed, idiotic, drunken, imbecile, poverty-stricken;
+seamed with every line which wretchedness could draw or vicious habits
+and associations delve. To walk these streets and look upon these faces
+was like a fearful witnessing in perspective of the last day, when the
+secrets of life, more loathsome than those of death, shall be laid bare
+in all their hideous deformity and ghastly shame.
+
+The knowledge of these people and their deeds was sufficient to create a
+paralysis of fear, even where they were not seen. Indeed, there was
+terror everywhere. High and low, rich and poor, cultured and ignorant,
+all shivered in its awful grasp. Upon stately avenues and noisome alleys
+it fell with the like blackness of darkness. Women cried aloud to God
+with the same agonized entreaty from knees bent on velvet carpets or
+bare and dingy floors. Men wandered up and down, prisoners in their own
+homes, and cursed or prayed with equal fury or intensity whether the
+homes were simple or splendid. Here one surveyed all his costly store of
+rare and exquisite surroundings, and shook his head as he gazed, ominous
+and foreboding. There, another of darker hue peered out from garret
+casement, or cellar light, or broken window-pane, and, shuddering,
+watched some woman stoned and beaten till she died; some child shot
+down, while thousands of heavy, brutal feet trod over it till the hard
+stones were red with its blood, and the little prostrate form, yet warm,
+lost every likeness of humanity, and lay there, a sickening mass of
+mangled flesh and bones; some man assaulted, clubbed, overborne, left
+wounded or dying or dead, as he fell, or tied to some convenient tree or
+lamp-post to be hacked and hewn, or flayed and roasted, yet living,
+where he hung,--and watching this, and cowering as he watched, held his
+breath, and waited his own turn, not knowing when it might come.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+ "_In breathless quiet, after all their ills._"
+
+ ARNOLD
+
+
+A body of these wretches, fresh from some act of rapine and pillage, had
+seen Mrs. Franklin, hastening home, and, opening the hue and cry, had
+started in full chase after her. Struck by sticks and stones that
+darkened the air, twice down, fleeing as those only do who flee for
+life, she gained her own house, thinking there to find security. Vain
+hope! the door was battered in, the windows demolished, the puny
+barriers between the room in which they were gathered and the creatures
+in pursuit, speedily destroyed,--and these three turned to face death.
+
+By chance, Surrey had his sword at his side, and, tearing this from its
+scabbard, sprang to the defence,--a gallant intent, but what could one
+weapon and one arm do against such odds as these? He was speedily beaten
+down and flung aside by the miscreants who swarmed into the room. It
+was marvellous they did not kill him outright. Doubtless they would have
+done so but for the face propped against the pillows, which caught their
+hungry eyes. Soldier and woman were alike forgotten at sight of this
+dying boy. Here was a foeman worthy their steel. They gathered about
+him, and with savage hands struck at him and the bed upon which he lay.
+
+A pause for a moment to hold consultation, crowded with oaths and jeers
+and curses; obscenity and blasphemy too hideous to read or record,--then
+the cruel hands tore him from his bed, dragged him over the prostrate
+body of his mother, past the senseless form of his brave young defender,
+out to the street. Here they propped him against a tree, to mock and
+torment him; to prick him, wound him, torture him; to task endurance to
+its utmost limit, but not to extinguish life. These savages had no such
+mercy as this in their souls; and when, once or twice he fell away into
+insensibility, a cut or blow administered with devilish skill or
+strength, restored him to anguish and to life.
+
+Surrey, bewildered and dizzy, had recovered consciousness, and sat
+gazing vacantly around him, till the cries and yells without, the
+agonized face within, thrilled every nerve into feeling. Starting up, he
+rushed to the window, but recoiled at the awful sight. Here, he saw,
+there was no human power within reach or call that could interfere. The
+whole block, from street to street, was crowded with men and boys, armed
+with the armory of the street, and rejoicing like veritable fiends of
+hell over the pangs of their victim.
+
+Even in the moment he stood there he beheld that which would haunt his
+memory, did it endure for a century. At last, tired of their sport, some
+of those who were just about Abram had tied a rope about his body, and
+raised him to the nearest branch of an overhanging tree; then, heaping
+under him the sticks and clubs which were flung them from all sides, set
+fire to the dry, inflammable pile, and watched, for the moment silent,
+to see it burn.
+
+Surrey fled to the other side of the room, and, cowering down, buried
+his head in his arm to shut out the awful sight and sounds. But his
+mother,--O marvellous, inscrutable mystery of mother-love!--his mother
+knelt by the open window, near which hung her boy, and prayed aloud,
+that he might hear, for the wrung body and passing soul. Great God! that
+such things were possible, and thy heavens fell not! Through the sound
+of falling blows, reviling oaths, and hideous blasphemy, through the
+crackling of burning fagots and lifting flames, there went out no cry
+for mercy, no shriek of pain, no wail of despair. But when the torture
+was almost ended, and nature had yielded to this work of fiends, the
+dying face was turned towards his mother,--the eyes, dim with the veil
+that falls between time and eternity, seeking her eyes with their latest
+glance,--the voice, not weak, but clear and thrilling even in death,
+cried for her ear, "Be of good cheer, mother! they may kill the body,
+but they cannot touch the soul!" and even with the words the great soul
+walked with God.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After a while the mob melted out of the street to seek new scenes of
+ravage and death; not, however, till they had marked the house, as those
+within learned, for the purpose of returning, if it should so please
+them, at some future time.
+
+When they were all gone, and the way was clear, these two--the mother
+that bore him, the elegant patrician who instinctively shrank from all
+unpleasant and painful things--took down the poor charred body, and
+carrying it carefully and tenderly into the house of a trembling
+neighbor, who yet opened her doors and bade them in, composed it
+decently for its final rest.
+
+It was drawing towards evening, and Surrey was eager to get away from
+this terrible region,--both to take the heart-stricken woman, thus
+thrown upon his care, to some place of rest and safety, and to reassure
+Francesca, who, he knew, would be filled with maddening anxiety and fear
+at his long absence.
+
+At length they ventured forth: no one was in the square;--turned at
+Fortieth Street,--all clear;--went on with hasty steps to the
+Avenue,--not a soul in sight. "Safe,--thank God!" exclaimed Surrey, as
+he hurried his companion onward. Half the space to their destination had
+been crossed, when a band of rioters, rushing down the street from the
+sack and burning of the Orphan Asylum, came upon them. Defence seemed
+utterly vain. Every house was shut; its windows closed and barred; its
+inmates gathered in some rear room. Escape and hope appeared alike
+impossible; but Surrey, flinging his charge behind him, with drawn
+sword, face to the on-sweeping hordes, backed down the street. The
+combination--a negro woman, a soldier's uniform--intensified the mad
+fury of the mob, which was nevertheless held at bay by the heroic front
+and gleaming steel of their single adversary. Only for a moment! Then,
+not venturing near him, a shower of bricks and stones hurtled through
+the air, falling about and upon him.
+
+At this instant a voice called, "This way! this way! For God's sake!
+quick! quick!" and he saw a friendly black face and hand thrust from an
+area window. Still covering with his body his defenceless charge, he
+moved rapidly towards this refuge. Rapid as was the motion, it was not
+speedy enough; he reached the railing, caught her with his one powerful
+arm, imbued now with a giant's strength, flung her over to the waiting
+hands that seized and dragged her in, pausing for an instant, ere he
+leaped himself, to beat back a half-dozen of the foremost miscreants,
+who would else have captured their prey, just vanishing from sight.
+Sublime, yet fatal delay! but an instant, yet in that instant a thousand
+forms surrounded him, disarmed him, overcame him, and beat him down.
+
+Meanwhile what of Francesca? The morning passed, and with its passing
+came terrible rumors of assault and death. The afternoon began, wore
+on,--the rumors deepened to details of awful facts and realities; and
+he--he, with his courage, his fatal dress--was absent, was on those
+death-crowded streets. She wandered from room to room, forgetting her
+reserve, and accosting every soul she met for later news,--for
+information which, received, did but torture her with more intolerable
+pangs, and send her to her knees; though, kneeling, she could not pray,
+only cry out in some dumb, inarticulate fashion, "God be merciful!"
+
+The afternoon was spent; the day gone; the summet twilight deepening
+into night; and still he did not come. She had caught up her hat and
+mantle with some insane intention of rushing into the wide, wild city,
+on a frenzied search, when two gentlemen passing by her door, talking of
+the all-absorbing theme, arrested her ear and attention.
+
+"The house ought to be guarded! These devils will be here
+presently,--they are on the Avenue now."
+
+"Good God! are you certain?"
+
+"Certain."
+
+"You may well be," said a third voice, as another step joined theirs.
+"They are just above Thirtieth Street. I was coming down the Avenue, and
+saw them myself. I don't know what my fate would have been in this
+dress,"--Francesca knew from this that he who talked was of the police
+or soldiery,--"but they were engaged in fighting a young officer, who
+made a splendid defence before they cut him down; his courage was
+magnificent. It makes my blood curdle to think of it. A fair-haired,
+gallant-looking fellow, with only one arm. I could do nothing for him,
+of course, and should have been killed had I stayed; so I ran for life.
+But I don't think I'll ever quite forgive myself for not rushing to the
+rescue, and taking my chance with him."
+
+She did not stay to hear the closing words. Out of the room, past them,
+like a spirit,--through the broad halls,--down the wide stairways,--on
+to the street,--up the long street, deserted here, but O, with what a
+crowd beyond!
+
+A company of soldiers, paltry in number, yet each with loaded rifle and
+bayonet set, charged past her at double-quick upon this crowd, which
+gave way slowly and sullenly at its approach, holding with desperate
+ferocity and determination to whatever ghastly work had been employing
+their hands,--dropped at last,--left on the stones,--the soldiers
+between it and the mob,--silent, motionless,--she saw it, and knew it
+where it lay. O woful sight and knowledge for loving eyes and bursting
+heart!
+
+Ere she reached it some last stones were flung by the retreating crowd,
+a last shot fired in the air,--fired at random, but speeding with as
+unerring aim to her aching, anguished breast, death-freighted and
+life-destroying,--but not till she had reached her destined point and
+end; not till her feet failed close to that bruised and silent form; not
+till she had sunk beside it, gathered it in her fair young arms, and
+pillowed its beautiful head--from which streamed golden hair, dabbled
+and blood-bestained--upon her faithful heart.
+
+There it stirred; the eyes unclosed to meet hers, a gleam of divine love
+shining through their fading fire; the battered, stiffened arm lifted,
+as to fold her in the old familiar caress. "Darling--die--to
+make--free"--came in gasps from the sweet, yet whitening lips. Then she
+lay still. Where his breath blew across her hair it waved, and her bosom
+moved above the slow and labored beating of his heart; but, save for
+this, she was as quiet as the peaceful dead within their graves,--and,
+like them, done with the noise and strife of time forever.
+
+For him,--the shadows deepened where he lay,--the stars came out one by
+one, looking down with clear and solemn eyes upon this wreck of fair and
+beautiful things, wrought by earthly hate and the awful passions of
+men,--then veiled their light in heavy and sombre clouds. The rain fell
+upon the noble face and floating, sunny hair,--washing them free of
+soil, and dark and fearful stains; moistening the fevered, burning lips,
+and cooling the bruised and aching frame. How passed the long night with
+that half-insensible soul? God knoweth. The secrets of that are hidden
+in the eternity to which it now belongs. Questionless, ministering
+spirits drew near, freighted with balm and inspiration; for when the
+shadows fled, and the next morning's sun shone upon these silent forms,
+it revealed faces radiant as with some celestial fire, and beatified as
+reflecting the smile of God.
+
+The inmates of the house before which lay this solemn mystery, rising to
+face a new-made day, looking out from their windows to mark what traces
+were left of last night's devastations, beheld this awful yet sublime
+sight.
+
+"A prejudice which, I trust, will never end," had Mr. Surrey said, in
+bidding adieu to his son but a few short hours before. This prejudice,
+living and active, had now thus brought death and desolation to his own
+doors. "How unsearchable are the judgments of God, and his ways past
+finding out!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+ "_Drink,--for thy necessity is yet greater than mine._"
+
+ Sir Philip Sidney
+
+
+The hospital boat, going out of Beaufort, was a sad, yet great sight. It
+was but necessary to look around it to see that the men here gathered
+had stood on the slippery battle-sod, and scorned to flinch. You heard
+no cries, scarcely a groan; whatever anguish wrung them as they were
+lifted into their berths, or were turned or raised for comfort, found
+little outward sign,--a long, gasping breath now and then; a suppressed
+exclamation; sometimes a laugh, to cover what would else be a cry of
+mortal agony; almost no swearing; these men had been too near the awful
+realities of death and eternity, some of them were still too near, to
+make a mock at either. Having demonstrated themselves heroes in action,
+they would, one and all, be equally heroes in the hour of suffering, or
+on the bed of lingering death.
+
+Jim, so wounded as to make every movement a pang, had been carefully
+carried in on a stretcher, and as carefully lifted into a middle berth.
+
+"Good," said one of the men, as he eased him down on his pillow.
+
+"What's good?" queried Jim.
+
+"The berth; middle berth. Put you in as easy as into the lowest one: bad
+lifting such a leg as yours into the top one, and it's the comfortablest
+of the three when you're in."
+
+"O, that's it, is it? all right; glad I'm here then; getting in didn't
+hurt more than a flea-bite,"--saying which Jim turned his face away to
+put his teeth down hard on a lip already bleeding. The wrench to his
+shattered leg was excruciating, "But then," as he announced to himself,
+"no snivelling, James; you're not going to make a spooney of yourself."
+Presently he moved, and lay quietly watching the others they were
+bringing in.
+
+"Why!" he called, "that's Bertie Curtis, ain't it?" as a slight,
+beautiful-faced boy was carried past him, and raised to his place.
+
+"Yes, it is," answered one of the men, shortly, to cover some strong
+feeling.
+
+Jim leaned out of his berth, regardless of his protesting leg, canteen
+in hand. "Here, Bertie!" he called, "my canteen's full of fresh water,
+just filled. I know it'll taste good to you."
+
+The boy's fine face flushed. "O, thank you, Given, it would taste
+deliriously, but I can't take it,"--glancing down. Jim followed the
+look, to see that both arms were gone, close to the graceful, boyish
+form; seeing which his face twitched painfully,--not with his own
+suffering,--and for a moment words failed him. Just then came up one of
+the sanitary nurses with some cooling drink, and fresh, wet bandages for
+the fevered stumps.
+
+Great drops were standing on Bertie's forehead, and ominous gray shadows
+had already settled about the mouth, and under the long, shut lashes.
+Looking at the face, so young, so refined, some mother's pride and
+darling, the nurse brushed back tenderly the fair hair, murmuring, "Poor
+fellow!"
+
+The eyes unclosed quickly: "There are no poor fellows here, sir!" he
+said.
+
+"Well, brave fellow, then!"
+
+"I did but do my duty,"--a smile breaking through the gathering mists.
+
+Here some poor fellow,--poor indeed,--delirious with fever, called out,
+"Mother! mother! I want to see my mother!"
+
+Tears rushed to the clear, steady eyes, dimmed them, dropped down
+unchecked upon the face. The nurse, with a sob choking in his throat,
+softly raised his hand to brush them away. "Mother," Bertie
+whispered,--"mother!" and was gone where God wipes away the tears from
+all eyes.
+
+For the space of five minutes, as Jim said afterwards, in telling about
+it, "that boat was like a meeting-house." Used as they were to death in
+all forms, more than one brave fellow's eye was dim as the silent shape
+was carried away to make place for the stricken living,--one of whom was
+directly brought in, and the stretcher put down near Jim.
+
+"What's up?" he called, for the man's face was turned from him, and his
+wounded body so covered as to give no clew to its condition. "What's
+wrong?" seeing the bearers did not offer to lift him, and that they were
+anxiously scanning the long rows of berths.
+
+"Berth's wrong," one of them answered.
+
+"What's the matter with the berth?"
+
+"Matter enough! not a middle one nor a lower one empty."
+
+"Well," called a wounded boy from the third tier, "plenty of room up
+here; sky-parlor,--airy lodgings,--all fine,--I see a lot of empty
+houses that'll take him in."
+
+"Like enough,--but he's about blown to pieces," said the bearer in a low
+voice, "and it'll be aw--ful putting him up there; however,"--commencing
+to take off the light cover.
+
+"Helloa!" cried Jim, "that's a dilapidated-looking leg,"--his head out,
+looking at it. "Stop a bit!"--body half after the head,--"you just stop
+that, and come here and catch hold of a fellow; now put me up there. I
+reckon I'll bear hoisting better'n he will, anyway. Ugh! ah! um! owh!
+here we are! bully!"
+
+If Jim had been of the fainting or praying order he would certainly have
+fainted or prayed; as it was, he said "Bully!" but lay for a while
+thereafter still as a mouse.
+
+"Given, you're a brick!" one of the boys was apostrophizing him. Jim
+took no notice. "And your man's in, safe and sound"; he turned at that,
+and leaned forward, as well as he could, to look at the occupant of his
+late bed.
+
+"Jemime!" he cried, when he saw the face. "I say, boys! it's
+Ercildoune--Robert--flag--Wagner--hurray--let's give three cheers for
+the color-sergeant,--long may he wave!"
+
+The men, propped up or lying down, gave the three cheers with a will,
+and then three more; and then, delighted with their performance, three
+more after that, Jim winding up the whole with an "a-a-ah,--Tiger!" that
+made them all laugh; then relapsing into silence and a hard battle with
+pain.
+
+A weary voyage,--a weary journey thereafter to the Northern
+hospitals,--some dying by the way, and lowered through the shifting,
+restless waves, or buried with hasty yet kindly hands in alien
+soil,--accounted strangers and foemen in the land of their birth. God
+grant that no tread of rebellion in the years to come, nor thunder of
+contending armies, may disturb their peace!
+
+Some stopped in the heat and dust of Washington to be nursed and tended
+in the great barracks of hospitals,--uncomfortable-looking without,
+clean and spacious and admirable within; some to their homes, on
+long-desired and eagerly welcomed furloughs, there to be cured speedily,
+the body swayed by the mind; some to suffer and die; some to struggle
+against winds and tides of mortality and conquer,--yet scarred and
+maimed; some to go out, as giants refreshed with new wine, to take their
+places once more in the great conflict, and fight there faithfully to
+the end.
+
+Among these last was Jim; but not till after many a hard battle, and
+buffet, and back-set did life triumph and strength prevail. One thing
+which sadly retarded his recovery was his incessant anxiety about
+Sallie, and his longing to see her once more. He had himself, after his
+first hurt, written her that he was slightly wounded; but when he
+reached Washington, and the surgeon, looking at his shattered leg,
+talked about amputation and death, Jim decided that Sallie should not
+know a word of all this till something definite was pronounced.
+
+"She oughtn't to have an ugly, one-legged fellow," he said, "to drag
+round with her; and, if she knows how bad it is, she'll post straight
+down here, to nurse and look after me,--I know her! and she'll have me
+in the end, out of sheer pity; and I ain't going to take any such mean
+advantage of her: no, sir-ee, not if I know myself. If I get well, safe
+and sound, I'll go to her; and, if I'm going to die, I'll send for her;
+so I'll wait,"--which he did.
+
+He found, however, that it was a great deal easier making the decision,
+than keeping it when made. Sallie, hearing nothing from him,--supposing
+him still in the South,--fearful as she had all along been that she
+stood on uncertain ground,--Mrs. Surrey away in New York,--and Robert
+Ercildoune, as the papers asserted in their published lists, mortally
+wounded,--having no indirect means of communication with him, and
+fearing to write again without some sign from him,--was sorrowing in
+silence at home.
+
+The silence reacted on him; not realizing its cause he grew fretful and
+impatient, and the fretfulness and impatience told on his leg,
+intensified his fever, and put the day of recovery--if recovery it was
+to be--farther into the future.
+
+"See here, my man,"--said the quick little surgeon one day, "you're
+worrying about something. This'll never do; if you don't stop it, you'll
+die, as sure as fate; and you might as well make up your mind to it at
+once,--so, now!"
+
+"Well, sir," answered Jim, "it's as good a time to die now, I reckon, as
+often happens; but I ain't dead yet, not by a long shot; and I ain't
+going to die neither; so, now, yourself!"
+
+The doctor laughed. "All right; if you'll get up that spirit, and keep
+it, I'll bet my pile on your recovery,--but you'll have to stop
+fretting. You've got something on your mind that's troubling you; and
+the sooner you get rid of it, if you can, the better. That's all I've
+got to say." And he marched off.
+
+"Get rid of it," mused Jim, "how in thunder'll I get rid of it if I
+don't hear from Sallie? Let me see--ah! I have it!" and looking more
+cheerful on the instant he lay still, watching for the doctor to come
+down the ward once more. "Helloa!" he called, then. "Helloa!" responded
+the doctor, coming over to him, "what's the go now? you're improved
+already."
+
+"Got any objection to telling a lie?"--this might be called coming to
+the point.
+
+"That depends--" said the doctor.
+
+"Well, all's fair in love and war, they say. This is for love. Help a
+fellow?"
+
+"Of course,--if I can,--and the fellow's a good one, like Jim Given.
+What is it you want?"
+
+"Well, I want a letter written, and I can't do it myself, you
+know,"--looking down at his still bandaged arm,--"likewise I want a lie
+told in it, and these ladies here are all angels, and of course you
+can't ask an angel to tell a lie,--no offence to you; so if you can take
+the time, and'll do it, I'll stand your everlasting debtor, and shoulder
+the responsibility if you're afraid of the weight."
+
+"What sort of a lie?"
+
+"A capital one; listen. I want a young lady to know that I'm wounded in
+the arm,--you see? not bad; nor nothing over which she need worry, and
+nothing that hurts me much; and I ain't damaged in any other way; legs
+not mentioned in this concern,--you understand?" The doctor nodded. "But
+it's tied up my hand, so that I have to get you to say all this for me.
+I'll be well pretty soon; and, if I can get a furlough, I'll be up in
+Philadelphia in a jiffy,--so she can just prepare for the infliction,
+&c. Comprendy? And'll you do it?"
+
+"Of course I will, if you don't want the truth told, and the fib'll do
+you any good; and, upon my word, the way you're looking I really think
+it will. So now for it."
+
+Thus the letter was written, and read, and re-read, to make sure that
+there was nothing in it to alarm Sallie; and, being satisfactory on that
+head, was finally sent away, to rejoice the poor girl who had waited,
+and watched, and hoped for it through such a weary time. When she
+answered it, her letter was so full of happiness and solicitude, and a
+love that, in spite of herself, spoke out in every line, that Jim
+furtively kissed it, and read it into tatters in the first few hours of
+its possession; then tucking it away in his hospital shirt, over his
+heart, proceeded to get well as fast as fast could be.
+
+"Well," said the doctor, a few weeks afterwards, as Jim was going home
+on his coveted sick-leave, "Mr. Thomas Carlyle calls fibs wind-bags. If
+that singular remedy would work to such a charm with all my men, I'd
+tell lies with impunity. Good by, Jim, and the best of good luck to
+you."
+
+"The same to you, Doctor, and I hope you may always find a friend in
+need, to lie for you. Good by, and God bless you!" wringing his hand
+hard,--"and now, hurrah for home!"
+
+"Hurrah it is!" cried the little surgeon after him, as, happy and proud,
+he limped down the ward, and turned his face towards home.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+ "_Youth on the prow, and Pleasure at the helm._"
+
+ Gray
+
+
+Jim scarcely felt the jolting of the ambulance over the city stones, and
+his impatience and eagerness to get across the intervening space made
+dust, and heat, and weariness of travel seem but as feather weights, not
+to be cared for, nor indeed considered at all; though, in fact, his arm
+complained, and his leg ached distressingly, and he was faint and weak
+without confessing it long before the tiresome journey reached its end.
+
+"No matter," he said to himself; "it'll be all well, or forgotten, at
+least, when I see Sallie once more; and so, what odds?"
+
+The end was gained at last, and he would have gone to her fast as
+certain Rosinantes, yclept hackhorses, could carry him, but, stopping
+for a moment to consider, he thought, "No, that will never do! Go to
+her looking like such a guy? Nary time. I'll get scrubbed, and put on a
+clean shirt, and make myself decent, before she sees me. She always used
+to look nice as a new pin, and she liked me to look so too; so I'd
+better put my best foot foremost when she hasn't laid eyes on me for
+such an age. I'm fright enough, anyway, goodness knows, with my
+thinness, and my old lame leg; so--" sticking his head out of the
+window, and using his lungs with astonishing vigor--"Driver! streak like
+lightning, will you, to the 'Merchants'? and you shall have extra fare."
+
+"Hold your blab there," growled the driver; "I ain't such a pig yet as
+to take double fare from a wounded soldier. You'll pay me well at
+half-price,--when we get where you want to go,"--which they did soon.
+
+"No!" said Jehu, thrusting back part of the money, "I ain't agoin' to
+take it, so you needn't poke it out at me. I'm all right; or, if I
+ain't, I'll make it up on the next broadcloth or officer I carry; never
+you fear! us fellows knows how to take care of ourselves, you'd better
+believe!" which statement Jim would have known to be truth, without the
+necessity of repetition, had he been one of the aforesaid "broadcloths,"
+or "officers," and thus better acquainted with the genus hack-driver in
+the ordinary exercise of its profession.
+
+As it was; he shook hands with the fellow, pocketed the surplus change,
+made his way into the hotel, was in his room, in his bath, under the
+barber's hands, cleaned, shaved, brushed, polished, shining,--as he
+himself would have declared, "in a jiffy" Then, deciding himself to be
+presentable to the lady of his heart, took his crutch and sallied forth,
+as good-looking a young fellow, spite of the wooden appendage, as any
+the sun shone upon in all the big city, and as happy, as it was bright.
+
+He knew where to go, and, by help of street-cars and other legs than his
+own, he was there speedily. He knew the very room towards which to turn;
+and, reaching it, paused to look in through the half-open
+door,--delighted thus to watch and listen for a little space unseen.
+
+Sallie was sitting, her handsome head bent over her sewing,--Frankie
+gambolling about the floor.
+
+"O sis, _don't_ you wish Jim would come home?" queried the youngster. "I
+do,--I wish he'd come right straight away."
+
+"Right straight away? What do _you_ want to see Jim for?"
+
+"O, 'cause he's nice; and 'cause he'll take me to the Theayter; and
+'cause he'll treat,--apples, and peanuts, and candy, you know,
+and--and--ice-cream," wiping the beads from his little red face,--the
+last desideratum evidently suggested by the fiery summer heat. "I say,
+Sallie!"--a pause--"won't you get me some ice-cream this evening?"
+
+"Yes, Bobbity, if you'll be a good boy."
+
+Frankie looked dubious over that proposition. Jim never made any such
+stipulations: so, after another pause, in which he was probably
+considering the whole subject with due and becoming gravity,--evidently
+desiring to hear his own wish propped up by somebody else's
+seconding,--he broke out again, "Now, Sallie, don't you just wish Jim
+would come home?"
+
+"O Frankie, don't I?" cried the girl, dropping her work, and stretching
+out her empty arms as though she would clasp some shape in the air.
+
+Frankie, poor child! innocently imagining the proffered embrace was for
+him, ran forward, for he was an affectionate little soul, to give Sallie
+a good hug, but found himself literally left out in the cold; no arms to
+meet, and no Sallie, indeed, to touch him. Something big, burly, and
+blue loomed up on his sight,--something that was doing its best to crush
+Sallie bodily, and to devour what was not crushed; something that could
+say nothing by reason of its lips being so much more pleasantly engaged,
+and whose face was invisible through its extraordinary proximity to
+somebody else's face and hair.
+
+Frankie, finding he could gain neither sight nor sound of notice, began
+to howl. But as neither of the hard-hearted creatures seemed to care for
+the poor little chap's howling, he fell upon the coat-tails of the big
+blue obstruction, and pulled at them lustily,--not to say
+viciously,--till their owner turned, and beheld him panting and fiery.
+
+"Helloa, youngster! what's to pay now?"
+
+"Wow! if 'tain't Jim. Hooray!" screeched the youngster, first embracing
+the blue legs, and then proceeding to execute a dance upon his head.
+"Te, te, di di, idde i-dum," he sang, coming feet down, finally.
+
+Evidently the bad boy's language had been corrupted by his street
+_confrères_; it was a missionary ground upon which Sallie entered, more
+or less faithfully, every day to hoe and weed; but of this last
+specimen-plant she took no notice, save to laugh as Jim, catching him
+up, first kissed him, then gave him a shake and a small spank, and,
+thrusting a piece of currency into his hand, whisked him outside the
+door with a "Come, shaver, decamp, and treat yourself to-day," and had
+it shut and fastened in a twinkling.
+
+"O Jim!" she cried then, her soul in her handsome eyes.
+
+"O Sallie!"--and he had her fast and tight once more.
+
+An ineffable blank, punctuated liberally with sounding exclamation
+points, and strongly marked periods,--though how or why a blank should
+be punctuated at all, only blissful lovers could possibly define.
+
+"Jim, dear Jim!" whispering it, and snuggling her blushing face closer
+to the faded blue, "can you love me after all that has happened?"
+
+"Come now! _can_ I love you, my beauty? Slightly, I should think. O, te,
+te, di di, idde i-dum,"--singing Frank's little song with his big, gay
+voice,--"I'm happy as a king."
+
+Happy as a king, that was plain enough. And what shall be said of her,
+as he sat down, and, resting the wounded leg--stiff and sore yet,--held
+Sallie on his other knee,--then fell to admiring her while she stroked
+his mustache and his crisp, curling hair, looking at both and at him
+altogether with an expression of contented adoration in her eyes.
+
+Frank, tired of prowling round the door, candy in hand, here thrust his
+head in at the window, and, unfortunately for his plans, sneezed.
+"Mutual-admiration society!" he cried at that, seeing that he was
+detected in any case, and running away,--his run spoiled as soon as it
+began.
+
+"We are a handsome couple," laughed Jim, holding back her face between
+both hands,--"ain't we, now?"
+
+Yes, they were,--no mistake about that, handsome as pictures.
+
+And merry as birds, through all of his short stay. They would see no
+danger in the future: Jim had been scathed in time past so often, yet
+come out safe and sound, that they would have no fear for what was to
+befall him in time to come. If they had, neither showed it to the other.
+Jim thought, "Sallie would break her heart, if she knew just what is
+down there,--so it would be a pity to talk about it"; and Sallie
+thought, "It's right for Jim to go, and I won't say a word to keep him
+back, no matter how I feel."
+
+The furlough was soon--ah! how soon--out, the days of happiness over;
+and Jim, holding her in a last close embrace, said his farewell: "Come,
+Sallie, you're not to cry now, and make me a coward. It'll only be for a
+little while; the Rebs _can't_ stand it much longer, and then--"
+
+"Ah, Jim! but if you should--"
+
+"Yes, but I sha'n't, you see; not a bit of it; don't you go to think it.
+'I bear'--what is it? O--'a charmed life,' as Mr. Macbeth says, and
+you'll see me back right and tight, and up to time. One kiss more, dear.
+God bless you! good by!" and he was gone.
+
+She leaned out of the window,--she smiled after him, kissed her hand,
+waved her handkerchief, so long as he could see them,--till he had
+turned a corner way down the street,--and smile, and hand, and
+handkerchief were lost to his sight; then flung herself on the floor,
+and cried as though her very heart would break. "God send him
+home,--send him safe and soon home!" she implored; entreaty made for how
+many loved ones, by how many aching hearts, that speedily lost the need
+of saying amen to any such petition,--the prayer for the living lost in
+mourning for the dead. Heaven grant that no soul that reads this ever
+may have the like cause to offer such prayer again!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+ "_When we see the dishonor of a thing, then it is time to
+ renounce it._"
+
+ Plutarch
+
+
+A letter which Sallie wrote to Jim a few weeks after his departure tells
+its own story, and hence shall be repeated here.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Philadelphia, October 29, 1863.
+
+Dear Jim:--
+
+I take my pen in hand this morning to write you a letter, and to tell
+you the news, though I don't know much of the last except about Frankie
+and myself. However, I suppose you will care more to hear that than any
+other, so I will begin.
+
+Maybe you will be surprised to hear that Frankie and I are at Mr.
+Ercildoune's. Well, we are,--and I will tell you how it came about. Not
+long after you went away, Frank began to pine, and look droopy. There
+wasn't any use in giving him medicine, for it didn't do him a bit of
+good. He couldn't eat, and he didn't sleep, and I was at my wits' ends
+to know what to do for him.
+
+One day Mrs. Lee,--that Mr. Ercildoune's housekeeper,--an old English
+lady she is, and she's lived with him ever since he was married, and
+before he came here,--a real lady, too,--came in with some sewing, some
+fine shirts for Mr. Robert Ercildoune. I asked after him, and you'll be
+glad to know that he's recovering. He didn't have to lose his leg, as
+they feared; and his arm is healing; and the wound in his breast getting
+well. Mrs. Lee says she's very sorry the stump isn't longer, so that he
+could wear a Palmer arm,--but she's got no complaints to make; they're
+only too glad and thankful to have him living at all, after such a
+dreadful time.
+
+While I was talking with her, Frankie called me from the next room, and
+began to cry. You wouldn't have known him,--he cried at everything, and
+was so fretful and cross I could scarcely get along at all. When I got
+him quiet, and came back, Mrs. Lee says, "What's the matter with Frank?"
+so I told her I didn't know,--but would she see him? Well, she saw him,
+and shook her head in a bad sort of way that scared me awfully, and I
+suppose she saw I was frightened, for she said, "All he wants is plenty
+of fresh air, and good, wholesome country food and exercise." I can
+tell you, spite of that, she went away, leaving me with heavy enough a
+heart.
+
+The next day Mr. Ercildoune came in. How he is changed! I haven't seen
+him before since Mrs. Surrey died, and that of itself was enough to kill
+him, without this dreadful time about Mr. Robert.
+
+"Good morning, Miss Sallie," says he, "how are you? and I'm glad to see
+you looking so well." So I told him I was well, and then he asked for
+Frankie. "Mrs. Lee tells me," he said, "that your little brother is
+quite ill, and that he needs country air and exercise. He can have them
+both at The Oaks; so if you'll get him ready, the carriage will come for
+you at whatever time you appoint. Mrs. Lee can find you plenty of work
+as long as you care to stay." He looked as if he wanted to say something
+more, but didn't; and I was just as sure as sure could be that it was
+something about Miss Francesca, probably about her having me out there
+so much; for his face looked so sad, and his lips trembled so, I knew
+that must be in his mind. And when I thought of it, and of such an awful
+fate as it was for her, so young, and handsome, and happy, like the
+great baby I am, I just threw my apron over my head, and burst out
+crying.
+
+"Don't!" he said,--"don't!" in O, such a voice! It was like a knife
+going through me; and he went quick out of the room, and downstairs,
+without even saying good by.
+
+Well, we came out the next day,--and I have plenty to do, and Frankie is
+getting real bright and strong. I can see Mr. Ercildoune likes to have
+us here, because of the connection with Miss Francesca. She was so
+interested in us, and so kind to us, and he knows I loved her so very
+dearly,--and if it's any comfort to him I'm sure I'm glad to be here,
+without taking Frankie into the account,--for the poor gentleman looks
+so bowed and heart-broken that it makes one's heart ache just to see
+him. Mr. Robert isn't well enough to be about yet, but he sits up for a
+while every day, and is getting on--the doctor says--nicely. They both
+talk about you often; and Mr. Ercildoune, I can see, thinks everything
+of you for that good, kind deed of yours, when you and Mr. Robert were
+on the transport together. Dear Jim, he don't know you as well as I do,
+or he'd know that you couldn't help doing such things,--not if you
+tried.
+
+I hope you'll like the box that comes with this. Mr. Robert had it
+packed for you in his own room, to see that everything went in that
+you'd like. Of course, as he's been a soldier himself, he knows better
+what they want than anybody else can.
+
+Dear Jim, do take care of yourself; don't go and get wounded; and don't
+get sick; and, whatever you do, don't let the rebels take you prisoner,
+unless you want to drive me frantic. I think about you pretty much all
+the time, and pray for you, as well as I know how, every night when I go
+to bed, and am always
+
+Your own loving
+
+Sallie.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Wow!" said Jim, as he read, "she's in a good berth there." So she
+was,--and so she stayed. Frankie got quite well once more, and Sallie
+began to think of going, but Mr. Ercildoune evidently clung to her and
+to the sunshine which the bright little fellow cast through the house.
+Sallie was quite right in her supposition. Francesca had cared for this
+girl, had been kind to her and helped her,--and his heart went out to
+everything that reminded him of his dear, dead child. So it happened
+that autumn passed, and winter, and spring,--and still they stayed. In
+fact, she was domesticated in the house, and, for the first time in
+years, enjoyed the delightful sense of a home. Here, then, she set up
+her rest, and remained; here, when the "cruel war was over," the armies
+disbanded, the last regiments discharged, and Jimmy "came marching
+home," brown, handsome, and a captain, here he found her,--and from here
+he married and carried her away.
+
+It was a happy little wedding, though nobody was there beside the
+essentials, save the family and a dear friend of Robert's, who was with
+him at the time, as he had been before and would be often again,--none
+other than William Surrey's favorite cousin and friend, Tom Russell.
+
+The letter which Surrey had written never reached his hand till he lay
+almost dying from the effects of wounds and exposure, after he had been
+brought in safety to our lines by his faithful black friends, at Morris
+Island. Surrey had not mistaken his temper; gay, reckless fellow, as he
+was, he was a thorough gentleman, in whom could harbor no small spite,
+nor petty prejudice,--and without a mean fibre in his being. At a glance
+he took in the whole situation, and insisting upon being propped up in
+bed, with his own hand--though slowly, and as a work of
+magnitude--succeeded in writing a cordial letter of congratulation and
+affection, that would have been to Surrey like the grasp of a brother's
+hand in a strange and foreign country, had it ever reached his touch and
+eyes.
+
+But even while Tom lay writing his letter, occasionally muttering,
+"They'll have a devilish hard time of it!" or "Poor young un!" or "She's
+one in a million!" or some such sentence which marked his feeling and
+care,--these two of whom he thought, to whose future he looked with such
+loving anxiety, were beyond the reach of human help or hindrance,--done
+alike with the sorrows and joys of time.
+
+From a distance, with the help of a glass, and absorbing interest, he
+had followed the movements of the flag and its bearer, and had cheered,
+till he fainted from weakness and exhaustion, as he saw them safe at
+last. It was with delight that he found himself on the same transport
+with Ercildoune, and discovered in him the brother of the young girl for
+whom, in the past, he had had so pleasing and deep a regard, and whose
+present and future were so full of interest for him, in their new and
+nearer relations.
+
+These two young men, unlike as they were in most particulars, were drawn
+together by an irresistible attraction. They had that common bond,
+always felt and recognized by those who possess it, of the gentle
+blood,--tastes and instincts in common, and a fine, chivalrous
+sentiment which each felt and thoroughly appreciated in the other. The
+friendship thus begun grew with the passing years, and was intensified a
+hundred fold by a portion of the past to which they rarely referred, but
+which lay always at the bottom of their hearts. They had each for those
+two who had lain dead together in the streets of New York the strongest
+and tenderest love,--and though it was not a tie about which they could
+talk, it bound them together as with chains of steel.
+
+Russell was with Ercildoune at the time of the wedding, and entered into
+it heartily, as they all did. The result was, as has been written, the
+gayest and merriest of times. Sallies dress, which Robert had given her,
+was a sight to behold; and the pretty jewels, which were a part of his
+gift, and the long veil, made her look, as Jim declared, "so handsome he
+didn't know her,"--though that must have been one of Jim's stories, or
+else he was in the habit of making love to strange ladies with
+extraordinary ease and effrontery.
+
+The breakfast was another sight to behold. As Mary the cook said to Jane
+the housemaid, "If they'd been born kings and queens, Mrs. Lee couldn't
+have laid herself out more; it's grand, so it is,--just you go and see;"
+which Jane proceeded to do, and forthwith thereafter corroborated Mary's
+enthusiastic statement.
+
+There were plenty of presents, too: and when it was all over, and they
+were in the carriage, to be sent to the station, Mr. Ercildoune,
+holding Sallie's hand in farewell, left there a bit of paper, "which is
+for you," he said. "God protect, and keep you happy, my child!" Then
+they were gone, with many kind adieus and good wishes called and sent
+after them. When they were seated in the cars, Sallie looked at her bit
+of paper, and read on its outer covering, "A wedding-gift to Sallie
+Howard from my dear daughter Francesca," and found within the deed of a
+beautiful little home. God bless her! say we, with Mr. Ercildoune. God
+bless them both, and may they live long to enjoy it!
+
+That afternoon, as Tom and Robert were driving, Russell, noting the
+unwonted look of life and activity, and the gay flags flung to the
+breeze, demanded what it all meant. "Why," said he, "it is like a field
+day."
+
+"It is so," answered Robert, "or what is the same; it is election day."
+
+"Bless my soul! so it is; and a soldier to be elected. Have you voted?"
+
+"No!"
+
+"No? Here's a nice state of affairs! a fellow that'll get his arm blown
+off for a flag, but won't take the trouble to drop a scrap of paper for
+it. Come, I'll drive you over."
+
+"You forget, Russell!"
+
+"Forget? Nonsense! This isn't 1860, but 1865. I don't forget; I
+remember. It is after the war now,--come."
+
+"As you please," said Robert. He knew the disappointment that awaited
+his friend, but he would not thwart him now.
+
+There was a great crowd about the polling-office, and they all looked on
+with curious interest as the two young men came up. No demonstration was
+made, though a half-dozen brutal fellows uttered some coarse remarks.
+
+"Hear the damned Rebs talk!" said a man in the army blue, who, with keen
+eyes, was observing the scene. "They're the same sort of stuff we licked
+in Carolina."
+
+"Ay," said another, "but with a difference; blue led there; but gray'll
+come off winner here, or I'm mistaken."
+
+Robert stood leaning upon his cane; a support which he would need for
+life, one empty sleeve pinned across his breast, over the scar from a
+deep and yet unhealed wound. The clear October sun shone down upon his
+form and face, upon the broad folds of the flag that waved in triumph
+above him, upon a country where wars and rumors of wars had ceased.
+
+"Courage, man! what ails you?" whispered Russell, as he felt his comrade
+tremble; "it's a ballot in place of a bayonet, and all for the same
+cause; lay it down."
+
+Robert put out his hand.
+
+"Challenge the vote!" "Challenge the vote!" "No niggers here!" sounded
+from all sides.
+
+The bit of paper which Ercildoune had placed on the window-ledge
+fluttered to the ground on the outer side, and, looking at Tom, Robert
+said quietly, "1860 or 1865?--is the war ended?"
+
+"No!" answered Tom, taking his arm, and walking away. "No, my friend! so
+you and I will continue in the service."
+
+"Not ended;--it is true! how and when will it be closed?"
+
+"That is for the loyal people of America to decide," said Russell, as
+they turned their faces towards home.
+
+How and when will it be closed? a question asked by the living and the
+dead,--to which America must respond.
+
+Among the living is a vast army: black and white,--shattered and maimed,
+and blind: and these say, "Here we stand, shattered and maimed, that the
+body politic might be perfect! blind forever, that the glorious sun of
+liberty might shine abroad throughout the land, for all people, through
+all coming time."
+
+And the dead speak too. From their crowded graves come voices of
+thrilling and persistent pathos, whispering, "Finish the work that has
+fallen from our nerveless hands. Let no weight of tyranny, nor taint of
+oppression, nor stain of wrong, cumber the soil nor darken the land we
+died to save."
+
+
+
+
+NOTE
+
+
+Since it is impossible for any one memory to carry the entire record of
+the war, it is well to state, that almost every scene in this book is
+copied from life, and that the incidents of battle and camp are part of
+the history of the great contest.
+
+The story of Fort Wagner is one that needs no such emphasis, it is too
+thoroughly known; that of the Color-Sergeant, whose proper name is W.H.
+Carney, is taken from a letter written by General M.S. Littlefield to
+Colonel A.G. Browne, Secretary to Governor Andrew.
+
+From the _New York Tribune_ and the _Providence Journal_ were taken the
+accounts of the finding of Hunt, the coming of the slaves into a South
+Carolina camp, and the voluntary carrying, by black men, ere they were
+enlisted, of a schooner into the fight at Newbern. Than these two
+papers, none were considered more reliable and trustworthy in their war
+record.
+
+Almost every paper in the North published the narrative of the black man
+pushing off the boat, for which an official report is responsible. The
+boat was a flat-boat, with a company of soldiers on board; and the
+battery under the fire of which it fell was at Rodman's Point, North
+Carolina. In drawing the outlines of this, as of the others, I have
+necessarily used a somewhat free pencil, but the main incident of each
+has been faithfully preserved.
+
+The disabled black soldier my own eyes saw thrust from a car in
+Philadelphia.
+
+The portraits of Ercildoune and his children may seem to some
+exaggerated; those who have, as I, the rare pleasure of knowing the
+originals, will say, "the half has not been told."
+
+Every leading New York paper, Democratic and Republican, was gone over,
+ere the summary of the Riots was made; and I think the record will be
+found historically accurate. The _Anglo-African_ gives the story of poor
+Abram Franklin; and the assault on Surrey has its likeness in the death
+of Colonel O'Brien.
+
+In a conversation between Surrey and Francesca, allusion is made to an
+act the existence of which I have frequently heard doubted. I therefore
+copy here a part of the "Retaliatory Act," passed by the Rebel
+Government at Richmond, and approved by its head, May 1, 1863:--
+
+"Sec. 4. Every white person, being a commissioned officer, or acting as
+such, who, during the present war, shall command negroes or mulattoes in
+arms against the Confederate States, or who shall arm, train, organize,
+or prepare negroes or mulattoes for military service against the
+Confederate States, or who shall voluntarily aid negroes or mulattoes in
+any military enterprise, attack, or conflict in such service, shall be
+deemed as inciting servile insurrection; and shall, if captured, be put
+to death."
+
+I have written this book, and send it to the consciences and the hearts
+of the American people. May God, for whose "little ones" I have here
+spoken, vivify its words.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of What Answer?, by Anna E. Dickinson
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of What Answer?, by Anna E. Dickinson
+
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+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
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+Title: What Answer?
+
+Author: Anna E. Dickinson
+
+Release Date: March 18, 2005 [EBook #15402]
+
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+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT ANSWER? ***
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+</pre>
+
+<h1>WHAT ANSWER?</h1>
+
+
+<h2>Anna E. Dickinson</h2>
+
+<h5>1868</h5>
+
+<p>
+ <a href="#WHAT_ANSWER"><b>WHAT ANSWER?</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_I"><b>CHAPTER I</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_II"><b>CHAPTER II</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_III"><b>CHAPTER III</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_IV"><b>CHAPTER IV</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_V"><b>CHAPTER V</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_VI"><b>CHAPTER VI</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_VII"><b>CHAPTER VII</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_VIII"><b>CHAPTER VIII</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_IX"><b>CHAPTER IX</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_X"><b>CHAPTER X</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_XI"><b>CHAPTER XI</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_XII"><b>CHAPTER XII</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_XIII"><b>CHAPTER XIII</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_XIV"><b>CHAPTER XIV</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_XV"><b>CHAPTER XV</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_XVI"><b>CHAPTER XVI</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_XVII"><b>CHAPTER XVII</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII"><b>CHAPTER XVIII</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_XIX"><b>CHAPTER XIX</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_XX"><b>CHAPTER XX</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_XXI"><b>CHAPTER XXI</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#CHAPTER_XXII"><b>CHAPTER XXII</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#NOTE"><b>NOTE</b></a><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="WHAT_ANSWER" id="WHAT_ANSWER"></a>WHAT ANSWER?</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>In flower of youth and beauty's pride.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+DRYDEN<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>A crowded New York street,&mdash;Fifth Avenue at
+the height of the afternoon; a gallant and brilliant
+throng. Looking over the glittering array, the purple and
+fine linen, the sweeping robes, the exquisite equipages, the
+stately houses; the faces, delicate and refined, proud, self-satisfied,
+that gazed out from their windows on the street,
+or that glanced from the street to the windows, or at one
+another,&mdash;looking over all this, being a part of it, one
+might well say, &quot;This is existence, and beside it there is
+none other. Let us dress, dine, and be merry! Life is good,
+and love is sweet, and both shall endure! Let us forget that
+hunger and sin, sorrow and self-sacrifice, want, struggle,
+and pain, have place in the world.&quot; Yet, even with the
+words, &quot;poverty, frost-nipped in a summer suit,&quot; here and
+there hurried by; and once and again through the restless
+tide the sorrowful procession of the tomb made way.</p>
+
+<p>More than one eye was lifted, and many a pleasant
+greeting passed between these selected few who filled the
+street and a young man who lounged by one of the overlooking
+windows; and many a comment was uttered upon
+him when the greeting was made:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A most eligible <i>parti</i>!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Handsome as a god!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O, immensely rich, I assure you!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>Isn't</i> he a beauty!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pity he wasn't born poor!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O, because they say he carried off all the honors at
+college and law-school, and is altogether overstocked with
+brains for a man who has no need to use them.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Will he practise?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Doubtful. Why should he?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ambition, power,&mdash;gratify one, gain the other.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nonsense! He'll probably go abroad and travel for a
+while, come back, marry, and enjoy life.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He does that now, I fancy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Looks so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And indeed he did. There was not only vigor and
+manly beauty, splendid in its present, but the &quot;possibility of
+more to be in the full process of his ripening days,&quot;&mdash;a
+form alert and elegant, which had not yet all of a man's
+muscle and strength; a face delicate, yet strong,&mdash;refined,
+yet full of latent power; a mass of rippling hair like burnished
+gold, flung back on the one side, sweeping low
+across brow and cheek on the other; eyes</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;Of a deep, soft, lucent hue,&mdash;<br />
+Eyes too expressive to be blue,<br />
+Too lovely to be gray.&quot;<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>People involuntarily thought of the pink and flower of
+chivalry as they looked at him, or imagined, in some indistinct
+fashion, that they heard the old songs of Percy and
+Douglas, or the later lays of the cavaliers, as they heard his
+voice,&mdash;a voice that was just now humming one of these
+same lays:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;Then mounte! then mounte, brave gallants, all,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And don your helmes amaine;</span><br />
+Death's couriers, Fame and Honor, call<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Us to the field againe.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Stuff!&quot; he cried impatiently, looking wistfully at the
+men's faces going by,&mdash;&quot;stuff! <i>We</i> look like gallants to ride
+a tilt at the world, and die for Honor and Fame,&mdash;we!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thank God, Willie, you are not called upon for any
+such sacrifice.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, little mother, well you may!&quot; he answered,
+smiling, and taking her hand,&mdash;&quot;well you may, for I am
+afraid I should fall dreadfully short when the time came;
+and then how ashamed you'd be of your big boy, who
+took his ease at home, with the great drums beating and
+the trumpets blowing outside. And yet&mdash;I should like to
+be tried!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;See, mother!&quot; he broke out again,&mdash;&quot;see what a life it
+is, getting and spending, living handsomely and doing the
+proper thing towards society, and all that,&mdash;rubbing
+through the world in the old hereditary way; though I
+needn't growl at it, for I enjoy it enough, and find it a
+pleasant enough way, Heaven knows. Lazy idler! enjoying
+the sunshine with the rest. Heigh-ho!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have your profession, Willie. There's work there,
+and opportunity sufficient to help others and do for yourself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ay, and I'll <i>do</i> it! But there is so much that is poor and
+mean, and base and tricky, in it all,&mdash;so much to disgust
+and tire one,&mdash;all the time, day after day, for years. Now if
+it were only a huge giant that stands in your way, you
+could out rapier and have at him at once, and there an
+end,&mdash;laid out or triumphant. That's worth while!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O youth, eager and beautiful,&quot; thought the mother
+who listened, &quot;that in this phase is so alike the world
+over,&mdash;so impatient to do, so ready to brave encounters, so
+willing to dare and die! May the doing be faithful, and the
+encounters be patiently as well as bravely fought, and the
+fancy of heroic death be a reality of noble and earnest life.
+God grant it! Amen.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Meanwhile,&quot; said the gay voice,&mdash;&quot;meanwhile it's a
+pleasant world; let us enjoy it! and as to do this is within
+the compass of a man's wit, therefore will I attempt the
+doing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>While he was talking he had once more come to the
+window, and, looking out, fastened his eyes unconsciously
+but intently upon the face of a young girl who was slowly
+passing by,&mdash;unconsciously, yet so intently that, as if suddenly
+magnetized, a flicker of feeling went over it; the
+mouth, set with a steady sweetness, quivered a little; the
+eyes&mdash;dark, beautiful eyes&mdash;were lifted to his an instant,
+that was all. The mother beside him did not see; but she
+heard a long breath, almost a sigh, break from him as he
+started, then flashed out of the room, snatching his hat in
+the hall, and so on to the street, and away.</p>
+
+<p>Away after her, through block after block, across the
+crowded avenue to Broadway. &quot;Who is she? where did she
+come from? <i>I</i> never saw her before. I wonder if Mrs. Russell
+knows her, or Clara, or anybody! I will know where
+she lives, or where she is going at least,&mdash;that will be some
+clew! There! she is stopping that stage. I'll help her in! no,
+I won't,&mdash;she will think I am chasing her. Nonsense! do
+you suppose she saw you at the window? Of course! No,
+she didn't; don't be a fool! There! I'll get into the next
+stage. Now I'll keep watch of that, and she'll not know.
+So&mdash;all right! Go ahead, driver.&quot; And happy with some
+new happiness, eager, bright, the handsome young fellow
+sat watching that other stage, and the stylish little lace
+bonnet that was all he could see of his magnet, through the
+interminable journey down Broadway.</p>
+
+<p>How clear the air seemed! and the sun, how splendidly
+it shone! and what a glad look was upon all the people's
+faces! He felt like breaking out into gay little snatches of
+song, and moved his foot to the waltz measure that beat
+time in his brain till the irate old gentleman opposite,
+whom nature had made of a sour complexion and art
+assisted to corns, broke out with an angry exclamation.
+That drew his attention for a moment. A slackening of
+speed, a halt, and the stage was wedged in one of the inextricable
+&quot;jams&quot; on Broadway. Vain the search for <i>her</i> stage
+then; looking over the backs of the poor, tired horses, or
+from the sidewalk,&mdash;here, there, at this one and that
+one,&mdash;all for naught! Stage and passenger, eyes, little lace
+bonnet, and all, had vanished away, as William Surrey confessed,
+and confessed with reluctance and discontent.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No matter!&quot; he said presently,&mdash;&quot;no matter! I shall see
+her again. I know it! I feel it! It is written in the book of
+the Fates! So now I shall content me with something&quot;&mdash;that
+looks like her he did not say definitely, but felt it none
+the less, as, going over to the flower-basket near by, he
+picked out a little nosegay of mignonette and geranium,
+with a tea-rosebud in its centre, and pinned it at his
+button-hole. &quot;Delicate and fine!&quot; he thought,&mdash;&quot;delicate
+and fine!&quot; and with the repetition he looked from it down
+the long street after the interminable line of stages; and
+somehow the faint, sweet perfume, and the fair flower, and
+the dainty lace bonnet, were mingled in wild and
+charming confusion in his brain, till he shook himself, and
+laughed at himself, and quoted Shakespeare to excuse himself,&mdash;&quot;A
+mad world, my masters!&quot;&mdash;seeing this poor old
+earth of ours, as people always do, through their own eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;God bless ye! and long life to yer honor! and may the
+blessed Virgin give ye the desire of yer heart!&quot; called the
+Irishwoman after him, as he put back the change in her
+hand and went gayly up the street. &quot;Sure, he's somebody's
+darlint, the beauty! the saints preserve him!&quot; she said, as she
+looked from the gold piece in her palm to the fair, sunny
+head, watching it till it was lost in the crowd from her
+grateful eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Evidently this young man was a favorite, for, as he
+passed along, many a face, worn by business and care,
+brightened as he smiled and spoke; many a countenance
+stamped with the trade-mark, preoccupied and hard,
+relaxed in a kindly recognition as he bowed and went by;
+and more than one found time, even in that busy whirl, to
+glance for a moment after him, or to remember him with
+a pleasant feeling, at least till the pavement had been crossed
+on which they met,&mdash;a long space at that hour of the day,
+and with so much more important matters&mdash;Bull and Bear,
+rise and fall, stock and account&mdash;claiming their attention.</p>
+
+<p>Evidently a favorite, for, turning off into one of the
+side streets, coming into his father's huge foundry, faces
+heated and dusty, tired, stained, and smoke-begrimed,
+glanced up from their work, from forge and fire and
+engine, with an expression that invited a look or word,&mdash;and
+look and word were both ready.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The boss is out, sir,&quot; said one of the foremen, &quot;and if
+you please, and have got the time to spare, I'd like to have
+a word with you before he comes in.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All right, Jim! say your say.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, sir, you'll likely think I'm sticking my nose into
+what doesn't concern me. 'Tain't a very nice thing I've got
+to say, but if I don't say it I don't know who in thunder
+will; and, as it's my private opinion that somebody ought
+to, I'll just pitch in.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very good; pitch in.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very good it is then. Only it ain't. Very bad, more
+like. It's a nasty mess, and no mistake! and there's the cause
+of it!&quot; pointing his brawny hand towards the door, upon
+which was marked, &quot;Office. Private,&quot; and sniffing as
+though he smelt something bad in the air.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You don't mean my father!&quot; flame shooting from the
+clear eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Be damned if I do. Beg pardon. Of course I don't. I
+mean the fellow as is perched up on a high stool in that
+there office, this very minute, poking into his books.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Franklin?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You've hit it. Franklin,&mdash;Abe Franklin,&mdash;that's the
+ticket.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What's the matter with him? what has he done?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Done? nothing! not as I know of, anyway, except
+what's right and proper. 'Tain't what he's done or's like to
+do. It's what he is.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And what may that be?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, he's a nigger! there's the long and short of it.
+Nobody here'd object to his working in this place, providing
+he was a runner, or an errand-boy, or anything that
+it's right and proper for a nigger to be; but to have him sitting
+in that office, writing letters for the boss, and going
+over the books, and superintending the accounts of the
+fellows, so that he knows just what they get on Saturday
+nights, and being as fine as a fiddle, is what the boys won't
+stand; and they swear they'll leave, every man of 'em,
+unless he has his walking papers,&mdash;double-quick too.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very well; let them. There are other workmen, good
+as they, in this city of New York.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hold on, sir! let me say my say first. There are seven
+hundred men working in this place: the most of 'em have
+worked here a long while. Good work, good pay. There
+ain't a man of 'em but likes Mr. Surrey, and would be sorry
+to lose the place; so, if they won't bear it, there ain't any
+that will. Wait a bit! I ain't through yet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Go on,&quot;&mdash;quietly enough spoken, but the mouth
+shook under its silky fringe, and a fiery spot burned on
+either cheek.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All right. Well, sir, I know all about Franklin. He's a
+bright one, smart enough to stock a lot of us with brains
+and have some to spare; he don't interfere with us, and
+does his work well, too, I reckon,&mdash;though that's neither
+here nor there, nor none of our business if the boss is satisfied;
+and he looks like a gentleman, and acts like one,
+there's no denying that! and as for his skin,&mdash;well!&quot; a smile
+breaking over his good-looking face, &quot;his skin's quite as
+white as mine now, anyway,&quot; smearing his red-flannel arm
+over his grimy phiz; &quot;but then, sir, it won't rub off. He's a
+nigger, and there's no getting round it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All right, sir! give you your chance directly. Don't
+speak yet,&mdash;ain't through, if <i>you</i> please. Well, sir, it's agen
+nature,&mdash;you may talk agen it, and work agen it, and fight
+agen it till all's blue, and what good'll it do? You can't get
+an Irishman, and, what's more, a free-born American citizen,
+to put himself on a level with a nigger,&mdash;not by no
+manner of means. No, sir; you can turn out the whole lot,
+and get another after it, and another after that, and so on
+to the end of the chapter, and you can't find men among
+'em all that'll stay and have him strutting through 'em, up
+to his stool and his books, grand as a peacock.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Would they work <i>with</i> him?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;At the same engines, and the like, do you mean?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nary time, so 'tain't likely they'll work under him.
+Now, sir, you see I know what I'm saying, and I'm saying
+it to <i>you</i>, Mr. Surrey, and not to your father, because he
+won't take a word from me nor nobody else,&mdash;and here's
+just the case. Now I ain't bullying, you understand, and I
+say it because somebody else'd say it, if I didn't, uglier
+and rougher. Abe Franklin'll have to go out of this shop
+in precious short order, or every man here'll bolt next
+Saturday night. There! now I've done, sir, and you can
+fire away.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But as he showed no signs of &quot;firing away,&quot; and stood
+still, pondering, Jim broke out again:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Beg pardon, sir. If I've said anything you don't like,
+sorry for it. It's because Mr. Surrey is so good an employer,
+and, if you'll let me say so, because I like you so well,&quot;
+glancing over him admiringly,&mdash;&quot;for, you see, a good
+engineer takes to a clean-built machine wherever he sees
+it,&mdash;it's just because of this I thought it was better to tell
+you, and get you to tell the boss, and to save any row; for
+I'd hate mortally to have it in this shop where I've worked,
+man and boy, so many years. Will you please to speak to
+him, sir? and I hope you understand.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you, Jim. Yes, I understand; and I'll speak to
+him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Was it that the sun was going down, or that some
+clouds were in the sky, or had the air of the shop oppressed
+him? Whatever it was, as he came out he walked with a
+slower step from which some of the spring had gone, and
+the people's faces looked not so happy; and, glancing down
+at his rosebud, he saw that its fair petals had been soiled by
+the smoke and grime in which he had been standing; and,
+while he looked a dead march came solemnly sounding up
+the street, and a soldier's funeral went by,&mdash;rare enough, in
+that autumn of 1860, to draw a curious crowd on either
+side; rare enough to make him pause and survey it; and as
+the line turned into another street, and the music came
+softened to his ear, he once more hummed the words of
+the song which had been haunting him all the day:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;Then mounte! then mounte, brave gallants, all,<br />
+And don your helmes amaine;<br />
+Death's couriers, Fame and Honor, call<br />
+Us to the field againe,&quot;&mdash;<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>sang them to himself, but not with the gay, bright spirit of
+the morning. Then he seemed to see the cavaliers, brilliant
+and brave, riding out to the encounter. Now, in the same
+dim and fanciful way, he beheld them stretched, still and
+dead, upon the plain.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>Thou&mdash;drugging pain by patience.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+ARNOLD<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>&quot;Laces cleaned, and fluting and ruffling done
+here,&quot;&mdash;that was what the little sign swinging
+outside the little green door said. And, coming under it
+into the cosey little rooms, you felt this was just the place
+in which to leave things soiled and torn, and come back to
+find them, by some mysterious process, immaculate and
+whole.</p>
+
+<p>Two rooms, with folding-doors between, in which
+through the day stood a counter, cut up on the one side
+into divers pigeon-holes rilled with small boxes and bundles,
+carefully pinned and labelled,&mdash;owner's name, time
+left, time to be called for, money due; neat and nice as a
+new pin, as every one said who had any dealings there.</p>
+
+<p>The counter was pushed back now, as always after
+seven o'clock, for the people who came in the evening
+were few; and then, when that was out of the way, it
+seemed more home-like and less shoppy, as Mrs. Franklin
+said every night, as she straightened things out, and peered
+through the window or looked from the front door, and
+wondered if &quot;Abram weren't later than usual,&quot; though she
+knew right well he was punctual as clock-work,&mdash;good
+clock-work too,&mdash;when he was going to his toil or hurrying
+back to his home.</p>
+
+<p>Pleasant little rooms, with the cleanest and brightest of
+rag carpets on the floor; a paper on the walls, cheap
+enough, but gay with scarlet rosebuds and green leaves,
+rivalled by the vines and berries on the pretty chintz curtains;
+chairs of a dozen ages and patterns, but all of them
+with open, inviting countenances and a hospitable air; a
+wood fire that <i>looked</i> like a wood fire crackling and
+sparkling on the hearth, shining and dancing over the
+ceiling and the floor and the walls, cutting queer capers
+with the big rocking-chair,&mdash;which turned into a giant
+with long arms,&mdash;and with the little figures on the mantel-shelf,
+and the books in their cases, softening and glorifying
+the two grand faces hanging in their frames opposite, and
+giving just light enough below them to let you read &quot;John
+Brown&quot; and &quot;Phillips,&quot; if you had any occasion to read, and
+did not know those whom the world knows; and first and
+last, and through all, as if it loved her, and was loath to part
+with her for a moment, whether she poked the flame, or
+straightened a chair, or went out towards the little kitchen
+to lift a lid and smell a most savory stew, or came back to
+the supper-table to arrange and rearrange what was already
+faultless in its cleanliness and simplicity, wherever she went
+and whatever she did, this firelight fell warm about a
+woman, large and comfortable and handsome, with a
+motherly look to her person, and an expression that was all
+kindness in her comely face and dark, soft eyes,&mdash;eyes and
+face and form, though, that might as well have had
+&quot;Pariah&quot; written all over them, and &quot;leper&quot; stamped on
+their front, for any good, or beauty, or grace, that people
+could find in them; for the comely face was a dark face,
+and the voice, singing an old Methodist hymn, was no
+Anglo-Saxon treble, but an Anglo-African voice, rich and
+mellow, with the touch of pathos or sorrow always heard
+in these tones.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There!&quot; she said, &quot;there he is!&quot; as a step, hasty yet
+halting, was heard on the pavement; and, turning up the
+light, she ran quickly to open the door, which, to be sure,
+was unfastened, and to give the greeting to her &quot;boy,&quot;
+which, through many a year, had never been omitted.</p>
+
+<p><i>Her</i> boy,&mdash;you would have known that as soon as you
+saw him,&mdash;the same eyes, same face, the same kindly look;
+but the face was thinner and finer, and the brow was a student's
+brow, full of thought and speculation; and, looking
+from her hearty, vigorous form, you saw that his was slight
+to attenuation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sit down, sonny, sit down and rest. There! how tired
+you look!&quot; bustling round him, smoothing his thin face
+and rough hair. &quot;Now don't do that! let your old mother
+do it!&quot; It pleased her to call herself old, though she was but
+just in her prime. &quot;You've done enough for one day, I'm
+sure, waiting on other people, and walking with your poor
+lame foot till you're all but beat out. You be quiet now, and
+let somebody else wait on you.&quot; And, going down on her
+knees, she took up the lame foot, and began to unlace the
+cork-soled, high-cut shoe, and, drawing it out, you saw
+that it was shrunken and small, and that the leg was shorter
+than its fellow.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Poor little foot!&quot; rubbing it tenderly, smoothing the
+stocking over it, and chafing it to bring warmth and life to
+its surface. Her &quot;baby,&quot; she called it, for it was no bigger
+than when he was a little fellow. &quot;Poor, tired foot! ain't it
+a dreadful long walk, sonny?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pretty long, mother; but I'd take twice that to do such
+work at the end.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, indeed, it's good work, and Mr. Surrey's a good
+man, and a kind one, that's sure! I only wish some others
+had a little of his spirit. Such a shame to have you dragging
+all the way up here, when any dirty fellow that wants
+to can ride. I don't mind for myself so much, for I can
+walk about spry enough yet, and don't thank them for
+their old omnibuses nor cars; but it's too bad for you, so it
+is,&mdash;too bad!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Never mind, mother! keep a brave heart. 'There's a
+good time coming soon, a good time coming!' as I heard Mr.
+Hutchinson sing the other night,&mdash;and it's true as gospel.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Maybe it is, sonny!&quot; dubiously, &quot;but I don't see it,&mdash;not
+a sign of it,&mdash;no indeed, not one! It gets worse and
+worse all the time, and it takes a deal of faith to hold on;
+but the good Lord knows best, and it'll be right after a
+while, anyhow! And now <i>that's</i> straight!&quot; pulling a soft
+slipper on the lame foot, and putting its mate by his side;
+then going off to pour out the tea, and dish up the stew,
+and add a touch or two to the appetizing supper-table.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's as good as a feast,&quot;&mdash;taking a bite out of her nice
+home-made bread,&mdash;&quot;better'n a feast, to think of you in
+that place; and I can't scarcely realize it yet. It seems too
+fine to be true.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's the way I've felt all the month, mother! It has
+been just like a dream to me, and I keep thinking surely
+I'm asleep and will waken to find this is just an air-castle
+I've been building, or 'a vision of the night,' as the good
+book says.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, it's a blessed vision, sure enough! and I hope to
+the good Lord it'll last;&mdash;but you won't if you make a
+vision of your supper in that way. You just eat, Abram! and
+have done your talking till you're through, if you can't do
+both at once. Talking's good, but eating's better when
+you're hungry; and it's my opinion you ought to be
+hungry, if you ain't.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So the teacups were filled and emptied, and the spoons
+clattered, and the stew was eaten, and the baked potatoes
+devoured, and the bread-and-butter assaulted vigorously,
+and general havoc made with the good things and substantial
+things before and between them; and then, this
+duty faithfully performed, the wreck speedily vanished
+away; and cups and forks, spoons and plates, knives and
+dishes, cleaned and cupboarded, Mrs. Franklin came, and,
+drawing away the book over which he was poring, said,
+while she smoothed face and hair once more, &quot;Come,
+Abram, what is it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What's what, mother?&quot; with a little laugh.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Something ails you, sonny. That's plain enough. I
+know when anything's gone wrong with ye, sure, and
+something's gone wrong to-day.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O mother! you worry about me too much, indeed
+you do. If I'm a little tired or out of sorts,&mdash;which I
+haven't any right to be, not here,&mdash;or quiet, or anything,
+you think somebody's been hurting me, or abusing me, or
+that everything's gone wrong with me, when I do well
+enough all the time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now, Abram, you can't deceive me,&mdash;not that way.
+My eyes is mother's eyes, and they see plain enough, where
+you're concerned, without spectacles. Who's been putting
+on you to-day? Somebody. You don't carry that down
+look in your face and your eyes for nothing, I found that
+out long ago, and you've got it on to-night.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O mother!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't you 'O mother' me! I ain't going to be put off
+in that way, Abram, an' you needn't think it. Has Mr.
+Surrey been saying anything hard to you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, indeed, mother; you needn't ask that.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nor none of the foremen?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;None.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Has Snipe been round?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hasn't been near the office since Mr. Surrey dismissed
+him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Met him anywhere?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nein!&quot; laughing, &quot;I haven't laid eyes on him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, the men have been saying or doing something
+then.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;N-no; why, what an inquisitor it is!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'N-no.' You don't say that full and plain, Abram.
+Something <i>has</i> been going wrong with the men. Now
+what is it? Come, out with it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, mother, if you <i>will</i> know, you will, I suppose;
+and, as you never get tired of the story, I'll go over the
+whole tale.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So long as I was Mr. Surrey's office-boy, to make his
+fires, and sweep and dust, and keep things in order, the
+men were all good enough to me after their fashion; and if
+some of them growled because they thought he favored
+me, Mr. Given, or some one said, 'O, you know his
+mother was a servant of Mrs. Surrey for no end of years,
+and of course Mr. Surrey has a kind of interest in him';
+and that put everything straight again.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well! you know how good Mr. Willie has been to me
+ever since we were little boys in the same house,&mdash;he in
+the parlor and I in the kitchen; the books he's given me,
+and the chances he's made me, and the way he's put me in
+of learning and knowing. And he's been twice as kind to
+me ever since I refused that offer of his.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, I know, but tell me about it again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, Mr. Surrey sent me up to the house one day,
+just while Mr. Willie was at home from college, and he
+stopped me and had a talk with me, and asked me in his
+pleasant way, not as if I were a 'nigger,' but just as he'd talk
+to one of his mates, ever so many questions about myself
+and my studies and my plans; and I told him what I
+wanted,&mdash;how hard you worked, and how I hoped to fit
+myself to go into some little business of my own, not a
+barber-shop, or any such thing, but something that'd support
+you and keep you like a lady after while, and that
+would help me and my people at the same time. For, of
+course,&quot; I said, &quot;every one of us that does anything more
+than the world expects us to do, or better, makes the world
+think so much the more and better of us all.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What did he say to that?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I wish you'd seen him! He pushed back that beautiful
+hair of his, and his eyes shone, and his mouth trembled,
+though I could see he tried hard to hold it still, and put up
+his hand to cover it; and he said, in a solemn sort of way,
+'Franklin, you've opened a window for me, and I sha'n't
+forget what I see through it to-day.' And then he offered to
+set me up in some business at once, and urged hard when
+I declined.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Say it all over again, sonny; what was it you told
+him?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I said that would do well enough for a white man;
+that he could help, and the white man be helped, just as
+people were being and doing all the time, and no one
+would think a thought about it. But, sir,&quot; I said, &quot;everybody
+says we can do nothing alone; that we're a poor, shiftless
+set; and it will be just one of the master race helping a
+nigger to climb and to stand where he couldn't climb or
+stand alone, and I'd rather fight my battle alone.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, yes! well, go on, go on. I like to hear what followed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, there was just a word or two more, and then he
+put out his hand and shook mine, and said good by. It was
+the first time I ever shook hands with a white <i>gentleman</i>.
+Some white hands have shaken mine, but they always
+made me feel that they <i>were</i> white and that mine was black,
+and that it was a condescension. I felt that, when they
+didn't mean I should. But there was nothing between us. I
+didn't think of his skin, and, for once in my life, I quite
+forgot I was black, and didn't remember it again till I got
+out on the street and heard a dirty little ragamuffin cry, 'Hi!
+hi! don't that nagur think himself foine?' I suspect, in spite
+of my lameness, I had been holding up my head and
+walking like a man.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>In spite of his lameness he was holding up his head and
+walking like a man now; up and down and across the little
+room, trembling, excited, the words rushing in an eager
+flow from his mouth. His mother sat quietly rocking herself
+and knitting. She knew in this mood there was
+nothing to be said to him; and, indeed, what had she to say
+save that which would add fuel to the flame?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well!&quot;&mdash;a long sigh,&mdash;&quot;after that Mr. Surrey doubled
+my wages, and was kinder to me than ever, and watched
+me, as I saw, quite closely; and that was the way he found
+out about Mr. Snipe.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You see Mr. Snipe had been very careless about
+keeping the books; would come down late in the mornings,
+just before Mr. Surrey came in, and go away early in
+the afternoons, as soon as he had left. Of course, the books
+got behindhand every month, and Mr. Snipe didn't want
+to stay and work overhours to make them up. One day he
+found out, by something I said, that I understood bookkeeping,
+and tried me, and then got me to take them
+home at night and go over them. I didn't know then how
+bad he was doing, and that I had no business to shield him,
+and all went smooth enough till the day I was too sick to
+get down to the office, and two of the books were at
+home. Then Mr. Surrey discovered the whole thing.
+There was a great row, it seems; and Mr. Surrey examined
+the books, and found, as he was pleased to say, that I'd kept
+them in first-rate style; so he dismissed Mr. Snipe on the
+spot, with six months' pay,&mdash;for you know he never does
+anything by halves,&mdash;and put me in his place.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The men don't like it, I know, and haven't liked it,
+but of course they can't say anything to him, and they
+haven't said anything to me; but I've seen all along that
+they looked at me with no friendly eyes, and for the last
+day or two I've heard a word here and there which makes
+me think there's trouble brewing,&mdash;bad enough, I'm
+afraid; maybe to the losing of my place, though Mr. Surrey
+has said nothing about it to me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Just here the little green door opened, and the foreman
+whom we have before seen&mdash;James Given as the register
+had him entered, Jim Given as every one knew him&mdash;came
+in; no longer with grimy face and flannel sleeves, but
+brave in all his Sunday finery, and as handsome a b'hoy,
+they said, at his engine-house, as any that ran with the
+machine; having on his arm a young lady whom he apostrophized
+as Sallie, as handsome and brave as he.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Evening,&quot;&mdash;a nod of the head accompanying. &quot;Miss
+Howard's traps done?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I wish you wouldn't say 'traps,' Jim,&quot; corrected Sallie,
+<i>sotto voce</i>: &quot;it's not proper. It's for a collar and pair of cuffs,
+Mrs. Franklin,&quot; she added aloud, putting down a little
+check.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not proper! goodness gracious me! there spoke
+Snipe! Come, Sallie, you've pranced round with that
+stuck-up jackanapes till you're getting spoiled entirely, so
+you are, and I scarcely know you. Not proper,&mdash;O my!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Spoiled, am I? Thank you, sir, for the compliment!
+And you don't know me at all,&mdash;don't you? Very well,
+then I'll say good night, and leave; for it wouldn't be proper
+to take a young lady you don't know to the theatre,&mdash;now,
+would it? Good by!&quot;&mdash;making for the door.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now don't, Sallie, please.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't what?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't talk that way.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't yourself, more like. You're just as cross as cross
+can be, and disagreeable, and hateful,&mdash;all because I
+happen to know there's some other man in the world
+besides yourself, and smile at him now and then. 'Don't,'
+indeed!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come, Sallie, you're too hard on a fellow. It's your
+own fault, you know well enough, if you will be so handsome.
+Now, if you were an ugly old girl, or I was certain
+of you, I shouldn't feel so bad, nor act so neither. But
+when there's a lot of hungry chaps round, all gaping to
+gobble you up, and even poor little Snipes trying to peck
+and bite at you, and you won't say 'yes' nor 'no' to me, how
+do you expect a man to keep cool? Can't do it, nohow, and
+you needn't ask it. Human nature's human nature, I suppose,
+and mine ain't a quiet nor a patient one, not by no
+manner of means. Come, Sallie, own up; you wouldn't like
+me so well as I hope you do if it was,&mdash;now, would you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Franklin smiled, though she had heard not a word
+of the lovers' quarrel, as she put a pin in the back of the
+ruffled collar which Sallie had come to reclaim. A quarrel
+it had evidently been, and as evidently the lady was mollified,
+for she said, &quot;Don't be absurd, Jim!&quot; and Jim laughed
+and responded, &quot;All right, Sallie, you're an angel! But
+come, we must hurry, or the curtain'll be up,&quot;&mdash;and away
+went the dashing and handsome couple.</p>
+
+<p>Abram, shutting in the shutters, and fastening the
+door, sat down to a quiet evening's reading, while his
+mother knitted and sewed,&mdash;an evening the likeness of a
+thousand others of which they never tired; for this mother
+and son, to whom fate had dealt so hard a measure, upon
+whom the world had so persistently frowned, were more
+to each other than most mothers and sons whose lines had
+fallen in pleasanter places,&mdash;compensation, as Mr.
+Emerson says, being the law of existence the world over.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>Every one has his day, from which he dates.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+OLD PROVERB<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>You see, Surrey, the school is something
+extra, and the performances, and it will
+please Clara no end; so I thought I'd run over, and inveigled
+you into going along for fear it should be stupid, and
+I would need some recreation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Which I am to afford?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Verily.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As clown or grindstone?&mdash;to make laugh, or sharpen
+your wits upon?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Far be it from me to dictate. Whichever suits our
+character best. On the whole, I think the last would be the
+most appropriate; the first I can swear wouldn't!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>Pourquoi</i>?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O, a woman's reason,&mdash;because!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Because why? Am I cross?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not exactly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Rough?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As usual,&mdash;like a May breeze.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Cynical?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As Epicurus.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Irritable?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'A countenance [and manner] more in sorrow than in
+anger.' Something's wrong with you; who is she?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ay,&mdash;she. That was a wise Eastern king who put at
+the bottom of every trouble and mischief a woman.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Fine estimate.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Correct one. Evidently he had studied the genus
+thoroughly, and had a poor opinion of it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No wonder.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Amazing! <i>you</i> say 'no wonder'! Astounding words!
+speak them again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No wonder,&mdash;seeing that he had a mother, and that
+she had such a son. He must needs have been a bad fellow
+or a fool to have originated so base a philosophy, and how
+then could he respect the source of such a stream as himself?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sir Launcelot,&mdash;squire of dames!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not Sir Launcelot, but squire of dames, I hope.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There you go again! Now I shall query once more,
+who is she?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No woman.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, though by your smiling you would seem to say
+so!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nay, I believe you, and am vastly relieved in the
+believing. Take advice from ten years of superior age, and
+fifty of experience, and have naught to do with them.
+Dost hear?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And will heed?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Which?&mdash;the words or the acts of my counsellor?
+who, of a surety, preaches wisely and does foolishly, or
+who does wisely and preaches foolishly; for preaching and
+practice do not agree.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nay, man, thou art unreasonable; to perform either
+well is beyond the capacity of most humans, and I desire
+not to be blessed above my betters. Then let my rash deeds
+and my prudent words both be teachers unto thee. But if
+it be true that no woman is responsible for your grave
+countenance this morning, then am I wasting words, and
+will return to our muttons. What ails you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am belligerent.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I see,&mdash;that means quarrelsome.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And hopeless.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bad,&mdash;very! belligerent and hopeless! When you go
+into a fight always expect to win; the thought is half the
+victory.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Suppose you are an atom against the universe?&quot;
+&quot;Don't fight, succumb. There's a proverb,&mdash;a wise
+one,&mdash;Napoleon's, 'God is on the side of the strongest battalions.'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A lie,&mdash;exploded at Waterloo. There's another proverb,
+'One on the side of God is a majority.' How about that?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Transcendental humbug.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A truth demonstrated at Wittenberg.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Are you aching for the martyr's palm?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am afraid not. On the whole, I think I'd rather enjoy
+life than quarrel with it. But&quot;&mdash;with a sudden blaze&mdash;&quot;I
+feel to-day like fighting the world.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hey, presto! what now, young'un?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't wonder you stare&quot;&mdash;a little laugh. &quot;I'm talking
+like a fool, and, for aught I know, feeling like one, aching
+to fight, and knowing that I might as well quarrel with the
+winds, or stab that water as it flows by.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As with what?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The fellow I've just been getting a good look at.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What manner of fellow?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ignorant, selfish, brutal, devilish.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tremendous! why don't you bind him over to keep
+the peace?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Because he is like the judge of old time, neither fears
+God nor respects his image,&mdash;when his image is carved in
+ebony, and not ivory.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What do you call this fellow?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Public Opinion.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This big fellow is abusing and devouring a poor little
+chap, eh? and the chap's black?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;True.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And sometimes the giant is a gentleman in purple and
+fine linen, otherwise broadcloth; and sometimes in hodden
+gray, otherwise homespun or slop-shop; and sometimes he
+cuts the poor little chap with a silver knife, which is
+rhetoric, and sometimes with a wooden spoon, which is
+raw-hide. Am I stating it all correctly?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All correctly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And you've been watching this operation when you
+had better have been minding your own business, and getting
+excited when you had better have kept cool, and now
+want to rush into the fight, drums beating and colors
+flying, to the rescue of the small one. Don't deny it,&mdash;it's
+all written out in your eyes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I sha'n't deny it, except about the business and the
+keeping cool. It's any gentleman's business to interfere
+between a bully and a weakling that he's abusing; and his
+blood must be water that does not boil while he 'watches
+the operation' as you say, and goes in.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To get well pommelled for his pains, and do no good
+to any one, himself included. Let the weakling alone. A
+fellow that can't save himself is not worth saving. If he
+can't swim nor walk, let him drop under or go to the wall;
+that's my theory.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Anglo-Saxon theory&mdash;and practice.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good theory, excellent practice,&mdash;in the main. What
+special phase of it has been disturbing your equanimity?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You know the Franklins?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course: Aunt Mina's son&mdash;what's his name?&mdash;is a
+sort of <i>prot&eacute;g&eacute;</i> of yours, I believe: what of him?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He is cleanly?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A nice question. Doubtless.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Respectable?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What are you driving at?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Intelligent?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Most true.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ambitious?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Or his looks belie him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Faithful, trusty, active, helpful, in every way devoted
+to my father's service and his work.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;With Sancho, I believe it all because your worship
+says so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, this man has just been discharged from my
+father's employ because seven hundred and forty-two
+other men gave notice to quit if he remained.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The reason?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;His skin.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The reason is not 'so deep as a well, nor so wide as a
+church-door, but it is enough.' Of course they wouldn't
+work with him, and my uncle Surrey, begging your
+pardon, should not have attempted anything so Quixotic.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;His skin covering so many excellent qualities, and
+these qualities gaining recognition,&mdash;that was the cause.
+They worked with him so long as he was a servant of servants:
+so soon as he demonstrated that he could strike out
+strongly and swim, they knocked him under; and, proving
+that he could walk alone, they ran hastily to shove him to
+the wall.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What! quoting my own words against me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Anglo-Saxon says we are the masters: we monopolize
+the strength and courage, the beauty, intelligence, power.
+These creatures,&mdash;what are they? poor, worthless, lazy,
+ignorant, good for nothing but to be used as machines, to
+obey. When lo! one of these dumb machines suddenly
+starts forth with a man's face; this creature no longer obeys,
+but evinces a right to command; and Anglo-Saxon
+speedily breaks him in pieces.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come, Willie, I hope you're not going to assert these
+people our equals,&mdash;that would be too much.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They have no intelligence, Anglo-Saxon declares,&mdash;then
+refuses them schools, while he takes of their money
+to help educate his own sons. They have no ambition,&mdash;then
+closes upon them every door of honorable advancement,
+and cries through the key-hole, Serve, or starve.
+They cannot stand alone, they have no faculty for rising,&mdash;then,
+if one of them finds foothold, the ground is undermined
+beneath him. If a head is seen above the crowd, the
+ladder is jerked away, and he is trampled into the dust
+where he is fallen. If he stays in the position to which
+Anglo-Saxon assigns him, he is a worthless nigger; if he
+protests against it, he is an insolent nigger; if he rises above
+it, he is a nigger not to be tolerated at all,&mdash;to be crushed
+and buried speedily.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now, Willie, 'no more of this, an thou lovest me.' I
+came not out to-day to listen to an abolition harangue, nor
+a moral homily, but to have a good time, to be civil and
+merry withal, if you will allow it. Of course you don't like
+Franklin's discharge, and of course you have done something
+to compensate him. I know&mdash;you have found him
+another place. No,&mdash;you couldn't do that?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I couldn't.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, you've settled him somewhere,&mdash;confess.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He has some work for the present; some copying for
+me, and translating, for this unfortunate is a scholar, you
+know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very good; then let it rest. Granted the poor devils
+have a bad time of it, you're not bound to sacrifice yourself
+for them. If you go on at this pace, you'll bring up
+with the long-haired, bloomer reformers, and then&mdash;God
+help you. No, you needn't say another word,&mdash;I sha'n't
+listen,&mdash;not one; so. Here we are! school yonder,&mdash;well
+situated?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Capitally.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Fine day.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Clara will be charmed to see you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You flatter me. I hope so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There, now you talk rationally. Don't relapse. We will
+go up and hear the pretty creatures read their little pieces,
+and sing their little songs, and see them take their nice
+blue-ribboned diplomas, and fall in love with their dear
+little faces, and flirt a bit this evening, and to-morrow I
+shall take Ma'm'selle Clara home to Mamma Russell, and
+you may go your ways.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The programme is satisfactory.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good. Come on then.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>All Commencement days, at college or young ladies'
+school, if not twin brothers and sisters, are at least first
+cousins, with a strong family likeness. Who that has passed
+through one, or witnessed one, needs any description
+thereof to furbish up its memories. This of Professor
+Hale's belonged to the great tribe, and its form and features
+were of the old established type. The young ladies were
+charming; plenty of white gowns, plenty of flowers, plenty
+of smiles, blushes, tremors, hopes, and fears; little songs,
+little pieces, little addresses, to be sung, to be played, to be
+read, just as Tom Russell had foreshadowed, and proving
+to be&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Just the least of a bore!&quot; as he added after listening
+awhile; &quot;don't you think so, Surrey?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hush! don't talk.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Tom stared; then followed his cousin's eye, fixed
+immovably upon one little spot on the platform. &quot;By
+Jove!&quot; he cried, &quot;what a beauty! As Father Dryden would
+say, 'this is the porcelain clay of humankind.' No wonder
+you look. Who is she,&mdash;do you know?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No! short, clear, and decisive. Don't devour her, Will.
+Remember the sermon I preached you an hour ago.
+Come, look at this,&quot;&mdash;thrusting a programme into his
+face,&mdash;&quot;and stop staring. Why, boy, she has bewitched
+you,&mdash;or inspired you,&quot;&mdash;surveying him sharply.</p>
+
+<p>And indeed it would seem so. Eyes, mouth, face,
+instinct with some subtle and thrilling emotion. As gay
+Tom Russell looked, he involuntarily stretched out his
+hand, as one would put it between another and some
+danger of which that other is unaware, and remembered
+what he had once said in talking of him,&mdash;&quot;If Will
+Surrey's time does come, I hope the girl will be all right in
+every way, for he'll plunge headlong, and love like distraction
+itself,&mdash;no half-way; it will be a life-and-death affair
+for him.&quot; &quot;Come, I must break in on this.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Surrey!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There's a pretty girl.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>No answer.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There! over yonder. Third seat, second row. See her?
+Pretty?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very pretty.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miss&mdash;Miss&mdash;what's her name? O, Miss Perry played
+that last thing very well for a school-girl, eh?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very well.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Admirable room this, for hearing; rare quality with
+chapels and halls; architects in planning generally tax ingenuity
+how to confuse sound. Now these girls don't make
+a great noise, yet you can distinguish every word,&mdash;can't
+you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>No response.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I say, can't you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Every word.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Tom drew a long breath.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Professor Hale's a sensible old fellow; I like the way he
+conducts this school.&quot; (Mem. Tom didn't know a thing
+about it.) &quot;Carries it on excellently.&quot; A pause.</p>
+
+<p>Silence.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Fine-looking, too. A man's physique has a deal to do
+with his success in the world. If he carries a letter of recommendation
+in his face, people take him on trust to
+begin with; and if he's a big fellow, like the Professor
+yonder, he imposes on folks awfully; they pop down on
+their knees to him, and clear the track for him, as if he had
+a right to it all. Bless me! I never thought of that before,&mdash;it's
+the reason you and I have got on so swimmingly,&mdash;is it
+not, now? Certainly. You think so? Of course.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course,&quot;&mdash;sedately and gravely spoken.</p>
+
+<p>Tom groaned, for, with a face kind and bright, he was
+yet no beauty; while if Surrey had one crowning gift in
+this day of fast youths and self-satisfied Young America, it
+was that of modesty with regard to himself and any gifts
+and graces nature had blessed him withal.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Clara has a nice voice.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very nice.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She is to sing, do you know?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you know when?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>No reply.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She sings the next piece. Are you ready to listen?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ready.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good Lord!&quot; cried Tom, in despair, &quot;the fellow has lost
+his wits. He has turned parrot; he has done nothing but
+repeat my words for me since he sat here. He's an echo.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Echo of nothingness?&quot; queried the parrot, smilingly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, you've come to yourself, have you? Capital! now
+stay awake. There's Clara to sing directly, and you are to
+cheer her, and look as if you enjoyed it, and throw her that
+bouquet when I tell you, and let her think it's a fine thing
+she has been doing; for this is a tremendous affair to her,
+poor child, of course.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How bright and happy she is! You will laugh at me,
+Tom, and indeed I don't know what has come over me,
+but somehow I feel quite sad, looking at those girls, and
+wondering what fate and time have in store for them.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sunshine and bright hours.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The day cometh, and also the night,&quot;&mdash;broke in the
+clear voice that was reading a selection from the Scriptures.</p>
+
+<p>Tom started, and Willie took from his button-hole just
+such a little nosegay as that he had bought on Broadway a
+fortnight before,&mdash;a geranium leaf, a bit of mignonette,
+and a delicate tea-rosebud, and, seeing it was drooping,
+laid it carefully upon the programme on his knee. &quot;I don't
+want that to fade,&quot; he thought as he put it down, while he
+looked across the platform at the same face which he had
+so eagerly pursued through a labyrinth of carriages, stages,
+and people, and lost at last.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There! Clara is talking to your beauty. I wonder if she
+is to sing, or do anything. If she does, it will be something
+dainty and fine, I'll wager. Helloa! there's Clara up,&mdash;now
+for it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Clara's bright little voice suited her bright little face,&mdash;like
+her brother's, only a great deal prettier,&mdash;and the
+young men enjoyed both, aside from brotherly and
+cousinly feeling, cheered her &quot;to the echo&quot; as Willie said,
+threw their bouquets,&mdash;great, gorgeous things they had
+brought from the city to please her,&mdash;and wished there was
+more of it all when it was through.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What next?&quot; said Willie.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Heaven preserve us! your favorite subject. Who
+would expect to tumble on such a theme here?&mdash;'Slavery;
+by Francesca Ercildoune.' Odd name,&mdash;and, by Jove! it's
+the beauty herself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>They both leaned forward eagerly as she came from
+her seat; slender, shapely, every fibre fine and exquisite, no
+coarse graining from the dainty head to the dainty foot; the
+face, clear olive, delicate and beautiful,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;The mouth with steady sweetness set,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And eyes conveying unaware</span><br />
+The distant hint of some regret<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">That harbored there,&quot;&mdash;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>eyes deep, tender, and pathetic.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What's this?&quot; said Tom. &quot;Queer. It gives me a
+heartache to look at her.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A woman for whom to fight the world, or lose the
+world, and be compensated a million-fold if you died at
+her feet,&quot; thought Surrey, and said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What a strange subject for her to select!&quot; broke in
+Tom.</p>
+
+<p>It was a strange one for the time and place, and she had
+been besought to drop it, and take another; but it should
+be that or nothing, she asserted,&mdash;so she was left to her
+own device.</p>
+
+<p>Oddly treated, too. Tom thought it would be a pretty
+lady-like essay, and said so; then sat astounded at what he
+saw and heard. Her face&mdash;this schoolgirl's face&mdash;grew
+pallid, her eyes mournful, her voice and manner sublime,
+as she summoned this Monster to the bar of God's justice
+and the humanity of the world; as she arraigned it; as she
+brought witness after witness to testify against it; as she
+proved its horrible atrocities and monstrous barbarities; as
+she went on to the close, and, lifting hand and face and
+voice together, thrilled out, &quot;I look backward into the
+dim, distant past, but it is one night of oppression and
+despair; I turn to the present, but I hear naught save the
+mother's broken-hearted shriek, the infant's wail, the
+groan wrung from the strong man in agony; I look forward
+into the future, but the night grows darker, the shadows
+deeper and longer, the tempest wilder, and involuntarily I
+cry out, 'How long, O God, how long?'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Heavens! what an actress she would make!&quot; said
+somebody before them.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's genius,&quot; said somebody behind them; &quot;but
+what a subject to waste it upon!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very bad taste, I must say, to talk about such a thing
+here,&quot; said somebody beside them. &quot;However, one can
+excuse a great deal to beauty like that.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Surrey sat still, and felt as though he were on fire, filled
+with an insane desire to seize her in one arm like a knight
+of old, and hew his way through these beings, and out of
+this place, into some solitary spot where he could seat her
+and kneel at her feet, and die there if she refused to take
+him up; filled with all the sweet, extravagant, delicious pain
+that thrills the heart, full of passion and purity, of a young
+man who begins to love the first, overwhelming, only love
+of a lifetime.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>'Tis an old tale, and often told.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+SIR WALTER SCOTT<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>That evening some people who were near them
+were talking about it, and that made Tom ask
+Clara if her friend was in the habit of doing startling
+things.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Should you think so to look at her now?&quot; queried
+Clara, looking across the room to where Miss Ercildoune
+stood.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Indeed I shouldn't,&quot; Tom replied; and indeed no one
+would who saw her then. &quot;She's as sweet as a sugar-plum,&quot;
+he added, as he continued to look. &quot;What does she mean
+by getting off such rampant discourses? She never wrote
+them herself,&mdash;don't tell <i>me</i>; at least somebody else put her
+up to it,&mdash;that strong-minded-looking teacher over
+yonder, for instance. <i>She</i> looks capable of anything, and
+something worse, in the denouncing way; poor little
+beauty was her cat's-paw this morning.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O Tom, how you talk! She is nobody's cat's-paw. I
+can tell you she does her own thinking and acting too. If
+you'd just go and do something hateful, or impose on
+somebody,&mdash;one of the waiters, for instance,&mdash;you'd see
+her blaze up, fast enough.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah! philanthropic?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Clara looked puzzled. &quot;I don't know; we have some
+girls here who are all the time talking about benevolence,
+and charity, and the like, and they have a little sewing-circle
+to make up things to be sold for the church mission,
+or something,&mdash;I don't know just what; but Francesca
+won't go near it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Democratic, then, maybe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, she isn't, not a bit. She's a thorough little aristocrat:
+so exclusive she has nothing to say to the most of us.
+I wonder she ever took me for a friend, though I do love
+her dearly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Tom looked down at his bright little sister, and thought
+the wonder was not a very great one, but didn't say so;
+reserving his gallantries for somebody else's sister.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You seem greatly taken with her, Tom.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I own the soft impeachment.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, you'll have a fair chance, for she's coming home
+with me. I wrote to mamma, and she says, bring her by all
+means,&mdash;and Mr. Ercildoune gives his consent; so it is all
+settled.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Ercildoune! is there no Mrs. E.?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;None,&mdash;her mother died long ago; and her father has
+not been here, so I can't tell you anything about him.
+There: do you see that elegant-looking lady talking with
+Professor Hale? that is her aunt, Mrs. Lancaster. She is
+English, and is here only on a visit. She wants to take
+Francesca home with her in the spring, but I hope she
+won't.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, what is it to you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am afraid she will stay, and then I shall never see her
+any more.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And why stay? do you fancy England so very fascinating?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, it is not that; but Francesca don't like America;
+she's forever saying something witty and sharp about our
+'democratic institutions,' as she calls them; and, if you had
+looked this morning, you'd have seen that she didn't sing
+The Star-Spangled Banner with the rest of us. Her voice
+is splendid, and Professor Hale wanted her to lead, as she
+often does, but she wouldn't sing that, she said,&mdash;no, not
+for anything; and though we all begged, she refused,&mdash;flat.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Shocking! what total depravity! I wonder is she converting
+Surrey to her heresies.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>No, she wasn't; not unless silence is more potent than
+words; for after they had danced together Surrey brought
+her to one of the great windows facing towards the sea,
+and, leaning over her chair, there was stillness between
+them as their eyes went out into the night.</p>
+
+<p>A wild night! great clouds drifted across the moon,
+which shone out anon, with light intensified, defining the
+stripped trees and desolate landscape, and then the beach,
+and</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">&quot;Marked with spray</span><br />
+The sunken reefs, and far away<br />
+The unquiet, bright Atlantic plain,&quot;<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>while through all sounded incessantly the mournful roar of
+buffeting wind and surging tide; and whether it was the
+scene, or the solemn undertone of the sea, the dance
+music, which a little while before had been so gay,
+sounded like a wail.</p>
+
+<p>How could it be otherwise? Passion is akin to pain.
+Love never yet penetrated an intense nature and made the
+heart light; sentiment has its smiles, its blushes, its brightness,
+its words of fancy and feeling, readily and at will; but
+when the internal sub-soiling is broken up, the heart swells
+with a steady and tremendous pressure till the breast feels
+like bursting; the lips are dumb, or open only to speak
+upon indifferent themes. Flowers may be played with, but
+one never yet cared to toy with flame.</p>
+
+<p>There are souls that are created for one another in the
+eternities, hearts that are predestined each to each, from
+the absolute necessities of their nature; and when this man
+and this woman come face to face, these hearts throb and
+are one; these souls recognize &quot;my master!&quot; &quot;my mistress!&quot;
+at the first glance, without words uttered or vows
+pronounced.</p>
+
+<p>These two young lives, so fresh, so beautiful; these
+beings, in many things such antipodes, so utterly dissimilar
+in person, so unlike, yet like; their whole acquaintance a
+glance on a crowded street and these few hours of
+meeting,&mdash;looked into one another's eyes, and felt their
+whole nature set each to each, as the vast tide &quot;of the
+bright, rocking ocean sets to shore at the full moon.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>These things are possible. Friendship is excellent, and
+friendship may be called love; but it is not love. It may be
+more enduring and placidly satisfying in the end; it may be
+better, and wiser, and more prudent, for acquaintance to
+beget esteem, and esteem regard, and regard affection, and
+affection an interchange of peaceful vows: the result, a
+well-ordered life and home. All this is admirable, no
+doubt; an owl is a bird when you can get no other; but the
+love born of a moment, yet born of eternity, which comes
+but once in a lifetime, and to not one in a thousand lives,
+unquestioning, unthinking, investigating nothing, proving
+nothing, sufficient unto itself,&mdash;ah, that is divine; and this
+divine ecstasy filled these two souls.</p>
+
+<p>Unconsciously. They did not define nor comprehend.
+They listened to the sea where they sat, and felt tears start
+to their eyes, yet knew not why. They were silent, and
+thought they talked; or spoke, and said nothing. They
+danced; and as he held her hand and uttered a few words,
+almost whispered, the words sounded to the listening ear
+like a part of the music to which they kept time. They saw
+a multitude of people, and exchanged the compliments of
+the evening, yet these people made no more impression
+upon their thoughts than gossamer would have made upon
+their hands.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come, Francesca!&quot; said Clara Russell, breaking in upon
+this, &quot;it is not fair for you to monopolize my cousin Will,
+who is the handsomest man in the room; and it isn't fair for
+Will to keep you all to himself in this fashion. Here is Tom,
+ready to scratch out his eyes with vexation because you won't
+dance with him; and here am I, dying to waltz with somebody
+who knows my step,&mdash;to say nothing of innumerable
+young ladies and gentlemen who have been casting indignant
+and beseeching glances this way: so, sir, face about, march!&quot;
+and away the gay girl went with her prize, leaving Francesca
+to the tender mercies of half a dozen young men who
+crowded eagerly round her, and from whom Tom carried
+her off with triumph and rejoicing.</p>
+
+<p>The evening was over at last, and they were going
+away. Tom had said good night.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are to be in New York, at my uncle's, Clara tells
+me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is true.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I may see you there?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>For answer she put out her hand. He took it as he
+would have taken a delicate flower, laid his other hand
+softly, yet closely, over it, and, without any adieu spoken,
+went away.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tom always declared Willie was a little queer, and I'm
+sure I begin to think so,&quot; said Clara, as she kissed her friend
+and departed to her room.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>A breathing sigh, a sigh for answer,<br />
+A little talking of outward things.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+JEAN INGELOW<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>Ah, the weeks that followed! People ate and drank
+and slept, lived and loved and hated, were born
+and died,&mdash;the same world that it had been a little while
+before, yet not the same to them,&mdash;never to seem quite the
+same again. A little cloud had fallen between them and it,
+and changed to their eyes all its proportions and hues.</p>
+
+<p>They were incessantly together, riding, or driving, or
+walking, looking at pictures, dancing at parties, listening to
+opera or play.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It seems to me Will is going it at a pretty tremendous
+pace somewhere,&quot; said Mr. Surrey to his wife, one
+morning, after this had endured for a space. &quot;It would be
+well to look into it, and to know something of this girl.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are right,&quot; she replied. &quot;Yet I have such absolute
+faith in Willie's fine taste and sense that I feel no anxiety.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nor I; yet I shall investigate a bit to-night at Augusta's.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Clara tells me that when Miss Ercildoune understood
+it was to be a great party, she insisted on ending her visit,
+or, at least, staying for a while with her aunt, but they
+would not hear of it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mrs. Lancaster goes back to England soon?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very soon.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Does any one know aught of Miss Ercildoune's
+family save that Mrs. Lancaster is her aunt?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If 'any one' means me, I understand her father to be
+a gentleman of elegant leisure,&mdash;his home near Philadelphia;
+a widower, with one other child,&mdash;a son, I believe;
+that his wife was English, married abroad; that Mrs. Lancaster
+comes here with the best of letters, and, for herself,
+is most evidently a lady.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good. Now I shall take a survey of the young lady
+herself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>When night came, and with it a crowd to Mrs. Russell's
+rooms, the opportunity offered for the survey, and it
+was made scrutinizingly. Surrey was an only son, a well-beloved
+one, and what concerned him was investigated
+with utmost care.</p>
+
+<p>Scrutinizingly and satisfactorily. They were dancing,
+his sunny head bent till it almost touched the silky blackness
+of her hair. &quot;Saxon and Norman,&quot; said somebody near
+who was watching them; &quot;what a delicious contrast!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They make an exquisite picture,&quot; thought the mother,
+as she looked with delight and dread: delight at the beauty;
+dread that fills the soul of any mother when she feels that
+she no longer holds her boy,&mdash;that his life has another
+keeper,&mdash;and queries, &quot;What of the keeper?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well?&quot; she said, looking up at her husband.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well,&quot; he answered, with a tone that meant, well.
+&quot;She's thorough-bred. Democratic or not, I will always
+insist, blood tells. Look at her: no one needs to ask <i>who</i> she
+is. I'd take her on trust without a word.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So, then, you are not her critic, but her admirer.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, my dear, criticism is lost in admiration, and I am
+glad to find it so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And I. Willie saw with our eyes, as a boy; it is fortunate
+that we can see with his eyes, as a man.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So, without any words spoken, after that night, both
+Mr. and Mrs. Surrey took this young girl into their hearts
+as they hoped soon to take her into their lives, and called
+her &quot;daughter&quot; in their thought, as a pleasant preparation
+for the uttered word by and by.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the weeks fled. No word had passed between
+these two to which the world might not have listened.
+Whatever language their hearts and their eyes spoke had
+not been interpreted by their lips. He had not yet touched
+her hand save as it met his, gloved or formal, or as it rested
+on his arm; and yet, as one walking through the dusk and
+stillness of a summer night feels a flower or falling leaf
+brush his check, and starts, shivering as from the touch of
+a disembodied soul, so this slight outward touch thrilled
+his inmost being; this hand, meeting his for an instant,
+shook his soul.</p>
+
+<p>Indefinite and undefined,&mdash;there was no thought
+beyond the moment; no wish to take this young girl into
+his arms and to call her &quot;wife&quot; had shaped itself in his
+brain. It was enough for both that they were in one
+another's presence, that they breathed the same air, that
+they could see each other as they raised their eyes, and
+exchange a word, a look, a smile. Whatever storm of emotion
+the future might hold for them was not manifest in
+this sunny and delightful present.</p>
+
+<p>Upon one subject alone did they disagree with
+feeling,&mdash;in other matters their very dissimilarity proving
+an added charm. This was a curious question to come
+between lovers. All his life Surrey had been a devotee of
+his country and its flag. While he was a boy Kossuth had
+come to these shores, and he yet remembered how he had
+cheered himself hoarse with pride and delight, as the eloquent
+voice and impassioned lips of the great Magyar
+sounded the praise of America, as the &quot;refuge of the
+oppressed and the hope of the world.&quot; He yet remembered
+how when the hand, every gesture of which was instinct
+with power, was lifted to the flag,&mdash;the flag, stainless, spotless,
+without blemish or flaw; the flag which was &quot;fair as
+the sun, clear as the moon,&quot; and to the oppressors of the
+earth &quot;terrible as an army with banners,&quot;&mdash;he yet remembered
+how, as this emblem of liberty was thus apostrophized
+and saluted, the tears had rushed to his boyish eyes,
+and his voice had said, for his heart, &quot;Thank God, I am an
+American!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>One day he made some such remark to her. She
+answered, &quot;I, too, am an American, but I do not thank
+God for it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>At another time he said, as some emigrants passed
+them in the street, &quot;What a sense of pride it gives one in
+one's country, to see her so stretch out her arms to help
+and embrace the outcast and suffering of the whole
+world!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She smiled&mdash;bitterly, he thought; and replied, &quot;O just
+and magnanimous country, to feed and clothe the stranger
+from without, while she outrages and destroys her children
+within!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You do not love America,&quot; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do not love America,&quot; she responded.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And yet it is a wonderful country.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ay,&quot; briefly, almost satirically, &quot;a wonderful country,
+indeed!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Still you stay here, live here.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, it is my country. Whatever I think of it, I will
+not be driven away from it; it is my right to remain.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Her right to remain?&quot; he thought; &quot;what does she
+mean by that? she speaks as though conscience were
+involved in the thing. No matter; let us talk of something
+pleasanter.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>One day she gave him a clew. They were looking at
+the picture of a great statesman,&mdash;a man as famous for the
+grandeur of face and form as for the power and splendor
+of his intellect.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Unequalled! unapproachable!&quot; exclaimed Surrey, at last.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have seen its equal,&quot; she answered, very quietly, yet
+with a shiver of excitement in the tones.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When? where? how? I will take a journey to look at
+him. Who is he? where did he grow?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>For response she put her hand into the pocket of her
+gown, and took out a velvet case. What could there be in
+that little blue thing to cause such emotion? As Surrey saw
+it in her hand, he grew hot, then cold, then fiery hot
+again. In an instant by this chill, this heat, this pain, his
+heart was laid bare to his own inspection. In an instant he
+knew that his arms would be empty did they hold a universe
+in which Francesca Ercildoune had no part, and that
+with her head on his heart the world might lapse from him
+unheeded; and, with this knowledge, she held tenderly and
+caressingly, as he saw, another man's picture in her hand.</p>
+
+<p>His own so shook that he could scarcely take the case
+from her, to open it; but, opened, his eyes devoured what
+was under them.</p>
+
+<p>A half-length,&mdash;the face and physique superb. Of what
+color were the hair and eyes the neutral tints of the picture
+gave no hint; the brow princely, breaking the perfect oval
+of the face; eyes piercing and full; the features rounded, yet
+clearly cut; the mouth with a curious combination of sadness
+and disdain. The face was not young, yet it was so
+instinct with magnificent vitality that even the picture
+impressed one more powerfully than most living men, and
+one involuntarily exclaimed on beholding it, &quot;This man
+can never grow old, and death must here forego its claim!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Looking up from it with no admiration to express for
+the face, he saw Francesca's smiling on it with a sort of
+adoration, as she, reclaiming her property, said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My father's old friends have a great deal of enjoyment,
+and amusement too, from his beauty. One of them
+was the other day telling me of the excessive admiration
+people had always shown, and laughingly insisted that
+when papa was a young man, and appeared in public, in
+London or Paris, it was between two police officers to
+keep off the admiring crowd; and,&quot; laughing a gay little
+laugh herself, &quot;of course I believed him! why shouldn't I?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He was looking at the picture again. &quot;What an air of
+command he has!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes. I remember hearing that when Daniel Webster
+was in London, and walked unattended through the
+streets, the coal-heavers and workmen took off their hats
+and stood bareheaded till he had gone by, thinking it was
+royalty that passed. I think they would do the same for
+papa.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If he looks like a king, I know somebody who looks
+like a princess,&quot; thought the happy young fellow, gazing
+down upon the proud, dainty figure by his side; but he
+smiled as he said, &quot;What a little aristocrat you are, Miss
+Ercildoune! what a pity you were born a Yankee!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am not a Yankee, Mr. Surrey,&quot; replied the little aristocrat,
+&quot;if to be a Yankee is to be a native of America. I
+was born on the sea.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And your mother, I know, was English.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, she was English.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is it rude to ask if your father was the same?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No!&quot; she answered emphatically, &quot;my papa is a Virginian,&mdash;a
+Virginia gentleman,&quot;&mdash;the last word spoken
+with an untransferable accent,&mdash;&quot;there are few enough of
+them.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So, so!&quot; thought Willie, &quot;here my riddle is read.
+Southern&mdash;Virginia&mdash;gentleman. No wonder she has no
+love to spend on country or flag; no wonder we couldn't
+agree. And yet it can't be that,&mdash;what were the first words
+I ever heard from her mouth?&quot; and, remembering that terrible
+denunciation of the &quot;peculiar institution&quot; of Virginia
+and of the South, he found himself puzzled the more.</p>
+
+<p>Just then there came into the picture-gallery, where
+they were wasting a pleasant morning, a young man to
+whom Surrey gave the slightest of recognitions,&mdash;well-dressed,
+booted, and gloved, yet lacking the nameless
+something which marks the gentleman. His glance, as it
+rested on Surrey, held no love, and, indeed, was rather
+malignant.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That fellow,&quot; said Surrey, indicating him, &quot;has a queer
+story connected with him. He was discharged from my
+father's employ to give place to a man who could do his
+work better; and the strange part of it&quot;&mdash;he watched her
+with an amused smile to see what effect the announcement
+would have upon her Virginia ladyship&mdash;&quot;is that number
+two is a black man.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A sudden heat flushed her cheeks: &quot;Do you tell me
+your father made room for a black man in his employ, and
+at the expense of a white one?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is even so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is he there now?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Surrey's beautiful Saxon face crimsoned. &quot;No: he is
+not,&quot; he said reluctantly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah! did he, this black man,&mdash;did he not do his work
+well?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Admirably.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is it allowable, then, to ask why he was discarded?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is allowable, surely. He was dismissed because the
+choice lay between him and seven hundred men.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And you&quot;&mdash;her face was very pale now, the flush all
+gone out of it&mdash;&quot;you have nothing to do with your
+father's works, but you are his son,&mdash;did you do naught?
+protest, for instance?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I protested&mdash;and yielded. The contest would have
+been not merely with seven hundred men, but with every
+machinist in the city. Justice <i>versus</i> prejudice, and prejudice
+had it; as, indeed, I suppose it will for a good many generations
+to come: invincible it appears to be in the American
+mind.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Invincible! is it so?&quot; She paused over the words, scrutinizing
+him meanwhile with an unconscious intensity.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And this black man,&mdash;what of him? He was flung out to
+starve and die; a proper fate, surely, for his presumption.
+Poor fool! how did he dare to think he could compete
+with his masters! You know nothing of <i>him </i>?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Surely he must be mistaken. What could this black man,
+or this matter, be to her? yet as he listened her voice
+sounded to his ear like that of one in mortal pain. What
+held him silent? Why did he not tell her, why did he not in
+some way make her comprehend, that he, delicate exclusive,
+and patrician, as the people of his set thought him, had gone
+to this man, had lifted him from his sorrow and despondency
+to courage and hope once more; had found him
+work; would see that the place he strove to fill in the world
+should be filled, could any help of his secure that end. Why
+did the modesty which was a part of him, and the high-bred
+reserve which shrank from letting his own mother know of
+the good deeds his life wrought, hold him silent now?</p>
+
+<p>In that silence something fell between them. What was
+it? But a moment, yet in that little space it seemed to him
+as though continents divided them, and seas rolled
+between. &quot;Francesca!&quot; he cried, under his breath,&mdash;he had
+never before called her by her Christian name,&mdash;&quot;Francesca!&quot;
+and stretched out his hand towards her, as a
+drowning man stretches forth his hand to life.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This room is stifling!&quot; she said for answer; and her
+voice, dulled and unnatural, seemed to his strangely confused
+senses as though it came from a far distance,&mdash;&quot;I am
+suffering: shall we go out to the air?&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>But more than loss about me clings.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+JEAN INGELOW<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>&quot;No! no, I am mad to think it! I must have
+been dreaming! what could there have
+been in that talk to have such an effect as I have conjured
+up? She pitied Franklin! yes, she pities every one whom
+she thinks suffering or wronged. Dear little tender heart!
+of course it was the room,&mdash;didn't she say she was ill? it
+must have been awful; the heat and the closeness got into
+my head,&mdash;that's it. Bad air is as bad as whiskey on a man's
+brain. What a fool I made of myself! not even answering
+her questions. What did she think of me? Well.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Surrey in despair pushed away the book over which he
+had been bending all the afternoon, seeing for every word
+Francesca, and on every page an image of her face. &quot;I'll
+smoke myself into some sort of decent quiet, before I go
+up town, at least&quot;; and taking his huge meerschaum, settling
+himself sedately, began his quieting operation with
+appalling energy. The soft rings, gray and delicate, taking
+curious and airy shapes, floated out and filled the room;
+but they were not soothing shapes, nor ministering spirits
+of comfort. They seemed filmy garments, and from their
+midst faces beautiful, yet faint and dim, looked at him, all
+of them like unto her face; but when he dropped his pipe
+and bent forward, the wreaths of smoke fell into lines that
+made the faces appear sad and bathed in tears, and the
+images faded from his sight.</p>
+
+<p>As the last one, with its visionary arms outstretched
+towards him, receded from him, and disappeared, he
+thought, &quot;That is Francesca's spirit, bidding me an eternal
+adieu&quot;&mdash;and, with the foolish thought, in spite of its foolishness,
+he shivered and stretched out his arms in return.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of a verity,&quot; he then cried, &quot;if nature failed to make
+me an idiot, I am doing my best to consummate that end,
+and become one of free choice. What folly possesses me?
+I will dissipate it at once,&mdash;I will see her in bodily shape,&mdash;that
+will put an end to such fancies,&quot;&mdash;starting up, and
+beginning to pull on his gloves.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No! no, that will not do,&quot;&mdash;pulling them off again.
+&quot;She will think I am an uneasy ghost that pursues her. I must
+wait till this evening, but ah, what an age till evening!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately, all ages, even lovers' ages, have an end.
+The evening came; he was at the Fifth Avenue,&mdash;his card
+sent up,&mdash;his feet impatiently travelling to and fro upon
+the parlor carpet,&mdash;his heart beating with happiness and
+expectancy. A shadow darkened the door; he flew to meet
+the substance,&mdash;not a sweet face and graceful form, but a
+servant, big and commonplace, bringing him his own card
+and the announcement, &quot;The ladies is both out, sir.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Impossible! take it up again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He said &quot;impossible&quot; because Francesca had that
+morning told him she would be at home in the evening.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All right, sir; but it's no use, for there's nobody there,
+I know&quot;; and he vanished for a second attempt, unsuccessful
+as the first. Surrey went to the office, still determinedly
+incredulous.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Are Mrs. Lancaster and Miss Ercildoune not in?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, sir; both out. Keys here,&quot;&mdash;showing them. &quot;Left
+for one of the five-o'clock trains; rooms not given up; said
+they would be back in a few days.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;From what depot did they leave?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't know, sir. They didn't go in the coach; had a
+carriage, or I could tell you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But they left a note, perhaps,&mdash;or some message?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nothing at all, sir; not a word, nor a scrap. Can I serve
+you in any way further?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thanks! not at all. Good evening.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good evening, sir.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>That was all. What did it mean?&mdash;to vanish without a
+sign! an engagement for the evening, and not a line left in
+explanation or excuse! It was not like her. There must be
+something wrong, some mystery. He tormented himself
+with a thousand fancies and fears over what, he confessed,
+was probably a mere accident; wisely determined to do so
+no longer,&mdash;but did, spite of such excellent resolutions
+and intent.</p>
+
+<p>This took place on the evening of Saturday, the 13th of
+April, 1861. The events of the next few days doubtless augmented
+his anxiety and unhappiness. Sunday followed,&mdash;a
+day filled not with a Sabbath calm, but with the stillness felt
+in nature before some awful convulsion; the silence preceding
+earthquake, volcano, or blasting storm; a quiet
+broken from Maine to the Pacific slope when the next day
+shone, and men roused themselves from the sleep of a night
+to the duty of a day, from the sleep of generations, fast
+merging into death, at the trumpet-call to arms,&mdash;a cry
+which sounded through every State and every household in
+the land, which, more powerful than the old songs of Percy
+and Douglas, &quot;brought children from their play, and old
+men from their chimney-corners,&quot; to emulate humanity in
+its strength and prime, and contest with it the opportunity
+to fight and die in a deathless cause.</p>
+
+<p>A cry which said, &quot;There are wrongs to be redressed
+already long enough endured,&mdash;wrongs against the flag of
+the nation, against the integrity of the Union, against the
+life of the republic; wrongs against the cause of order, of
+law, of good government, against right, and justice, and
+liberty, against humanity and the world; not merely in the
+present, but in the great future, its countless ages and its
+generations yet unborn.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>To this cry there sounded one universal response, as
+men dropped their work at loom, or forge, or wheel, in
+counting-room, bank, and merchant's store, in pulpit,
+office, or platform, and with one accord rushed to arms,
+to save these rights so frightfully and arrogantly assailed.</p>
+
+<p>One voice that went to swell this chorus was Surrey's;
+one hand quick to grasp rifle and cartridge-box, one soul
+eager to fling its body into the breach at this majestic call,
+was his. He felt to the full all the divine frenzy and passion
+of those first days of the war, days unequalled in the history
+of nations and of the world. All the elegant dilettanteism,
+the delicious idleness, the luxurious ease, fell away,
+and were as though they had never been. All the airy
+dreams of a renewed chivalrous age, of courage, of
+heroism, of sublime daring and self-sacrifice, took substance
+and shape, and were for him no longer visions of
+the night, but realities of the day.</p>
+
+<p>Still, while flags waved, drums beat, and cannon thundered;
+while friends said, &quot;Go!&quot; the world stood ready to
+cheer him on, and fame and honor and greater things than
+these beckoned him to come; while he felt the whirl and
+excitement of it all,&mdash;his heart cried ceaselessly, &quot;Only let
+me see her&mdash;once&mdash;if but for a moment, before I go!&quot; It
+was so little he asked of fate, yet too much to be granted.</p>
+
+<p>In vain he went every day, and many times a day, in the
+brief space left him, to her hotel. In vain he once more
+questioned clerk and servants; in vain haunted the house of
+his aunt, with the dim hope that Clara might hear from
+her, or that in some undefined way he might learn of her
+whereabouts, and so accomplish his desire.</p>
+
+<p>But the days passed, too slowly for the ardent young
+patriot, all too rapidly for the unhappy lover. Friday came.
+Early in the day multitudes of people began to collect in
+the street, growing in numbers and enthusiasm as the
+hours wore on, till, in the afternoon, the splendid thoroughfare
+of New York from Fourth Street down to the
+Cortlandt Ferry&mdash;a stretch of miles&mdash;was a solid mass of
+humanity; thousands and tens of thousands, doubled,
+quadrupled, and multiplied again.</p>
+
+<p>Through the morning this crowd in squads and companies
+traversed the streets, collected on the corners, congregating
+chiefly about the armory of their pet regiment,
+the Seventh, on Lafayette Square,&mdash;one great mass gazing
+unweariedly at its windows and walls, then moving on to
+be replaced by another of the like kind, which, having
+gone through the same performance, gave way in turn to
+yet others, eager to take its place.</p>
+
+<p>So the fever burned; the excitement continued and
+augmented till, towards three o'clock in the afternoon, the
+mighty throng stood still, and waited. It was no ordinary
+multitude; the wealth, refinement, fashion, the greatness
+and goodness of a vast city were there, pressed close against
+its coarser and darker and homelier elements. Men and
+women stood alike in the crowd, dainty patrician and toil-stained
+laborer, all thrilled by a common emotion, all vivified&mdash;if
+in unequal degree&mdash;by the same sublime enthusiasm.
+Overhead, from every window and doorway and
+housetop, in every space and spot that could sustain one,
+on ropes, on staffs, in human hands, waved, and curled,
+and floated, flags that were in multitude like the swells of
+the sea; silk, and bunting, and painted calico, from the
+great banner spreading its folds with an indescribable
+majesty, to the tiny toy shaken in a baby hand. Under all
+this glad and gay and splendid show, the faces seemed, perhaps
+by contrast, not sad, but grave; not sorrowful, but
+intense, and luminously solemn.</p>
+
+<p>Gradually the men of the Seventh marched out of
+their armory. Hands had been wrung, adieus said, last fond
+embraces and farewells given. The regiment formed in the
+open square, the crowd about it so dense as to seem stifling,
+the windows of its building rilled with the sweetest
+and finest and fairest of faces,&mdash;the mothers, wives, and
+sweethearts of these young splendid fellows just ready to
+march away.</p>
+
+<p>Surrey from his station gazed and gazed at the window
+where stood his mother, so well beloved, his relations and
+friends, many of them near and dear to him,&mdash;some of
+them with clear, bright eyes that turned from the forms of
+brothers in the ranks to seek his, and linger upon it wistfully
+and tenderly; yet looking at all these, even his mother,
+he looked beyond, as though in the empty space a face
+would appear, eyes would meet his, arms be stretched
+towards him, lips whisper a fond adieu, as he, breaking
+from the ranks, would take her to his embrace, and speak,
+at the same time, his love and farewell. A fruitless longing.</p>
+
+<p>Four o'clock struck over the great city, and the line
+moved out of the square, through Fourth Street, to
+Broadway. Then began a march, which whoso witnessed,
+though but a little child, will remember to his dying day,
+the story of which he will repeat to his children, and his
+children's children, and, these dead, it will be read by eyes
+that shall shine centuries hence, as one of the most memorable
+scenes in the great struggle for freedom.</p>
+
+<p>Hands were stretched forth to touch the cloth of their
+uniforms, and kissed when they were drawn back.
+Mothers held up their little children to gain inspiration for
+a lifetime. A roar of voices, continuous, unbroken, rent the
+skies; while, through the deafening cheers, men and
+women, with eyes blinded by tears, repeated, a million
+times, &quot;God bless&mdash;God bless and keep them!&quot; And so,
+down the magnificent avenue, through the countless,
+shouting multitude, through the whirlwind of enthusiasm
+and adoration, under the glorious sweep of flags, the grand
+regiment moved from the beginning of its march to its
+close,&mdash;till it was swept away towards the capital, around
+which were soon to roll such bloody waves of death.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, where was Miss Ercildoune? Surrey had
+thought her behavior strange the last morning they spent
+together. How much stranger, how unaccountable,
+indeed, would it have seemed to him, could he have seen
+her through the afternoon following!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is wrong with you? are you ill, Francesca?&quot; her
+aunt had inquired as she came in, pulling off her hat with
+the air of one stifling, and throwing herself into a chair.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ill! O no!&quot;&mdash;with a quick laugh,&mdash;&quot;what could have
+made you think so? I am quite well, thank you; but I will
+go to my room for a little while and rest. I think I am
+tired.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do, dear, for I want you to take a trip up the Hudson
+this afternoon. I have to see some English people who are
+living at a little village a score of miles out of town, and
+then I must go on to Albany before I take you home. It
+will be pleasant at Tanglewood over the Sabbath,&mdash;unless
+you have some engagements to keep you here?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O Aunt Alice, how glad I am! I was going home this
+afternoon without you. I thought you would come when
+you were ready; but this will do just as well,&mdash;anything to
+get out of town.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Anything to get out of town? why, Francesca, is it so
+hateful to you? 'Going home! and this do almost as well!'&mdash;what
+does the child mean? is she the least little bit mad? I'm
+afraid so. She evidently needs some fresh country air, and rest
+from excitement. Go, dear, and take your nap, and refresh
+yourself before five o'clock; that is the time we leave.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As the door closed between them, she shook her head
+dubiously. '&quot;Going home this afternoon!' what does that
+signify? Has she been quarrelling with that young lover of
+hers, or refusing him? I should not care to ask any questions
+till she herself speaks; but I fear me something is
+wrong.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She would not have feared, but been certain, could she
+have looked then and there into the next room. She would
+have seen that the trouble was something deeper than she
+dreamed. Francesca was sitting, her hands supporting an
+aching head, her large eyes fixed mournfully and immovably
+upon something which she seemed to contemplate
+with a relentless earnestness, as though forcing herself to a
+distressing task. What was this something? An image, a
+shadow in the air, which she had not evoked from the
+empty atmosphere, but from the depths of her own nature
+and soul,&mdash;the life and fate of a young girl. Herself! what
+cause, then, for mournful scrutiny? She, so young, so brilliant,
+so beautiful, upon whom fate had so kindly smiled,
+admired by many, tenderly and passionately loved by at
+least one heart,&mdash;surely it was a delightful picture to contemplate,&mdash;this
+life and its future; a picture to bring smiles
+to the lips, rather than tears to the eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Though, in fact, there were none dimming hers,&mdash;hot,
+dry eyes, full of fever and pain. What visions passed before
+them? what shadows of the life she inspected darkened
+them? what sunshine now and then fell upon it, reflecting
+itself in them, as she leaned forward to scan these bright
+spots, holding them in her gaze after other and gloomier
+ones had taken their places, as one leans forth from
+window or doorway to behold, long as possible, the vanishing
+form of some dear friend.</p>
+
+<p>Looking at these, she cried out, &quot;Fool! to have been so
+happy, and not to have known what the happiness meant,
+and that it was not for me,&mdash;never for me! to have walked
+to the verge of an abyss,&mdash;to have plunged in, thinking the
+path led to heaven. Heaven for me! ah,&mdash;I forgot,&mdash;I
+forgot. I let an unconscious bliss seize me, possess me,
+exclude memory and thought,&mdash;lived in it as though it
+would endure forever.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She got up and moved restlessly to and fro across the
+room, but presently came back to the seat she had abandoned,
+and to the inspection which, while it tortured her,
+she yet evidently compelled herself to pursue.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come,&quot; she then said, &quot;let us ask ourself some questions,
+constitute ourself confessor and penitent, and see
+what the result will prove.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did you think fate would be more merciful to you
+than to others?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I thought nothing about fate.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did you suppose that he loved you sufficiently to
+destroy 'an invincible barrier?'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I did not think of his love. I remembered no barrier.
+I only knew I was in heaven, and cared for naught
+beyond.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you see the barrier now?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do&mdash;I do.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did <i>he</i> help you to behold it; to discover, or to
+remember it? did he, or did he not?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He did. Too true,&mdash;he did.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Does he love you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I&mdash;how should I know? his looks, his acts&mdash;I never
+thought&mdash;O Willie, Willie!&quot;&mdash;her voice going out in a
+little gasping sob.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come,&mdash;none of that. No sentiment,&mdash;face the facts.
+Think over all that was said, every word. Have you done
+so?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have,&mdash;every word.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, stop torturing me. Do not ask me any more
+questions. I am going away,&mdash;flying like a coward. I will
+not tempt further suffering. And yet&mdash;once more&mdash;only
+once? could that do harm? Ah, God, my God, be merciful!&quot;
+she cried, clasping her hands and lifting them above
+her bowed head. Then remembering, in the midst of her
+anguish, some words she had been reading that morning,
+she repeated them with a bitter emphasis,&mdash;&quot;What can
+wringing of the hands do, that which is ordained to alter?&quot;
+As she did so she tore asunder her clasped hands, to drop
+them clinched by her side,&mdash;the gesture of despair substituted
+for that of hope.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is not Heaven I am to besiege!&quot; she exclaimed.
+&quot;Will I never learn that? Its justice cannot overcome the
+injustice of man. My God!&quot; she cried then, with a sudden,
+terrible energy, &quot;our punishment should be light, our rest
+sure, our paradise safe, at the end, since we have to make
+now such awful atonement; since men compel us to
+endure the pangs of purgatory, the tortures of hell, here
+upon earth.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>After that she sat for a long while silent, evidently
+revolving a thousand thoughts of every shape and hue,
+judging from the myriads of lights and shadows that flitted
+over her face. At last, rousing herself, she perceived that
+she had no more time to spend in this sorrowful employment,&mdash;that
+she must prepare to go away from him, as her
+heart said, forever. &quot;Forever!&quot; it repeated. &quot;This, then, is
+the close of it all,&mdash;the miserable end!&quot; With that thought
+she shut her slender hand, and struck it down hard, the
+blood almost starting from the driven nails and bruised
+flesh, unheeding; though a little space thereafter she
+smiled, beholding it, and muttered, &quot;So&mdash;the drop of
+savage blood is telling at last!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Presently she was gone. It was a pleasant spot to which
+her aunt took her,&mdash;one of the pretty little villages scattered
+up and down the long sweep of the Hudson.
+Pleasant people they were too,&mdash;these English friends of
+Mrs. Lancaster,&mdash;who made her welcome, but did not
+intrude upon the solitude which they saw she desired.</p>
+
+<p>Sabbath morning they all went to the little chapel, and
+left her, as she wished, alone. Being so alone, after hearing
+their adieus, she went up to her room and sat down to
+devote herself once again to sorrowful contemplation,&mdash;not
+because she would, but because she must.</p>
+
+<p>Poor girl! the bright spring sunshine streamed over her
+where she sat;&mdash;not a cloud in the sky, not a dimming of
+mist or vapor on all the hills, and the broad river-sweep
+which, placid and beautiful, rolled along; the cattle far off
+on the brown fields rubbed their silky sides softly together,
+and gazed through the clear atmosphere with a lazy content,
+as though they saw the waving of green grass, and
+heard the rustle of wind in the thick boughs, so soon to
+bear their leafy burden. Stillness everywhere,&mdash;the blessed
+calm that even nature seems to feel on a sunny Sabbath
+morn. Stillness scarcely broken by the voices, mellowed
+and softened ere they reached her ear, chanting in the village
+church, to some sweet and solemn music, words
+spoken in infinite tenderness long ago, and which, through
+all the centuries, come with healing balm to many a sore
+and saddened heart: &quot;Come unto me,&quot; the voices sang,&mdash;&quot;come
+unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and
+I will give you rest.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, rest,&quot; she murmured while she listened,&mdash;&quot;rest&quot;;
+and with the repetition of the word the fever died out of
+her eyes, leaving them filled with such a look, more pitiful
+than any tears, as would have made a kind heart ache even
+to look at them; while her figure, alert and proud no
+longer, bent on the window ledge in such lonely and
+weary fashion that a strong arm would have involuntarily
+stretched out to shield it from any hardness or blow that
+might threaten, though the owner thereof were a stranger.</p>
+
+<p>There was something indescribably appealing and
+pathetic in her whole look and air. Outside the window
+stood a slender little bird which had fluttered there, spent
+and worn, and did not try to flit away any further. Too
+early had it flown from its southern abode; too early abandoned
+the warm airs, the flowers and leafage, of a more
+hospitable region, to find its way to a northern home; too
+early ventured into a rigorous clime; and now, shivering,
+faint, near to death, drooped its wings and hung its weary
+head, waiting for the end of its brief life to come.</p>
+
+<p>Francesca, looking up with woeful eyes, beheld it, and,
+opening the window, softly took it in. &quot;Poor birdie!&quot; she
+whispered, striving to warm it in her gentle hand and
+against her delicate cheek,&mdash;&quot;poor little wanderer!&mdash;didst
+thou think to find thy mate, and build thy tiny nest, and be
+a happy mother through the long bright summer-time? Ah,
+my pet, what a sad close is this to all these pleasant dreams!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The frail little creature could not eat even the bits of
+crumbs which she put into its mouth, nor taste a drop of
+water. All her soothing presses failed to bring warmth and
+life to the tiny frame that presently stretched itself out,
+dead,&mdash;all its sweet songs sung, its brief, bright existence
+ended forever. &quot;Ah, my little birdie, it is all over,&quot; whispered
+Francesca, as she laid it softly down, and unconsciously
+lifted her hand to her own head with a self-pitying
+gesture that was sorrowful to behold.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Like me,&quot; she did not say; yet a penetrating eye
+looking at them&mdash;the slight bird lying dead, its brilliant
+plumage already dimmed, the young girl gazing at it&mdash;would
+perceive that alike these two were fitted for the
+warmth and sunshine, would perceive that both had been
+thwarted and defrauded of their fair inheritance, would
+perceive that one lay spent and dead in its early spring.
+What of the other?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Aunt Alice,&quot; said Francesca a few days after that, &quot;can
+you go to New York this afternoon or to-morrow
+morning?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Certainly, dear. I purposed returning to-day or early
+in the morning to see the Seventh march away. Of course
+you would like to be there.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes.&quot; She spoke slowly, and with seeming indifference.
+It was because she could scarcely control her voice to speak
+at all. &quot;I should like to be there.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Francesca knew, what her aunt did not, that Surrey was
+a member of the Seventh, and that he would march away
+with it to danger,&mdash;perhaps to death.</p>
+
+<p>So they were there, in a window overlooking the great
+avenue,&mdash;Mrs. Lancaster, foreigner though she was,
+thrilled to the heart's core by the magnificent pageant;
+Francesca straining her eyes up the long street, through the
+vast sea of faces, to fasten them upon just one face that she
+knew would presently appear in the throng.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, heavens!&quot; cried Mrs. Lancaster, &quot;what a sight!
+look at those young men; they are the choice and fine of
+the city. See, see! there is Hunter, and Winthrop, and Pursuivant,
+and Mortimer, and Shaw, and Russell, and, yes&mdash;no&mdash;it
+is, over there&mdash;your friend, Surrey, himself. Did
+you know, Francesca?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Francesca did not reply. Mrs. Lancaster turned to see
+her lying white and cold in her chair. Endurance had failed
+at last.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>The plain, unvarnished tale of my whole course of love.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+SHAKESPEARE<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>&quot;What a handsome girl that is who
+always waits on us!&quot; Francesca had once
+said to Clara Russell, as they came out of Hyacinth's with
+some dainty laces in their hands.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very,&quot; Clara had answered.</p>
+
+<p>The handsome girl was Sallie.</p>
+
+<p>At another time Francesca, admiring some particular
+specimen of the pomps and vanities with which the store
+was crowded, was about carrying it away, but first experimented
+as to its fit.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O dear!&quot; she cried, in dismay, &quot;it is too short, and&quot;&mdash;rummaging
+through the box&mdash;&quot;there is not another like it,
+and it is the only one I want.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How provoking!&quot; sympathized Clara.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I could very easily alter that,&quot; said Sallie, who was
+behind the counter; &quot;I make these up for the shop, and I'll
+be glad to fix this for you, if you like it so much.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thanks. You are very kind. Can you send it up to-morrow?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This evening, if you wish it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very good; I shall be your debtor.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well!&quot; exclaimed Clara, as they turned away, this is
+the first time in all my shopping I ever found a girl ready
+to put herself out to serve one. They usually act as if they
+were conferring the most overwhelming favor by condescending
+to wait upon you at all.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, Clara, I'm sure I always find them civil.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know they seem devoted to you. I wonder why.
+Oh!&quot;&mdash;laughing and looking at her friend with honest
+admiration,&mdash;&quot;it must be because you are so pretty.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Excellent,&mdash;how discerning you are!&quot; smiled
+Francesca, in return.</p>
+
+<p>If Clara had had a little more discernment, she would
+have discovered that what wrought this miracle was a
+friendly courtesy, that never failed to either equal or subordinate.</p>
+
+<p>Six weeks after the Seventh had marched out of New
+York, Francesca, sitting in her aunt's room, was roused
+from evidently painful thought by the entrance of a servant,
+who announced, &quot;If you please, a young woman to
+see you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Name?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She gave none, miss.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Send her up.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Sallie came in. &quot;Bird of Paradise&quot; Francesca had called
+her more than once, she was so dashing and handsome; but
+the title would scarcely fit now, for she looked poor, and
+sad, and woefully dispirited.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, Miss Sallie, is it you? Good morning.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good morning, Miss Ercildoune.&quot; She stood, and
+looked as though she had something important to say.
+Presently Francesca had drawn it from her,&mdash;a little story
+of her own sorrows and troubles.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The reason I have come to you, Miss Ercildoune,
+when you are so nearly a stranger, is because you have
+always been so kind and pleasant to me when I waited on
+you at the store, and I thought you'd anyway listen to what
+I have to say.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Speak on, Sallie.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I've been at Hyacinth's now, over four years, ever
+since I left school. It's a good place, and they paid me well,
+but I had to keep two people out of it, my little brother
+Frank and myself; Frank and I are orphans. And I'm very
+fond of dress; I may as well confess that at once. So the
+consequence is, I haven't saved a cent against a rainy day.
+Well,&quot; blushing scarlet, &quot;I had a lover,&mdash;the best heart that
+ever beat,&mdash;but I liked to flirt, and plague him a little, and
+make him jealous; and at last he got dreadfully so about a
+young gentleman,&mdash;a Mr. Snipe, who was very attentive
+to me,&mdash;and talked to me about it in a way I didn't like.
+That made me worse. I don't know what possessed me; but
+after that I went out with Mr. Snipe a great deal more, to
+the theatre and the like, and let him spend his money on
+me, and get things for me, as freely as he chose. I didn't
+mean any harm, indeed I didn't,&mdash;but I liked to go about
+and have a good time; and then it made Jim show how
+much he cared for me, which, you see, was a great thing
+to me; and so this went on for a while, till Jim gave me a
+real lecture, and I got angry and wouldn't listen to anything
+he had to say, and sent him away in a huff&quot;&mdash;here
+she choked&mdash;&quot;to fight; to the war; and O dear! O dear!&quot;
+breaking down utterly, and hiding her face in her shawl,
+&quot;he'll be killed,&mdash;I know he will; and oh! what shall I do?
+My heart will break, I am sure.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Francesca came and stood by her side, put her hand
+gently on her shoulder, and stroked her beautiful hair.
+&quot;Poor girl!&quot; she said, softly, &quot;poor girl!&quot; and then, so low
+that even Sallie could not hear, &quot;You suffer, too: do we all
+suffer, then?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Presently Sallie looked up, and continued: &quot;Up to that
+time, Mr. Snipe hadn't said anything to me, except that he
+admired me very much, and that I was pretty, too pretty to
+work so hard, and that I ought to live like a lady, and a
+good deal more of that kind of talk that I was silly enough
+to listen to; but when he found Jim was gone, first, he
+made fun of him for 'being such a great fool as to go and
+be shot at for nothing,' and then he&mdash;O Miss Ercildoune,
+I can't tell you what he said; it makes me choke just to
+think of it. How dared he? what had I done that he should
+believe me such a thing as that? I don't know what words
+I used when I did find them, and I don't care, but they
+must have stung. I can't tell you how he looked, but it was
+dreadful; and he said, 'I'll bring down that proud spirit of
+yours yet, my lady. I'm not through with you,&mdash;don't
+think it,&mdash;not by a good deal'; and then he made me a fine
+bow, and laughed, and went out of the room.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The next day Mr. Dodd&mdash;that's one of our firm&mdash;gave
+me a week's notice to quit: 'work was slack,' he said,
+'and they didn't want so many girls.' But I'm just as sure as
+sure can be that Mr. Snipe's at the bottom of it, for I've
+been at the store, as I told you, four years and more, and
+they always reckoned me one of their best hands, and Mr.
+Dodd and Mr. Snipe are great friends. Since then I've done
+nothing but try to get work. I must have been into a thousand
+stores, but it's true work is slack; there's not a thing
+been doing since the war commenced, and I can't get any
+place. I've been to Miss Russell and some of the ladies
+who used to come to the store, to see if they'd give me
+some fine sewing; but they hadn't any for me, and I don't
+know what in the world to do, for I understand nothing
+very well but to sew, and to stand in a store. I've spent all
+my money, what little I had, and&mdash;and&mdash;I've even sold
+some of my clothes, and I can't go on this way much
+longer. I haven't a relative in the world; nor a home, except
+in a boarding-house; and the girls I know all treat me cool,
+as though I had done something bad, because I've lost my
+place, I suppose, and am poor.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All along, at times, Mr. Snipe has been sending me
+things,&mdash;bouquets, and baskets of fruit, and sometimes a
+note, and, though I won't speak to him when I meet him
+on the street, he always smiles and bows as if he were
+intimate; and last night, when I was coming home, tired
+enough from my long search, he passed me and said, with
+such a look, 'You've gone down a peg or two, haven't you,
+Sallie? Come, I guess we'll be friends again before long.'
+You think it's queer I'm telling you all this. I can't help it;
+there's something about you that draws it all out of me. I
+came to ask you for work, and here I've been talking all
+this while about myself. You must excuse me; I don't think
+I would have said so much, if you hadn't looked so kind
+and so interested&quot;; and so she had,&mdash;kind as kind could be,
+and interested as though the girl who talked had been her
+own sister.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am glad you came, Sallie, and glad that you told me
+all this, if it has been any relief to you. You may be sure I
+will do what I can for you, but I am afraid that will not be
+a great deal, here; for I am a stranger in New York, and
+know very few people. Perhaps&mdash;Would you go away from
+here?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Would I?&mdash;O wouldn't I? and be glad of the chance.
+I'd give anything to go where I couldn't get sight or sound
+of that horrid Snipe. Can't I go with you, Miss Ercildoune?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have no counter behind which to station you,&quot; said
+Francesca, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I know,&mdash;of course; but&quot;&mdash;looking at the daintily
+arrayed figure&mdash;&quot;you have plenty of elegant things to
+make, and I can do pretty much anything with my needle,
+if you'd like to trust me with some work. And then&mdash;I'm
+ashamed to ask so much of you, but a few words from you
+to your friends, I'm sure, would send me all that I could
+do, and more.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You think so?&quot; Miss Ercildoune inquired, with a
+curious intonation to her voice, and the strangest
+expression darkening her face. &quot;Very well, it shall
+be tried.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Sallie was nonplussed by the tone and look, but she
+comprehended the closing words fully and with delight.
+&quot;You will take me with you,&quot; she cried. &quot;O, how good,
+how kind you are! how shall I ever be able to thank you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't thank me at all,&quot; said Miss Ercildoune, &quot;at least
+not now. Wait till I have done something to deserve your
+gratitude.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But Sallie was not to be silenced in any such fashion,
+and said her say with warmth and meaning; then, after
+some further talk about time and plans, went away
+carrying a bit of work which Miss Ercildoune had found, or
+made, for her, and for which she had paid in advance.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;God bless her!&quot; thought Sallie; &quot;how nice and how
+thoughtful she is! Most ladies, if they'd done anything for
+me, would have given me some money and made a beggar
+of me, and I should have felt as mean as dish-water. But
+now&quot;&mdash;she patted her little bundle and walked down the
+street, elated and happy.</p>
+
+<p>Francesca watched her out of the door with eyes that
+presently filled with tears. &quot;Poor girl!&quot; she whispered;
+&quot;poor Sallie! her lover has gone to the wars with a shadow
+between them. Ah, that must not be; I must try to bring
+them together again, if he loves her dearly and truly. He
+might die,&quot;&mdash;she shuddered at that,&mdash;&quot;die, as other men
+die, in the heat and flame of battle. My God! my God!
+how shall I bear it? Dead! and without a word! Gone, and
+he will never know how well I love him! O Willie, Willie!
+my life, my love, my darling, come back, come back to
+me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Vain cry!&mdash;he cannot hear. Vain lifting of an agonized
+face, beautiful in its agony!&mdash;he cannot see. Vain stretching
+forth of longing hands and empty arms!&mdash;he is not there
+to take them to his embrace. Carry thy burden as others
+have carried it before thee, and learn what multitudes, in
+times past and in time present, have learned,&mdash;the lesson
+of endurance when happiness is denied, and of patience
+and silence when joy has been withheld. Go thou thy way,
+sorrowful and suffering soul, alone; and if thy own heart
+bleeds, strive thou to soothe its pangs, by medicining the
+wounds and healing the hurts of another.</p>
+
+<p>A few days thereafter, when Miss Ercildoune went over
+to Philadelphia, Sallie and Frank bore her company. She
+had become as thoroughly interested in them as though
+she had known and cared for them for a long while; and as
+she was one who was incapable of doing in an imperfect
+or partial way aught she attempted, and whose friendship
+never stopped short with pleasant sounding words, this
+interest had already bloomed beautifully, and was fast
+ripening into solid fruit.</p>
+
+<p>She had written in advance to desire that certain
+preparations should be made for her <i>prot&eacute;g&eacute;s</i>,&mdash;preparations
+which had been faithfully attended to; and thus, reaching
+a strange city, they felt themselves not strangers, since they
+had a home ready to receive them, and this excellent
+friend by their side.</p>
+
+<p>The home consisted of two rooms, neat, cheerful,
+high up,&mdash;&quot;the airier and healthier for that,&quot; as Sallie
+decided when she saw them.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I believe everything is in order,&quot; said the good-natured-looking
+old lady, the mistress of the establishment.
+&quot;My lodgers are all gentlemen who take their meals out,
+and I shall be glad of some company. Any one whom
+Friend Comstock recommends will be all right, I know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As Mrs. Healey's style of designation indicated, Friend
+Comstock was a Quakeress, well known, greatly esteemed,
+an old friend of Miss Ercildoune, and of Miss Ercildoune's
+father. She it was to whom Francesca had written, and
+who had found this domicile for the wanderers, and who
+at the outset furnished Sallie with an abundance of fine
+and dainty sewing. Indeed, without giving the matter
+special thought, she was surprised to discover that, with one
+or two exceptions, the people Miss Ercildoune sent her
+were of the peaceful and quiet sect. This bird of brilliant
+plumage seemed ill assorted with the sober-hued flock.</p>
+
+<p>She found in this same bird a helper in more ways than
+one. It was not alone that she gave her employment and
+paid her well, nor that she sent her others able and willing
+to do the same. She found Frankie a good school, and saw
+him properly installed. She never came to them empty-handed;
+through the long, hot summer-time she brought
+them fruit and flowers from her home out of town; and
+when she came not herself, if the carriage was in the city
+it stopped with these same delightful burdens. Sallie
+declared her an angel, and Frank, with his mouth stuffed
+full, stood ready to echo the assertion.</p>
+
+<p>So the heated term wore away,&mdash;before it ended,
+telling heavily on Sallie. Her anxiety about Jim, her close
+confinement and constant work, the fever everywhere in
+the spiritual air through that first terrible summer of the
+war, bore her down.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You need rest,&quot; said Miss Ercildoune to her one day,
+looking at her with kindly solicitude,&mdash;&quot;rest, and change,
+and fresh air, and freedom from care. I can't give you the
+last, but I can the first if you will accept them. You need
+some country living.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O Miss Ercildoune, will you let me do your work at
+your own home? I know it would do me good just to be
+under the same roof with you, and then I should have all
+the things you speak of combined and another one added.
+If you only will!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This was not the plan Francesca had proposed to herself.
+She had intended sending Sallie away to some pleasant
+country or seaside place, till she was refreshed and ready to
+come to her work once more. Sallie did not know what to
+make of the expression of the face that watched her, nor
+of the exclamation, &quot;Why not? let me try her.&quot; But she had
+not long to consider, for Miss Ercildoune added, &quot;Be it so.
+I will send in for you to-morrow, and you shall stay till you
+are better and stronger, or&mdash;till you please to come
+home,&quot;&mdash;the last words spoken in a bitter and sorrowful
+tone.</p>
+
+<p>The next day Sallie found her way to the superb home
+of her employer. Superb it was, in every sense. Never
+before had she been in such a delightful region, never
+before realized how absolutely perfect breeding sets at ease
+all who come within the charm of its magic sphere,&mdash;employed,
+acquaintance, or friend.</p>
+
+<p>There was a shadow, however, in this house,&mdash;a
+shadow, the premonition of which she had seen more than
+once on the face of its mistress ere she ever beheld her
+home; a shadow to which, for a few days, she had no clew,
+but which was suddenly explained by the arrival of the
+master of this beautiful habitation; a shadow from which
+most people would have fled as from the breath of a pestilence,
+or the shade of the tomb; nay, one from which, but
+a few short months before, Sallie herself would have sped
+with feet from which she would have shaken the very dust
+of the threshold when she was beyond its doors,&mdash;but not
+now. Now, as she beheld it, she sat still to survey it, with
+surprise that deepened into indignation and compassion,
+that many a time filled her eyes with tears, and brought an
+added expression of respect to her voice when she spoke
+to these people who seemed to have all the good things
+that this world can offer, upon whom fortune had
+expended her treasures, yet&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Whatever it was, Sallie came from that home with
+many an old senseless prejudice destroyed forever, with a
+new thought implanted in her soul, the blossoming of
+which was a noxious vapor in the nostrils of some who
+were compelled to inhale it, but as a sweet-smelling savor
+to more than one weary wayfarer, and to that God to
+whom the darkness and the light are alike, and who, we are
+told by His own word, is no respecter of persons.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Poor, dear Miss Ercildoune!&quot; half sobbed, half
+scolded Sallie, as she sat at her work, blooming and, fresh,
+the day after her return. &quot;What a tangled thread it is, to be
+sure,&quot; jerking at her knotty needleful. &quot;Well, I know what
+I'll do,&mdash;I'll treat her as if she was a queen born and
+crowned, just so long as I have anything to do with her,&mdash;so
+I will.&quot; And she did.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>For hearts of truest mettle<br />
+Absence doth join, and time doth settle.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+ANONYMOUS<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>It were a vain endeavor to attempt the telling of what
+filled the heart and soul of Surrey, as he marched away
+that day from New York, and through the days and weeks
+and months that followed. Fired by a sublime enthusiasm
+for his country; thirsting to drink of any cup her hand
+might present, that thus he might display his absolute
+devotion to her cause; burning with indignation at the
+wrongs she had suffered; thrilled with an adoring love for
+the idea she embodied; eager to make manifest this love at
+whatever cost of pain and sorrow and suffering to himself,&mdash;through
+all this the man never once was steeped in
+forgetfulness in the soldier; the divine passion of patriotism
+never once dulled the ache, or satisfied the desire, or
+answered the prayer, or filled the longing heart, that
+through the day marches and the night watches cried, and
+would not be appeased, for his darling.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Surely,&quot; he thought as he went down Broadway, as he
+reflected, as he considered the matter a thousand times
+thereafter,&mdash;&quot;surely I was a fool not to have spoken to her
+then; not to have seen her, have devised, have forced some
+way to reach her, not to have met her face to face, and told
+her all the love with which she had filled my heart and
+possessed my soul. And then to have been such a coward
+when I did write to her, to have so said a say which was
+nothing&quot;; and he groaned impatiently as he thought of the
+scene in his room and the letter which was its final result.</p>
+
+<p>How he had written once, and again, and yet again,
+letters short and long, letters short and burning, or lengthy
+and filled almost to the final line with delicate fancies and
+airy sentiment, ere he ventured to tell that of which all this
+was but the prelude; how, at the conclusion of each
+attempt, he had watched these luminous effusions blaze
+and burn as he regularly committed them to the flames;
+how he found it difficult to decide which he enjoyed the
+most,&mdash;writing them out, or seeing them burn; how at last
+he had put upon paper some such words as these:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;After these delightful weeks and months of intercourse,
+I am to go away from you, then, without a single
+word of parting, or a solitary sentence of adieu. Need I tell
+you how this pains me? I have in vain besieged the house
+that has held you; in vain made a thousand inquiries, a
+thousand efforts to discover your retreat and to reach your
+side, that I might once more see your face and take your
+hand ere I went from the sight and touch of both, perchance
+forever. This I find may not be. The hour strikes,
+and in a little space I shall march away from the city to
+which my heart clings with infinite fondness, since it is
+filled with associations of you. I have again and again
+striven to write that which will be worthy the eyes that are
+to read, and striven in vain. 'Tis a fine art to which I do
+not pretend. Then, in homely phrase, good by. Give me
+thy spiritual hand, and keep me, if thou wilt, in thy gentle
+remembrance. Adieu! a kind adieu, my friend; may the
+brighter stars smile on thee, and the better angels guard thy
+footsteps wherever thou mayst wander, keep thy heart and
+spirit bright, and let thy thoughts turn kindly back to me,
+I pray very, very often. And so, once more, farewell.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Remembering all this, thinking what he would do and
+say were the doing and saying yet possible in an untried
+future, the time sped by. He waited and waited in vain. He
+looked, yet was gratified by no sight for which his eyes
+longed. He hoped, till hope gave place to despondency
+and almost despair: not a word came to him, not a line of
+answer or remembrance. This long silence was all the more
+intolerable, since the time that intervened did but the
+more vividly stamp upon his memory the delights of the
+past, and color with softer and more exquisite tints the recollection
+of vanished hours,&mdash;hours spent in galloping
+gayly by her side in the early morning, or idly and deliciously
+lounged away in picture-galleries or concert-rooms,
+or in a conversation carried on in some curious and
+subtle shape between two hearts and spirits with the help
+of very few uttered words; hours in which he had whirled
+her through many a fairy maze and turn of captivating
+dance-music, or in some less heated and crowded room, or
+cool conservatory, listened to the voice of the siren who
+walked by his side, &quot;while the sweet wind did gently kiss
+the flowers and make no noise,&quot; and the strains of &quot;flute,
+violin, bassoon,&quot; and the sounds of the &quot;dancers dancing in
+tune,&quot; coming to them on the still air of night, seemed like
+the sounds from another and a far-off world,&mdash;listened,
+listened, listened, while his silver-tongued enchantress
+builded castles in the air, or beguiled his thought,
+enthralled his heart, his soul and fancy, through many a
+golden hour.</p>
+
+<p>Thinking of all this, his heart well found expression for
+its feelings in the half-pleasing, half-sorrowful lines which
+almost unconsciously repeated themselves again and again
+in his brain:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;Still o'er those scenes my memory wakes,<br />
+And fondly broods with miser care;<br />
+Time but the impression deeper makes,<br />
+As streams their channels deeper wear.&quot;<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Thinking of all this, he took comfort in spite of his
+trouble. &quot;Perhaps,&quot; he said to himself, &quot;he was mistaken.
+Perhaps&quot;&mdash;O happy thought!&mdash;it was but make-believe
+displeasure which had so tortured him. Perhaps&mdash;yes, he
+would believe it&mdash;she had never received his letter; they
+had been careless, they had failed to give it her or to send
+it aright. He would write her once again, in language
+which would relieve his heart, and which she must comprehend.
+He loved her; perhaps, ah, perhaps she loved him
+a little in return: he would believe so till he was undeceived,
+and be infinitely happy in the belief.</p>
+
+<p>Is it not wondrous how even the tiniest grain of love
+will permeate the saddest and sorest recesses of the heart,
+and instantly cause it to pulsate with thoughts and emotions
+the sweetest and dearest in life? O Love, thou sweet,
+thou young and rose lipped cherubim, how does thy smile
+illuminate the universe! how does thy slightest touch electrify
+the soul! how gently and tenderly dost thou lead us
+up to heaven!</p>
+
+<p>With Surrey, to decide was to act. The second letter,
+full of sweetest yet intensest love,&mdash;his heart laid bare to
+her,&mdash;was written; was sent, enclosed in one to his aunt.
+Tom was away in another section, fighting manfully for the
+dear old flag, or the precious missive would have been
+intrusted to his care. He sent it thus that it might reach her
+sooner. Now that he had a fresh hope, he could not wait
+to write for her address, and forward it himself to her
+hands; he must adopt the speediest method of putting it in
+her possession.</p>
+
+<p>In a little space came answer from Mrs. Russell,
+enclosing the letter he had sent: a kindly epistle it was. He
+was a sort of idol with this same aunt, so she had put many
+things on paper that were steeped in gentleness and affection
+ere she said at the end, &quot;I re-enclose your letter. I have
+seen Miss Ercildoune. She restores it to you; she implores
+you never to write her again,&mdash;to forget her. I add my
+entreaties to hers. She begs of me to beseech you not to
+try her by any further appeals, as she will but return them
+unopened.&quot; That was all.</p>
+
+<p>What could it mean? He loved her so absolutely, he
+had such exalted faith in her kindness, her gentleness, her
+fairness and superiority,&mdash;in <i>her</i>,&mdash;that he could not
+believe she would so thrust back his love, purely and
+chivalrously offered, with something that seemed like
+ignominy, unless she had a sufficient reason&mdash;or one she
+deemed such&mdash;for treating so cruelly him and the offering
+he laid at her feet.</p>
+
+<p>But she had spoken. It was for him, then, when she
+bade silence, to keep it; when she refused his gift, to refrain
+from thrusting it upon her attention and heart. But ah, the
+silence and the refraining! Ah, the time&mdash;the weary, sore,
+intolerable time&mdash;that followed! Summer, and autumn,
+and winter, and the seasons repeated once again, he
+tramped across the soil of Virginia, already wet with rebel
+and patriot blood; he felt the shame and agony of Bull
+Run; he was in the night struggle at Ball's Bluff, where
+those wondrous Harvard boys found it &quot;sweet to die for
+their country,&quot; and discovered, for them, &quot;death to be but
+one step onward in life.&quot; He lay in camp, chafing with
+impatience and indignation as the long months wore away,
+and the thousands of graves about Washington, filled by
+disease and inaction, made &quot;all quiet along the Potomac.&quot;
+He went down to Yorktown; was in the sweat and fury of
+the seven days' fight; away in the far South, where fever
+and pestilence stood guard to seize those who were spared
+by the bullet and bayonet; and on many a field well lost or
+won. Through it all marching or fighting, sick, wounded
+thrice and again; praised, admired, heroic, promoted,&mdash;from
+private soldier to general,&mdash;through two years and
+more of such fiery experience, no part of the tender love
+was burned away, tarnished, or dimmed.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes, indeed, he even smiled at himself for the
+constant thought, and felt that he must certainly be
+demented on this one point at least, since it colored every
+impression of his life, and, in some shape, thrust itself
+upon him at the most unseemly and foreign times.</p>
+
+<p>One evening, when the mail for the division came in,
+looking over the pile of letters, his eye was caught by one
+addressed to James Given. The name was familiar,&mdash;that of
+his father's old foreman, whom he knew to be somewhere
+in the army; doubtless the same man. Unquestionably, he
+thought, that was the reason he was so attracted to it; but
+why he should take up the delicate little missive, scan it
+again and again, hold it in his hand with the same touch
+with which he would have pressed a rare flower, and lay it
+down as reluctantly as he would have yielded a known and
+visible treasure,&mdash;that was the mystery. He had never seen
+Francesca's writing, but he stood possessed, almost assured,
+of the belief that this letter was penned by her hand; and
+at last parted with it slowly and unwillingly, as though it
+were the dear hand of which he mused; then took himself
+to task for this boyish weakness and folly. Nevertheless, he
+went in pursuit of Jim, not to question him,&mdash;he was too
+thorough a gentleman for that,&mdash;but led on partly by his
+desire to see a familiar face, partly by this folly, as he called
+it with a sort of amused disdain.</p>
+
+<p>Folly, however, it was not, save in such measure as the
+subtle telegraphings between spirit and spirit can be thus
+called. Unjustly so called they are, constantly; it being the
+habit of most people to denounce as heresy or ridicule as
+madness things too high for their sight or too deep for
+their comprehension. As these people would say, &quot;oddly
+enough,&quot; or &quot;by an extraordinary coincidence,&quot; this very
+letter was from Miss Ercildoune,&mdash;a letter which she wrote
+as she purposed, and as she well knew how to write, in
+behalf of Sallie. It was ostensibly on quite another theme;
+asking some information in regard to a comrade, but so
+cunningly devised and executed as to tell him in few
+words, and unsuspiciously, some news of Sallie,&mdash;news
+which she knew would delight his heart, and overthrow
+the little barrier which had stood between them, making
+both miserable, but which he would not, and she could
+not, clamber over or destroy. It did its work effectually, and
+made two hearts thoroughly happy,&mdash;this letter which had
+so strangely bewitched Surrey; which, in his heart, spite of
+the ridicule of his reason, he was so sure was hers; and
+which, indeed, was hers, though he knew not that till long
+afterward.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So,&quot; he thought, as he went through the camp, &quot;Given
+is here, and near. I shall be glad to see a face from home,
+whatever kind of a face it may be, and Given's is a good
+one; it will be a pleasant rememberance.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Whither away?&quot; called a voice behind him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To the 29th,&quot; he answered the questioner, one of his
+officers and friends, who, coming up, took his arm,&mdash;&quot;in
+pursuit of a man.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What's his name?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Given,&mdash;christened James. What are you laughing at?
+do you know him?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I don't know him, but I've heard some funny stories
+about him; he's a queer stick, I should think.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Something in that way.&mdash;Helloa! Brooks, back
+again?&quot; to a fine, frank-looking young fellow,&mdash;&quot;and were
+you successful?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, to both your questions. In addition I'll say, for
+your rejoicing, that I give in, cave, subside, have nothing
+more to say against your pet theory,&mdash;from this moment
+swear myself a rank abolitionist, or anything else you
+please, now and forever,&mdash;so help me all ye black gods and
+goddesses!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Phew! what's all this?&quot; cried Whittlesly, from the
+other side of his Colonel; &quot;what are you driving at? I'll
+defy anybody to make head or tail of that answer.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Surrey understands.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not I; your riddle's too much for me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Didn't you go in pursuit of a dead man?&quot; queried
+Whittlesly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Just that.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did the dead man convert you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, Colonel, not precisely. And yet yes, too; that is, I
+suppose I shouldn't have been converted if he hadn't died,
+and I gone in search of him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I believe it; you're such an obstinate case that you
+need one raised from the dead to have any effect on you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Obstinate! O, hear the pig-headed fellow talk! You're
+a beauty to discourse on that point, aren't you!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Surrey laughed, and stopped at the call of one of his
+men, who hailed him as he went by. Evidently a favorite
+here as in New York, in camp as at home; for in a moment
+he was surrounded by the men, who crowded about him,
+each with a question, or remark, to draw special attention
+to himself, and a word or smile from his commander.
+Whatever complaint they had to enter, or petition to
+make, or favor to beg, or wish to urge, whatever help they
+wanted or information they desired, was brought to him to
+solve or to grant, and&mdash;never being repulsed by their
+officer&mdash;they speedily knew and loved their friend. Thus
+it was that the two men standing at a little distance,
+watching the proceeding, were greatly amused at the
+motley drafts made upon his attention in the shape of
+tents, shoes, coats, letters to be sent or received, books
+borrowed and lent, a man sick, or a chicken captured.
+They brought their interests and cares to him,&mdash;these big,
+brown fellows,&mdash;as though they were children, and he a
+parent well beloved.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One might think him the father of the regiment,&quot;
+said Brooks, with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The mother, more like: it must be the woman element
+in him these fellows feel and love so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Perhaps; but it would have another effect on them, if,
+for instance, he didn't carry that sabre-slash on his hand.
+They've seen him under steel and fire, and know where
+he's led them.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is this you were joking about with him, a while
+ago?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What! about turning abolitionist?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Precisely.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O, you know he's rampant on the slavery question. I
+believe it's the only thing he ever loses his temper over, and
+he has lost it with me more than once. I've always been a
+rank heretic with regard to Cuffee, and the result was, we
+disagreed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, I know. But what connection has that with your
+expedition?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Just what I want to know,&quot; added Surrey, coming up
+at the moment.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah! you're in time to hear the confession, are you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'An honest confession&mdash;'You know what the wise
+man says.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come, don't flatter yourself we will think you so
+because you quote him. Be quiet, both of you, and let me
+go on to tell my tale.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Attention!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Proceed!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thus, then. You understand what my errand was?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not exactly; Lieutenant Hunt was drowned somewhere,
+wasn't he?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes: fell overboard from a tug; the men on board tried
+to save him, and then to recover his body, and couldn't do
+either. Some of his people came down here in pursuit of
+it, and I was detailed with a squad to help them in their
+search.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, the naval officers gave us every facility in their
+power; the river was dragged twice over, and the woods
+along-shore ransacked, hoping it might have been washed
+in and, maybe, buried; but there wasn't sight or trace of it.
+While we were hunting round we stumbled on a couple of
+darkies, who told us, after a bit of questioning, that darky
+number three, somewhere about, had found the body of a
+Federal officer on the river bank, and buried it. On that
+hint we acted, posted over to the fellow's shanty, and
+found, not him, but his wife, who was ready enough to tell
+us all she knew. She showed us some traps of the buried
+officer, among them a pair of spurs, which his brother recognized
+directly. When she was quite sure that we were all
+correct, and that the thing had fallen into the right hands,
+she fished out of some safe corner his wallet, with fifty-seven
+dollars in it. I confess I stared, for they were slaves,
+both of them, and evidently poor as Job's turkey, and it has
+always been one of my theories that a nigger invariably
+steals when he gets a chance. However, I wasn't going to
+give in at that.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course you weren't,&quot; said the Colonel. &quot;Did you
+ever read about the man who was told that the facts did
+not sustain his theory, and of his sublime answer? 'Very
+well,' said he, 'so much the worse for the facts!'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come, Colonel, you talk too much. How am I ever
+to get on with my narrative, if you keep interrupting me
+in this style? Be quiet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Word of command. Quiet. Quiet it is. Continue.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I said, of course they expect some reward,&mdash;that's
+it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What an ass you must be!&quot; broke in Whittlesly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hadn't you sense enough to see they could keep the
+whole of it, and nobody the wiser? and of course they
+couldn't have supposed any one was coming after it,&mdash;could
+they?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How am I to know what they thought? If you don't
+stop your comments, I'll stop the story; take your choice.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All right: go ahead.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;While I was considering the case, in came the master
+of the mansion,&mdash;a thin, stooped, tired-looking little
+fellow,&mdash;'Sam,' he told us, was his name; then proceeded to
+narrate how he had found the body, and knew the uniform,
+and was kind and tender with it because of its dress, 'for you
+see, sah, we darkies is all Union folks'; how he had brought
+it up in the night, for fear of his Secesh master, and made a
+coffin for it, and buried it decently. After that he took us out
+to a little spot of fresh earth, covered with leaves and twigs,
+and, digging down, we came to a rough pine box made as
+well as the poor fellow knew how to put it together.
+Opening it, we found all that was left of poor Hunt,
+respectably clad in a coarse, clean white garment which
+Sam's wife had made as nicely as she could out of her one
+pair of sheets. 'It wa'n't much,' said the good soul, with tears
+in her eyes, 'it wa'n't much we's could do for him, but I
+washed him, and dressed him, peart as I could, and Sam and
+me, we buried him. We wished, both on us, that we could
+have done heaps more for him, but we did all that we
+could,'&mdash;which, indeed, was plain enough to be seen.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Before we went away, Sam brought from a little hole,
+which he burrowed in the floor of his cabin, a something,
+done up in dirty old rags; and when we opened it, what
+under the heavens do you suppose we found? You'll never
+guess. Three hundred dollars in bank-bills, and some
+important papers, which he had taken and hid,&mdash;concealed
+them even from his wife, because, he said, the
+guerillas often came round, and they might frighten her
+into giving them up if she knew they were there.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I collapsed at that, and stood with open mouth,
+watching for the next proceeding. I knew there was to be
+some more of it, and there was. Hunt's brother offered
+back half the money; <i>offered</i> it! why, he tried to force it on
+the fellow, and couldn't. His master wouldn't let him buy
+himself and his wife,&mdash;I suspect, out of sheer cussedness,&mdash;and
+he hadn't any other use for money, he said.
+Besides, he didn't want to take, and wouldn't take, anything
+that looked like pay for doing aught for a 'Linkum
+sojer,' alive or dead.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'They'se going to make us all free, sometime,' he said,
+'that's enough. Don't look like it, jest yet, I knows; but I
+lives in faith; it'll come byumby' When the fellow said that,
+I declare to you, Surrey, I felt like hiding my face. At last
+I began to comprehend what your indignation meant
+against the order forbidding slaves coming into our lines,
+and commanding their return when they succeed in
+entering. Just then we all seemed to me meaner than dirt.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As we are; and, as dirt, deserve to be trampled underfoot,
+beaten, defeated, till we're ready to stand up and fight
+like men in this struggle.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Amen to that, Colonel,&quot; added Whittlesly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, I'm pretty nearly ready to say so myself,&quot; finished
+Brooks, half reluctantly.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>The best-laid schemes o' mice and men</i><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;"><i>Gang aft agley.</i>&quot;</span><br />
+<br />
+BURNS<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>They didn't find Jim in the camp of his regiment,
+so went up to head-quarters to institute inquiries.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Given?&quot; a little thought and investigation. &quot;Oh! Given
+is out on picket duty.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Whereabouts?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The direction indicated. &quot;Thanks! we'll find him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Having commenced the search, Surrey was determined to
+end it ere he turned back, and his two friends bore him
+company. As they came down the road, they saw in the
+distance a great stalwart fellow, red-shirted and conspicuous,
+evidently absorbed in some singular task,&mdash;what
+they did not perceive, till, coming to closer quarters, they
+discovered, perched by his side, a tin cup filled with soap-suds,
+a pipe in his mouth, and that by the help of the two
+he was regaling himself with the pastime of blowing
+bubbles.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'll wager that's Jim,&quot; said Surrey, before he saw his
+face.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's like him, certainly: from what I've heard of him,
+I think he would die outright if he couldn't amuse himself
+in some shape.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, the fellow must be a curiosity worth coming
+here to see.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pretty nearly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Surrey walked on a little in advance, and tapped him
+on the shoulder. Down came the pipe, up went the hand
+in a respectful military salute, but before it was finished he
+saw who was before him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Wow!&quot; he exclaimed, &quot;if it ain't Mr. Willie Surrey.
+My! Ain't I glad to see you? How <i>do</i> you do? The sight of
+you is as good as a month's pay.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come, Given, don't stun me with compliments,&quot;
+cried Surrey, laughing and putting out his hand to grasp
+the big, red paw that came to meet it, and shake it heartily.
+&quot;If I'd known you were over here, I'd have found you
+before, though my regiment hasn't been down here long.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Jim at that looked sharply at the &quot;eagles,&quot; and then over
+the alert, graceful person, finishing his inspection with an
+approving nod, and the emphatic declaration, &quot;Well, if I
+know what's what, and I rayther reckon I do, you're about
+the right figger for an officer, and on the whole I'd sooner
+pull off my cap to you than any other fellow I've seen
+round,&quot;&mdash;bringing his hand once more to the salute.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, Jim, you have turned courtier; army life is
+spoiling you,&quot; protested the inspected one; protesting,&mdash;yet
+pleased, as any one might have been, at the evidently sincere
+admiration.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nary time,&quot; Jim strenuously denied; and, these little
+courtesies being ended, they talked about enlistment, and
+home, and camp, and a score of things that interested
+officer and man alike. In the midst of the confab a dust was
+seen up the road, coming nearer, and presently out of it
+appeared a family carriage somewhat dilapidated and
+worse for wear, but still quite magnificent; enthroned on
+the back seat a fullblown F.F.V. with rather more than the
+ordinary measure of superciliousness belonging to his race;
+driven, of course, by his colored servant. Jim made for the
+middle of the road, and, holding his bayonet in such wise
+as to threaten at one charge horse, negro, and chivalry,
+roared out, &quot;Tickets!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>At such an extraordinary and unceremonious demand
+the knight flushed angrily, frowned, made an expressive
+gesture with his lips and his nose which suggestively indicated
+that there was something offensive in the air between
+the wind and his gentility, ending the pantomime by
+finding a pass and handing it over to his &quot;nigger,&quot; then&mdash;not
+deigning to speak&mdash;motioned him and it to the threatening
+figure. As this black man came forward, Brooks, looking at
+him a moment, cried excitedly, &quot;By Jove! it's Sam.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No? Hunt's Sam?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, the very same; and I suppose that's his cantankerous
+old master.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Surrey ran forward to Jim, for the three had fallen back
+when the carriage came near, and said a few sentences to
+him quickly and earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All right, Colonel! just as you please,&quot; he replied.
+&quot;You leave it to me; I'll fix him.&quot; Then, turning to Sam,
+who stood waiting, demanded, &quot;Well, have you got it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, massa.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Fork over,&quot;&mdash;and looking at it a moment pronounced
+&quot;All right! Move on!&quot; elucidating the remark by a jerk at
+the coat-collar of the unsuspecting Sam, which sent him
+whirling up the road at a fine but uncomfortable rate of
+speed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now, sir, what do you want?&quot; addressing the
+astounded chevalier, who sat speechlessly observant of this
+unlooked-for proceeding.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Want?&quot; cried the irate Virginian, his anger loosening
+his tongue, &quot;want? I want to go on, of course; that was my
+pass.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Was it now? I want to know! that's singular! Why
+didn't you offer it yourself then?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Because I thought my nigger a fitter person to parley
+with a Lincoln vandal,&quot; loftily responded his eminence.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's kind of you, I'm sure. Sorry I can't oblige you
+in return,&mdash;very; but you'll just have to turn tail and drive
+back again. That bit of paper says 'Pass the bearer,' and the
+bearer's already passed. You can't get two men through this
+picket on one man's pass, not if one is a nigger and t'other
+a skunk; so, sir, face about, march!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This was an unprepared-for dilemma. Mr. V. looked at
+the face of the &quot;Lincoln vandal,&quot; but saw there no sign of
+relenting; then into the distance whither he was anxiously
+desirous to tend; glanced reflectively at the bayonet in the
+centre and the narrow space on either side the road; and
+finally called to his black man to come back.</p>
+
+<p>Sam approached with reluctance, and fell back with
+alacrity when the glittering steel was brandished towards
+his own breast.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where's your pass, sirrah?&quot; demanded Jim, with
+asperity.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Here, massa,&quot; said the chattel, presenting the same one
+which had already been examined.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Won't do,&quot; said Jim. &quot;Can't come that game over this
+child. That passes you to Fairfax,&mdash;can't get any one from
+Fairfax on that ticket. Come,&quot; flourishing the shooting-stick
+once more, &quot;move along&quot;; which Sam proceeded to
+do with extraordinary readiness.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now, sir,&quot; turning to the again speechless chevalier, &quot;if
+you stay here any longer, I shall take you under arrest to
+head-quarters: consequently, you'd better accept the advice
+of a disinterested friend, and make tracks, lively.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>By this time the scion of a latter-day chivalry seemed
+to comprehend the situation, seized his lines, wheeled
+about, and went off at a spanking trot over the &quot;sacred
+soil,&quot;&mdash;Jim shouting after him, &quot;I say, Mr. F.F.V. if you
+meet any 'Lincoln vandals,' just give them my respects, will
+you?&quot; to which as the knight gave no answer, we are left in
+doubt to this day whether Given's commission was ever
+executed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There! my mind's relieved on that point,&quot; announced
+Jim, wiping his face with one hand and shaking the other
+after the retreating dust. &quot;Mean old scoot! I'll teach him to
+insult one of our boys,&mdash;'Lincoln vandals' indeed! I'd like
+to have whanged him!&quot; with a final shake and a final
+explosion, cooling off as rapidly as he had heated, and
+continuing the interrupted conversation with recovered
+temper and <i>sangfroid</i>.</p>
+
+<p>He was delighted at meeting Surrey, and Surrey was
+equally glad to see once more his old favorite, for Jim and
+he had been great friends when he was a little boy and had
+watched the big boy at work in his father's foundry,&mdash;a
+favoritism which, spite of years and changes, and wide
+distinctions of social position, had never altered nor cooled,
+and which showed itself now in many a pleasant shape and
+fashion so long as they were near together.</p>
+
+<p>They aided and abetted one another in more ways than
+one. Jim at Surrey's request, and by a plan of his proposing,
+succeeded in getting Sam's wife away from her home,&mdash;not
+from any liking for the expedition, or interest in either
+of the &quot;niggers,&quot; as he stoutly asserted, but solely to please
+the Colonel. If that, indeed, were his only purpose, he
+succeeded to a charm, for when Surrey saw the two reunited,
+safe from the awful clutch of slavery, supplied with
+ample means for the journey and the settlement thereafter,
+and on their way to a good Northern home, he was more
+than pleased,&mdash;he was rejoiced, and said, &quot;Thank God!&quot;
+with all his heart, and reverently, as he watched them away.</p>
+
+<p>Before the summer ended Jim was down with what he
+called &quot;a scratch&quot;; a pretty ugly wound, the surgeon
+thought it, and the Colonel remembered and looked after
+him with unflagging interest and zeal. Many a book and
+paper, many a cooling drink and bit of fruit delicious to the
+parched throat and fevered lips, found their way to the little
+table by his side. Surrey was never too busy by reason of his
+duties, or among his own sick and wounded men, to find
+time for a chat, or a scrap of reading, or to write a letter for
+the prostrate and helpless fellow, who suffered without
+complaining, as, indeed, they did all about him, only
+relieving himself now and then by a suppressed growl.</p>
+
+<p>And so, with occasional episodes of individual interest,
+with marches and fightings, with extremes of heat and
+cold, of triumph and defeat, the long months wore away.
+These men were soldiers, each in his place in the great war
+with the record of which all the world is familiar, a tale
+written in blood, and flame, and tears,&mdash;terrible, yet
+heroic; ghastly, yet sublime. As soldiers in such a conflict,
+they did their duty and noble endeavor,&mdash;Jim, a nameless
+private in the ranks,&mdash;Surrey, not braver perchance, but so
+conspicuous with all the elements which fit for splendid
+command, so fortunate in opportunities for their display,
+so eminent in seizing them and using them to their fullest
+extent, regardless of danger and death, as to make his name
+known and honored by all who watched the progress of
+the fight, read its record with interest, and knew its heroes
+and leaders with pride and love.</p>
+
+<p>In the winter of '63 Jim's regiment was ordered away
+to South Carolina; and he who at parting looked with keen
+regret on the face of the man who had been so faithful and
+well tried a friend, would have looked upon it with something
+deeper and sadder, could he at the same time have
+gazed a little way into the future, and seen what it held in
+store for him.</p>
+
+<p>Four months after he marched away, Surrey's brigade
+was in that awful fight and carnage of Chancellorsville,
+where men fought like gods to counteract the blunders,
+and retrieve the disaster, induced by a stunned and helpless
+brain. There was he stricken down, at the head of his
+command, covered with dust and smoke; twice wounded,
+yet refusing to leave the field,&mdash;his head bound with a
+handkerchief, his eyes blazing like stars beneath its stained
+folds, his voice cheering on his men; three horses shot
+under him; on foot then; contending for every inch of the
+ground he was compelled to yield; giving way only as he
+was forced at the point of the bayonet; his men eager to
+emulate him, to follow him into the jaws of death, to fall
+by his side,&mdash;thus was he prostrated; not dead, as they
+thought and feared when they seized him and bore him at
+last from the field, but insensible, bleeding with frightful
+abundance, his right arm shattered to fragments; not dead,
+yet at death's door&mdash;and looking in.</p>
+
+<p>May blossoms had dropped, and June harvests were
+ripe on all the fields, ere he could take advantage of the
+unsolicited leave, and go home. Home&mdash;for which his
+heart longed!</p>
+
+<p>He was not, however, in too great haste to stop by the
+way, to pause in Washington, and do what he had sooner
+intended to accomplish,&mdash;solicit, as a special favor to himself,
+as an honor justly won by the man for whom he
+entreated it, a promotion for Jim. &quot;It is impossible now,&quot; he
+was informed, &quot;but the case should be noted and remembered.
+If anything could certainly secure the man an
+advance, it was the advocacy of General Surrey&quot;; and so,
+not quite content, but still satisfied that Jim's time was in
+the near future, he went on his way.</p>
+
+<p>As the cars approached Philadelphia his heart beat so
+fast that it almost stifled him, and he leaned against the
+window heavily for air and support. It was useless to reason
+with himself, vain to call good judgment to his counsels
+and summon wisdom to his aid. This was her home.
+Somewhere in this city to which he was so rapidly hastening,
+she was moving up and down, had her being, was
+living and loving. After these long years his eyes so ached
+to see her, his heart was so hungry for her presence, that it
+seemed to him as though the sheer longing would call her
+out of her retreat, on to the streets through which he must
+pass, across his path, into the sight of his eyes and reach of
+his hand. He had thought that he felt all this before. He
+found, as the space diminished between them,&mdash;as, perchance,
+she was but a stone's throw from his side,&mdash;that the
+pain, and the longing, and the intolerable desire to behold
+her once again, increased a hundred-fold.</p>
+
+<p>Eager as he had been a little while before to reach his
+home, he was content to remain quietly here now. He
+laughed at himself as he stepped into a carriage, and, tired
+as he was,&mdash;for his amputated arm, not yet thoroughly
+healed, made him weak and worn,&mdash;drove through all the
+afternoon and evening, across miles and miles of heated,
+wearisome stones, possessed by the idea that somewhere,
+somehow, he should see her, he would find her before his
+quest was done.</p>
+
+<p>After that last painful rebuff, he did not dare to go to
+her home, could he find it, till he had secured from her, in
+some fashion, a word or sign. &quot;This,&quot; he said, &quot;is certainly
+doubly absurd, since she does not live in the city; but she
+is here to-day, I know,&mdash;she must be here&quot;; and persisted
+in his endeavor,&mdash;persisted, naturally, in vain; and went to
+bed, at last, exhausted; determined that to-morrow should
+find him on his journey farther north, whatever wish
+might plead for delay, yet with a final cry for her from the
+depths of his soul, as he stretched out his solitary arm, ere
+sinking to restless sleep, and dreams of battle and death&mdash;sleep
+unrefreshing, and dreams ill-omened; as he thought,
+again and again, rousing himself from their hold, and
+looking out to the night, impatient for the break of day.</p>
+
+<p>When day broke he was unable to rise with its dawn.
+The effect of all this tension on his already overtaxed
+nerves was to induce a fever in the unhealed arm, which,
+though not painful, was yet sufficient to hold him close
+prisoner for several days; a delay which chafed him, and
+which filled his family at home with an intolerable anxiety,
+not that they knew its cause,&mdash;<i>that</i> would have been a
+relief,&mdash;but that they conjectured another, to them infinitely
+worse than sickness or suffering, bad and sorrowful
+as were these.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>Gentlemen, let not prejudice prepossess you.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+IZAAK WALTON<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>Car No. 14, Fifth Street line, Philadelphia, was
+crowded. Travelling bags, shawls, and dusters
+marked that people were making for the 11 A.M. New York
+train, Kensington depot. One pleasant-looking old gentleman
+whose face shone under a broad brim, and whose
+cleanly drabs were brought into distasteful proximity with
+the garments of a drunken coal-heaver, after a vain effort
+to edge away, relieved his mind by turning to his neighbor
+with the statement, &quot;Consistency is a jewel.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Undoubtedly true, Mr. Greenleaf,&quot; answered the
+neighbor, &quot;but what caused the remark?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That,&quot;&mdash;looking with mild disgust at the dirty and
+ragged leg sitting by his own. &quot;Here's this filthy fellow, a
+nuisance to everybody near him, can ride in these cars, and
+a nice, respectable colored person can't. So I couldn't help
+thinking, and saying, that consistency is a jewel.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, it's a shame,&mdash;that's a fact; but of course nobody
+can interfere if the companies don't choose to let them
+ride; it's their concern, not ours.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There's a fine specimen now, out there on the sidewalk.&quot;
+The fine specimen was a large, powerfully made
+man, black as ebony, dressed in army blouse and trousers,
+one leg gone,&mdash;evidently very tired, for he leaned heavily
+on his crutches. The conductor, a kindly-faced young
+fellow, pulled the strap, and helped him on to the platform
+with a peremptory &quot;Move up front, there!&quot; to the people
+standing inside.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why!&quot; exclaimed the old Friend,&mdash;&quot;do my eyes
+deceive me?&quot; Then getting up, and taking the man by the
+arm, he seated him in his own place: &quot;Thou art less able to
+stand than I.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Tears rushed to his eyes as he said, &quot;Thank you, sir! you
+are too kind.&quot; Evidently he was weak, and as evidently
+unaccustomed to find any one &quot;too kind.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thee has on the army blue; has thee been fighting
+any?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, sir!&quot; he answered, promptly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I didn't know black men were in the army; yet thee
+has lost a leg. Where did that go?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;At Newbern, sir.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;At Newbern,&mdash;ah! long ago? and how did it
+happen?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Fourteenth of March, sir. There was a land fight, and
+the gunboats came up to the rescue. Some of us black men
+were upon board a little schooner that carried one gun.
+'Twasn't a great deal we could do with that, but we did the
+best we could; and got well peppered in return. This is
+what it did for me,&quot;&mdash;looking down at the stump.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I guess thee is sorry now that thee didn't keep out of
+it, isn't thee?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, sir; no indeed, sir. If I had five hundred legs and
+fifty lives, I'd be glad to give them all in such a war as this.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Here somebody got out; the old Friend sat down; and
+the coal-heaver, roused by the stir, lifted himself from his
+drunken sleep, and, looking round, saw who was beside
+him.</p>
+
+<p>A vile oath, an angry stare from his bloodshot eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ye &mdash;&mdash;, what are ye doin' here? out wid ye,
+quick!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What's the matter?&quot; queried the conductor, who was
+collecting somebody's fare.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The matther, is it? matther enough! what's this nasty
+nagur doin' here? Put him out, can't ye?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The conductor took no notice.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Conductor!&quot; spoke up a well-dressed man, with the
+air and manner of a gentleman, &quot;what does that card say?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The conductor looked at the card indicated, upon
+which was printed &quot;Colored people not allowed in this
+car,&quot; legible enough to require less study than he saw fit to
+give it. &quot;Well!&quot; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well,&quot; was the answer,&mdash;&quot;your duty is plain. Put that
+fellow out.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The conductor hesitated,&mdash;looked round the car.
+Nobody spoke.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'm sorry, my man! I hoped there would be no objection
+when I let you in; but our orders are strict, and, as the
+passengers ain't willing, you'll have to get off,&quot;&mdash;jerking
+angrily at the bell.</p>
+
+<p>As the car slackened speed, a young officer, whom
+nobody noticed, got on.</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's pause as the black man gathered
+up his crutches, and raised himself painfully. &quot;Stop!&quot; cried
+a thrilling and passionate voice,&mdash;&quot;stand still! Of what stuff
+are you made to sit here and see a man, mangled and
+maimed in <i>your</i> cause and for <i>your</i> defence, insulted and
+outraged at the bidding of a drunken boor and a cowardly
+traitor?&quot; The voice, the beautiful face, the intensity
+burning through both, electrified every soul to which she
+appealed. Hands were stretched out to draw back the crippled
+soldier; eyes that a moment before were turned away
+looked kindly at him; a Babel of voices broke out, &quot;No,
+no,&quot; &quot;let him stay,&quot; &quot;it's a shame,&quot; &quot;let him alone, conductor,&quot;
+&quot;we ain't so bad as that,&quot; with more of the same
+kind; those who chose not to join in the chorus discreetly
+held their peace, and made no attempt to sing out of time
+and tune.</p>
+
+<p>The car started again. The <i>gentleman</i>, furious at the
+turn of the tide, cried out, &quot;Ho, ho! here's a pretty
+preacher of the gospel of equality! why, ladies and gentlemen,
+this high-flyer, who presumes to lecture us, is
+nothing but a&quot;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The sentence was cut short in mid-career, the insolent
+sneer dashed out of his face,&mdash;face and form prone on the
+floor of the car,&mdash;while over him bent and blazed the
+young officer, whose entrance, a little while before,
+nobody had heeded.</p>
+
+<p>Spurning the prostrate body at his feet, he turned to
+Francesca, for it was she, and stretched out his hand,&mdash;his
+left hand,&mdash;his only one. It was time; all the heat, and passion,
+and color, had died out, and she stood there shivering,
+a look of suffering in her face.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miss Ercildoune! you are ill,&mdash;you need the air,&mdash;allow
+me!&quot; drawing her hand through his arm, and taking
+her out with infinite deference and care.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you! a moment's faintness,&mdash;it is over now,&quot; as
+they reached the sidewalk.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no, you are too ill to walk,&mdash;let me get you a carriage.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Hailing one that was passing by, he put her in, his hand
+lingering on hers, lingering on the folds of her dress as he
+bent to arrange it; his eyes clinging to her face with a passionate,
+woeful tenderness. &quot;It is two years since I saw you,
+since I have heard from you,&quot; he said, his voice hoarse with
+the effort to speak quietly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; she answered, &quot;it is two years.&quot; Stooping her
+head to write upon a card, her lips moved as if they said
+something,&mdash;something that seemed like &quot;I must! only
+once!&quot; but of course that could not be. &quot;It is my address,&quot;
+she then said, putting the card in his hand. &quot;I shall be
+happy to see you in my own home.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This afternoon?&quot; eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>She hesitated. &quot;Whenever you may call. I thank you
+again,&mdash;and good morning.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the car had moved on its course: outwardly,
+peaceful enough; inwardly, full of commotion. The conservative
+gentleman, gathering himself up from his prone
+estate, white with passion and chagrin, saw about him
+everywhere looks of scorn, and smiles of derision and
+contempt, and fled incontinently from the sight.</p>
+
+<p>His coal-heaving <i>confr&egrave;re</i>, left to do battle alone, came
+to the charge valiant and unterrified. Another outbreak of
+blasphemy and obscenity were the weapons of assault; the
+ladies looked shocked, the gentlemen indignant and disgusted.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Friend,&quot; called the non-resistant broad-brim, beckoning
+peremptorily to the conductor,&mdash;&quot;friend, come here.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The conductor came.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If colored persons are not permitted to ride, I suppose
+it is equally against the rules of the company to allow
+nuisances in their cars. Isn't it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are right, sir,&quot; assented the conductor, upon
+whose face a smile of comprehension began to beam.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, I don't know what thee thinks, or what these
+other people think, but I know of no worse nuisance than
+a filthy, blasphemous drunkard. There he sits,&mdash;remove him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>There was a perfect shout of laughter and delight; and
+before the irate &quot;citizen&quot; comprehended what was
+intended, or could throw himself into a pugilistic attitude,
+he was seized, <i>sans</i> ceremony, and ignominiously pushed
+and hustled from the car; the people therein, black soldier
+and all, drawing a long breath of relief, and going on their
+way rejoicing. Everybody's eyes were brighter; hearts beat
+faster, blood moved more quickly; everybody felt a sense of
+elation, and a kindness towards their neighbor and all the
+world. A cruel and senseless prejudice had been lost in an
+impulse, generous and just; and for a moment the sentiment
+which exalted their humanity, vivified and gladdened
+their souls.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&quot;<i>The future seemed barred</i></span><br />
+<i>By the corpse of a dead hope.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+OWEN MEREDITH<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>So, then, after these long years he had seen her again.
+Having seen her, he wondered how he had lived
+without her. If the wearisome months seemed endless in
+passing, the morning hours were an eternity. &quot;This afternoon?&quot;
+he had said. &quot;Be it so,&quot; she had answered. He did
+not dare to go till then.</p>
+
+<p>Thinking over the scene of the morning, he scarcely
+dared go at all. She had not offered her hand; she had
+expressed no pleasure, either by look or word, at meeting
+him again. He had forced her to say, &quot;Come&quot;: she could
+do no less when he had just interfered to save her insult,
+and had begged the boon.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Insult!&quot; his arm ached to strike another blow, as he
+remembered the sentence it had cut short. Of course the
+fellow had been drinking, but outrage of her was intolerable,
+whatever madness prompted it. The very sun must
+shine more brightly, and the wind blow softly, when she
+passed by. Ah me! were the whole world what an ardent
+lover prays for his mistress, there were no need of death to
+enjoy the bliss of heaven.</p>
+
+<p>What could he say? what do? how find words to speak
+the measured feelings of a friend? how control the beatings
+of his heart, the passion of his soul, that no sign should
+escape to wound or offend her? She had bade him to
+silence: was he sufficiently master of himself to strike the
+lighter keys without sounding some deep chords that
+would jar upon her ear?</p>
+
+<p>He tried to picture the scene of their second meeting.
+He repeated again and again her formal title, Miss Ercildoune,
+that he might familiarize his tongue and his ear to
+the sound, and not be on the instant betrayed into calling
+the name which he so often uttered in his thoughts. He
+said over some civil, kindly words of greeting, and endeavored
+to call up, and arrange in order, a theme upon which
+he should converse. &quot;I shall not dare to be silent,&quot; he
+thought, &quot;for if I am, my silence will tell the tale; and if
+that do not, she will hear it from the throbbings of my
+heart. I don't know though,&quot;&mdash;he laughed a little, as he
+spoke aloud,&mdash;bitterly it would have been, had his voice
+been capable of bitterness,&mdash;&quot;perhaps she will think the
+organism of the poor thing has become diseased in camp
+and fightings,&quot;&mdash;putting his hand up to his throat and
+holding the swollen veins, where the blood was beating
+furiously.</p>
+
+<p>Presently he went down stairs and out to the street, in
+pursuit of some cut flowers which he found in a little
+cellar, a stone's throw from his hotel,&mdash;a fresh, damp little
+cellar, which smelt, he could not help thinking, like a
+grave. Coming out to the sunshine, he shook himself with
+disgust. &quot;Faugh!&quot; he thought, &quot;what sick fancies and sentimental
+nonsense possess me? I am growing unwholesome.
+My dreams of the other night have come back to torment
+me in the day. These must put them to flight.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The fancy which had sent him in pursuit of these
+flowers he confessed to be a childish one, but none the less
+soothing for that. He had remembered that the first day he
+beheld her a nosegay had decorated his button-hole; a fair,
+sweet-scented thing which seemed, in some subtle way,
+like her. He wanted now just such another,&mdash;some
+mignonette, and geranium, and a single tea-rosebud. Here
+they were,&mdash;the very counterparts of those which he had
+worn on a brighter and happier day. How like they were!
+how changed was he! In some moods he would have
+smiled at this bit of girlish folly as he fastened the little
+thing over his heart; now, something sounded in his throat
+that was pitifully like a sob. Don't smile at him! he was so
+young; so impassioned, yet gentle; and then he loved so
+utterly with the whole of his great, sore heart.</p>
+
+<p>By and by the time came to go, and eager, yet fearful,
+he went. It was a fresh, beautiful day in early June; and
+when the city, with its heat, and dust, and noise, was left
+behind, and all the leafy greenness&mdash;the soothing quiet of
+country sights and country sounds&mdash;met his ear and eye, a
+curious peace took possession of his soul. It was less the
+whisper of hope than the calm of assured reality. For the
+moment, unreasonable as it seemed, something made him
+blissfully sure of her love, spite of the rebuffs and coldness
+she had compelled him to endure.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This is the place, sir!&quot; suddenly called his driver, stopping
+the horses in front of a stately avenue of trees, and
+jumping down to open the gates.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You need not drive in; you may wait here.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This, then, was her home. He took in the exquisite
+beauty of the place with a keen pleasure. It was right that
+all things sweet and fine should be about her; he had before
+known that they were, but it delighted him to see them
+with his own eyes. Walking slowly towards the house,&mdash;slowly,
+for he was both impelled and retarded by the conflicting
+feelings that mastered him,&mdash;he heard her voice at
+a little distance, singing; and directly she came out of a by-path,
+and faced him. He need not have feared the meeting;
+at least, any display of emotion; she gave no opportunity
+for any such thing.</p>
+
+<p>A frankly extended hand,&mdash;an easy &quot;Good afternoon,
+Mr. Surrey!&quot; That was all. It was a cool, beautiful room
+into which she ushered him; a room filled with an atmosphere
+of peace, but which was anything but peaceful to
+him. He was restless, nervous; eager and excited, or absent
+and still. He determined to master his emotion, and give
+no outward sign of the tempest raging within.</p>
+
+<p>At the instant of this conclusion his eye was caught by
+an exquisite portrait miniature upon an easel near him.
+Bending over it, taking it into his hands, his eyes went to
+and fro from the pictured face to the human one, tracing
+the likeness in each. Marking his interest, Francesca said,
+&quot;It is my mother.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If the eyes were dark, this would be your veritable
+image.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Or, if mine were blue, I should be a portrait of
+mamma, which would be better.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Better?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes.&quot; She was looking at the picture with weary eyes,
+which he could not see. &quot;I had rather be the shadow of her
+than the reality of myself: an absurd fancy!&quot; she added,
+with a smile, suddenly remembering herself.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I would it were true!&quot; he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>She looked a surprised inquiry. His thought was, &quot;for
+then I should steal you, and wear you always on my heart.&quot;
+But of course he could speak no such lover's nonsense; so
+he said, &quot;Because of the fitness of things; you wished to be
+a shadow, which is immaterial, and hence of the substance
+of angels.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Truly he was improving. His effort to betray no love
+had led him into a ridiculous compliment. &quot;What an idiot
+she will think me to say anything so silly!&quot; he reflected;
+while Francesca was thinking, &quot;He has ceased to love me,
+or he would not resort to flattery. It is well!&quot; but the pang
+that shot through her heart belied the closing thought,
+and, glancing at him, the first was denied by the unconscious
+expression of his eyes. Seeing that, she directly took
+alarm, and commenced to talk upon a score of indifferent
+themes.</p>
+
+<p>He had never seen her in such a mood: gay, witty,
+brilliant,&mdash;full of a restless sparkle and fire; she would not
+speak an earnest word, nor hear one. She flung about bonmots,
+and chatted airy persiflage till his heart ached. At
+another time, in another condition, he would have been
+delighted, dazzled, at this strange display; but not now.</p>
+
+<p>In some careless fashion the war had been alluded to,
+and she spoke of Chancellorsville. &quot;It was there you were
+last wounded?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; he answered, not even looking down at the
+empty sleeve.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was there you lost your arm?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; he answered again, &quot;I am sorry it was my sword-arm.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was frightful,&quot;&mdash;holding her breath. &quot;Do you know
+you were reported mortally wounded? worse?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have heard that I was sent up with the slain,&quot; he
+replied, half-smiling.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is true. I looked for your name in the columns of
+'wounded' and 'missing,' and read it at last in the list of
+'killed.'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;For the sake of old times, I trust you were a little
+sorry to so read it,&quot; he said, sadly, for the tone hurt him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sorry? yes, I was sorry. Who, indeed, of your friends
+would not be?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who, indeed?&quot; he repeated: &quot;I am afraid the one
+whose regret I should most desire would sorrow the least.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is very like,&quot; she answered, with seeming
+carelessness,&mdash;&quot;disappointment
+is the rule of life.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This would not do. He was getting upon dangerous
+ground. He would change the theme, and prevent any farther
+speech till he was better master of it. He begged for
+some music. She sat down at once and played for him; then
+sang at his desire. Rich as she was in the gifts of nature, her
+voice was the chief,&mdash;thrilling, flexible, with a sympathetic
+quality that in singing pathetic music brought tears,
+though the hearer understood not a word of the language
+in which she sang. In the old time he had never wearied
+listening, and now he besought her to repeat for him some
+of the dear, familiar songs. If these held for her any associations,
+he did not know it; she gave no outward sign,&mdash;sang
+to him as sweetly and calmly as to the veriest stranger.
+What else had he expected? Nothing; yet, with the unreasonableness
+of a lover, was disappointed that nothing
+appeared.</p>
+
+<p>Taking up a piece at random, without pausing to
+remember the words, he said, spreading it before her,
+&quot;May I tax you a little farther? I am greedy, I know, but
+then how can I help it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was the song of the Princess.</p>
+
+<p>She hesitated a moment, and half closed the book.
+Had he been standing where he could see her face, he
+would have been shocked by its pallor. It was over directly:
+she recovered herself, and, opening the music with a resolute
+air, began to sing:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;Ask me no more: the moon may draw the sea;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The cloud may stoop from heaven and take the shape,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">With fold to fold, of mountain and of cape;</span><br />
+But, O too fond, when have I answered thee?<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">Ask me no more.</span><br />
+<br />
+&quot;Ask me no more: what answer should I give?<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I love not hollow cheek or faded eye;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Yet, O my friend, I will not have thee die!</span><br />
+Ask me no more, lest I should bid thee live:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">Ask me no more.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>She sang thus far with a clear, untrembling voice,&mdash;so
+clear and untrembling as to be almost metallic,&mdash;the
+restraint she had put upon herself making it unnatural. At
+the commencement she had estimated her strength, and
+said, &quot;It is sufficient!&quot; but she had overtaxed it, as she found
+in singing the last verse:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;Ask me no more: thy fate and mine are sealed;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I strove against the stream and all in vain;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Let the great river take me to the main;</span><br />
+No more, dear love, for at a touch I yield:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">Ask me no more.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>All the longing, the passion, the prayer of which a
+human soul is capable found expression in her voice. It
+broke through the affected coldness and calm, as the ocean
+breaks through its puny barriers when, after wind and
+tempest, all its mighty floods are out. Surrey had changed
+his place, and stood fronting her. As the last word fell, she
+looked at him, and the two faces saw in each but a reflection
+of the same passion and pain: pallid, with eyes burning
+from an inward fire,&mdash;swayed by the same emotion,&mdash;she
+bent forward as he, stretching forth his arms, in a stifling
+voice cried, &quot;Come!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Bent, but for an instant; then, by a superhuman effort,
+turned from him, and put out her hand with a gesture of
+dissent, though she could not control her voice to speak a
+word.</p>
+
+<p>At that he came close to her, not touching her hand or
+even her dress, but looking into her face with imploring
+eyes, and whispering, &quot;Francesca, my darling, speak to me!
+say that you love me! one word! You are breaking my
+heart!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Not a word.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Francesca!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She had mastered her voice. &quot;Go!&quot; she then said,
+beseechingly. &quot;Oh, why did you ask me? why did I let you
+come?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no,&quot; he answered. &quot;I cannot go,&mdash;not till you
+answer me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah!&quot; she entreated, &quot;do not ask! I can give no such
+answer as you desire. It is all wrong,&mdash;all a mistake. You do
+not comprehend.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Make me, then.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She was silent.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Forgive me. I am rude: I cannot help it. I will not go
+unless you say, 'I do not love you.' Nothing but this shall
+drive me away.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Francesca's training in her childhood had been by a
+Catholic governess; she never quite lost its effect. Now she
+raised her hand to a little gold cross that hung at her neck,
+her fingers closing on it with a despairing clasp. &quot;Ah,
+Christ, have pity!&quot; her heart cried. &quot;Blessed Mother of
+God, forgive me! have mercy upon me!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Her face was frightfully pale, but her voice did not
+tremble as she gave him her hand, and said gently, &quot;Go,
+then, my friend. I do not love you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He took her hand, held it close for a moment, and
+then, without another look or word, put it tenderly down,
+and was gone.</p>
+
+<p>So absorbed was he in painful thought that, passing
+down the long avenue with bent head, he did not notice,
+nor even see, a gentleman who, coming from the opposite
+direction, looked at him at first carelessly, and then searchingly,
+as he went by.</p>
+
+<p>This gentleman, a man in the prime of life, handsome,
+stately, and evidently at home here, scrutinized the stranger
+with a singular intensity,&mdash;made a movement as though he
+would speak to him,&mdash;and then, drawing back, went with
+hasty steps towards the house.</p>
+
+<p>Had Willie looked up, beheld this face and its expression,
+returned the scrutiny of the one, and comprehended
+the meaning of the other, while memory recalled a picture
+once held in his hands, some things now obscured would
+have been revealed to him, and a problem been solved. As
+it was, he saw nothing, moved mechanically onward to the
+carriage, seated himself and said, &quot;Home!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This young man was neither presumptuous nor vain.
+He had been once repulsed and but now utterly rejected.
+He had no reason to hope, and yet&mdash;perhaps it was his
+poetical and imaginative temperament&mdash;he could not
+resign himself to despair.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he started with an exclamation that was
+almost a cry. What was it? He remembered that, more than
+two years ago, on the last day he had been with her, he had
+begged the copy of a duet which they sometimes sang. It
+was in manuscript, and he desired to have it written out by
+her own hand. He had before petitioned, and she promised
+it; and when he thus again spoke of it, she laughed, and
+said, &quot;What a memory it is, to be sure! I shall have to tie a
+bit of string on my finger to refresh it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is that efficacious?&quot; he had asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Doubtless,&quot; she had replied, searching in her pocket
+for a scrap of anything that would serve.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Will this do?&quot; he then queried, bringing forth a coil
+of gold wire which he had been commissioned to buy for
+some fanciful work of his mother.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Finely,&quot; she declared; &quot;it is durable, it will give me a
+wide margin, it will be long in wearing out.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nay, then, you must have something more fragile,&quot; he
+had objected.</p>
+
+<p>At that they both laughed, as he twisted a fragment of
+it on the little finger of her right hand. &quot;There it is to stay,&quot;
+he asserted, &quot;till your promise is redeemed.&quot; That was the
+last time he had seen her till to-day.</p>
+
+<p>Now, sitting, thinking of the interview just passed,
+suddenly he remembered, as one often recalls the vision of
+something seemingly unnoticed at the time, that, upon her
+right hand, the little finger of the right hand, there was a
+delicate ring,&mdash;a mere thread,&mdash;in fact, a wire of gold; the
+very one himself had tied there two years ago.</p>
+
+<p>In an instant, by one of those inexplicable connections
+of the brain or soul, he found himself living over an experience
+of his college youth.</p>
+
+<p>He had been spending the day in Boston with a dear
+friend, some score of years his senior; a man of the rarest
+culture, and of a most sweet and gentle nature withal; and
+when evening came they had drifted naturally to the theatre,&mdash;the
+fool's paradise it may be sometimes, but to them
+on that occasion a real paradise.</p>
+
+<p>He remembered well the play. It was Scott's <i>Bride of
+Lammermoor</i>. He had never read it, but, before the curtain
+rose, his friend had unfolded the story in so kind and
+skilful a manner as to have imbued him as fully with the
+spirit of the tale as though he had studied the book.</p>
+
+<p>What he chiefly recalled in the play was the scene in
+which Ravenswood comes back to Emily long after they
+had been plighted,&mdash;long after he had supposed her faithless,&mdash;long
+after he had been tossed on a sea of troubles,
+touching the seeming decay in her affections. Just as she is
+about to be enveloped in the toils which were spread for
+her,&mdash;just as she is about to surrender herself to the hated
+nuptials, and submit to the embrace of one whom she
+loathed more than she dreaded death,&mdash;Ravenswood, the
+man whom Heaven had made for her, presents himself.</p>
+
+<p>What followed was quiet, yet intensely dramatic.
+Ravenswood, wrought to the verge of despair, bursts upon
+the scene at the critical moment, detaches Emily from her
+party, and leads her slowly forward. He is unutterably sad.
+He questions her very tenderly; asks her whether she is not
+enforced; whether she is taking this step of her own free
+will and accord; whether she has indeed dismissed the dear,
+old fond love for him from her heart forever? He must hear
+it from her own lips. When timidly and feebly informed
+that such is indeed the case, he requests her to return a certain
+memento,&mdash;a silver trinket which had been given her
+as the symbol of his love on the occasion of their
+betrothal. Raising her hand to her throat she essays to draw
+it from her bosom. Her fingers rest upon the chain which
+binds it to her neck, but the o'erfraught heart is still,&mdash;the
+troubled, but unconscious head droops upon his
+shoulder,&mdash;he lifts the chain from its resting-place, and
+withdraws the token from her heart.</p>
+
+<p>Supporting her with one hand and holding this badge
+of a lost love with the other, he says, looking down upon
+her with a face of anguish, and in a voice of despair, &quot;<i>And
+she could wear it thus!</i>&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As this scene rose and lived before him, Surrey
+exclaimed, &quot;Surely that must have been the perfection of
+art, to have produced an effect so lasting and profound,&mdash;'and
+she could wear it thus!'&mdash;ah,&quot; he said, as in response
+to some unexpressed thought, &quot;but Emily loved
+Ravenswood. Why&mdash;?&quot; Evidently he was endeavoring to
+answer a question that baffled him.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>And down on aching heart and brain</i><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;"><i>Blow after blow unbroken falls.</i>&quot;</span><br />
+<br />
+BOKER<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>&quot;A letter for you, sir,&quot; said the clerk, as Surrey
+stopped at the desk for his key. It was a
+bulky epistle, addressed in his aunt Russell's hand, and he
+carried it off, wondering what she could have to say at
+such length.</p>
+
+<p>He was in no mood to read or to enjoy; but, nevertheless,
+tore open the cover, finding within it a double
+letter. Taking the envelope of one from the folds of the
+other, his eye fell first upon his mother's writing; a short
+note and a puzzling one.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>&quot;My dear Willie:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have tried to write you a letter, but cannot. I never
+wounded you if I could avoid it, and I do not wish to
+begin now. Augusta and I had a talk about you yesterday
+which crazed me with anxiety. She told me it was my place
+to write you what ought to be said under these trying circumstances,
+for we are sure you have remained in Philadelphia
+to see Miss Ercildoune. At first I said I would, and
+then my heart failed me. I was sure, too, that she could
+write, as she always does, much better than I; so I begged
+her to say all that was necessary, and I would send her this
+note to enclose with her letter. Read it, I entreat you, and
+then hasten, I pray you, hasten to us at once.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Take care of your arm, do not hurt yourself by any
+excitement; and, with dear love from your father, which he
+would send did he know I was writing, believe me always
+your devoted</p>
+
+<p>&quot;MOTHER.&quot;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>&quot;'Trying circumstances!'&mdash;'Miss Ercildoune!'&mdash;what
+does it mean?&quot; he cried, bewildered. &quot;Come, let us see.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The letter which he now opened was an old and
+much-fingered one, written&mdash;as he saw at the first
+glance&mdash;by his aunt to his mother. Why it was sent to him
+he could not conjecture; and, without attempting to so do,
+at once plunged into its pages:&mdash;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+&quot;CONTINENTAL HOTEL,<br />
+PHILADELPHIA, JUNE 27, 1861<br />
+<br />
+&quot;MY DEAR LAURA:&mdash;<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I can readily understand with what astonishment you
+will read this letter, from the amazement I have experienced
+in collecting its details. I will not weary you with
+any personal narration, but tell my tale at once.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miss Ercildoune, as you know, was my daughter's
+intimate at school,&mdash;a school, the admittance to which was
+of itself a guarantee of respectability. Of course I knew
+nothing of her family, nor of her,&mdash;save as Clara wrote me
+of her beauty and her accomplishments, and, above all, of
+her style,&mdash;till I met Mrs. Lancaster. Of her it is needless
+for me to speak. As you know, she is irreproachable, and
+her position is of the best. Consequently when Clara
+wrote me that her friend was to come to New York to her
+aunt, and begged to entertain her for a while, I added my
+request to her entreaty, and Miss Ercildoune came. Ill-fated
+visit! would it had never been made!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is useless now to deny her gifts and graces. They
+are, reluctantly I confess, so rare and so conspicuous&mdash;have
+so many times been seen, and known, and praised by us
+all,&mdash;that it would put me in the most foolish of attitudes
+should I attempt to reconsider a verdict so frequently pronounced,
+or to eat my own words, uttered a thousand times.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is also, I presume, useless to deny that we were well
+pleased&mdash;nay, delighted&mdash;with Willie's evident sentiment
+for her. Indeed, so thoroughly did she charm me, that, had
+I not seen how absolutely his heart was enlisted in her pursuit,
+she is the very girl whom I should have selected,
+could I have so done, as a wife for Tom and a daughter for
+myself.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I knew full well how deep was this feeling for her
+when he marched away, on that day so full of supreme
+splendor and pain, unable to see her and to say adieu. His
+eyes, his face, his manner, his very voice, marked his restlessness,
+his longing, and disappointment. I was positively
+angry with the girl for thwarting and hurting him so, and,
+whatever her excuse might be, for her absence at such a
+time. How constantly are we quarrelling with our best
+fates!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She remained in New York, as you know, for some
+weeks after the 19th; in fact, has been at home but for a
+little while. Once or twice, so provoked with her was I for
+disappointing our pet, I could not resist the temptation of
+saying some words about him which, if she cared for him,
+I knew would wound her: and, indeed, they did,&mdash;wounded
+her so deeply, as was manifest in her manner and
+her face, that I had not the heart to repeat the experiment.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One week ago I had a letter from Willie, enclosing
+another to her, and an entreaty, as he had written one
+which he was sure had miscarried, that I would see that
+this reached her hands in safety. So anxious was I to fulfil
+his request in its word and its spirit, and so certain that I
+could further his cause,&mdash;for I was sure this letter was a
+love-letter,&mdash;that I did not forward it by post, but, being
+compelled to come to Burlington, I determined to go on
+to Philadelphia, drive out to her home, and myself deliver
+the missive into her very hands. A most fortunate conclusion,
+as you will presently decide.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Last evening I reached the city,&mdash;rested, slept here,&mdash;and
+this morning was driven to her father's place. For all
+our sakes, I was somewhat anxious, under the circumstances,
+that this should be quite the thing; and I confess
+myself, on the instant of its sight, more than satisfied. It is
+really superb!&mdash;the grounds extensive, and laid out with
+the most absolute taste. The house, large and substantial,
+looks very like an English mansion; with a certain quaint
+style and antique elegance, refreshing to contemplate, after
+the crude newness and ostentatious vulgarity of almost
+everything one sees here in America. It is within as it is
+without. Although a great many lovely things are scattered
+about of recent make, the wood-work and the heavy furniture
+are aristocratic from their very age, and in their way,
+literally perfection.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miss Ercildoune met me with not quite her usual
+grace and ease. She was, no doubt, surprised at my unexpected
+appearance, and&mdash;I then thought, as a consequence&mdash;slightly
+embarrassed. I soon afterwards discovered the constraint in her
+manner sprang from another cause.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I had reached the house just at lunch-time, and she
+would take me out to the table to eat something with her.
+I had hoped to see her father, and was disappointed when
+she informed me he was in the city. All I saw charmed me.
+The appointments of the table were like those of the
+house: everything exquisitely fine, and the silver massive
+and old,&mdash;not a new piece among it,&mdash;and marked with a
+monogram and crest.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I write you all this that you may the more thoroughly
+appreciate my absolute horror at the final <i>denouement</i>, and
+share my astonishment at the presumption of these people
+in daring to maintain such style.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I had given her Willie's letter before we left the
+parlor, with a significant word and smile, and was piqued
+to see that she did not blush,&mdash;in fact, became excessively
+white as she glanced at the writing, and with an unsteady
+hand put it into her pocket. After lunch she made no
+motion to look at it, and as I had my own reasons for
+desiring her to peruse it, I said, 'Miss Francesca, will you
+not read your letter? that I may know if there is any later
+news from our soldier.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She hesitated a moment, and then said, with what I
+thought an unnatural manner, 'Certainly, if you so desire,'
+and, taking it out, broke the seal. 'Allow me,' she added,
+going towards a window,&mdash;as though she desired more
+light, but in reality, I knew, to turn her back upon me,&mdash;forgetting
+that a mirror, hanging opposite, would reveal
+her face with distinctness to my gaze.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was pale to ghastliness, with a drawn, haggard look
+about the mouth and eyes that shocked as much as it
+amazed me; and before commencing to read she crushed
+the letter in her hands, pressing it to her heart with a gesture
+which was less of a caress than of a spasm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;However, as she read, all this changed; and before she
+finished said, 'Ah, Willie, it is clear your cause needs no
+advocate.' Positively, I did not know a human countenance
+could express such happiness; there was something in it
+absolutely dazzling. And evidently entirely forgetful of me,
+she raised the paper to her mouth, and kissed it again and
+again, pressing her lips upon it with such clinging and passionate
+fondness as would have imbued it with life were
+that possible.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Here Willie flung down his aunt's epistle and tore from
+his pocket this self-same letter. He had kept it,&mdash;carried it
+about with him,&mdash;for two reasons: because it was <i>hers</i>, he
+said,&mdash;this avowal of his love was hers, whether she refused
+it or no, and he had no right to destroy her property; and
+because, as he had nothing else she had worn or touched,
+he cherished this sacredly since it had been in her dear
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>Now he took it into his clasp as tenderly as though it
+were Francesca's face, and kissed it with the self-same
+clinging and passionate fondness as this of which he had
+just read. Here had her lips rested,&mdash;here; he felt their fragrance
+and softness thrilling him under the cold, dead
+paper, and pressed it to his heart while he continued to
+read:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Before she turned, I walked to another window,&mdash;wishing
+to give her time to recover calmness, or at least
+self-control, and was at once absorbed in contemplating a
+gentleman whom I felt assured to be Mr. Ercildoune. He
+stood with his back to me, apparently giving some order
+to the coachman: thus I could not see his face, but I never
+before was so impressed with, so to speak, the personality
+of a man. His physique was grand, and his air and bearing
+magnificent, and I watched him with admiration as he
+walked slowly away. I presume he passed the window at
+which she was standing, for she called, 'Papa!' 'In a
+moment, dear,' he answered, and in a moment entered, and
+was presented; and I, raising my eyes to his face,&mdash;ah, how
+can I tell you what sight they beheld!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Self-possessed as I think I am, and as I certainly ought
+to be, I started back with an involuntary exclamation, a
+mingling doubtless of incredulity and disgust. This man,
+who stood before me with all the ease and self-assertion of
+a gentleman, was&mdash;you will never believe it, I fear&mdash;<i>a
+mulatto</i>!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Whatever effect my manner had on him was not perceptible.
+He had not seated himself, and, with a smile that
+was actually satirical, he bowed, uttered a few words of
+greeting, and went out of the room.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'How dared you?' I then cried, for astonishment had
+given place to rage, 'how dared you deceive me&mdash;deceive
+us all&mdash;so? how dared you palm yourself off as white and
+respectable, and thus be admitted to Mr. Hale's school and
+to the society and companionship of his pupils?' I could
+scarcely control myself when I thought of how shamefully
+we had all been cozened.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Pardon me, madam,' she answered with effrontery,&mdash;effrontery
+under the circumstances,&mdash;'you forget yourself,
+and what is due from one lady to another.' (Did you ever
+hear of such presumption!) 'I practised no deceit upon Professor
+Hale. He knew papa well,&mdash;was his intimate friend
+at college, in England,&mdash;and was perfectly aware who was
+Mr. Ercildoune's daughter when she was admitted to his
+school. For myself, I had no confessions to make, and made
+none. I was your daughter's friend; as such, went to her
+house, and invited her here. I trust you have seen in me
+nothing unbecoming a gentlewoman, as, <i>up to this time</i>, I
+have beheld in you naught save the attributes of a lady. If
+we are to have any farther conversation, it must be conducted
+on the old plan, and not the extraordinary one you
+have just adopted; else I shall be compelled, in self-respect,
+to leave you alone in my own parlor.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Imagine if you can the effect of this speech upon me.
+I assure you I was composed enough outwardly, if not
+inwardly, ere she ended her sentence. Having finished, I
+said, 'Pardon me, Miss Ercildoune, for any words which
+may have offended your dignity. I will confine myself for
+the rest of our interview to your own rules!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'It is well,' she responded. I had spoken satirically, and
+expected to see her shrink under it, but she answered with
+perfect coolness and <i>sang froid</i>. I continued, 'You will not
+deny that you are a negro, at least a mulatto.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Pardon me, madam,' she replied; 'my father is a
+mulatto, my mother was an Englishwoman. Thus, to give
+you accurate information upon the subject, I am a
+quadroon.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Quadroon be it!' I answered, angrily again, I fear.
+'Quadroon, mulatto, or negro, it is all one. I have no desire
+to split hairs of definition. You could not be more obnoxious
+were you black as Erebus. I have no farther words to
+pass upon the past or the present, but something to say of
+the future. You hold in your hands a letter&mdash;a love-letter,
+I am sure&mdash;a declaration, as I fear&mdash;from my nephew, Mr.
+Surrey. You will oblige me by at once sitting down,
+writing a peremptory and unqualified refusal to his proposal,
+if he has made you one,&mdash;a refusal that will admit of
+no hope and no double interpretation,&mdash;and give it into
+my keeping before I leave this room.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When I first alluded to Willie's letter she had crimsoned,
+but before I closed she was so white I should have
+thought her fainting, but for the fire in her eyes. However,
+she spoke up clear enough when she said, 'And what,
+madam, if I deny your right to dictate any action whatever
+to me, however insignificant, and utterly refuse to obey
+your command?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'At your peril do so,' I exclaimed. 'Refuse, and I will
+write the whole shameful story, with my own comments;
+and you may judge for yourself of the effect it will produce.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;At that she smiled,&mdash;an indescribable sort of smile,&mdash;and
+shut her fingers on the letter she held,&mdash;I could not
+help thinking as though it were a human hand. 'Very well,
+madam, write it. He has already told me'&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'That he loves you,' I broke in. 'Do you think he
+would continue to do so if he knew what you are?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'He knows me as well now,' she answered, 'as he will
+after reading any letter of yours.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Incredible!' I exclaimed. 'When he wrote you that,
+he did not know, he could not have known, your birth,
+your race, the taint in your blood. I will never believe it.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'No,' she said, 'I did not say he did. I said he knew <i>me</i>;
+so well, I think, judging from this,'&mdash;clasping his letter
+with the same curious pressure I had before noticed,&mdash;'that
+you could scarcely enlighten him farther. He knows
+my heart, and soul, and brain,&mdash;as I said, he knows <i>me</i>.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'O, yes,' I answered,&mdash;or rather sneered, for I was
+uncontrollably indignant through all this,&mdash;'if you mean
+<i>that</i>, very likely. I am not talking lovers' metaphysics, but
+practical common-sense. He does not know the one thing
+at present essential for him to know; and he will abandon
+you, spurn you,&mdash;his love turned to scorn, his passion to
+contempt,&mdash;when he reads what I shall write him if you
+refuse to do what I demand!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I expected to see her cower before me. Conceive,
+then, if you can, my sensations when she cried, 'Stop,
+madam! Say what you will to me; insult, outrage me, if
+you please, and have not the good breeding and dignity to
+forbear; but do not presume to so slander him. Do not presume
+to accuse him, who is all nobility and greatness of
+soul, of a sentiment so base, a prejudice so infamous. Study
+him, madam, know him better, ere you attempt to be his
+mouth-piece.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As she uttered these words, a horrible foreboding
+seized me, or, to speak more truthfully, I so felt the certainty
+of what she spoke, that a shudder of terror ran over
+me. I thought of him, of his character, of his principles, of
+his insane sense of honor, of his terrible will under all that
+soft exterior,&mdash;the hand of steel under the silken glove; I
+saw that if I persisted and she still refused to yield I should
+lose all. On the instant I changed my attack.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'It is true,' I said, 'having asked you to become his
+wife, he will marry you; he will redeem his pledge though
+it ruin his life and blast his career, to say nothing of the
+effect an unending series of outrages and mortifications
+will have upon his temper and his heart. A pretty love,
+truly, yours must be,&mdash;whatever his is,&mdash;to condemn him
+to so terrible an ordeal, so frightful a fate.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She shivered at that, and I went on,&mdash;blaming my
+folly in not remembering, being a woman, that it was with
+a woman and her weakness I had to deal.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'He is young,' I continued; 'he has probably a long life
+before him. Rich, handsome, brilliant,&mdash;a magnificent
+career opening to him,&mdash;position, ease, troops of
+friends,&mdash;you will ruthlessly ruin all this. Married to you,
+white as you are, the peculiarity of your birth would in
+some way be speedily known. His father would disinherit
+him (it was not necessary to tell her he has a fortune in his
+own right), his family disown him, his friends abandon
+him, society close its doors upon him, business refuse to
+seek him, honor and riches elude his grasp. If you do not
+know the strength of this prejudice, which you call infamous,
+pre-eminently in the circle to which he belongs, I
+cannot tell it you. Taking all this from him, what will you
+give him in return? Ruining his life, can your affection
+make amends? Blasting his career, will your love fill the
+gap? Do you flatter yourself by the supposition that you
+can be father, mother, relatives, friends, society, wealth,
+position, honor, career,&mdash;all,&mdash;to him? Your people are
+cursed in America, and they transfer their curse to any one
+mad enough, or generous enough (that was a diplomatic
+turn), to connect his fate with yours.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Before I was through, I saw that I had carried my
+point. All the fine airs went out of my lady, and she looked
+broken and humbled enough. I might have said less, but I
+ached to say more to the insolent.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Enough, madam,' she gasped, 'stop.' And then said,
+more to herself than to me, 'I could give heaven for
+him,'&mdash;the rest I rather guessed from the motion of her lips
+than from any sound,&mdash;'but I cannot ask him to give the
+world for me.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Will you write the letter?' I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'No.'&mdash;She said the word with evident effort, and
+then, still more slowly, 'I will give you a message. Say &quot;I
+implore you never to write me again,&mdash;to forget me. I beseech
+of you not to try me by any farther appeals, as I shall
+but return them unopened.&quot;' I wrote down the words as
+she spoke them. 'This is well,' I said when she finished; 'but
+it is not enough. I must have the letter.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'The letter?' she said. 'What need of a letter? surely
+that is sufficient.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'I do not mean your letter. I mean his,&mdash;the one
+which you hold in your hands.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'This?' she queried, looking down on it,&mdash;'this?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought the repetition senseless and affected, but I
+answered, 'Yes,&mdash;that. He will not believe you are in
+earnest if you keep his avowal of love. You must give him
+up entirely. If you let me send that back, with your words,
+he shall never&mdash;at least from me&mdash;have clew or reason for
+your conduct. That will close the whole affair.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Close the whole affair,' she repeated after me,
+mechanically,&mdash;'close the whole affair.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was getting heartily tired of this, and had no desire
+to listen to an echo conversation; so, without answering, I
+stretched out my hand for it. She held it towards me, then
+drew it back and raised it to her heart with the same gesture
+I had marked when she first opened it,&mdash;a gesture as
+I said, of that, which was less of a caress than a spasm.
+Indeed, I think now that it was wholly physical and involuntary.
+Then she handed it to me, and, motioning towards
+the door, said, 'Go!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I rose, and, infamous as I thought her past deceit,
+wearied as I was with the interview, small claim as she had
+upon me for the slightest consideration, I said 'You have
+done well, Miss Ercildoune! I commend you for your sensible
+decision, and for your ability, if late, to appreciate the
+situation. I wish you all success in life, I am sure; and,
+permit me to add, a future union with one of your own
+race, if that will bring you happiness.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Heavens! what a face and what eyes she turned upon
+me as, rising, she once more pointed to the door, and
+cried, 'Go!' And indeed I went,&mdash;the girl actually frightened
+me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When I got on to the lawn, I missed my bag and
+parasol, and had to return for them. I opened the door
+with some slight trepidation, but had no need for fear. She
+was lying prostrate upon the floor, as I saw on coming
+near, in a dead faint. She had evidently fallen so suddenly
+and with such force as to have hurt herself; her head had
+struck against an ornament of the bookcase, near which
+she had been standing; and a little stream of blood was
+trickling from her temple. It made me sick to behold it. As
+I looked at her where she lay, I could not but pity her a
+little, and think what a merciful fate it would be for her,
+and such as she, if they could all die,&mdash;and so put an end
+to what, I presume, though I never before thought of it, is
+really a very hard existence.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was no time, however, to sentimentalize. I rang for
+a servant, and, having waited till one came, took my leave.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course all this is very shocking and painful, but I
+am glad I came. The matter is ended now in a satisfactory
+manner. I think it has been well done. Let us both keep
+our counsel, and the affair will soon become a memory
+with us, as it is nothing with every one else.</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;Always your loving sister,<br />
+<br />
+&quot;AUGUSTA.&quot;<br />
+</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>It is better to be silent upon some themes than to say
+too little. Words would fail to express the emotions with
+which Willie read this history: let silence and imagination
+tell the tale.</p>
+
+<p>Flinging down the paper with a passionate cry, he saw
+yet another letter,&mdash;the one in which these had been
+enfolded,&mdash;a letter written to him, and by Mrs. Russell.
+As by a flash, he perceived that there had been some
+blunder here, by which he was the gainer; and, partly at
+least, comprehended it.</p>
+
+<p>These two, mother and aunt, fearing the old fire had
+not yet burned to ashes,&mdash;nay, from their knowledge of
+him, sure of it,&mdash;hearing naught of his illness, for he did
+not care to distress them by any account thereof, were satisfied
+that he had either met, or was remaining to compass
+a meeting, with Miss Ercildoune. His mother had not the
+courage, or the baseness, to write such a letter as that to
+which Mrs. Russell urged her,&mdash;a letter which should
+degrade his love in his own eyes, and recall him from an
+unworthy pursuit. &quot;Very well!&quot; Mrs. Russell had then said,
+&quot;It will be better from you; it will look more like unwarranted
+interference from me; but I will write, and you shall
+send an accompanying line. Let me have it to-morrow.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The next morning Mrs. Surrey was not well enough
+to drive out, and thus sent her note by a servant, enclosing
+with it the letter of June 27th,&mdash;thinking that her sister
+might want it for reference. When it reached Mrs. Russell,
+it was almost mail-time, and with the simple thought,
+&quot;So,&mdash;Laura has written it, after all,&quot; she enclosed it in her
+own, and sent it off, post-haste; not even looking at the
+unsealed envelope, as Mrs. Surrey had taken for granted
+she would, and thus failing to know of its double contents.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the very letter which they would have compassed
+land and sea to have prevented coming under his eyes,
+unwisely yet most fortunately kept in existence, was sent
+by themselves to his hands.</p>
+
+<p>Without pausing to read a line of that which his aunt
+had written him, he tore it into fragments, flung it into the
+empty grate; and, bounding down the stairs and on to the
+street, plunged into a carriage and was whirled away, all
+too slowly, to the home he had left but a little space before
+with such widely, such painfully different emotions.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>I could not love thee, dear, so much,<br />
+Loved I not honor more.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+LOVELACE<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>Just after Surrey, for the third time, had passed through
+the avenue of trees, two men appeared in it, earnestly
+conversing. One, the older, was the same who had met
+Willie as he was going out, and had examined him with such
+curious interest. The other, in feature, form, and bearing,
+was so absolutely the counterpart of his companion that it
+was easy to recognize in them father and son,&mdash;a father and
+son whom it would be hard to match. &quot;The finest type of the
+Anglo-Saxon race I have seen from America,&quot; was the verdict
+pronounced upon Mr. Ercildoune, when he was a
+young man studying abroad, by an enthusiastic and nationally
+ignorant Englishman; &quot;but then, sir,&quot; he added, &quot;what
+very dark complexions you Americans have! Is it universal?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;By no means, sir,&quot; was Mr. Ercildoune's reply. &quot;There
+are some exceedingly fine ones among my countrymen. I
+come from the South: that is a bad climate for the tint of
+the skin.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is it so?&quot; exclaimed John Bull,&mdash;&quot;worse than the
+North?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very much worse, sir, in more ways than one.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps Robert Ercildoune was a trifle fairer than his
+father, but there was still perceptible the shade which
+marked him as effectually an outcast from the freedom of
+American society, and the rights of American citizenship,
+as though it had been the badge of crime or the strait
+jacket of a madman. Something of this was manifested in
+the conversation in which the two were engaged.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is folly, Robert, for you to carry your refinement
+and culture into the ranks as a common soldier, to fight
+and to die, without thanks. You are made of too good stuff
+to serve simply as food for powder.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Better men than I, father, have gone there, and are
+there to-day; men in every way superior to me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Perhaps,&mdash;yes, if you will have it so. But what are
+they? white men, fighting for their own country and flag,
+for their own rights of manhood and citizenship, for a present
+for themselves and a future for their children, for
+honor and fame. What is there for you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;For one thing, just that of which you spoke. Perhaps
+not a present for me, but certainly a future for those that
+come after.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A future! How are you to know? what warrant or
+guarantee have you for any such future? Do you judge by
+the past? by the signs of to-day? I tell you this American
+nation will resort to any means&mdash;will pledge anything, by
+word or implication&mdash;to secure the end for which it fights;
+and will break its pledges just so soon as it can, and with
+whomsoever it can with impunity. You, and your children,
+and your children's children after you, will go to the wall
+unless it has need of you in the arena.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do not think so. This whole nation is learning,
+through pain and loss, the lesson of justice; of expediency,
+doubtless, but still of justice; and I do not think it will be
+forgotten when the war is ended. This is our time to wipe
+off a thousand stigmas of contempt and reproach: this&quot;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who is responsible for them? ourselves? What cast
+them there? our own actions? I trow not. Mark the facts. I
+pay taxes to support the public schools, and am compelled
+to have my children educated at home. I pay taxes to support
+the government, and am denied any representation or
+any voice in regard to the manner in which these taxes
+shall be expended. I hail a car on the street, and am
+laughed to scorn by the conductor,&mdash;or, admitted, at the
+order of the passengers am ignominiously expelled. I offer
+my money at the door of any place of public amusement,
+and it is flung back to me with an oath. I enter a train to
+New York, and am banished to the rear seat or the 'negro
+car.' I go to a hotel, open for the accommodation of the
+public, and am denied access; or am requested to keep my
+room, and not show myself in parlor, office, or at table. I
+come within a church, to worship the good God who is
+no respecter of persons, and am shown out of the door by
+one of his insolent creatures. I carry my intelligence to the
+polls on election morning, and am elbowed aside by an
+American boor or a foreign drunkard, and, with opprobrious
+epithets by law officers and rabble, am driven away.
+All this in the North; all this without excuse of slavery and
+of the feeling it engenders; all this from arrogant hatred
+and devilish malignity. At last, the country which has disowned
+me, the government which has never recognized
+save to outrage me, the flag which has refused to cover or
+to protect me, are in direct need and utmost extremity.
+Then do they cry for me and mine to come up to their
+help ere they perish. At least, they hold forth a bribe to
+secure me? at least, if they make no apology for the past,
+they offer compensation for the future? at least, they bid
+high for the services they desire? Not at all!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They say to one man, 'Here is twelve hundred dollars
+bounty with which to begin; here is sixteen dollars a month
+for pay; here is the law passed, and the money pledged, to
+secure you in comfort for the rest of life, if wounded or disabled,
+or help for your family, if killed. Here is every door set
+wide for you to rise, from post to post; money yours,
+advancement yours, honor, and fame, and glory yours; the
+love of a grateful country, the applause of an admiring world.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They say to another man,&mdash;you, or me, or Sam out
+there in the field,&mdash;'There is no bounty for you, not a
+cent; there is pay for you, twelve dollars a month, the hire
+of a servant; there is no pension for you, or your family, if
+you be sent back from the front, wounded or dead; if you
+are taken prisoner you can be murdered with impunity, or
+be sold as a slave, without interference on our part. Fight
+like a lion! do acts of courage and splendor! and you shall
+never rise above the rank of a private soldier. For you there
+is neither money nor honor, rights secured, nor fame
+gained. Dying, you fall into a nameless grave: living, you
+come back to your old estate of insult and wrong. If you
+refuse these tempting offers, we brand you cowards. If,
+under these infamous restraints and disadvantages, you fail
+to equal the white troops by your side, you are written
+down&mdash;inferiors. If you equal them, you are still inferiors.
+If you perform miracles, and surpass them, you are, in a
+measure, worthy commendation at last; we consent to see
+in you human beings, fit for mention and admiration,&mdash;not
+as types of your color and of what you intrinsically are,
+but as exceptions; made such by the habit of association,
+and the force of surrounding circumstances.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;These are the terms the American people offer you,
+these the terms which you stoop to accept, these the
+proofs that they are learning a lesson of justice! So be it!
+there is need. Let them learn it to the full! let this war go
+on 'until the cities be wasted without inhabitant, and the
+houses without man, and the land be utterly destroyed.' Do
+not you interfere. Leave them to the teachings and the
+judgments of God.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Ercildoune had spoken with such impassioned feeling,
+with such fire in his eyes, such terrible earnestness in his
+voice, that Robert could not, if he would, interrupt him;
+and, in the silence, found no words for the instant at his
+command. Ere he summoned them they saw some one
+approaching.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A fine looking fellow! fighting has been no child's
+play for him,&quot; said Robert, looking, as he spoke, at the
+empty sleeve.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Ercildoune advanced to meet the stranger, and
+Surrey beheld the same face upon whose pictured semblance
+he had once gazed with such intense feelings, first
+of jealousy, and then of relief and admiration; the same
+splendor of life, and beauty, and vitality. Surrey knew him
+at once, knew that it was Francesca's father, and went up
+to him with extended hand. Mr. Ercildoune took the proffered
+hand, and shook it warmly. &quot;I am happy to meet you,
+Mr. Surrey.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You know me?&quot; said he with surprise. &quot;I thought to
+present myself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have seen your picture.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And I yours. They must have held the mirror up to
+nature, for the originals to be so easily known. But may I
+ask where you saw mine? <i>yours</i> was in Miss Ercildoune's
+possession.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As was yours,&quot; was answered after a moment's hesitation,&mdash;Surrey
+thought, with visible reluctance. His heart
+flew into his throat. &quot;She has my picture,&mdash;she has spoken
+of me,&quot; he said to himself. &quot;I wonder what her father will
+think,&mdash;what he will do. Come, I will to the point immediately.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Ercildoune,&quot; said he, aloud, &quot;you know something
+of me? of my position and prospects?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A great deal.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I trust, nothing disparaging or ignoble.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know nothing for which any one could desire
+oblivion.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thanks. Let me speak to you, then, of a matter which
+should have been long since proposed to you had I been
+permitted the opportunity. I love your daughter. I cannot
+speak about that, but you will understand all that I wish to
+say. I have twice&mdash;once by letter, once by speech&mdash;let her
+know this and my desire to call her wife. She has twice
+refused,&mdash;absolutely. You think this should cut off all
+hope?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Ercildoune had been watching him closely. &quot;If she
+does not love you,&quot; he answered, at the pause.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do not know. I went away from here a little while
+ago with her peremptory command not to return. I should
+not have dared disobey it had I not learned&mdash;thought&mdash;in
+fact, but for some circumstances&mdash;I beg your pardon&mdash;I
+do not know what I am saying. I believed if I saw her once
+more I could change her determination,&mdash;could induce
+her to give me another response,&mdash;and came with that
+hope.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Which has failed?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Which has thus far failed that she will not at all see
+me; will hold no communication with me. I should be a
+ruffian did I force myself on her thus without excuse or
+reason. My own love would be no apology did I not think,
+did I not dare to hope, that it is not aversion to me that
+induces her to act as she has done. Believing so, may I beg
+a favor of you? may I entreat that you will induce her to
+see me, if only for a little while?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Ercildoune smiled a sad, bitter smile, as he answered,
+&quot;Mr. Surrey, if my daughter does not love you, it would
+be hopeless for you or for me to assail her refusal. If she
+does, she has doubtless rejected you for a reason which you
+can read by simply looking into my face. No words of
+mine can destroy or do that away.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There is nothing to destroy; there is nothing to do
+away. Thank you for speaking of it, and making the way
+easy. There is nothing in all the wide world between us,&mdash;there
+can be nothing between us,&mdash;if she loves me;
+nothing to keep us apart save her indifference or lack of
+regard for me. I want to say so to her if she will give me
+the chance. Will you not help me to it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You comprehend all that I mean?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do. It is, as I have said, nothing. That love would not
+be worth the telling that considered extraneous circumstances,
+and not the object itself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have counted all the consequences? I think not.
+How, indeed, should you be able? Come with me a
+moment.&quot; The two went up to the house, across the wide
+veranda, into a room half library, half lounging-room,
+which, from a score of evidences strewn around, was
+plainly the special resort of the master. Over the mantel
+hung the life-size portrait of an excessively beautiful
+woman. A fine, <i>spirituelle</i> face, with proud lines around the
+mouth and delicate nostrils, but with a tender, appealing
+look in the eyes, that claimed gentle treatment. This face
+said, &quot;I was made for sunshine and balmy airs, but, if darkness
+and storm assail, I can walk through them unflinching,
+though the progress be short; I can die, and give no sign.&quot;
+Willie went hastily up to this, and stood, absorbed, before
+it. &quot;Francesca is very like her mother,&quot; said Ercildoune,
+coming to his side. It was his own thought, but he made
+no answer.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will tell you something of her and myself; a very
+little story; you can draw the moral. My father, who was a
+Virginian, sent my brother and me to England when we
+were mere boys, to be trained and educated. After his
+fashion, doubtless, he loved us; for he saw that we had
+every advantage that wealth, and taste, and care could provide;
+and though he never sent for us, nor came to us, in
+all the years after we left his house,&mdash;and though we had
+no legal claim upon him,&mdash;he acknowledged us his children,
+and left us the entire proceeds of his immense estates,
+unincumbered. We were so young when we went abroad,
+had been so tenderly treated at home, had seen and known
+so absolutely nothing of the society about us, that we were
+ignorant as Arabs of the state of feeling and prejudice in
+America against such as we, who carried any trace of
+negro blood. Our treatment in England did but increase
+this oblivion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We graduated at Oxford; my brother, who was two
+years older than I, waiting upon me that we might go
+together through Europe; and together we had three of the
+happiest years of life. On the Continent I met <i>her</i>. You see
+what she is; you know Francesca: it is useless for me to
+attempt to describe her. I loved her,&mdash;she loved me,&mdash;it
+was confessed. In a little while I called her wife; I would,
+if I could, tell you of the time that followed: I cannot. We
+had a beautiful home, youth, health, riches, friends, happiness,
+two noble boys. At last an evil fate brought us to
+America. I was to look after some business affairs which,
+my agent said, needed personal supervision. My brother,
+whose health had failed, was advised to try a sea-voyage,
+and change of scene and climate. My wife was enthusiastic
+about the glorious Republic,&mdash;the great, free America,&mdash;the
+land of my birth. We came, carrying with us letters
+from friends in England, that were an open sesame to the
+most jealously barred doors. They flew wide at our
+approach, but to be shut with speed when my face was
+seen; hands were cordially extended, and drawn back as
+from a loathsome contact when mine went to meet them.
+In brief, we were outlawed, ostracised, sacrificed on the
+altar of this devilish American prejudice,&mdash;wholly American,
+for it is found nowhere else in the world,&mdash;I for my
+color, she for connecting her fate with mine.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was so held as to be unable to return at once, and
+she would not leave me. Then my brother drooped more
+and more. His disease needed the brightest and most
+cheerful influences. The social and moral atmosphere stifled
+him. He died; and we, with grief intensified by bitterness,
+laid him in the soil of his own country as though
+it had been that of the stranger and enemy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;At this time the anti-slavery movement was provoking
+profound thought and feeling in America. I at once
+identified myself with it; not because I was connected with
+the hated and despised race, but because I loathed all forms
+of tyranny, and fought against them with what measure of
+strength I possessed. Doubtless this made me a more conspicuous
+mark for the shafts of malice and cruelty, and as I
+could nowhere be hurt as through her, malignity
+exhausted its devices there. She was hooted at when she
+appeared with me on the streets; she was inundated with
+infamous letters; she was dragged before a court of <i>justice</i>
+upon the plea that she had defied the law of the state
+against amalgamation, forbidding the marriage of white
+and colored; though at the time it was known that she was
+English, that we were married in England and by English
+law. One night, in the midst of the riots which in 1838
+disgraced this city, our house was surrounded by a mob,
+burned over us; and I, with a few faithful friends, barely
+succeeded in carrying her to a place of safety,&mdash;uncovered,
+save by her delicate night-robe and a shawl, hastily caught
+up as we hurried her away. The yelling fiends, the burning
+house, the awful horror of fright and danger, the shock to
+her health and strength, the storm,&mdash;for the night was a
+wild and tempestuous one, which drenched her to the
+skin,&mdash;from all these she might have recovered, had not
+her boy, her first-born, been carried into her, bruised and
+dead,&mdash;dead, through an accident of burning rafters and
+falling stones; an accident, they said; yet as really murdered
+as though they had wilfully and brutally stricken him
+down.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;After that I saw that she, too, would die, were she not
+taken back to our old home. The preparations were hastily
+made; we turned our faces towards England; we hoped to
+reach it at least before another pair of eyes saw the light,
+but hoped in vain. There on the broad sea Francesca was
+born. There her mother died. There was she buried.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was with extreme difficulty Ercildoune had controlled
+his face and voice, through the last of this distressing
+recital, and with the final word he bowed his forehead
+on the picture-frame,&mdash;convulsed with agony,&mdash;while
+voiceless sobs, like spasms, shook his form. Surrey
+realized that no words were to be said here, and stood by,
+awed and silent. What hand, however tender, could be laid
+on such a wound as this?</p>
+
+<p>Presently he looked up, and continued: &quot;I came back
+here, because, I said, here was my place. I had wealth, education,
+a thousand advantages which are denied the masses
+of people who are, like me, of mixed race. I came here to
+identify my fate with theirs; to work with and for them; to
+fight, till I died, against the cruel and merciless prejudice
+which grinds them down. I have a son, who has just
+entered the service of this country, perhaps to die under its
+flag. I have a daughter,&quot;&mdash;Willie flushed and started forward;&mdash;&quot;I
+asked you when I began this recital, if you had
+counted all the consequences. You know my story; you see
+with what fate you link yours; reflect! Francesca carries no
+mark of her birth; her father or brother could not come
+inside her home without shocking society by the scandal,
+were not the story earlier known. The man whom you
+struck down this morning is one of our neighbors; you saw
+and heard his brutal assault: are you ready to face more of
+the like kind? Better than you I know what sentence will
+be passed upon you,&mdash;what measure awarded. It is for your
+own sake I say these things; consider them. I have finished.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Surrey had made to speak a half score of times, and as
+often checked himself,&mdash;partly that he should not interrupt
+his companion; partly that he might be master of his
+emotions, and say what he had to utter without heat or
+excitement.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Ercildoune,&quot; he now said, &quot;listen to me. I should
+despise myself were I guilty of the wicked and vulgar prejudice
+universal in America. I should be beneath contempt
+did I submit or consent to it. Two years ago I loved Miss
+Ercildoune without knowing aught of her birth. She is the
+same now as then; should I love her the less? If anything
+hard or cruel is in her fate that love can soften, it shall be
+done. If any painful burdens have been thrown upon her
+life, I can carry, if not the whole, then a part of them. If I
+cannot put her into a safe shelter where no ill will befall
+her, I can at least take her into my arms and go with her
+through the world. It will be easier for us, I think,&mdash;I
+hope,&mdash;to face any fate if we are together. Ah, sir, do not
+prevent it; do not deny me this happiness. Be my ambassador,
+since she will not let me speak for myself, and plead
+my own cause.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>In his earnestness he had come close to Mr. Ercildoune,
+putting out his one hand with a gesture of entreaty,
+with a tone in his voice, and a look in his face, irresistible
+to hear and behold. Ercildoune took the hand, and held it
+in a close, firm grasp. Some strong emotion shook him.
+The expression, a combination of sadness and scorn,
+which commonly held possession of his eyes, went out of
+them, leaving them radiant. &quot;No,&quot; he said, &quot;I will say
+nothing for you. I would not for worlds spoil your plea;
+prevent her hearing, from your own mouth, what you
+have to say. I will send her to you,&quot;&mdash;and, going to a door,
+gave the order to a servant, &quot;Desire Miss Francesca to
+come to the parlor.&quot; Then, motioning Surrey to the room,
+he went away, buried in thought.</p>
+
+<p>Standing in the parlor, for he was too restless to sit, he
+tried to plan how he should meet her; to think of a sentence
+which at the outset should disarm her indignation at
+being thus thrust upon him, and convey in some measure
+the thought of which his heart was full, without trespassing
+on her reserve, or telling her of the letter which he
+had read. Then another fear seized him; it was two years
+since he had written,&mdash;two years since that painful and
+terrible scene had been enacted in the very room where he
+stood,&mdash;two years since she had confessed by deed and
+look that she loved him. Might she not have changed?
+might she not have struggled for the mastery of this feeling
+with only too certain success? might she not have learned
+to regard him with esteem, perchance,&mdash;with
+friendship,&mdash;sentiment,&mdash;anything
+but that which he desired or
+would claim at her hands? Silence and absence and time
+are pitiless destructives. Might they not? Aye, might they
+not? He paced to and fro, with quick, restless tread, at the
+thought. All his love and his longing cried out against such
+a cruel supposition. He stopped by the side of the bookcase
+against which she had fallen in that merciless and suffering
+struggle, and put his hand down on the little projection,
+which he knew had once cut and wounded her,
+with a strong, passionate clasp, as though it were herself he
+held. Just then he heard a step,&mdash;her step, yet how
+unlike!&mdash;coming down the stairs. Where he stood he
+could see her as she crossed the hall, coming unconsciously
+to meet him. All the brightness and airy grace seemed to
+have been drawn quite out of her. The alert, slender figure
+drooped as if it carried some palpable weight, and moved
+with a step slow and unsteady as that of sickness or age.
+Her face was pathetic in its sad pallor, and blue, sorrowful
+circles were drawn under the deep eyes, heavy and dim
+with the shedding of unnumbered tears. It almost broke
+his heart to look at her. A feeling, pitiful as a mother
+would have for her suffering baby, took possession of his
+soul,&mdash;a longing to shield and protect her. Tears blinded
+him; a great sob swelled in his throat; he made a step forward
+as she came into the room. &quot;Papa,&quot; she said, without
+looking up, &quot;you wanted me?&quot; There was no response.
+&quot;Papa!&quot; In an instant an arm enfolded her; a presence,
+tender and strong, bent above her; a voice, husky with
+crowding emotions, yet sweet with all the sweetness of
+love, breathed, &quot;My darling! my darling!&quot; as <i>his</i> fair, sunny
+hair swept her face.</p>
+
+<p>Even then she remembered another scene, remembered
+her promise; even then she thought of him, of his
+future, and struggled to release herself from his embrace.</p>
+
+<p>What did he say? what could he say? Where were the
+arguments he had planned, the entreaties he had purposed?
+where the words with which he was to tell his tale, combat
+her refusal, win her to a willing and happy assent? All gone.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing but his heart and its caresses to
+speak for him. Silent, with the ineffable stillness he kissed
+her eyes, her mouth, held her to his breast with a passionate
+fondness,&mdash;a tender, yet masterful hold, which
+said, &quot;Nothing shall separate us now.&quot; She felt it, recognized
+it, yielded without power to longer contend, clasped
+her arms about his neck, met his eyes, and dropped her
+face upon his heart with a long, tremulous sigh which
+confessed that heaven was won.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>The golden hours, on angel wings,<br />
+Flew o'er me and my dearie.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+BURNS<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>The evening that followed was of the brightest
+and happiest; even the adieus spoken to the soldier
+who was just leaving his home did not sadden it. They
+were in such a state of exaltation as to see everything with
+courageous and hopeful eyes, and sent Robert off with the
+feeling that all these horrible realities they had known so
+long were but bogies to frighten foolish children, and that
+he would come back to them wearing, at the very least,
+the stars of a major-general. Whatever sombre and painful
+thoughts filled Ercildoune's heart he held there, that no
+gloom might fall from him upon these fresh young lives,
+nor sadden the cheery expectancy of his son.</p>
+
+<p>Surrey, having carried the first line of defence, prepared
+for a vigorous assault upon the second. Like all eager lovers,
+his primary anxiety was to hear &quot;Yes&quot;; afterwards, the day.
+To that end he was pleading with every resource that love
+and impatience could lend; but Francesca shook her head,
+and smiled, and said that was a long way off,&mdash;that was not
+to be thought of, at least till the war was over, and her soldier
+safe at home; but he insisted that this was the flimsiest,
+and poorest of excuses; nay, that it was the very reverse of
+the true and sensible idea, which was of course wholly on
+his side. He had these few weeks at home, and then must
+away once more to chances of battle and death. He did not
+say this till he had exhausted every other entreaty; but at
+last, gathering her close to him with his one loving arm,&mdash;&quot;how
+fortunate,&quot; he had before said, &quot;that it is the left arm,
+because if it were the other I could not hold you so near
+my heart!&quot;&mdash;so holding her, he glanced down at the empty
+sleeve, and whispered, &quot;My darling! who knows? I have
+been wounded so often, and am now only a piece of a
+fellow to come to you. It may be something more next
+time, and then I shall never call you wife. It would make no
+difference hereafter, I know: we belong to each other for
+time and eternity. But then I should like to feel that we
+were something more to one another than even betrothed
+lovers, before the end comes, if come it does, untimely. Be
+generous, dearie, and say yes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He did not give utterance to another fear, which was
+that by some device she might again be taken away from
+him; that some cruel plan might be put in execution to
+separate them once more. He would not take the risk; he
+would bind her to him so securely that no device, however
+cunning,&mdash;no plan, however hard and shrewd,&mdash;could
+again divide them.</p>
+
+<p>She hesitated long; was long entreated; but the result
+was sure, since her own heart seconded every prayer he
+uttered. At last she consented; but insisted that he should
+go home at once, see the mother and father who were
+waiting for him with such anxious hearts, give to them&mdash;as
+was their due&mdash;at least a part of the time, and then,
+when her hasty bride-preparations were made, come back
+and take her wholly to himself. Thus it was arranged, and
+he left her.</p>
+
+<p>Into the mysteries which followed&mdash;the mysteries of
+hemming and stitching, of tucking and trimming, ruffling,
+embroidering, of all the hurry and delicious confusion of
+an elegant yet hasty bridal trousseau&mdash;let us not attempt to
+investigate.</p>
+
+<p>Doubtless through those days, through this sweet and
+happy whirl of emotion, Francesca had many anxious and
+painful hours: hours in which she looked at the future&mdash;for
+him more than for herself&mdash;with sorrowful anticipations
+and forebodings. But with each evening came a
+letter, written in the morning by his dear hand; a letter so
+full of happy, hopeful love, of resolute, manly spirit, that
+her cares and anxieties all took flight, and were but as a tale
+that is told, or as a dream of darkness when the sun shines
+upon a blessed reality.</p>
+
+<p>He wrote her that he had told his parents of his wishes
+and plans; and that, as he had known before, they were
+opposed, and opposed most bitterly; but he was sure that
+time would soften, and knowledge destroy this prejudice
+utterly. He wrote as he believed. They were so fond of
+him, so devoted to him who was their only child, that he
+was assured they would not and could not cast him off, nor
+hate that which he loved. He did not know that his father,
+who had never before been guilty of a base action,&mdash;his
+mother, who was fine to daintiness,&mdash;were both so warped
+by this senseless and cruel feeling&mdash;having seen Francesca
+and known all her beautiful and noble elements of personal
+character&mdash;as to have written her a letter which only
+a losel should have penned and an outcast read. She did not
+tell him. Being satisfied that they two belonged to one
+another; that if they were separated it would be as the
+tearing asunder of a perfect whole, leaving the parts rent
+and bleeding,&mdash;she would not listen to any voice that
+attempted, nor heed any hand that strove to drive an
+entering wedge, or to divide them. Why, then, should she
+trouble him by the knowledge that this effort had again
+been made, and by those he trusted and honored. Let it
+pass. The future must decide what the future must be,
+meanwhile, they were to live in a happy present.</p>
+
+<p>He learned of it, however, before he left his home.
+Finding that neither persuasions, threats, nor prayers could
+move him,&mdash;that he would be true to honor and love,&mdash;they
+told him of what they had done; laid bare the whole
+intensity of their feeling; and putting her on the one side,
+placing themselves on the other, said, &quot;Choose,&mdash;this wife,
+or those who have loved you for a lifetime. Cleave to her,
+and your father disowns you, your mother renounces, your
+home shuts its doors upon you, never to open. With the
+world and its judgment we have nothing to do; that is
+between it and you; but no judgment of indifferent
+strangers shall be more severe than ours.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A painful position; a cruel alternative; but not for an
+instant did he hesitate. Taking the two hands of father and
+mother into his solitary one, he said,&mdash;&quot;Father, I have
+always found you a gentleman; mother, you have shown all
+the graces of the Christian character which you profess; yet
+in this you are supporting the most dishonorable sentiment,
+the most infidel unbelief, with which the age is
+shamed. You are defying the dictates of justice and the
+teachings of God. When you ask me to rank myself on
+your side, I cannot do it. Were my heart less wholly
+enlisted in this matter, my reason and sense of right would
+rebel. Here, then, for the present at least, we must say
+farewell.&quot; And so, with many a heart-ache and many a
+pang, he went away.</p>
+
+<p>As true love always grows with passing time, so his
+increased with the days, and intensified by the cruel heat
+which was poured upon it. He realized the torture to
+which, in a thousand ways, this darling of his heart had for
+a lifetime been subjected; and his tenderness and love&mdash;in
+which was an element of indignation and pathos&mdash;deepened
+with every fresh revelation of the passing hours.
+When he came back to her he had few words to speak, and
+no airy grace of sentence or caress to bestow; he followed
+her about in a curious, shadow-like way, with such a strain
+on his heart as made him many a time lift his hand to it, as
+if to check physical pain. For her, she was as one who had
+found a beloved master, able and willing to lighten all her
+burdens; a physician, whose slightest touch brought balm
+and healing to every aching wound. And so these two
+when the time came, spite of the absence of friends who
+should have been there, spite of warnings and denunciations
+and evil prophecies, stood up and said to those who
+listened what their hearts had long before confessed, that
+they were one for time and eternity; then, hand in hand,
+went out into the world.</p>
+
+<p>For the present it was a pleasant enough world to
+them. Surrey had a lovely little place on the Hudson to
+which he would carry her, and pleased himself by fitting it
+up with every convenience and beauty that taste could
+devise and wealth supply.</p>
+
+<p>How happy they were there! To be sure, nobody came
+to see them, but then they wished to see nobody; so every
+one was well satisfied. The delicious lovers' life of two
+years before was renewed, but with how much richer and
+deeper delights and blissfulness! They galloped on many a
+pleasant morning across miles and miles of country, down
+rocky slopes, and through wild and romantic glens. They
+drove lazily, on summer noons, through leafy fastnesses and
+cool forest paths; or sat idly by some little stream on the
+fresh, green moss, with a line dancing on the crystal water,
+amusing themselves by the fiction that it was fishing upon
+which they were intent, and not the dear delight of
+watching one another's faces reflected from the placid
+stream. They spent hours at home, reading bits of poems,
+or singing scraps of love-songs, talking a little, and then
+falling away into silence; or she sat perched on his knee or
+the elbow of his chair, smoothing his sunny hair, stroking
+his long, silky mustache, or looking into his answering
+eyes, till the world lapsed quite away from them, and they
+thought themselves in heaven.</p>
+
+<p>An idle, happy time! a time to make a worker sigh only
+to behold, and a Benthamite lift his hands in deprecation and
+despair. A time which would not last, because it could not,
+any more than apple-blossoms and May flowers, but which
+was sweet and fragrant past all describing while it endured.</p>
+
+<p>Some <i>kindly</i> disposed person sent Surrey a city paper
+with an item marked in such wise as to make him understand
+its unpleasant import without the reading. &quot;Come,&quot;
+he said, &quot;we will have none of this; this owl does not
+belong to our sunshine,&quot;&mdash;and so destroyed and forgot it.
+Others, however, saw that which he scorned to read. He
+had not been into the city since he called at his father's
+house, and walked into the reception room of his aunt,
+and been refused interview or speech at either place. &quot;Very
+well,&quot; he thought, &quot;I will go from this painful inhospitality
+and coldness to my Paradise&quot;; and he went, and remained.</p>
+
+<p>The only letter he wrote was to his old friend and
+favorite cousin, Tom Russell,&mdash;who was away somewhere
+in the far South, and from whom he had not heard for
+many a day,&mdash;and hoped that he, at least, would not disappoint
+him; would not disappoint the hearty trust he had in
+his breadth of nature and manly sensibility.</p>
+
+<p>And so, with clouds doubtless in the sky, but which
+they did not see,&mdash;the sun shone so bright for them; and
+some discords in the minor keys which they did not
+heed,&mdash;the major music was so sweet and intoxicating,&mdash;the
+brief, glad hours wore away, and the time for parting,
+with hasty steps, had almost reached and faced them.
+Meanwhile, what was occurring to others, in other scenes
+and among other surroundings?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>There are some deeds so grand<br />
+That their mighty doers stand<br />
+Ennobled, in a moment, more than kings.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+BOKER<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>It was towards the evening of a blazing July day on
+Morris Island. The mail had just come in and been distributed.
+Jim, with some papers and a precious missive from
+Sallie in one hand, his supper in the other, betook himself
+to a cool spot by the river,&mdash;if, indeed, any spot could be
+called cool in that fiery sand,&mdash;and proceeded to devour
+the letter with wonderful avidity while the &quot;grub,&quot; properly
+enough, stood unnoticed and uncared for. Presently he
+stopped, rubbed his eyes, and re-read a paragraph in the
+epistle before him, then re-rubbed, and read it again; and
+then, laying it down, gave utterance to a long whistle,
+expressive of unbounded astonishment, if not incredulity.</p>
+
+<p>The whistle was answered by its counterpart, and Jim,
+looking up, beheld his captain,&mdash;Coolidge by name,&mdash;a
+fast, bright New York boy, standing at a little distance, and
+staring with amazed eyes at a paper he held in his hands.
+Glancing from this to Jim, encountering his look, he burst
+out laughing and came towards him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Helloa, Given!&quot; he called: Jim was a favorite with
+him, as indeed with pretty much every one with whom he
+came in contact, officers and men,&mdash;&quot;you, too, seem put
+out. I wonder if you've read anything as queer as that,&quot;
+handing him the paper and striking his finger down on an
+item; &quot;read it.&quot; Jim read:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;MISCEGENATION. DISGRACEFUL FREAK IN HIGH LIFE.
+FRUIT OF AN ABOLITION WAR.&mdash;We are credibly informed
+that a young man belonging to one of the first families in
+the city, Mr. W.A.S.,&mdash;we spare his name for the sake of
+his relatives,&mdash;who has been engaged since its outset in this
+fratricidal war, has just given evidence of its legitimate
+effect by taking to his bosom a nigger wench as <i>his wife</i>. Of
+course he is disowned by his family, and spurned by his
+friends, even radical fanaticism not being yet ready for such
+a dose as this. However&mdash;&quot; Jim did not finish the homily
+of which this was the presage, but, throwing the paper on
+the ground, indignantly drove his heel through it, tearing
+and soiling it, and then viciously kicked it into the river.</p>
+
+<p>Said the Captain when this operation was completed,
+having watched it with curious eyes, &quot;Well, my man, are
+you aware of the fact that that is <i>my</i> paper?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't care if it is. What in thunder did you bring the
+damned Copperhead sheet to me for, if you didn't want it
+smashed? Ain't you ashamed of yourself having such a
+thing round? How'd you feel if you were picked up dead
+by a reb, with that stuff in your pocket? Say now!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Coolidge laughed,&mdash;he was always ready to laugh: that
+was probably why the men liked him so well, and stood in
+awe of him not a bit. &quot;Feel? horridly, of course. Bad
+enough, being dead, to yet speak, and tell 'em that paper
+didn't represent my politics: 'd that do?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Jim shook his head dubiously.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What are you making such a devil of a row for, I'd
+like to know? it's too hot to get excited. 'Tain't likely you
+know anything about Willie Surrey.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O ho! it is Mr. Will, then, is it? Know him,&mdash;don't I,
+though? Like a book. Known him ever since he was knee-height
+of a grasshopper. I'd like to have that fellow&quot;&mdash;shaking
+his fist toward the floating paper&mdash;&quot;within arm's
+reach. Wouldn't I pummel him some? O no, of course
+not,&mdash;not at all. Only, if he wants a sound skin, I'd advise
+him, as a friend, to be scarce when I'm round, because it'd
+very likely be damaged.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You think it's all a Copperhead lie, then! I should have
+thought so, at first, only I know Surrey's capable of doing
+any Quixotic thing if he once gets his mind fixed on it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know what I know,&quot; Jim answered, slowly folding
+and unfolding Sallie's letter, which he still held in his hand.
+&quot;I know all about that young lady he's been marrying.
+She's young, and she's handsome&mdash;handsome as a picture&mdash;and
+rich, and as good as an angel; that's about what
+she is, if Sallie Howard and I know B from a bull's foot.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who is Sallie Howard?&quot; queried the Captain.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She? O,&quot;&mdash;very red in the face,&mdash;&quot;she's a friend of
+mine, and she's Miss Ercildoune's seamstress.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ercildoune? good name! Is she the <i>lady</i> upon whom
+Surrey has been bestowing his&mdash;?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, she is; and here's her photograph. Sallie begged it
+of her, and sent it to me, once after she had done a kind
+thing by both of us. Looks like a 'nigger wench,' don't she?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The Captain seized the picture, and, having once fastened
+his eyes upon it, seemed incapable of removing
+them. &quot;This? this her?&quot; he cried. &quot;Great C&aelig;sar! I should
+think Surrey would have the fellow out at twenty paces in
+no time. Heavens, what a beauty!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Jim grinned sardonically: &quot;She is rather pretty, now,&mdash;ain't
+she?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pretty! ugh, what an expression! pretty, indeed! I
+never saw anything so beautiful. But what a sad face it is!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sad! well, 'tain't much wonder. I guess her life's been
+sad enough, in spite of her youth, and her beauty, and her
+riches, and all the rest.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, how should that be?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Suppose you take another squint at that face.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;See anything peculiar about it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nothing except its beauty.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not about the eyes?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No,&mdash;only I believe it is they that make the face so
+sorrowful.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very like. You generally see just such big mournful-looking
+eyes in the faces of people that are called&mdash;octoroons.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What?&quot; cried the Captain, dropping the picture in his
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Just so,&quot; Jim answered, picking it up and dusting it
+carefully before restoring it to its place in his pocket-book.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So, then, it is part true, after all.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;True!&quot; exclaimed Jim, angrily,&mdash;&quot;don't make an ass of
+yourself, Captain.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, Given, didn't you say yourself that she was an
+octoroon, or some such thing?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Suppose I did,&mdash;what then?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I should say, then, that Surrey has disgraced himself
+forever. He has not only outraged his family and his
+friends, and scandalized society, but he has run against
+nature itself. It's very plain God Almighty never intended
+the two races to come together.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O, he didn't, hey? Had a special despatch from him,
+that you know all about it? I've heard just such talk before
+from people who seemed to be pretty well posted about
+his intentions,&mdash;in this particular matter,&mdash;though I generally
+noticed they weren't chaps who were very intimate
+with him in any other way.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The Captain laughed. &quot;Thank you, Jim, for the compliment;
+but come, you aren't going to say that nature
+hasn't placed a barrier between these people and us? an
+instinct that repels an Anglo-Saxon from a negro always
+and everywhere?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ho, ho! that's good! why, Captain, if you keep on, you'll
+make me talk myself into a regular abolitionist. Instinct, hey?
+I'd like to know, then, where all the mulattoes, and the
+quadroons, and the octoroons come from,&mdash;the yellow-skins
+and brown-skins and skins so nigh white you can't tell 'em
+with your spectacles on! The darkies must have bleached out
+amazingly here in America, for you'd have to hunt with a long
+pole and a telescope to boot to find a straight-out black one
+anywhere round,&mdash;leastwise that's my observation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That was slavery.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes 'twas,&mdash;and then the damned rascals talk about
+the amalgamationists, and all that, up North. 'Twan't the
+abolitionists; 'twas the slaveholders and their friends that
+made a race of half-breeds all over the country; but, slavery
+or no slavery, they showed nature hadn't put any barriers
+between them,&mdash;and it seems to me an enough sight
+decenter and more respectable plan to marry fair and
+square than to sell your own children and the mother that
+bore them. Come, now, ain't it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, yes, if you come to that, I suppose it is!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You <i>suppose</i> it is! See here,&mdash;I've found out something
+since I've been down here, and have had time to think;
+'tain't the living together that troubles squeamish stomachs;
+it's the marrying. That's what's the matter!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Just about!&quot; assented the Captain, with an amused
+look, &quot;and here's a case in point. Surrey ought to have
+been shot for marrying one of that degraded race.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bah! he married one of his own race, if I know how
+to calculate.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There, Jim, don't be a fool! If she's got any negro
+blood in her veins she's a nigger, and all your talk won't
+make her anything else.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I say, Captain, I've heard that some of your ancestors
+were Indians: is that so?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes: my great-grandmother was an Indian chief's
+daughter,&mdash;so they say; and you might as well claim royalty
+when you have the chance.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bless me! your great-grandmother, eh? Come, now,
+what do you call yourself,&mdash;an Injun?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I don't. I call myself an Anglo-Saxon.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What, not call yourself an Injun,&mdash;when your great-grandmother
+was one? Here's a pretty go!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nonsense! 'tisn't likely that filtered Indian blood can
+take precedence and mastery of all the Anglo-Saxon material
+it's run through since then.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hurray! now you've said it. Lookee here, Captain.
+You say the Anglo-Saxon's the master race of the world.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course I do.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course you do,&mdash;being a sensible fellow. So do I;
+and you say the negro blood is mighty poor stuff, and the
+race a long way behind ours.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course, again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now, Captain, just take a sober squint at your own
+logic. You back Anglo-Saxon against the field; very well!
+here's Miss Ercildoune, we'll say, one eighth negro, seven
+eighths Anglo-Saxon. You make that one eighth stronger
+than all the other seven eighths: you make that little bit of
+negro master of all the lot of Anglo-Saxon. Now I have
+such a good opinion of my own race that if it were t'other
+way about, I'd think the one eighth Saxon strong enough
+to beat the seven eighths nigger. That's sound, isn't it? consequently,
+I call anybody that's got any mixture at all, and
+that knows anything, and keeps a clean face,&mdash;and ain't a
+rebel, nor yet a Copperhead,&mdash;I call him, if it's a him, and
+her, if it's a she, one of us. And I mean to say to any such
+from henceforth, 'Here's your chance,&mdash;go in, and win, if
+you can,&mdash;and anybody be damn'd that stops you!'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Blow away, Jim,&quot; laughed the Captain, &quot;I like to hear
+you; and it's good talk if you don't mean it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'll be blamed if I don't.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come, you're talking now,&mdash;you're saying a lot more
+than you'll live up to,&mdash;you know that as well as I. People
+always do when they're gassing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, blow or no blow, it's truth, whether I live up to
+it or not.&quot; And he, evidently with not all the steam worked
+off, began to gather sticks and build a fire to fry his bit of
+pork and warm the cold coffee.</p>
+
+<p>Just then they heard the plash of oars keeping time to
+the cadence of a plantation hymn, which came floating
+solemn and clear through the night:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;My brudder sittin' on de tree ob life,<br />
+An' he yearde when Jordan roll.<br />
+Roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Roll Jordan, roll!&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>They both paused to listen as the refrain was again and
+again repeated.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There's nigger for you,&quot; broke out Jim, &quot;what'n
+thunder'd they mean by such gibberish as that?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The Captain laughed. &quot;Come, Given, don't quarrel
+with what's above your comprehension. Doubtless there's
+a spiritual meaning hidden away somewhere, which your
+unsanctified ears can't interpret.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Spiritual fiddlestick!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Worse and worse! what a heathen you're demonstrating
+yourself! Violins are no part of the heavenly
+chorus.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Much you know about it! Hark,&mdash;they're at it again&quot;;
+and again the voices and break of oars came through the
+night:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;O march, de angel march! O march, de angel march!<br />
+O my soul arise in heaven, Lord, for to yearde when Jordan roll!<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, I confess that's a little bit above my comprehension,&mdash;that
+is. Spiritual or something else. Lazy vermin!
+they'll paddle round in them boats, or lie about in the sun,
+and hoot all day and all night about 'de good Lord' and 'de
+day ob jubilee,'&mdash;and think God Almighty is going to
+interfere in their special behalf, and do big things for them
+generally.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's a fact; they do all seem to be waiting for something.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, I reckon they needn't wait any longer. The day
+of miracles is gone by, for such as them, anyway. They ain't
+worth the salt that feeds them, so far as I can discover.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Through the wash of the waters they could hear from
+the voices, as they sang, that their possessors were evidently
+drawing nearer.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sense or not,&quot; said the Captain, &quot;I never listen to them
+without a queer feeling. What they sing is generally
+ridiculous enough, but their voices are the most pathetic
+things in the world.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Here the hymn stopped; a boat was pulled up, and
+presently they saw two men coming from the sands and
+into the light of their fire,&mdash;ragged, dirty; one shabby old
+garment&mdash;a pair of tow pantaloons&mdash;on each; bareheaded,
+barefooted,&mdash;great, clumsy feet, stupid and heavy-looking
+heads; slouching walk, stooping shoulders; something eager
+yet deprecating in their black faces.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Look at 'em, Captain; now you just take a fair look at
+'em; and then say that Mr. Surrey's wife belongs to the
+same family,&mdash;own kith and kin,&mdash;you ca-a-n't do it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Faugh! for heaven's sake, shut up! of course, when it
+comes to this, I can't say anything of the kind.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Nuff said. You see, I believe in Mr. Surrey, and
+what's more, I believe in Miss Ercildoune,&mdash;have reason
+to; and when I hear anybody mixing her up with these
+onry, good-for-nothing niggers, it's more'n I can stand, so
+don't let's have any more of it&quot;; and turning with an air
+which said that subject was ended, Jim took up his forgotten
+coffee, pulled apart some brands and put the big tin
+cup on the coals, and then bent over it absorbed, sniffing
+the savory steam which presently came up from it. Meanwhile
+the two men were skulking about among the trees,
+watching, yet not coming near,&mdash;&quot;at their usual work of
+waiting,&quot; as the Captain said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Proper enough, too, let 'em wait. Waiting's their business.
+Now,&quot; taking off his tin and looking towards them,
+&quot;what d'ye s'pose those anemiles want? Pity the boat
+hadn't tipped over before they got here. Camp's overrun
+now with just such scoots. Here, you!&quot; he called.</p>
+
+<p>The men came near. &quot;Where'd you come from?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>One of them pointed back to the boat, seen dimly on
+the sand.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Was that you howling a while ago, 'Roll Jordan,' or
+something?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, massa.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And where did you come from?&mdash;no, you needn't
+look back there again,&mdash;I mean, where did you and the
+boat too come from?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come from Mass' George Wingate's place, massa.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Far from here?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Big way, massa.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What brought you here? what did you come for?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If you please, massa, 'cause the Linkum sojers was
+yere, an' de big guns, an' we yearde dat all our people's free
+when dey gets yere.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Free! what'll such fellows as you do with freedom, hey?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The two looked at their interrogator, then at one
+another, opened their mouths as to speak, and shut them
+hopelessly,&mdash;unable to put into words that which was
+struggling in their darkened brains,&mdash;and then with a
+laugh, a laugh that sounded woefully like a sob, answered,
+&quot;Dunno, massa.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What fools!&quot; cried Jim, angrily; but the Captain, who
+was watching them keenly, thought of a line he had once
+read, &quot;There is a laughter sadder than tears.&quot; &quot;True
+enough,&mdash;poor devils!&quot; he added to himself.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Are you hungry?&quot; Jim proceeded.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hope massa don't think we's come yere for to git
+suthin' to eat,&quot; said the smaller of the two, a little, thin,
+haggard-looking fellow,&mdash;&quot;we's no beggars. Some ob de
+darkies is, but we's not dem kind,&mdash;Jim an' me,&mdash;we's
+willin' to work, ain't we, Jim?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Jim!&quot; soliloquized Given,&mdash;&quot;my name, hey? we'll take
+a squint at this fellow.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The squint showed two impoverished-looking
+wretches, with a starved look in their eyes, which he did
+not comprehend, and a starved look in their faces and
+forms, which he did.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come, now, are you hungry?&quot; he queried once more.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If ye please, massa,&quot; began the little one who was
+spokesman,&mdash;'little folks always are gas-bags,' Jim was fond
+of saying from his six feet of height,&mdash;&quot;if ye please, massa,
+we's had nothin' to eat but berries an' roots an' sich like
+truck for long while.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, why by the devil haven't you had something
+else then? what've you been doing with yourselves for
+'long while'? what d'ye mean, coming here starved to
+death, making a fellow sick to look at you? Hold your gab,
+and eat up that pork,&quot; pushing over his tin plate, &quot;'n' that
+bread,&quot; sending it after, &quot;'n' that hard tack,&mdash;'tain't very
+good, but it's better'n roots, I reckon, or berries either,&mdash;'n'
+gobble up that coffee, double-quick, mind; and don't
+you open your heads to talk till the grub's gone, slick and
+clean. Ugh!&quot; he said to the Captain,&mdash;&quot;sight o' them fellows
+just took my appetite away; couldn't eat to save my
+soul; lucky they came to devour the rations; pity to throw
+them away.&quot; The Captain smiled,&mdash;he knew Jim. &quot;Poor
+cusses!&quot; he added presently, &quot;eat like cannibals, don't they?
+hope they enjoy it. Had enough?&quot; seeing they had
+devoured everything put before them.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thankee, massa. Yes, massa. Bery kind, massa. Had
+quite 'nuff.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, now, you, sir!&quot; looking at the little one,&mdash;&quot;by
+the way, what's your name?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Bijah, if ye please, massa.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Bijah? Abijah, hey? well, I don't please; however, it's
+none of my name. Well, 'Bijah, how came you two to be
+looking like a couple of animated skeletons? that's the next
+question.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, massa.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I say, how came you to be starved? Hai'n't they
+nothing but roots and berries up your way? Mass' George
+Wingate must have a jolly time, feasting, in that case.
+Come, what's your story? Out with the whole pack of lies
+at once.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hope massa thinks we wouldn't tell nuffin but de
+truf,&quot; said Jim, who had not before spoken save to say,
+&quot;Thankee,&quot;&mdash;&quot;cause if he don't bleeve us, ain't no use in
+talkin'.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You shut up! I ain't conversing with you, rawbones!
+Speak when you're spoken to! Come, 'Bijah, fire away.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bery good, massa. Ye see I'se Mass' George Wingate's
+boy. Mass' George he lives in de back country, good long
+way from de coast,&mdash;over a hundred miles, Jim calklates,&mdash;an'
+Jim's smart at calklating; well, Mass' George he's not
+berry good to his people; never was, an' he's been wuss'n
+ever since the Linkum sojers cum round his way, 'cause it's
+made feed scurce ye see, an' a lot of de boys dey tuck to
+runnin' away,&mdash;so what wid one ting an' anoder, his temper
+got spiled, an' he was mighty hard on us all de time.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;At las' I got tired of bein' cuffed an' knocked round,
+an' den I yearde dat if our people, any of dem, got to de
+Fedral lines dey was free, so I said, 'Cum, 'Bijah,&mdash;freedom's
+wuth tryin' for'; an' one dark night I did up some
+hoe-cake an' a piece of pork an' started. I trabbeled hard's
+I could all night,&mdash;'bout fifteen mile, I reckon,&mdash;an' den as
+'twas gittin' toward mornin' I hid away in a swamp. Ye see
+I felt drefful bad, for I could year way off, but plain enuff,
+de bayin' of de hounds, an' I knew dat de men an' de guns
+an' de dogs was all after me; but de day passed an' dey
+didn't come. So de next night I started off agen, an' run
+an' walked hard all night, an' towards mornin' I went up to
+a little house standen off from de road, thinking it was a
+nigger house, an' jest as I got up to it out walked a white
+woman scarin' me awfully, an' de fust ting she axed me was
+what I wanted.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tight slave!&quot; interrupted Jim,&mdash;&quot;what d'ye do then?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, massa, ye see I saw mighty quick I was in for a
+lie anyhow, so I said, 'Is massa at home?' 'Yes,' says she,&mdash;an'
+sure nuff, he cum right out. 'Hello, nigger!' he said
+when he seed me, 'whar you cum from? so I tells him from
+Pocotaligo, an' before he could ax any more queshuns, I
+went on an' tole him we cotched fifty Yankees down dere
+yesterday, an' massa he was so tickled dat he let me go to
+Barnwells to see my family, an' den I said I'd got off de
+track an' was dead beat an' drefful hungry, an' would he
+please to sell me suthin to eat. At dat de woman streaked
+right into de house, an' got me some bread an' meat, an'
+tole me to eat it up an' not talk about payin,'&mdash;'we don't
+charge good, faithful niggers nothin',' she said,&mdash;so I
+thanked her an' eat it all up, an' den, when de man had tole
+me how to go, I went right long till I got out ob sight ob
+de little house, an' den I got into de woods, an' turned
+right round de oder way an' made tracks fast as I could in
+dat direcshun.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ho! ho! you're about what I call a 'cute nigger,&quot;
+laughed Jim. &quot;Come, go on,&mdash;this gets interesting.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, directly I yearde de dogs. Dere was a pond little
+way off; so I tuck to it, an' waded out till I could just touch
+my toes an' keep my nose above water so's to breathe.
+Presently dey all cum down, an' I yearde Mass' George say,
+'I'll hunt dat nigger till I find him if takes a month. I'se
+goin' to make a zample of him,'&mdash;so I shook some at dat,
+for I know'd what Mass' George's zamples was. Arter while
+one ob de men says, 'He ain't yere,&mdash;he'd shown hisself
+before dis, if he was,' an' I spose I would, for I was pretty
+nearly choked, only I said to myself when I went in, 'I'll
+go to de bottom before I'll come up to be tuck,' so I jest
+held on by my toes an' waited.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I didn't dare to cum out when dey rode away to try a
+new scent, an' when I did I jest skulked round de edge ob
+de pond, ready to take to it agen if I yearde dem, an' when
+night cum I started off an' run an' walked agen hard's I
+could, an' den at day-dawn I tuck to anoder pond, an'
+went on a log dat was stickin' in de water, and broke down
+some rushes an' bushes enuf to lie down on an' cover me
+up, an' den I slept all day, for I was drefful tired an' most
+starved too. Next evenin' when it got dark, I went on
+agen, an' trabblin through de woods I seed a little light, an'
+sartin dis time dat it was a darkey's cabin, I made for it, an'
+it was. It was his'n,&quot;&mdash;pointing to the big fellow who stood
+beside him, and who nodded his head in assent.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I had a palaver before he'd let me in, but when I was
+in I seed what de matter was. He had a sojer dere, a Linkum
+sojer, bad wounded, what he'd found in de woods,&mdash;he
+was a runaway hisself, ye see, like me,&mdash;an' he'd tuck him
+to dis ole cabin an'd been nussin him on for good while.
+When I seed dat I felt drefful bad, for I knowed dey was a
+huntin for me yet, an' I tought if de dogs got on de trail
+dey'd get to dis cabin, sure: an' den dey'd both be tuck. So
+I up an' tole dem, an' de sojer he says, 'Come, Jim, you've
+done quite enuff fur me, my boy. If you're in danger now,
+be off with you fast as you can,&mdash;an' God reward you, for
+I never can, for all you've done for me.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'No,' says Jim, 'Capen, ye needn't talk in dat way, for
+I'se not goin to budge widout you. You got wounded fur
+me an' my people, an' now I'll stick by you an' face any
+thing fur you if it's Death hisself!' That's just what Jim said;
+an' de sojer he put his hand up to his face, an' I seed it
+tremble bad,&mdash;he was weak, you see,&mdash;an' some big tears
+cum out troo his fingers onto de back ob it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Den Jim says, 'Dis isn't a safe place for any on us, an'
+we'll have to take to our heels agen, an' so de sooner we's
+off de better.' So he did up some vittels,&mdash;all he had dere,&mdash;an'
+gave 'em to me to tote,&mdash;an' den before de Capen
+could sneeze he had him up on his back, an' we was off.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was pretty hard work I kin tell you, strong as Jim
+was, an' we'd have to stop an' rest putty ofen; an' den, Jim
+an' I, we'd tote him atween us on some boughs; an' den we
+had to lie by, some days, all day,&mdash;an' we trabbled putty
+slow, cause we'd lost our bearing an' was in a secesh
+country, we knowed,&mdash;an' we had nudin but berries an'
+sich to eat, an' got nigh starved.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One night we cum onto half a dozen fellows skulkin'
+in de woods, an' at fust dey made fight, but d'rectly dey
+know'd we was friends, fur dey was some more Linkum
+sojers, an' dey'd lost dere way, or ruther, dey know'd where
+dey was, but dey didn't know how to git way from dere.
+Dey was 'scaped pris'ners, dey told us; when I yearde
+where 'twas I know'd de way to de coast, an' said I'd show
+'em de way if dey'd cum long wid us, so dey did; an' we
+got 'long all right till we got to de ribber up by Mass'
+Rhett's place.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, I know where it is,&quot; said the Captain.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Den what to do was de puzzle. De country was all full
+ob secesh pickets, an' dere was de ribber, an' we had no
+boat,&mdash;so Jim, he says, 'I know what to do; fust I'll hide
+you yere,' an' he did all safe in de woods; 'an' den I'll git ye
+suthin to eat from de niggers round,' an' he did dat too, do
+he couldn't git much, for fear he'd be seen; an' den we, he
+and I, made some ropes out ob de tall grass like dat we'd
+ofen made fur mats, an' tied dem together wid some oder
+grass, an' stuck a board in, an' den made fur de Yankee
+camp, an' yere we is.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; said the black man Jim, here,&mdash;breaking
+silence,&mdash;&quot;we'll show you de way back if you kin go up in
+a boat dey can rest in, fur dey's most all clean done out, an'
+de capen's wound is awful bad yit.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This captain,&mdash;what's his name?&quot; inquired Coolidge.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;His name is here,&quot; said Jim, carefully drawing forth a
+paper from his rags,&mdash;&quot;he has on dis some figgers an' a map
+of de country he took before he got wounded, an' some
+words he writ wid a bit of burnt stick just before we cum
+away,&mdash;an' he giv it to me, an' tole me to bring it to camp,
+fur fear something might happen to him while we was
+away.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My God!&quot; cried Coolidge when he had opened the
+paper, and with hasty eyes scanned its contents, &quot;it's Tom
+Russell; I know him well. This must be sent up to head-quarters,
+and I'll get an order, and a boat, and some men,
+to go for them at once.&quot; All of which was promptly done.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;See here! I speak to be one of the fellows what goes,&quot;
+Jim emphatically announced.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All right. I reckon we'll both go, Given, if the General
+will let us,&mdash;and I think he will,&quot;&mdash;which was a safe
+guess and a true one. The boat was soon ready and
+manned. 'Bijah, too weak to pull an oar, was left behind;
+and Jim, really not fit to do aught save guide them, still
+insisted on taking his share of work. They found the place
+at last, and the men; and taking them on board,&mdash;Russell
+having to be moved slowly and carefully,&mdash;they began to
+pull for home.</p>
+
+<p>The tide was going out, and the river low: that, with
+the heavy laden boat, made their progress lingering; a fact
+which distressed them all, as they knew the night to be
+almost spent, and that the shores were so lined with batteries,
+open and masked, and the country about so scoured
+by rebels, as to make it almost sure death to them if they
+were not beyond the lines before the morning broke.</p>
+
+<p>The water was steadily and perceptibly ebbing,&mdash;the
+rowing growing more and more insecure,&mdash;the danger
+becoming imminent.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ease her off, there! ease her off!&quot; cried the Captain,&mdash;as
+a harsh, gravelly sound smote on his ear, and at the same
+moment a shot whizzed past them, showing that they were
+discovered,&mdash;&quot;ease her off, there! or we're stuck!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The warning came too late,&mdash;indeed, could not have
+been obeyed, had it come earlier. The boat struck; her
+bottom grating hard on the wet sand.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Great God! she's on a bar,&quot; cried Coolidge, &quot;and the
+tide's running out, fast.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, and them damned rebs are safe enough from <i>our</i>
+fire,&quot; said one of the men.</p>
+
+<p>A few scattering shot fell about them.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They're going to make their mark on us, anyway,&quot; put
+in another.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And we can't send 'em anything in return, blast 'em!&quot;
+growled a third.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's the worst of it,&quot; broke out a fourth, &quot;to be shot
+at like a rat in a hole.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>All said in a breath, and the balls by this time falling
+thick and fast,&mdash;a fiery, awful rain of death. The men were
+no cowards, and the captain was brave enough; but what
+could they do? To stand up was but to make figure-heads
+at which the concealed enemy could fire with ghastly certainty;
+to fire in return was to waste their ammunition in
+the air. The men flung themselves face foremost on the
+deck, silent and watchful.</p>
+
+<p>Through it all Jim had been sitting crouched over his
+oar. He, unarmed, could not have fought had the chance
+offered; breaking out, once and again, into the solemn-sounding
+chant which he had been singing when he came
+up in his boat the evening before:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;O my soul arise in heaven, Lord, for to yearde when<br />
+Jordan roll,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll,&quot;&mdash;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>the words falling in with the sound of the water as it lapsed
+from them.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Stop that infernal noise, will you?&quot; cried one of the
+men, impatiently. The noise stopped.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hush, Harry,&mdash;don't swear!&quot; expostulated another,
+beside whom was lying a man mortally wounded. &quot;This is
+awful! 'tain't like going in fair and square, on your chance.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's so,&mdash;it's enough to make a fellow pray,&quot; was the
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>Here Russell, putting up his hand, took hold of Jim's
+brawny black one with a gesture gentle as a woman's. It
+hurt him to hear his faithful friend even spoken to harshly.
+All this, while the hideous shower of death was dropping
+about them; the water was ebbing, ebbing,&mdash;falling and
+running out fast to sea, leaving them higher and drier on
+the sands; the gray dawn was steadily brightening into day.</p>
+
+<p>At this fearful pass a sublime scene was enacted. &quot;Sirs!&quot;
+said a voice,&mdash;it was Jim's voice, and in it sounded something
+so earnest and strange, that the men involuntarily
+turned their heads to look at him. Then this man stood
+up,&mdash;a black man,&mdash;a little while before a slave,&mdash;the great
+muscles swollen and gnarled with unpaid toil, the marks of
+the lash and the branding-iron yet plain upon his person,
+the shadows of a lifetime of wrongs and sufferings
+looking out of his eyes. &quot;Sirs!&quot; he said, simply, &quot;somebody's
+got to die to get us out of dis, and it may as well be me,&quot;&mdash;plunged
+overboard, put his toil-hardened shoulders to the
+boat; a struggle, a gasp, a mighty wrench,&mdash;pushed it off
+clear; then fell, face foremost, pierced by a dozen bullets.
+Free at last!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>Ye died to live.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+BOKER<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>The next day Jim was recounting this scene to
+some men in camp, describing it with feeling and
+earnestness, and winding up the narration by the declaration,
+&quot;and the first man that says a nigger ain't as good as a
+white man, and a damn'd sight better'n those graybacks
+over yonder, well&quot;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, suppose he does?&quot;&mdash;interrupted one of the men.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O, nothing, Billy Dodge,&mdash;only he and I'll have a few
+words to pass on the subject, that's all&quot;; doubling up his fist
+and examining the big cords and muscles on it with
+curious and well-satisfied interest.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;See here, Billy!&quot; put in one of his comrades, &quot;don't
+you go to having any argument with Jim,&mdash;he's a dabster
+with his tongue, Jim is.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, and a devil with his fist,&quot; growled a sullen-looking
+fellow.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Just so,&quot;&mdash;assented Jim,&mdash;&quot;when a blackguard's round
+to feel it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, Given, do you like the darkies well enough to
+take off your cap to them?&quot; queried a sergeant standing near.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What are you driving at now, hey?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O, not much; but you'll have to play second fiddle to
+them to-night. The General thinks they're as good as the
+rest of us, and a little bit better, and has sent over for the
+Fifty-fourth to lead the charge this evening. What have
+you got to say to that?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bull, for them! that's what I've got to say. Any objection?&quot;
+looking round him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nary objec!&quot; &quot;They deserve it!&quot; &quot;They fought like
+tigers over on James Island!&quot; &quot;I hope they'll pepper the rebs
+well!&quot;&mdash;&quot;It ought to be a free fight, and no quarter, with
+them!&quot; &quot;Yes, for they get none if they're taken!&quot; &quot;Go in,
+Fifty-fourth!&quot; These and the like exclamations broke from
+the men on all sides, with absolute heartiness and good will.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It seems to me,&quot; sneered a dapper little officer who
+had been looking and listening, &quot;that the niggers have
+plenty of advocates here.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Two or three of the men looked at Jim. &quot;You may bet
+your pile on that, Major!&quot; said he, with becoming gravity;
+&quot;we love our friends, and we hate our enemies, and it's the
+dark-complected fellows that are the first down this way.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pretty-looking set of friends!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, they ain't much to look at, that's a fact; but I
+never heard of anybody saying you was to turn a cold
+shoulder on a helper because he was homely, except,&quot;&mdash;this
+as the Major was walking away, &quot;except a secesh, or a
+fool, or one of little Mac's staff officers.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Homely? what are you gassing about?&quot; objected a
+little fellow from Massachusetts; &quot;the Fifty-fourth is as fine-looking
+a set of men as shoulder rifles anywhere in the
+army.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Jack's sensitive about the credit of his State,&quot; chaffed a
+big Ohioan. &quot;He wants to crack up these fellows, seeing
+they're his comrades. I say, Johnny, are all the white men
+down your way such little shavers as you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;For a fellow that's all legs and no brains, you talk too
+much,&quot; answered Johnny. &quot;Have any of you seen the Fifty-fourth?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I haven't.&quot; &quot;Nor I.&quot; &quot;Yes, I saw them at Port Royal.&quot;
+&quot;And I.&quot; &quot;And I.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, the Twenty-third was at Beaufort while they
+were there, and I used to go over to their camp and talk
+with them. I never saw fellows so in earnest; they seemed
+ready to die on the instant, if they could help their people,
+or walk into the slaveholders any, first. They were just full
+of it; and yet it seemed absurd to call 'em a black regiment;
+they were pretty much all colors, and some of 'em as white
+as I am.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Lord,&quot; said Jim, &quot;that's not saying much, you've got a
+smutty face.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The men laughed, Jack with the rest, as he dabbed at
+his heated, powder-stained countenance. &quot;Come,&quot; said he,
+&quot;that's no fair,&mdash;they're as white as I am, then, when I've
+just scrubbed; and some of them are first-raters, too; none
+of your rag, tag, and bobtail. There's one I remember, a
+man from Philadelphia, who walks round like a prince.
+He's a gentleman, every inch,&mdash;and he's rich,&mdash;and about
+the handsomest-looking specimen of humanity I've set
+eyes upon for an age.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Rich, is he? how do you know he's rich?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was over one night with Captain Ware, and he and
+this man got to talking about the pay for the Fifty-fourth.
+The government promised them regular pay, you see, and
+then when it got 'em refused to stick to its agreement, and
+they would take no less, so they haven't seen a dime since
+they enlisted; and it's a darned mean piece of business,
+that's my opinion of the matter, and I don't care who
+knows it,&quot; looking round belligerently.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come, Bantam, don't crow so loud,&quot; interrupted the
+big Ohioan; &quot;nobody's going to fight you on that statement;
+it's a shame, and no mistake. But what about your
+paragon?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'll tell you. The Captain was trying to convince him
+that they had better take what they could get till they got
+the whole, and that, after all, it was but a paltry difference.
+'But,' said the man, 'it's not the money, though plenty of us
+are poor enough to make that an item. It's the badge of
+disgrace, the stigma attached, the dishonor to the government.
+If it were only two cents we wouldn't submit to it,
+for the difference would be made because we are colored,
+and we're not going to help degrade our own people, not
+if we starve for it. Besides, it's our flag, and our government
+now, and we've got to defend the honor of both against
+any assailants, North or South,&mdash;whether they're Republican
+Congressmen or rebel soldiers.' The Captain looked
+puzzled at that, and asked what he meant. 'Why,' said he,
+'the United States government enlisted us as soldiers.
+Being such, we don't intend to disgrace the service by
+accepting the pay of servants.'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's the kind of talk,&quot; bawled Jim from a fence-rail
+upon which he was balancing. &quot;I'd like to have a shake of
+that fellow's paw. What's his name, d'ye know?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ercildoune.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hey?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ercildoune.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Jemime! Ercildoune,&mdash;from Philadelphia, you say?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&mdash;do you know him?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, no,&mdash;I don't exactly know him, but I think I
+know something about him. His pa's rich as a nob, if it's
+the one I mean,&quot;&mdash;and then finished sotto voce, &quot;it's Mrs.
+Surrey's brother, sure as a gun!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, he ought to be rich, if he ain't. As we, that's the
+Captain and me, were walking away, the Captain said to
+one of the officers of the Fifty-fourth who'd been listening
+to the talk, 'It's easy for that man to preach self-denial
+for a principle. He's rich, I've heard. It don't hurt
+him any; but it's rather selfish to hold some of the rest up
+to his standard; and I presume that such a man as he has no
+end of influence with them!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'As he should,' said his officer. 'Ercildoune has brains
+enough to stock a regiment, and refinement, and genius,
+and cultivation that would assure him the highest position
+in society or professional life anywhere out of America.
+He won't leave it though; for in spite of its wrongs to him
+he sees its greatness and goodness,&mdash;says that it is <i>his</i>, and
+that it is to be saved, it and all its benefits, for Americans,&mdash;no
+matter what the color of their skin,&mdash;of whom
+he is one. He sees plain enough that this war is going to
+break the slave's chain, and ultimately the stronger chain of
+prejudice that binds his people to the grindstone, and he's
+full of enthusiasm for it, accordingly; though I'm free to
+confess, the magnanimity of these colored men from the
+North who fight, on faith, for the government, is to me
+something amazing.'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Why,' said the Captain,&mdash;'why, any more from the
+North than from the South?'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why? the blacks down here can at least fight their ex-masters,
+and pay off some old scores; but for a man from the
+North who is free already, and so has nothing to gain in that
+way,&mdash;whose rights as a man and a citizen are denied,&mdash;for
+such a man to enlist and to fight, without bounty, pay,
+honor, or promotion,&mdash;without the promise of gaining
+anything whatever for himself,&mdash;condemned to a thankless
+task on the one side,&mdash;to a merciless death or even worse
+fate on the other,&mdash;facing all this because he has faith that
+the great republic will ultimately be redeemed; that some
+hands will gather in the harvest of this bloody sowing,
+though he be lying dead under it,&mdash;I tell you, the more I
+see of these men, the more I know of them, the more am
+I filled with admiration and astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now here's this one of whom we are talking, Ercildoune,
+born with a silver spoon in his mouth: instead of
+eating with it, in peace and elegance, in some European
+home, look at him here. You said something about his lack
+of self-sacrifice. He's doing 'what he is from a principle;
+and beyond that, it's no wonder the men care for him: he
+has spent a small fortune on the most needy of them since
+they enlisted,&mdash;finding out which of them have families,
+or any one dependent on them, and helping them in the
+finest and most delicate way possible. There are others like
+him here, and it's a fortunate circumstance, for there's not
+a man but would suffer, himself,&mdash;and, what's more, let his
+family suffer at home,&mdash;before he'd give up the idea for
+which they are contending now.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Well, good luck to them!' said the Captain as we
+came away; and so say I,&quot; finished Jack.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And I,&quot;&mdash;&quot;And I,&quot; responded some of the men. &quot;We
+must see this man when they come over here.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'll bet you a shilling,&quot; said Jim, pulling out a bit of
+currency, &quot;that he'll make his mark to-night.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Lend us the change, Given, and I'll take you up,&quot; said
+one of the men.</p>
+
+<p>The others laughed. &quot;He don't mean it,&quot; said Jim: which,
+indeed, he didn't. Nobody seemed inclined to run any risks
+by betting on the other side of so likely a proposition.</p>
+
+<p>This talk took place late in the afternoon, near the
+head-quarters of the commanding General; and the men
+directly scattered to prepare for the work of the evening:
+some to clean a bayonet, or furbish up a rifle; others to chat
+and laugh over the chances and to lay plans for the
+morrow,&mdash;the morrow which was for them never to dawn
+on earth; and yet others to sit down in their tents and write
+letters to the dear ones at home, making what might, they
+knew, be a final-farewell,&mdash;for the fight impending was to
+be a fierce one,&mdash;or to read a chapter in a little book carried
+from some quiet fireside, balancing accounts perchance,
+in anticipation of the call of the Great Captain to
+come up higher.</p>
+
+<p>Through the whole afternoon there had been a
+tremendous cannonading of the fort from the gunboats
+and the land forces: the smooth, regular engineer lines
+were broken, and the fresh-sodded embankments torn and
+roughened by the unceasing rain of shot and shell.</p>
+
+<p>About six o'clock there came moving up the island,
+over the burning sands and under the burning sky, a stalwart,
+splendid-appearing set of men, who looked equal to
+any daring, and capable of any heroism; men whom
+nothing could daunt and few things subdue. Now, weary,
+travel-stained, with the mire and the rain of a two days'
+tramp; weakened by the incessant strain and lack of food,
+having taken nothing for forty-eight hours save some
+crackers and cold coffee; with gaps in their ranks made by
+the death of comrades who had fallen in battle but a little
+time before,&mdash;under all these disadvantages, it was plain to
+be seen of what stuff these men were made, and for what
+work they were ready.</p>
+
+<p>As this regiment, the famous Fifty-fourth, came up the
+island to take its place at the head of the storming party in
+the assault on Wagner, it was cheered from all sides by the
+white soldiers, who recognized and honored the heroism
+which it had already shown, and of which it was soon to
+give such new and sublime proof.</p>
+
+<p>The evening, or rather the afternoon, was a lurid and
+sultry one. Great masses of clouds, heavy and black, were
+piled in the western sky, fringed here and there by an
+angry red, and torn by vivid streams of lightning. Not a
+breath of wind shook the leaves or stirred the high, rank
+grass by the water-side; a portentous and awful stillness
+filled the air,&mdash;the stillness felt by nature before a devastating
+storm. Quiet, with the like awful and portentous
+calm, the black regiment, headed by its young, fair-haired,
+knightly colonel, marched to its destined place and action.</p>
+
+<p>When within about six hundred yards of the fort it was
+halted at the head of the regiments already stationed, and
+the line of battle formed. The prospect was such as might
+daunt the courage of old and well-tried veterans, but these
+soldiers of a few weeks seemed but impatient to take the
+odds, and to make light of impossibilities. A slightly rising
+ground, raked by a murderous fire, to within a little distance
+of the battery; a ditch holding three feet of water; a
+straight lift of parapet, thirty feet high; an impregnable
+position, held by a desperate and invincible foe.</p>
+
+<p>Here the men were addressed in a few brief and
+burning words by their heroic commander. Here they
+were besought to glorify their whole race by the lustre of
+their deeds; here their faces shone with a look which said,
+&quot;Though men, we are ready to do deeds, to achieve triumphs,
+worthy the gods!&quot; here the word of command was
+given:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We are ordered and expected to take Battery Wagner
+at the point of the bayonet. Are you ready?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ay, ay, sir! ready!&quot; was the answer.</p>
+
+<p>And the order went pealing down the line, &quot;Ready!
+Close ranks! Charge bayonets! Forward! Double-quick,
+march!&quot;&mdash;and away they went, under a scattering fire, in
+one compact line till within one hundred feet of the fort,
+when the storm of death broke upon them. Every gun
+belched forth its great shot and shell; every rifle whizzed
+out its sharp-singing, death-freighted messenger. The men
+wavered not for an instant;&mdash;forward,&mdash;forward they
+went; plunged into the ditch; waded through the deep
+water, no longer of muddy hue, but stained crimson with
+their blood; and commenced to climb the parapet. The
+foremost line fell, and then the next, and the next. The
+ground was strewn with the wrecks of humanity, scattered
+prostrate, silent, where they fell,&mdash;or rolling under the
+very feet of the living comrades who swept onward to fill
+their places. On, over the piled-up mounds of dead and
+dying, of wounded and slain, to the mouth of the battery;
+seizing the guns; bayoneting the gunners at their posts;
+planting their flag and struggling around it; their leader on
+the walls, sword in hand, his blue eyes blazing, his fair face
+aflame, his clear voice calling out, &quot;Forward, my brave
+boys!&quot;&mdash;then plunging into the hell of battle before him.
+Forward it was. They followed him, gathered about him,
+gained an angle of the fort, and fought where he fell,
+around his prostrate body, over his peaceful heart,&mdash;shielding
+its dead silence by their living, pulsating ones,&mdash;till
+they, too, were stricken down; then hacked, hewn, battered,
+mangled, heroic, yet overcome, the remnant was
+beaten back.</p>
+
+<p>Ably sustained by their supporters, Anglo-African and
+Anglo-Saxon vied together to carry off the palm of
+courage and glory. All the world knows the last fought
+with heroism sublime: all the world forgets this and them
+in contemplating the deeds and the death of their compatriots.
+Said Napoleon at Austerlitz to a young Russian
+officer, overwhelmed with shame at yielding his sword,
+&quot;Young man, be consoled: those who are conquered by
+my soldiers may still have titles to glory.&quot; To say that on that
+memorable night the last were surpassed by the first is still
+to leave ample margin on which to write in glowing characters
+the record of their deeds.</p>
+
+<p>As the men were clambering up the parapet their color-sergeant
+was shot dead, the colors trailing stained and wet
+in the dust beside him. Ercildoune, who was just behind,
+sprang forward, seized the staff from his dying hand, and
+mounted with it upward. A ball struck his right arm, yet
+ere it could fall shattered by his side, his left hand caught the
+flag and carried it onward. Even in the mad sweep of assault
+and death the men around him found breath and time to
+hurrah, and those behind him pressed more gallantly forward
+to follow such a lead. He kept in his place, the colors
+flying,&mdash;though faint with loss of blood and wrung with
+agony,&mdash;up the slippery steep; up to the walls of the fort;
+on the wall itself, planting the flag where the men made
+that brief, splendid stand, and melted away like snow before
+furnace-heat. Here a bayonet thrust met him and brought
+him down, a great wound in his brave breast, but he did not
+yield; dropping to his knees, pressing his unbroken arm
+upon the gaping wound,&mdash;bracing himself against a dead
+comrade,&mdash;the colors still flew; an inspiration to the men
+about him; a defiance to the foe.</p>
+
+<p>At last when the shattered ranks fell back, sullenly and
+slowly retreating, it was seen by those who watched
+him,&mdash;men lying for three hundred rods around in every
+form of wounded suffering,&mdash;that he was painfully
+working his way downward, still holding aloft the flag,
+bent evidently on saving it, and saving it as flag had rarely,
+if ever, been saved before.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the men had crawled, some had been carried,
+some hastily caught up and helped by comrades to a sheltered
+tent out of range of the fire; a hospital tent, they called
+it, if anything could bear that name which was but a place
+where men could lie to suffer and expire, without a bandage,
+a surgeon, or even a drop of cooling water to moisten
+parched and dying lips. Among these was Jim. He had a
+small field-glass in his pocket, and forgot or ignored his pain
+in his eager interest of watching through this the progress of
+the man and the flag, and reporting accounts to his no less
+eager companions. Black soldiers and white were alike mad
+with excitement over the deed; and fear lest the colors
+which had not yet dipped should at last bite the ground.</p>
+
+<p>Now and then he paused at some impediment: it was
+where the dead and dying were piled so thickly as to
+compel him to make a detour. Now and then he rested a
+moment to press his arm tighter against his torn and open
+breast. The rain fell in such torrents, the evening shadows
+were gathering so thickly, that they could scarcely trace his
+course, long before it was ended.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly, painfully, he dragged himself onward,&mdash;step by
+step down the hill, inch by inch across the ground,&mdash;to the
+door of the hospital; and then, while dying eyes brightened,&mdash;dying
+hands and even shattered stumps were
+thrown into the air,&mdash;in brief, while dying men held back
+their souls from the eternities to cheer him,&mdash;gasped out,
+&quot;I did&mdash;but do&mdash;my duty, boys,&mdash;and the dear&mdash;old flag&mdash;never
+once&mdash;touched the ground,&quot;&mdash;and then, away from
+the reach and sight of its foes, in the midst of its defenders,
+who loved and were dying for it, the flag at last fell.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Meanwhile, other troops had gone up to the
+encounter; other regiments strove to win what these men
+had failed to gain; and through the night, and the storm,
+and the terrific reception, did their gallant endeavor&mdash;in
+vain.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The next day a flag of truce went up to beg the body
+of the heroic young chief who had so led that marvellous
+assault. It came back without him. A ditch, deep and wide,
+had been dug; his body, and those of twenty-two of his
+men found dead upon and about him, flung into it in one
+common heap and the word sent back was, &quot;We have
+buried him with his niggers.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was well done. The fair, sweet face and gallant breast
+lie peacefully enough under their stately monument of
+ebony.</p>
+
+<p>It was well done. What more fitting close of such a
+life,&mdash;what fate more welcome to him who had fought
+with them, had loved, and believed in them, had led them
+to death,&mdash;than to lie with them when they died?</p>
+
+<p>It was well done. Slavery buried these men, black and
+white, together,&mdash;black and white in a common grave. Let
+Liberty see to it, then, that black and white be raised
+together in a life better than the old.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>Spirits are not finely touched<br />
+But to fine issues.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+SHAKESPEARE<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>Surrey was to depart for his command on Monday
+night, and as there were various matters which
+demanded his attention in town ere leaving, he drove
+Francesca to the city on the preceding Sunday,&mdash;a soft
+clear summer evening, full of pleasant sights and sounds.
+They scarcely spoke as, hand in hand, they sat drinking in
+the scene whilst the old gray, for they wished no high-stepping
+prancers for this ride, jogged on the even tenor of
+his way. Above them, the blue of the sky never before
+seemed so deep and tender, while in it floated fleecy
+clouds of delicate amber, rose, and gold, like gossamer
+robes of happy spirits invisible to human eyes. The leaves
+and grass just stirred in the breeze, making a slight, musical
+murmur, and across them fell long shadows cast by the
+westering sun. A sentiment so sweet and pleasurable as to
+be tinged with pain, took possession of these young, susceptible
+souls, as the influences of the time closed about
+them. In our happiest moments, our moments of utmost
+exaltation, it is always thus:&mdash;when earth most nearly
+approaches the beatitudes of heaven, and the spirit
+stretches forward with a vain longing for the far off, which
+seems but a little way beyond; the unattained and dim,
+which for a space come near.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Darling!&quot; said Surrey softly, &quot;does it not seem easy
+now to die?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, Willie,&quot; she whispered, &quot;I feel as though it would
+be stepping over a very little stream to some new and
+beautiful shore.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Doubtless, when a pure and great soul is close to eternity,
+ministering angels draw nigh to one soon to be of their
+number, and cast something of the peace and glory of their
+presence on the spirit yet held by its cerements of clay.</p>
+
+<p>At last the ride and the evening had an end. The
+country and its dear delights were mere memories,&mdash;fresh,
+it is true, but memories still, and no longer realities,&mdash;in
+the luxurious rooms of their hotel.</p>
+
+<p>Evidently Surrey had something to say, which he hesitated
+and feared to utter. Again and again, when Francesca
+was talking of his plans and purposes, trusting and hoping
+that he might see no hard service, nor be called upon for
+any exposing duty, &quot;not yet awhile,&quot; she prayed, at least,&mdash;again
+and again he made as if to speak, and then, ere she
+could notice the movement, shook his head with a gesture
+of silence, or&mdash;she seeing it, and asking what it was he had
+to say&mdash;found ready utterance for some other thought, and
+whispered to himself, &quot;not yet; not quite yet. Let her rest
+in peace a little space longer.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>They sat talking far into the night, this last night that
+they could spend together in so long a time,&mdash;how long,
+God, with whom are hid the secrets of the future, could
+alone tell. They talked of what had passed, which was
+ended,&mdash;and of what was to come, which was not sure but
+full of hope,&mdash;but of both with a feeling that quickened
+their heart-throbs, and brought happy tears to their eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Twice or thrice a sound from some far distance, undecided,
+yet full of a solemn melody, came through the open
+window, borne to their ears on the still air of night,&mdash;something
+so undefined as not consciously to arrest their
+attention, yet still penetrating their nerves and affecting
+some fine, inner sense of feeling, for both shivered as
+though a chill wind had blown across them, and Surrey&mdash;half
+ashamed of the confession&mdash;said, &quot;I don't know what
+possesses me, but I hear dead marches as plainly as though
+I were following a soldier's funeral.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Francesca at that grew white, crept closer to his breast,
+and spread out her arms as if to defend him by that slight
+shield from some impending danger; then both laughed at
+these foolish and superstitious fancies, and went on with
+their cheerful and tender talk.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever the sound was, it grew plainer and came
+nearer; and, pausing to listen, they discovered it was a
+mighty swell of human voices and the marching of many
+feet.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A regiment going through,&quot; said they, and ran to the
+window to see if it passed their way, looking for it up the
+long street, which lay solemn and still in the moonlight.
+On either side the palace-like houses stood stately and
+dark, like giant sentinels guarding the magnificent avenue,
+from whence was banished every sight and sound of the
+busy life of day; not a noise, not a footfall, not a solitary
+soul abroad, not a wave nor a vestige of the great restless
+sea of humanity which a little space before surged through
+it, and which, in a little while to come, would rise and
+swell to its full, and then ebb, and fall, and drop away once
+more into silence and nothingness.</p>
+
+<p>Through this white stillness there came marching a
+regiment of men, without fife or drum, moving to the
+music of a refrain which lifted and fell on the quiet air. It
+was the Battle Hymn of the Republic,&mdash;and the two listeners
+presently distinguished the words,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea,<br />
+With a glory in his bosom that transfigures you and me;<br />
+As he died to make men holy, let us die to make men free,<br />
+While God is marching on.&quot;<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The effect of this; the thousand voices which sang; the
+marching of twice one thousand feet; the majesty of the
+words; the deserted street; the clear moonlight streaming
+over the men, reflected from their gleaming bayonets,
+brightening the faded blue of their uniforms, illumining
+their faces which, one and all, seemed to wear&mdash;and probably
+<i>did</i> wear&mdash;a look more solemn and earnest than that of
+common life and feeling,&mdash;the combined effect of it all was
+something indescribably impressive:&mdash;inspiring, yet solemn.</p>
+
+<p>They stood watching and listening till the pageant had
+vanished, and then turned back into their room, Francesca
+taking up the refrain and singing the line,</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;As he died to make men holy, let us die to make men free,<br />
+While God is marching on.&quot;<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Surrey's face brightened at the rapt expression of hers.
+&quot;Sing it again, dearie!&quot; he said. She sang it again. &quot;Do you
+mean it?&quot; he asked then. &quot;Can you sing it, and mean it
+with all your heart, for me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him with an expression of anxiety and
+pain. &quot;What are you asking, Willie?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He sat down; taking her upon his knee, and with the
+old fond gesture, holding her head to his heart,&mdash;&quot;I should
+have told you before, dearie, but I did not wish to throw
+any shadow on the happy days we have been spending
+together; they were few and brief enough without marring
+them; and I was certain of the effect it would have upon
+you, by your incessant anxiety for Robert.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She drew a long, gasping sigh, and started away from
+his hold: &quot;O Willie, you are not going to&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>His arm drew her back to her resting-place. &quot;I do not
+return to my command, darling. I am to raise a black
+brigade.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Freedmen?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, dearie.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O Willie,&mdash;and that act just passed!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is true; yet, after all, it is but one risk more.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One? O Willie, it is a thousand. You had that many
+chances of escape where you were; you might be wounded
+and captured a score of times, and come home safe at last;
+but this!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To go into every battle with the sentence of death
+hanging over you; to know that if you are anywhere captured,
+anyhow made prisoner, you are condemned to
+die,&mdash;O Willie, I can't bear it; I can't bear it! I shall die, or
+go mad, to carry such a thought all the time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>For answer he only held her close, with his face resting
+upon her hair, and in the stillness they could hear each
+other's heart beat.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is God's service,&quot; he said, at last.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It will end slavery and the war more effectually than
+aught else.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It will make these freedmen, wherever they fight, free
+men. It will give them and their people a sense of dignity
+and power that might otherwise take generations to
+secure.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And I. Both feeling and knowing this, who so fit to
+yield and to do for such a cause? If those who see do not
+advance, the blind will never walk.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Silence for a space again fell between them. Francesca
+moved in his arm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dearie.&quot; She looked up. &quot;I want to do no half service.
+I go into this heart and soul, but I do not wish to go alone.
+It will be so much to me to know that you are quite
+willing, and bade me go. Think what it is.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She did. For an instant all sacrifices appeared easy, all
+burdens light. She could send him out to death unfaltering.
+One of those sublime moods in which martyrdom seems
+glorious filled and possessed her. She took away her clinging
+arms from his neck, and said, &quot;Go,&mdash;whether it be for life
+or for death; whether you come back to me or go up to
+God; I am willing&mdash;glad&mdash;to yield you to such a cause.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was finished. There was nothing more to be said.
+Both had climbed the mount of sacrifice, and sat still with
+God.</p>
+
+<p>After a while the cool gray dawn stole into their room.
+The night had passed in this communion, and another day
+come.</p>
+
+<p>There were many &quot;last things&quot; which claimed Surrey's
+attention; and he, wishing to get through them early so as
+to have the afternoon and evening undisturbed with
+Francesca, plunged into a stinging bath to refresh him for
+the day, breakfasted, and was gone.</p>
+
+<p>He attended to his business, came across many an old
+acquaintance and friend, some of whom greeted him
+coldly; a few cut him dead; whilst others put out their
+hands with cordial frankness, and one or two congratulated
+him heartily upon his new condition and happiness.
+These last gave him fresh courage for the task which he
+had set himself. If friends regarded the matter thus, surely
+they&mdash;his father and mother&mdash;would relent, when he
+came to say what might be a final adieu.</p>
+
+<p>He ran up the steps, rang the bell, and, speaking a
+pleasant word to the old servant, went directly to his
+mother's room. His father had not yet gone down town;
+thus he found them together. They started at seeing him,
+and his mother, forgetting for the instant all her pride, chagrin,
+and anger, had her arms about his neck, with the cry,
+&quot;O Willie, Willie,&quot; which came from the depths of her
+heart; then seeing her husband's face, and recovering herself,
+sat down cold and still.</p>
+
+<p>It was a painful interview. He could not leave without
+seeing them once more; he longed for a loving good by;
+but after that first outburst he almost wished he had not
+forced the meeting. He did not speak of his wife, nor did
+they; but a barrier as of adamant was raised between them,
+and he felt as though congealing in the breath of an iceberg.
+At length he rose to go.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Father!&quot; he said then, &quot;perhaps you will care to know
+that I do not return to my old command, but have been
+commissioned to raise a brigade from the freedmen.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Both father and mother knew the awful peril of this
+service, and both cried, half in suffering, half in anger,
+&quot;This is your wife's work!&quot; while his father added, with a
+passionate exclamation, &quot;It is right, quite right, that you
+should identify yourself with her people. Well, go your
+way. You have made your bed; lie in it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The blood flushed into Surrey's face. He opened his
+lips, and shut them again. At last he said, &quot;Father, will you
+never forego this cruel prejudice?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Never!&quot; answered his mother, quickly. &quot;Never!&quot;
+repeated his father, with bitter emphasis. &quot;It is a feeling that
+will never die out, and ought never to die out, so long as
+any of the race remain in America. She belongs to it, that
+is enough.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Surrey urged no further; but with few words, constrained
+on their part,&mdash;though under its covering of pride
+the mother's heart was bleeding for him,&mdash;sad and earnest
+on his, the farewell was spoken, and they watched him out
+of the room. How and when would they see him again?</p>
+
+<p>There was one other call upon his time. The day was
+wearing into the afternoon, but he would not neglect it.
+This was to see his old <i>prot&eacute;g&eacute;</i>, Abram Franklin, in whom
+he had never lost interest, and for whose welfare he had
+cared, though he had not seen him in more than two years.
+He knew that Abram was ill, had been so for a long time,
+and wished to see him and speak to him a few friendly and
+cheering words,&mdash;sure, from what the boy's own hand had
+written, that this would be his last opportunity upon earth
+to so do.</p>
+
+<p>Thus he went on from his father's stately palace up
+Fifth Avenue, turned into the quiet side street, and
+knocked at the little green door. Mrs. Franklin came to
+open it, her handsome face thinner and sadder than of old.
+She caught Surrey's hand between both of hers with a
+delighted cry: &quot;Is it you, Mr. Willie? How glad I am to see
+you! How glad Abram will be! How good of you to
+come!&quot; And, holding his hand as she used when he was a
+boy, she led him up stairs to the sick-room. This room was
+even cosier than the two below; its curtains and paper
+cheerfuller; its furniture of quainter and more hospitable
+aspect; its windows letting in more light and air; everything
+clean and homely, and pleasant for weary, suffering eyes to
+look upon.</p>
+
+<p>Abram was propped up in bed, his dark, intelligent
+face worn to a shadow, fiery spots breaking through the
+tawny hue upon cheeks and lips, his eyes bright with fever.
+Surrey saw, as he came and sat beside him, that for him
+earthly sorrow and toil were almost ended.</p>
+
+<p>He had brought some fruit and flowers, and a little
+book. This last Abram, having thanked him eagerly for all,
+stretched out his hand to examine.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You see, Mr. Willie, I have not gotten over my old
+love,&quot; he said, as his fingers closed upon it. &quot;Whittier? 'In
+War-Time'? That is fine. I can read about it, if I can't do
+anything in it,&quot; and he lay for a while quietly turning over
+the pages. Mrs. Franklin had gone out to do an errand, and
+the two were alone.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you know, Mr. Willie,&quot; said Abram, putting his
+finger upon the titles of two successive poems, &quot;The
+Waiting,&quot; and &quot;The Summons,&quot; &quot;I had hard work to submit
+to this sickness a few months ago? I fought against it
+strong; do you know why?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not your special reason. What was it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I had waited so long, you see,&mdash;I, and my people,&mdash;for
+a chance. It made me quite wild to watch this big fight
+go on, and know that it was all about us, and not be
+allowed to participate; and at last when the chance came,
+and the summons, and the way was opened, I couldn't
+answer, nor go. It's not the dying I care for; I'd be willing
+to die the first battle I was in; but I want to do something
+for the cause before death comes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The book was lying open where it had fallen from his
+hand, and Surrey, glancing down at the very poem of
+which he spoke, said gently, &quot;Here is your answer,
+Franklin, better than any I can make; it ought to comfort
+you; listen, it is God's truth!</p>
+
+<p>
+'O power to do! O baffled will!<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">O prayer and action! ye are one;</span><br />
+Who may not strive may yet fulfil<br />
+The harder task of standing still,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And good but wished with God is done!'&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is so,&quot; said Abram. &quot;You act and I pray, and you act
+for me and mine. I'd like to be under you when you get
+the troops you were telling me about; but&mdash;God knows
+best.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Surrey sat gazing earnestly into space, crowded by
+emotions called up by these last words, whilst Abram lay
+watching him with admiring and loving eyes. &quot;For me and
+mine,&quot; he repeated softly, his look fastening on the blue
+sleeve, which hung, limp and empty, near his hand. This
+he put out cautiously, but drew it back at some slight
+movement from his companion; then, seeing that he was
+still absorbed, advanced it, once more, and slowly, timidly,
+gently, lifted it to his mouth, pressing his lips upon it as
+upon a shrine. &quot;For me and mine!&quot; he whispered,&mdash;&quot;for
+me and mine!&quot; tears dimming the pathetic, dying eyes.</p>
+
+<p>The peaceful quiet was broken by a tempest of awful
+sound,&mdash;groans and shrieks and yells mingled in horrible
+discord, blended with the trampling of many feet,&mdash;noises
+which seemed to their startled and excited fancies like
+those of hell itself. The next moment a door was flung
+open; and Mrs. Franklin, bruised, lame, her garments torn,
+blood flowing from a cut on her head, staggered into the
+room. &quot;O Lord! O Lord Jesus!&quot; she cried, &quot;the day of
+wrath has come!&quot; and fell, shuddering and crying, on the
+floor.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>Will the future come? It seems that we may almost ask<br />
+this question, when we see such terrible shadow.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+VICTOR HUGO<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>Here it will be necessary to consider some facts
+which, while they are rather in the domain of
+the grave recorder of historical events, than in that of the
+narrator of personal experiences, are yet essential to the
+comprehension of the scenes in which Surrey and
+Francesca took such tragic parts.</p>
+
+<p>Following the proclamation for a draft in the city of
+New York, there had been heard on all sides from the
+newspaper press which sympathized with and aided the
+rebellion, premonitions of the coming storm; denunciations
+of the war, the government, the soldiers, of the
+harmless and inoffensive negroes; angry incitings of the
+poor man to hatred against the rich, since the rich man
+could save himself from the necessity of serving in the
+ranks by the payment of three hundred dollars of commutation
+money; incendiary appeals to the worst passions of
+the most ignorant portion of the community; and open
+calls to insurrection and arms to resist the peaceable
+enforcement of a law enacted in furtherance of the
+defence of the nation's life.</p>
+
+<p>Doubtless this outbreak had been intended at the time
+of the darkest and most disastrous days of the Republic;
+when the often-defeated and sorely dispirited Army of the
+Potomac was marching northward to cover Washington
+and Baltimore, and the victorious legions of traitors under
+Lee were swelling across the border, into a loyal State;
+when Grant stood in seemingly hopeless waiting before
+Vicksburg, and Banks before Port Hudson; and the whole
+people of the North, depressed and disheartened by the
+continued series of defeats to our arms, were beginning to
+look each at his neighbor, and whisper with white lips,
+&quot;Perhaps, after all, this struggle is to be in vain.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Had it been attempted at this precise time, it would,
+without question, have been, not a riot, but an insurrection,&mdash;would
+have been a portion of the army of rebellion,
+organized and effective for the prosecution of the
+war, and not a mob, hideous and devilish in its work of
+destruction, yet still a mob; and as such to be beaten down
+and dispersed in a comparatively short space of time.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of Monday, the thirteenth of July,
+began this outbreak, unparalleled in atrocities by anything
+in American history, and equalled only by the horrors of
+the worst days of the French Revolution. Gangs of men
+and boys, composed of railroad <i>employ&eacute;es</i>, workers in
+machine-shops, and a vast crowd of those who lived by
+preying upon others, thieves, pimps, professional ruffians,&mdash;the
+scum of the city,&mdash;jail-birds, or those who
+were running with swift feet to enter the prison-doors,
+began to gather on the corners, and in streets and alleys
+where they lived; from thence issuing forth they visited the
+great establishments on the line of their advance, commanding
+their instant close and the companionship of the
+workmen,&mdash;many of them peaceful and orderly men,&mdash;on
+pain of the destruction of one and a murderous assault
+upon the other, did not their orders meet with instant
+compliance.</p>
+
+<p>A body of these, five or six hundred strong, gathered
+about one of the enrolling-offices in the upper part of the
+city, where the draft was quietly proceeding, and opened
+the assault upon it by a shower of clubs, bricks, and
+paving-stones torn from the streets, following it up by a
+furious rush into the office. Lists, records, books, the
+drafting-wheel, every article of furniture or work in the
+room was rent in pieces, and strewn about the floor or
+flung into the street; while the law officers, the newspaper
+reporters,&mdash;who are expected to be everywhere,&mdash;and the
+few peaceable spectators, were compelled to make a hasty
+retreat through an opportune rear exit, accelerated by the
+curses and blows of the assailants.</p>
+
+<p>A safe in the room, which contained some of the hated
+records, was fallen upon by the men, who strove to wrench
+open its impregnable lock with their naked hands, and,
+baffled, beat them on its iron doors and sides till they were
+stained with blood, in a mad frenzy of senseless hate and
+fury. And then, finding every portable article destroyed,&mdash;their
+thirst for ruin growing by the little drink it had
+had,&mdash;and believing, or rather hoping, that the officers had
+taken refuge in the upper rooms, set fire to the house, and
+stood watching the slow and steady lift of the flames,
+filling the air with demoniac shrieks and yells, while they
+waited for the prey to escape from some door or window,
+from the merciless fire to their merciless hands. One of
+these, who was on the other side of the street, courageously
+stepped forward, and, telling them that they had
+utterly demolished all they came to seek, informed them
+that helpless women and little children were in the house,
+and besought them to extinguish the flames and leave the
+ruined premises; to disperse, or at least to seek some other
+scene.</p>
+
+<p>By his dress recognizing in him a government official,
+so far from hearing or heeding his humane appeal, they set
+upon him with sticks and clubs, and beat him till his eyes
+were blind with blood, and he&mdash;bruised and mangled&mdash;succeeded
+in escaping to the handful of police who stood
+helpless before this howling crew, now increased to thousands.
+With difficulty and pain the inoffensive tenants
+escaped from the rapidly spreading fire, which, having
+devoured the house originally lighted, swept across the
+neighboring buildings till the whole block stood a mass of
+burning flames. The firemen came up tardily and reluctantly,
+many of them of the same class as the miscreants
+who surrounded them, and who cheered at their
+approach, but either made no attempt to perform their
+duty, or so feeble and farcical a one, as to bring disgrace
+upon a service they so generally honor and ennoble.</p>
+
+<p>At last, when there was here nothing more to accomplish,
+the mob, swollen to a frightful size, including myriads
+of wretched, drunken women, and the half-grown,
+vagabond boys of the pavements, rushed through the
+intervening streets, stopping cars and insulting peaceable
+citizens on their way, to an armory where were manufactured
+and stored carbines and guns for the government. In
+anticipation of the attack, this, earlier in the day, had been
+fortified by a police squad capable of coping with an ordinary
+crowd of ruffians, but as chaff before fire in the presence
+of these murderous thousands. Here, as before, the
+attack was begun by a rain of missiles gathered from the
+streets; less fatal, doubtless, than more civilized arms, but
+frightful in the ghastly wounds and injuries they inflicted.
+Of this no notice was taken by those who were stationed
+within; it was repeated. At last, finding they were treated
+with contemptuous silence, and that no sign of surrender
+was offered, the crowd swayed back,&mdash;then forward,&mdash;in a
+combined attempt to force the wide entrance-doors.
+Heavy hammers and sledges, which had been brought
+from forges and workshops, caught up hastily as they gathered
+the mechanics into their ranks, were used with
+frightful violence to beat them in,&mdash;at last successfully.
+The foremost assailants began to climb the stairs, but were
+checked, and for the moment driven back by the fire of
+the officers, who at last had been commanded to resort to
+their revolvers. A half-score fell wounded; and one, who
+had been acting in some sort as their leader,&mdash;a big, brutal,
+Irish ruffian,&mdash;dropped dead.</p>
+
+<p>The pause was but for an instant. As the smoke cleared
+away there was a general and ferocious onslaught upon the
+armory; curses, oaths, revilings, hideous and obscene blasphemy,
+with terrible yells and cries, filled the air in every
+accent of the English tongue save that spoken by a native
+American. Such were there mingled with the sea of sound,
+but they were so few and weak as to be unnoticeable in the
+roar of voices. The paving stones flew like hail, until the
+street was torn into gaps and ruts, and every window-pane,
+and sash, and doorway, was smashed or broken. Meanwhile,
+divers attempts were made to fire the building, but
+failed through haste or ineffectual materials, or the vigilant
+watchfulness of the besieged. In the midst of this gallant
+defence, word was brought to the defenders from head-quarters
+that nothing could be done for their support; and
+that, if they would save their lives, they must make a quick
+and orderly retreat. Fortunately, there was a side passage
+with which the mob was unacquainted, and, one by one
+they succeeded in gaining this, and vanishing. A few, too
+faithful or too plucky to retreat before such a foe, persisted
+in remaining at their posts till the fire, which had at last
+been communicated to the building, crept unpleasantly
+near; then, by dropping from sill to sill of the broken
+windows, or sliding by their hands and feet down the rough
+pipes and stones, reached the pavement,&mdash;but not without
+injuries and blows, and broken bones, which disabled for a
+lifetime, if indeed they did not die in the hospitals to
+which a few of the more mercifully disposed carried them.</p>
+
+<p>The work thus begun, continued,&mdash;gathering in force
+and fury as the day wore on. Police stations, enrolling-offices,
+rooms or buildings used in any way by government
+authority, or obnoxious as representing the dignity of law,
+were gutted, destroyed, then left to the mercy of the
+flames. Newspaper offices, whose issues had been a fire in
+the rear of the nation's armies by extenuating and
+defending treason, and through violent and incendiary
+appeals stirring up &quot;lewd fellows of the baser sort&quot; to this
+very carnival of ruin and blood, were cheered as the crowd
+went by. Those that had been faithful to loyalty and law
+were hooted, stoned, and even stormed by the army of
+miscreants who were only driven off by the gallant and
+determined charge of the police, and in one place by the
+equally gallant, and certainly unique defence, which came
+from turning the boiling water from the engines upon the
+howling wretches, who, unprepared for any such warm
+reception as this, beat a precipitate and general retreat.
+Before night fell it was no longer one vast crowd collected
+in a single section, but great numbers of gatherings,
+scattered over the whole length and breadth of the city,&mdash;some
+of them engaged in actual work of demolition and
+ruin; others with clubs and weapons in their hands,
+prowling round apparently with no definite atrocity to
+perpetrate, but ready for any iniquity that might offer,&mdash;and,
+by way of pastime, chasing every stray police officer,
+or solitary soldier, or inoffensive negro, who crossed the
+line of their vision; these three objects&mdash;the badge of a
+defender of the law,&mdash;the uniform of the Union army,&mdash;the
+skin of a helpless and outraged race&mdash;acted upon these
+madmen as water acts upon a rabid dog.</p>
+
+<p>Late in the afternoon a crowd which could have numbered
+not less than ten thousand, the majority of whom
+were ragged, frowzy, drunken women, gathered about the
+Orphan Asylum for Colored Children,&mdash;a large and beautiful
+building, and one of the most admirable and noble
+charities of the city. When it became evident, from the
+menacing cries and groans of the multitude, that danger, if
+not destruction, was meditated to the harmless and inoffensive
+inmates, a flag of truce appeared, and an appeal was
+made in their behalf, by the principal, to every sentiment
+of humanity which these beings might possess,&mdash;a vain
+appeal! Whatever human feeling had ever, if ever, filled
+these souls was utterly drowned and washed away in the
+tide of rapine and blood in which they had been steeping
+themselves. The few officers who stood guard over the
+doors, and manfully faced these demoniac legions, were
+beaten down and flung to one side, helpless and stunned
+whilst the vast crowd rushed in. All the articles upon
+which they could seize&mdash;beds, bedding, carpets, furniture,&mdash;the
+very garments of the fleeing inmates, some of
+these torn from their persons as they sped by&mdash;were carried
+into the streets, and hurried off by the women and
+children who stood ready to receive the goods which their
+husbands, sons, and fathers flung to their care. The little
+ones, many of them, assailed and beaten; all,&mdash;orphans and
+caretakers,&mdash;exposed to every indignity and every danger,
+driven on to the street,&mdash;the building was fired. This had
+been attempted whilst the helpless children&mdash;some of
+them scarce more than babies&mdash;were still in their rooms;
+but this devilish consummation was prevented by the
+heroism of one man. He, the Chief of the Fire Department,
+strove by voice and arm to stay the endeavor; and
+when, overcome by superior numbers, the brands had
+been lit and piled, with naked hands, and in the face of
+threatened death, he tore asunder the glowing embers, and
+trod them under foot. Again the effort was made, and
+again failed through the determined and heroic opposition
+of this solitary soul. Then, on the front steps, in the midst
+of these drunken and infuriate thousands, he stood up and
+besought them, if they cared nothing for themselves nor
+for these hapless orphans, that they would not bring lasting
+disgrace upon the city by destroying one of its noblest
+charities, which had for its object nothing but good.</p>
+
+<p>He was answered on all sides by yells and execrations,
+and frenzied shrieks of &quot;Down with the nagurs!&quot; coupled
+with every oath and every curse that malignant hate of the
+blacks could devise, and drunken, Irish tongues could
+speak. It had been decreed that this building was to be
+razed to the ground. The house was fired in a thousand
+places, and in less than two hours the walls crashed in,&mdash;a
+mass of smoking, blackened ruins; whilst the children
+wandered through the streets, a prey to beings who were
+wild beasts in everything save the superior ingenuity of
+man to agonize and torture his victims.</p>
+
+<p>Frightful as the day had been, the night was yet more
+hideous; since to the horrors which were seen was added
+the greater horror of deeds which might be committed in
+the darkness; or, if they were seen, it was by the lurid glare
+of burning buildings,&mdash;the red flames of which&mdash;flung
+upon the stained and brutal faces, the torn and tattered
+garments, of men and women who danced and howled
+around the scene of ruin they had caused&mdash;made the
+whole aspect of affairs seem more like a gathering of
+fiends rejoicing in Pandemonium than aught with which
+creatures of flesh and blood had to do.</p>
+
+<p>Standing on some elevated point, looking over the
+great city, which presented, as usual, at night, a solemn and
+impressive show, the spectator was thrilled with a fearful
+admiration by the sights and sounds which gave to it a
+mysterious and awful interest. A thousand fires streamed
+up against the sky, making darkness visible; and from all
+sides came a combination of noises such as might be heard
+from an asylum in which were gathered the madmen of
+the world.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning's sun rose on a city which was ruled
+by a reign of terror. Had the police possessed the heads of
+Hydra and the arms of Briareus, and had these heads all
+seen, these arms all fought, they would have been powerless
+against the multitude of opposers. Outbreaks were
+made, crowds gathered, houses burned, streets barricaded,
+fights enacted, in a score of places at once. Where the officers
+appeared they were irretrievably beaten and overcome;
+their stand, were it ever so short, but inflaming the
+passions of the mob to fresh deeds of violence. Stores were
+closed; the business portion of the city deserted; the large
+works and factories emptied of men, who had been sent
+home by their employers, or were swept into the ranks of
+the marauding bands. The city cars, omnibuses, hacks,
+were unable to run, and remained under shelter. Every
+telegraph wire was cut, the posts torn up, the operators
+driven from their offices. The mayor, seeing that civil
+power was helpless to stem this tide, desired to call the military
+to his aid, and place the city under martial law, but
+was opposed by the Governor,&mdash;a governor, who, but a
+few days before, had pronounced the war a failure; and not
+only predicted, but encouraged this mob rule, which was
+now crushing everything beneath its heavy and ensanguined
+feet. This man, through almost two days of these
+awful scenes, remained at a quiet seaside retreat but a few
+miles from the city. Coming to it on the afternoon of the
+second day,&mdash;instead of ordering cannon planted in the
+streets, giving these creatures opportunity to retire to their
+homes, and, in the event of refusal, blowing them there by
+powder and ball,&mdash;he first went to the point where was
+collected the chiefest mob, and proceeded to address them.
+Before him stood incendiaries, thieves, and murderers,
+who even then were sacking dwelling-houses, and
+butchering powerless and inoffensive beings. These
+wretches he apostrophized as &quot;My friends,&quot; repeating the
+title again and again in the course of his harangue, assuring
+them that he was there as a proof of his friendship,&mdash;which
+he had demonstrated by &quot;sending his adjutant-general
+to Washington, to have the draft stopped&quot;; begging
+them to &quot;wait for his return&quot;; &quot;to separate now as good citizens&quot;;
+with the promise that they &quot;might assemble again
+whenever they wished to so do&quot;; meanwhile, he would
+&quot;take care of their rights.&quot; This model speech was incessantly
+interrupted by tremendous cheering and frantic
+demonstrations of delight,&mdash;one great fellow almost
+crushing the Governor in his enthusiastic embrace. This
+ended, he entered a carriage, and was driven through the
+blackened, smoking scenes of Monday's devastations;
+through fresh vistas of outrage, of the day's execution;
+bland, gracious, smiling. Wherever he appeared, cheer
+upon cheer rent the air from these crowds of drunken blasphemers;
+and in one place the carriage in which he sat was
+actually lifted from the ground, and carried some rods, by
+hands yet red with deeds of arson and murder; while from
+all sides voices cried out, &quot;Will ye stop the draft, Gov'nur?&quot;
+&quot;Bully boy!&quot; &quot;Ye're the man for us!&quot; &quot;Hooray for Gov'nur
+Saymoor!&quot; Thus, through the midst of this admiring and
+applauding crowd, this high officer of the law, sworn to
+maintain public peace, moved to his hotel, where he was
+met by a despatch from Washington, informing him that
+five regiments were under arms and on their way to put an
+end to this bloody assistance to the Southern war.</p>
+
+<p>His allies in newspaper offices attempted to throw the
+blame upon the loyal press and portion of the community.
+This was but a repetition of the cry, raised by traitors in
+arms, that the government, struggling for life in their
+deadly hold, was responsible for the war: &quot;If thou wouldst
+but consent to be murdered peaceably, there could be no
+strife.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>These editors outraged common sense, truth, and
+decency, by speaking of the riots as an &quot;uprising of the
+people to defend their liberties,&quot;&mdash;&quot;an opposition on the
+part of the workingmen to an unjust and oppressive law,
+enacted in favor of the men of wealth and standing.&quot; As
+though the <i>people</i> of the great metropolis were incendiaries,
+robbers, and assassins; as though the poor were to
+demonstrate their indignation against the rich by hunting
+and stoning defenceless women and children; torturing and
+murdering men whose only offence was the color God
+gave them, or men wearing the self-same uniform as that
+which they declared was to be thrust upon them at the
+behest of the rich and the great.</p>
+
+<p>It was absurd and futile to characterize this new Reign
+of Terror as anything but an effort on the part of Northern
+rebels to help Southern ones, at the most critical moment
+of the war,&mdash;with the State militia and available troops
+absent in a neighboring Commonwealth,&mdash;and the loyal
+people unprepared. These editors and their coadjutors,
+men of brains and ability, were of that most poisonous
+growth,&mdash;traitors to the Government and the flag of their
+country,&mdash;renegade Americans. Let it, however, be
+written plainly and graven deeply, that the tribes of savages&mdash;the
+hordes of ruffians&mdash;found ready to do their
+loathsome bidding, were not of native growth, nor American
+born.</p>
+
+<p>While it is true that there were some glib-tongued fellows
+who spoke the language without foreign accent, all of
+them of the lowest order of Democratic ward-politicians,
+of creatures skulking from the outstretched arm of
+avenging law; while the most degraded of the German
+population were represented; while it is also true that there
+were Irish, and Catholic Irish too,&mdash;industrious, sober,
+intelligent people,&mdash;who indignantly refused participation
+in these outrages, and mourned over the barbarities which
+were disgracing their national name; it is pre-eminently
+true,&mdash;proven by thousands of witnesses, and testified to
+by numberless tongues,&mdash;that the masses, the rank and file,
+the almost entire body of rioters, were the worst classes of
+Irish emigrants, infuriated by artful appeals, and maddened
+by the atrocious whiskey of thousands of grog-shops.</p>
+
+<p>By far the most infamous part of these cruelties was
+that which wreaked every species of torture and lingering
+death upon the colored people of the city,&mdash;men, women,
+and children, old and young, strong and feeble alike. Hundreds
+of these fell victims to the prejudice fostered by
+public opinion, incorporated in our statute-books, sanctioned
+by our laws, which here and thus found legitimate
+outgrowth and action. The horrors which blanched the
+face of Christendom were but the bloody harvest of fields
+sown by society, by cultured men and women, by speech,
+and book, and press, by professions and politics, nay, by the
+pulpit itself, and the men who there make God's truth a
+lie,&mdash;garbling or denying the inspired declaration that &quot;He
+has made of one blood all people to dwell upon the face
+of the earth&quot;; and that he, the All-Just and Merciful One,
+&quot;is no respecter of persons.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This riot, begun ostensibly to oppose the enforcement
+of a single law, developed itself into a burning and pillaging
+assault upon the homes and property of peaceful citizens. To
+realize this, it was only necessary to walk the streets, if that
+were possible, through those days of riot and conflagration,
+observe the materials gathered into the vast, moving multitudes,
+and scrutinize the faces of those of whom they were
+composed,&mdash;deformed, idiotic, drunken, imbecile, poverty-stricken;
+seamed with every line which wretchedness could
+draw or vicious habits and associations delve. To walk these
+streets and look upon these faces was like a fearful witnessing
+in perspective of the last day, when the secrets of life, more
+loathsome than those of death, shall be laid bare in all their
+hideous deformity and ghastly shame.</p>
+
+<p>The knowledge of these people and their deeds was
+sufficient to create a paralysis of fear, even where they were
+not seen. Indeed, there was terror everywhere. High and
+low, rich and poor, cultured and ignorant, all shivered in its
+awful grasp. Upon stately avenues and noisome alleys it fell
+with the like blackness of darkness. Women cried aloud to
+God with the same agonized entreaty from knees bent on
+velvet carpets or bare and dingy floors. Men wandered up
+and down, prisoners in their own homes, and cursed or
+prayed with equal fury or intensity whether the homes
+were simple or splendid. Here one surveyed all his costly
+store of rare and exquisite surroundings, and shook his
+head as he gazed, ominous and foreboding. There, another
+of darker hue peered out from garret casement, or cellar
+light, or broken window-pane, and, shuddering, watched
+some woman stoned and beaten till she died; some child
+shot down, while thousands of heavy, brutal feet trod over
+it till the hard stones were red with its blood, and the little
+prostrate form, yet warm, lost every likeness of humanity,
+and lay there, a sickening mass of mangled flesh and bones;
+some man assaulted, clubbed, overborne, left wounded or
+dying or dead, as he fell, or tied to some convenient tree or
+lamp-post to be hacked and hewn, or flayed and roasted,
+yet living, where he hung,&mdash;and watching this, and cowering
+as he watched, held his breath, and waited his own
+turn, not knowing when it might come.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>In breathless quiet, after all their ills.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+ARNOLD<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>A body of these wretches, fresh from some act of
+rapine and pillage, had seen Mrs. Franklin, hastening
+home, and, opening the hue and cry, had started in
+full chase after her. Struck by sticks and stones that darkened
+the air, twice down, fleeing as those only do who flee
+for life, she gained her own house, thinking there to find
+security. Vain hope! the door was battered in, the windows
+demolished, the puny barriers between the room in which
+they were gathered and the creatures in pursuit, speedily
+destroyed,&mdash;and these three turned to face death.</p>
+
+<p>By chance, Surrey had his sword at his side, and,
+tearing this from its scabbard, sprang to the defence,&mdash;a
+gallant intent, but what could one weapon and one arm do
+against such odds as these? He was speedily beaten down
+and flung aside by the miscreants who swarmed into the
+room. It was marvellous they did not kill him outright.
+Doubtless they would have done so but for the face
+propped against the pillows, which caught their hungry
+eyes. Soldier and woman were alike forgotten at sight of
+this dying boy. Here was a foeman worthy their steel. They
+gathered about him, and with savage hands struck at him
+and the bed upon which he lay.</p>
+
+<p>A pause for a moment to hold consultation, crowded
+with oaths and jeers and curses; obscenity and blasphemy
+too hideous to read or record,&mdash;then the cruel hands tore
+him from his bed, dragged him over the prostrate body of
+his mother, past the senseless form of his brave young
+defender, out to the street. Here they propped him against
+a tree, to mock and torment him; to prick him, wound
+him, torture him; to task endurance to its utmost limit, but
+not to extinguish life. These savages had no such mercy as
+this in their souls; and when, once or twice he fell away
+into insensibility, a cut or blow administered with devilish
+skill or strength, restored him to anguish and to life.</p>
+
+<p>Surrey, bewildered and dizzy, had recovered consciousness,
+and sat gazing vacantly around him, till the cries and
+yells without, the agonized face within, thrilled every
+nerve into feeling. Starting up, he rushed to the window,
+but recoiled at the awful sight. Here, he saw, there was no
+human power within reach or call that could interfere.
+The whole block, from street to street, was crowded with
+men and boys, armed with the armory of the street, and
+rejoicing like veritable fiends of hell over the pangs of
+their victim.</p>
+
+<p>Even in the moment he stood there he beheld that
+which would haunt his memory, did it endure for a century.
+At last, tired of their sport, some of those who were
+just about Abram had tied a rope about his body, and raised
+him to the nearest branch of an overhanging tree; then,
+heaping under him the sticks and clubs which were flung
+them from all sides, set fire to the dry, inflammable pile,
+and watched, for the moment silent, to see it burn.</p>
+
+<p>Surrey fled to the other side of the room, and, cowering
+down, buried his head in his arm to shut out the
+awful sight and sounds. But his mother,&mdash;O marvellous,
+inscrutable mystery of mother-love!&mdash;his mother knelt by
+the open window, near which hung her boy, and prayed
+aloud, that he might hear, for the wrung body and passing
+soul. Great God! that such things were possible, and thy
+heavens fell not! Through the sound of falling blows,
+reviling oaths, and hideous blasphemy, through the crackling
+of burning fagots and lifting flames, there went out no
+cry for mercy, no shriek of pain, no wail of despair. But
+when the torture was almost ended, and nature had
+yielded to this work of fiends, the dying face was turned
+towards his mother,&mdash;the eyes, dim with the veil that falls
+between time and eternity, seeking her eyes with their
+latest glance,&mdash;the voice, not weak, but clear and thrilling
+even in death, cried for her ear, &quot;Be of good cheer,
+mother! they may kill the body, but they cannot touch the
+soul!&quot; and even with the words the great soul walked with
+God.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>After a while the mob melted out of the street to seek new
+scenes of ravage and death; not, however, till they had
+marked the house, as those within learned, for the purpose
+of returning, if it should so please them, at some future
+time.</p>
+
+<p>When they were all gone, and the way was clear, these
+two&mdash;the mother that bore him, the elegant patrician who
+instinctively shrank from all unpleasant and painful
+things&mdash;took down the poor charred body, and carrying it
+carefully and tenderly into the house of a trembling
+neighbor, who yet opened her doors and bade them in,
+composed it decently for its final rest.</p>
+
+<p>It was drawing towards evening, and Surrey was eager
+to get away from this terrible region,&mdash;both to take the
+heart-stricken woman, thus thrown upon his care, to some
+place of rest and safety, and to reassure Francesca, who, he
+knew, would be filled with maddening anxiety and fear at
+his long absence.</p>
+
+<p>At length they ventured forth: no one was in the
+square;&mdash;turned at Fortieth Street,&mdash;all clear;&mdash;went on
+with hasty steps to the Avenue,&mdash;not a soul in sight.
+&quot;Safe,&mdash;thank God!&quot; exclaimed Surrey, as he hurried his
+companion onward. Half the space to their destination had
+been crossed, when a band of rioters, rushing down the
+street from the sack and burning of the Orphan Asylum,
+came upon them. Defence seemed utterly vain. Every
+house was shut; its windows closed and barred; its inmates
+gathered in some rear room. Escape and hope appeared
+alike impossible; but Surrey, flinging his charge behind
+him, with drawn sword, face to the on-sweeping hordes,
+backed down the street. The combination&mdash;a negro
+woman, a soldier's uniform&mdash;intensified the mad fury of
+the mob, which was nevertheless held at bay by the heroic
+front and gleaming steel of their single adversary. Only for
+a moment! Then, not venturing near him, a shower of
+bricks and stones hurtled through the air, falling about and
+upon him.</p>
+
+<p>At this instant a voice called, &quot;This way! this way! For
+God's sake! quick! quick!&quot; and he saw a friendly black face
+and hand thrust from an area window. Still covering with
+his body his defenceless charge, he moved rapidly towards
+this refuge. Rapid as was the motion, it was not speedy
+enough; he reached the railing, caught her with his one
+powerful arm, imbued now with a giant's strength, flung
+her over to the waiting hands that seized and dragged her
+in, pausing for an instant, ere he leaped himself, to beat
+back a half-dozen of the foremost miscreants, who would
+else have captured their prey, just vanishing from sight.
+Sublime, yet fatal delay! but an instant, yet in that instant a
+thousand forms surrounded him, disarmed him, overcame
+him, and beat him down.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile what of Francesca? The morning passed,
+and with its passing came terrible rumors of assault and
+death. The afternoon began, wore on,&mdash;the rumors deepened
+to details of awful facts and realities; and he&mdash;he,
+with his courage, his fatal dress&mdash;was absent, was on those
+death-crowded streets. She wandered from room to room,
+forgetting her reserve, and accosting every soul she met for
+later news,&mdash;for information which, received, did but torture
+her with more intolerable pangs, and send her to her
+knees; though, kneeling, she could not pray, only cry out
+in some dumb, inarticulate fashion, &quot;God be merciful!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The afternoon was spent; the day gone; the summet
+twilight deepening into night; and still he did not come.
+She had caught up her hat and mantle with some insane
+intention of rushing into the wide, wild city, on a frenzied
+search, when two gentlemen passing by her door, talking
+of the all-absorbing theme, arrested her ear and attention.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The house ought to be guarded! These devils will be
+here presently,&mdash;they are on the Avenue now.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good God! are you certain?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Certain.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You may well be,&quot; said a third voice, as another step
+joined theirs. &quot;They are just above Thirtieth Street. I was
+coming down the Avenue, and saw them myself. I don't
+know what my fate would have been in this dress,&quot;&mdash;Francesca
+knew from this that he who talked was of the
+police or soldiery,&mdash;&quot;but they were engaged in fighting a
+young officer, who made a splendid defence before they
+cut him down; his courage was magnificent. It makes my
+blood curdle to think of it. A fair-haired, gallant-looking
+fellow, with only one arm. I could do nothing for him, of
+course, and should have been killed had I stayed; so I ran
+for life. But I don't think I'll ever quite forgive myself for
+not rushing to the rescue, and taking my chance with
+him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She did not stay to hear the closing words. Out of the
+room, past them, like a spirit,&mdash;through the broad halls,&mdash;down
+the wide stairways,&mdash;on to the street,&mdash;up the long
+street, deserted here, but O, with what a crowd beyond!</p>
+
+<p>A company of soldiers, paltry in number, yet each
+with loaded rifle and bayonet set, charged past her at
+double-quick upon this crowd, which gave way slowly and
+sullenly at its approach, holding with desperate ferocity
+and determination to whatever ghastly work had been
+employing their hands,&mdash;dropped at last,&mdash;left on the
+stones,&mdash;the soldiers between it and the mob,&mdash;silent,
+motionless,&mdash;she saw it, and knew it where it lay. O woful
+sight and knowledge for loving eyes and bursting heart!</p>
+
+<p>Ere she reached it some last stones were flung by the
+retreating crowd, a last shot fired in the air,&mdash;fired at
+random, but speeding with as unerring aim to her aching,
+anguished breast, death-freighted and life-destroying,&mdash;but
+not till she had reached her destined point and end; not till
+her feet failed close to that bruised and silent form; not till
+she had sunk beside it, gathered it in her fair young arms,
+and pillowed its beautiful head&mdash;from which streamed
+golden hair, dabbled and blood-bestained&mdash;upon her
+faithful heart.</p>
+
+<p>There it stirred; the eyes unclosed to meet hers, a
+gleam of divine love shining through their fading fire; the
+battered, stiffened arm lifted, as to fold her in the old
+familiar caress. &quot;Darling&mdash;die&mdash;to make&mdash;free&quot;&mdash;came in
+gasps from the sweet, yet whitening lips. Then she lay still.
+Where his breath blew across her hair it waved, and her
+bosom moved above the slow and labored beating of his
+heart; but, save for this, she was as quiet as the peaceful
+dead within their graves,&mdash;and, like them, done with the
+noise and strife of time forever.</p>
+
+<p>For him,&mdash;the shadows deepened where he lay,&mdash;the
+stars came out one by one, looking down with clear and
+solemn eyes upon this wreck of fair and beautiful things,
+wrought by earthly hate and the awful passions of men,&mdash;then
+veiled their light in heavy and sombre clouds. The
+rain fell upon the noble face and floating, sunny hair,&mdash;washing
+them free of soil, and dark and fearful stains;
+moistening the fevered, burning lips, and cooling the
+bruised and aching frame. How passed the long night with
+that half-insensible soul? God knoweth. The secrets of that
+are hidden in the eternity to which it now belongs. Questionless,
+ministering spirits drew near, freighted with balm
+and inspiration; for when the shadows fled, and the next
+morning's sun shone upon these silent forms, it revealed
+faces radiant as with some celestial fire, and beatified as
+reflecting the smile of God.</p>
+
+<p>The inmates of the house before which lay this solemn
+mystery, rising to face a new-made day, looking out from
+their windows to mark what traces were left of last night's
+devastations, beheld this awful yet sublime sight.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A prejudice which, I trust, will never end,&quot; had Mr.
+Surrey said, in bidding adieu to his son but a few short
+hours before. This prejudice, living and active, had now
+thus brought death and desolation to his own doors. &quot;How
+unsearchable are the judgments of God, and his ways past
+finding out!&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX"></a>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>Drink,&mdash;for thy necessity is yet greater than mine.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+SIR PHILIP SIDNEY<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>The hospital boat, going out of Beaufort, was a sad,
+yet great sight. It was but necessary to look around
+it to see that the men here gathered had stood on the slippery
+battle-sod, and scorned to flinch. You heard no cries,
+scarcely a groan; whatever anguish wrung them as they were
+lifted into their berths, or were turned or raised for comfort,
+found little outward sign,&mdash;a long, gasping breath now and
+then; a suppressed exclamation; sometimes a laugh, to cover
+what would else be a cry of mortal agony; almost no
+swearing; these men had been too near the awful realities of
+death and eternity, some of them were still too near, to make
+a mock at either. Having demonstrated themselves heroes in
+action, they would, one and all, be equally heroes in the hour
+of suffering, or on the bed of lingering death.</p>
+
+<p>Jim, so wounded as to make every movement a pang,
+had been carefully carried in on a stretcher, and as carefully
+lifted into a middle berth.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good,&quot; said one of the men, as he eased him down
+on his pillow.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What's good?&quot; queried Jim.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The berth; middle berth. Put you in as easy as into the
+lowest one: bad lifting such a leg as yours into the top one,
+and it's the comfortablest of the three when you're in.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O, that's it, is it? all right; glad I'm here then; getting
+in didn't hurt more than a flea-bite,&quot;&mdash;saying which Jim
+turned his face away to put his teeth down hard on a lip
+already bleeding. The wrench to his shattered leg was
+excruciating, &quot;But then,&quot; as he announced to himself, &quot;no
+snivelling, James; you're not going to make a spooney of
+yourself.&quot; Presently he moved, and lay quietly watching the
+others they were bringing in.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why!&quot; he called, &quot;that's Bertie Curtis, ain't it?&quot; as a
+slight, beautiful-faced boy was carried past him, and raised
+to his place.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, it is,&quot; answered one of the men, shortly, to cover
+some strong feeling.</p>
+
+<p>Jim leaned out of his berth, regardless of his protesting
+leg, canteen in hand. &quot;Here, Bertie!&quot; he called, &quot;my canteen's
+full of fresh water, just filled. I know it'll taste good
+to you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The boy's fine face flushed. &quot;O, thank you, Given, it
+would taste deliriously, but I can't take it,&quot;&mdash;glancing
+down. Jim followed the look, to see that both arms were
+gone, close to the graceful, boyish form; seeing which his
+face twitched painfully,&mdash;not with his own suffering,&mdash;and
+for a moment words failed him. Just then came up one
+of the sanitary nurses with some cooling drink, and fresh,
+wet bandages for the fevered stumps.</p>
+
+<p>Great drops were standing on Bertie's forehead, and
+ominous gray shadows had already settled about the
+mouth, and under the long, shut lashes. Looking at the
+face, so young, so refined, some mother's pride and darling,
+the nurse brushed back tenderly the fair hair, murmuring,
+&quot;Poor fellow!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The eyes unclosed quickly: &quot;There are no poor fellows
+here, sir!&quot; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, brave fellow, then!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I did but do my duty,&quot;&mdash;a smile breaking through the
+gathering mists.</p>
+
+<p>Here some poor fellow,&mdash;poor indeed,&mdash;delirious
+with fever, called out, &quot;Mother! mother! I want to see my
+mother!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Tears rushed to the clear, steady eyes, dimmed them,
+dropped down unchecked upon the face. The nurse, with
+a sob choking in his throat, softly raised his hand to brush
+them away. &quot;Mother,&quot; Bertie whispered,&mdash;&quot;mother!&quot; and
+was gone where God wipes away the tears from all eyes.</p>
+
+<p>For the space of five minutes, as Jim said afterwards, in
+telling about it, &quot;that boat was like a meeting-house.&quot; Used
+as they were to death in all forms, more than one brave
+fellow's eye was dim as the silent shape was carried away to
+make place for the stricken living,&mdash;one of whom was
+directly brought in, and the stretcher put down near Jim.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What's up?&quot; he called, for the man's face was turned
+from him, and his wounded body so covered as to give no
+clew to its condition. &quot;What's wrong?&quot; seeing the bearers
+did not offer to lift him, and that they were anxiously scanning
+the long rows of berths.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Berth's wrong,&quot; one of them answered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What's the matter with the berth?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Matter enough! not a middle one nor a lower one
+empty.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well,&quot; called a wounded boy from the third tier,
+&quot;plenty of room up here; sky-parlor,&mdash;airy lodgings,&mdash;all
+fine,&mdash;I see a lot of empty houses that'll take him in.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Like enough,&mdash;but he's about blown to pieces,&quot; said
+the bearer in a low voice, &quot;and it'll be aw&mdash;ful putting him
+up there; however,&quot;&mdash;commencing to take off the light
+cover.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Helloa!&quot; cried Jim, &quot;that's a dilapidated-looking
+leg,&quot;&mdash;his head out, looking at it. &quot;Stop a bit!&quot;&mdash;body half
+after the head,&mdash;&quot;you just stop that, and come here and
+catch hold of a fellow; now put me up there. I reckon I'll
+bear hoisting better'n he will, anyway. Ugh! ah! um! owh!
+here we are! bully!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>If Jim had been of the fainting or praying order he
+would certainly have fainted or prayed; as it was, he said
+&quot;Bully!&quot; but lay for a while thereafter still as a mouse.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Given, you're a brick!&quot; one of the boys was apostrophizing
+him. Jim took no notice. &quot;And your man's in, safe
+and sound&quot;; he turned at that, and leaned forward, as well
+as he could, to look at the occupant of his late bed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Jemime!&quot; he cried, when he saw the face. &quot;I say, boys!
+it's Ercildoune&mdash;Robert&mdash;flag&mdash;Wagner&mdash;hurray&mdash;let's
+give three cheers for the color-sergeant,&mdash;long may he
+wave!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The men, propped up or lying down, gave the three
+cheers with a will, and then three more; and then,
+delighted with their performance, three more after that,
+Jim winding up the whole with an &quot;a-a-ah,&mdash;Tiger!&quot; that
+made them all laugh; then relapsing into silence and a hard
+battle with pain.</p>
+
+<p>A weary voyage,&mdash;a weary journey thereafter to the
+Northern hospitals,&mdash;some dying by the way, and lowered
+through the shifting, restless waves, or buried with hasty
+yet kindly hands in alien soil,&mdash;accounted strangers and
+foemen in the land of their birth. God grant that no tread
+of rebellion in the years to come, nor thunder of contending
+armies, may disturb their peace!</p>
+
+<p>Some stopped in the heat and dust of Washington to
+be nursed and tended in the great barracks of
+hospitals,&mdash;uncomfortable-looking
+without, clean and spacious and
+admirable within; some to their homes, on long-desired
+and eagerly welcomed furloughs, there to be cured
+speedily, the body swayed by the mind; some to suffer and
+die; some to struggle against winds and tides of mortality
+and conquer,&mdash;yet scarred and maimed; some to go out, as
+giants refreshed with new wine, to take their places once
+more in the great conflict, and fight there faithfully to the
+end.</p>
+
+<p>Among these last was Jim; but not till after many a hard
+battle, and buffet, and back-set did life triumph and
+strength prevail. One thing which sadly retarded his
+recovery was his incessant anxiety about Sallie, and his
+longing to see her once more. He had himself, after his
+first hurt, written her that he was slightly wounded; but
+when he reached Washington, and the surgeon, looking at
+his shattered leg, talked about amputation and death, Jim
+decided that Sallie should not know a word of all this till
+something definite was pronounced.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She oughtn't to have an ugly, one-legged fellow,&quot; he
+said, &quot;to drag round with her; and, if she knows how bad
+it is, she'll post straight down here, to nurse and look after
+me,&mdash;I know her! and she'll have me in the end, out of
+sheer pity; and I ain't going to take any such mean advantage
+of her: no, sir-ee, not if I know myself. If I get well,
+safe and sound, I'll go to her; and, if I'm going to die, I'll
+send for her; so I'll wait,&quot;&mdash;which he did.</p>
+
+<p>He found, however, that it was a great deal easier
+making the decision, than keeping it when made. Sallie,
+hearing nothing from him,&mdash;supposing him still in the
+South,&mdash;fearful as she had all along been that she stood on
+uncertain ground,&mdash;Mrs. Surrey away in New York,&mdash;and
+Robert Ercildoune, as the papers asserted in their published
+lists, mortally wounded,&mdash;having no indirect means
+of communication with him, and fearing to write again
+without some sign from him,&mdash;was sorrowing in silence at
+home.</p>
+
+<p>The silence reacted on him; not realizing its cause he
+grew fretful and impatient, and the fretfulness and impatience
+told on his leg, intensified his fever, and put the day
+of recovery&mdash;if recovery it was to be&mdash;farther into the
+future.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;See here, my man,&quot;&mdash;said the quick little surgeon one
+day, &quot;you're worrying about something. This'll never do; if
+you don't stop it, you'll die, as sure as fate; and you might
+as well make up your mind to it at once,&mdash;so, now!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, sir,&quot; answered Jim, &quot;it's as good a time to die
+now, I reckon, as often happens; but I ain't dead yet, not
+by a long shot; and I ain't going to die neither; so, now,
+yourself!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The doctor laughed. &quot;All right; if you'll get up that
+spirit, and keep it, I'll bet my pile on your recovery,&mdash;but
+you'll have to stop fretting. You've got something on your
+mind that's troubling you; and the sooner you get rid of it,
+if you can, the better. That's all I've got to say.&quot; And he
+marched off.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Get rid of it,&quot; mused Jim, &quot;how in thunder'll I get rid
+of it if I don't hear from Sallie? Let me see&mdash;ah! I have it!&quot;
+and looking more cheerful on the instant he lay still,
+watching for the doctor to come down the ward once
+more. &quot;Helloa!&quot; he called, then. &quot;Helloa!&quot; responded the
+doctor, coming over to him, &quot;what's the go now? you're
+improved already.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Got any objection to telling a lie?&quot;&mdash;this might be
+called coming to the point.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That depends&mdash;&quot; said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, all's fair in love and war, they say. This is for
+love. Help a fellow?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course,&mdash;if I can,&mdash;and the fellow's a good one,
+like Jim Given. What is it you want?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, I want a letter written, and I can't do it myself,
+you know,&quot;&mdash;looking down at his still bandaged arm,&mdash;&quot;likewise
+I want a lie told in it, and these ladies here are all
+angels, and of course you can't ask an angel to tell a lie,&mdash;no
+offence to you; so if you can take the time, and'll do it,
+I'll stand your everlasting debtor, and shoulder the responsibility
+if you're afraid of the weight.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What sort of a lie?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A capital one; listen. I want a young lady to know that
+I'm wounded in the arm,&mdash;you see? not bad; nor nothing
+over which she need worry, and nothing that hurts me
+much; and I ain't damaged in any other way; legs not mentioned
+in this concern,&mdash;you understand?&quot; The doctor
+nodded. &quot;But it's tied up my hand, so that I have to get you
+to say all this for me. I'll be well pretty soon; and, if I can
+get a furlough, I'll be up in Philadelphia in a jiffy,&mdash;so she
+can just prepare for the infliction, &amp;c. Comprendy? And'll
+you do it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course I will, if you don't want the truth told, and
+the fib'll do you any good; and, upon my word, the way
+you're looking I really think it will. So now for it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Thus the letter was written, and read, and re-read, to
+make sure that there was nothing in it to alarm Sallie; and,
+being satisfactory on that head, was finally sent away, to
+rejoice the poor girl who had waited, and watched, and
+hoped for it through such a weary time. When she
+answered it, her letter was so full of happiness and solicitude,
+and a love that, in spite of herself, spoke out in every
+line, that Jim furtively kissed it, and read it into tatters in
+the first few hours of its possession; then tucking it away in
+his hospital shirt, over his heart, proceeded to get well as
+fast as fast could be.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well,&quot; said the doctor, a few weeks afterwards, as Jim
+was going home on his coveted sick-leave, &quot;Mr. Thomas
+Carlyle calls fibs wind-bags. If that singular remedy would
+work to such a charm with all my men, I'd tell lies with
+impunity. Good by, Jim, and the best of good luck to you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The same to you, Doctor, and I hope you may always
+find a friend in need, to lie for you. Good by, and God
+bless you!&quot; wringing his hand hard,&mdash;&quot;and now, hurrah for
+home!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hurrah it is!&quot; cried the little surgeon after him, as,
+happy and proud, he limped down the ward, and turned
+his face towards home.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>Youth on the prow, and Pleasure at the helm.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+GRAY<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>Jim scarcely felt the jolting of the ambulance over the
+city stones, and his impatience and eagerness to get
+across the intervening space made dust, and heat, and
+weariness of travel seem but as feather weights, not to be
+cared for, nor indeed considered at all; though, in fact, his
+arm complained, and his leg ached distressingly, and he was
+faint and weak without confessing it long before the tiresome
+journey reached its end.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No matter,&quot; he said to himself; &quot;it'll be all well, or forgotten,
+at least, when I see Sallie once more; and so, what
+odds?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The end was gained at last, and he would have gone to
+her fast as certain Rosinantes, yclept hackhorses, could
+carry him, but, stopping for a moment to consider, he
+thought, &quot;No, that will never do! Go to her looking like
+such a guy? Nary time. I'll get scrubbed, and put on a
+clean shirt, and make myself decent, before she sees me.
+She always used to look nice as a new pin, and she liked
+me to look so too; so I'd better put my best foot foremost
+when she hasn't laid eyes on me for such an age. I'm fright
+enough, anyway, goodness knows, with my thinness, and
+my old lame leg; so&mdash;&quot; sticking his head out of the
+window, and using his lungs with astonishing vigor&mdash;&quot;Driver!
+streak like lightning, will you, to the 'Merchants'?
+and you shall have extra fare.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hold your blab there,&quot; growled the driver; &quot;I ain't
+such a pig yet as to take double fare from a wounded soldier.
+You'll pay me well at half-price,&mdash;when we get
+where you want to go,&quot;&mdash;which they did soon.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No!&quot; said Jehu, thrusting back part of the money, &quot;I
+ain't agoin' to take it, so you needn't poke it out at me. I'm
+all right; or, if I ain't, I'll make it up on the next broadcloth
+or officer I carry; never you fear! us fellows knows
+how to take care of ourselves, you'd better believe!&quot; which
+statement Jim would have known to be truth, without the
+necessity of repetition, had he been one of the aforesaid
+&quot;broadcloths,&quot; or &quot;officers,&quot; and thus better acquainted
+with the genus hack-driver in the ordinary exercise of its
+profession.</p>
+
+<p>As it was; he shook hands with the fellow, pocketed the
+surplus change, made his way into the hotel, was in his
+room, in his bath, under the barber's hands, cleaned,
+shaved, brushed, polished, shining,&mdash;as he himself would
+have declared, &quot;in a jiffy&quot; Then, deciding himself to be
+presentable to the lady of his heart, took his crutch and
+sallied forth, as good-looking a young fellow, spite of the
+wooden appendage, as any the sun shone upon in all the
+big city, and as happy, as it was bright.</p>
+
+<p>He knew where to go, and, by help of street-cars and
+other legs than his own, he was there speedily. He knew
+the very room towards which to turn; and, reaching it,
+paused to look in through the half-open door,&mdash;delighted
+thus to watch and listen for a little space unseen.</p>
+
+<p>Sallie was sitting, her handsome head bent over her
+sewing,&mdash;Frankie gambolling about the floor.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O sis, <i>don't</i> you wish Jim would come home?&quot;
+queried the youngster. &quot;I do,&mdash;I wish he'd come right
+straight away.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Right straight away? What do <i>you</i> want to see Jim
+for?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O, 'cause he's nice; and 'cause he'll take me to the
+Theayter; and 'cause he'll treat,&mdash;apples, and peanuts, and
+candy, you know, and&mdash;and&mdash;ice-cream,&quot; wiping the
+beads from his little red face,&mdash;the last desideratum evidently
+suggested by the fiery summer heat. &quot;I say,
+Sallie!&quot;&mdash;a pause&mdash;&quot;won't you get me some ice-cream this
+evening?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, Bobbity, if you'll be a good boy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Frankie looked dubious over that proposition. Jim
+never made any such stipulations: so, after another pause,
+in which he was probably considering the whole subject
+with due and becoming gravity,&mdash;evidently desiring to
+hear his own wish propped up by somebody else's
+seconding,&mdash;he broke out again, &quot;Now, Sallie, don't you just
+wish Jim would come home?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O Frankie, don't I?&quot; cried the girl, dropping her
+work, and stretching out her empty arms as though she
+would clasp some shape in the air.</p>
+
+<p>Frankie, poor child! innocently imagining the
+proffered embrace was for him, ran forward, for he was an
+affectionate little soul, to give Sallie a good hug, but found
+himself literally left out in the cold; no arms to meet, and
+no Sallie, indeed, to touch him. Something big, burly, and
+blue loomed up on his sight,&mdash;something that was doing
+its best to crush Sallie bodily, and to devour what was not
+crushed; something that could say nothing by reason of its
+lips being so much more pleasantly engaged, and whose
+face was invisible through its extraordinary proximity to
+somebody else's face and hair.</p>
+
+<p>Frankie, finding he could gain neither sight nor sound
+of notice, began to howl. But as neither of the hard-hearted
+creatures seemed to care for the poor little chap's
+howling, he fell upon the coat-tails of the big blue
+obstruction, and pulled at them lustily,&mdash;not to say
+viciously,&mdash;till their owner turned, and beheld him
+panting and fiery.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Helloa, youngster! what's to pay now?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Wow! if 'tain't Jim. Hooray!&quot; screeched the youngster,
+first embracing the blue legs, and then proceeding to
+execute a dance upon his head. &quot;Te, te, di di, idde i-dum,&quot;
+he sang, coming feet down, finally.</p>
+
+<p>Evidently the bad boy's language had been corrupted
+by his street <i>confr&egrave;res</i>; it was a missionary ground upon
+which Sallie entered, more or less faithfully, every day to
+hoe and weed; but of this last specimen-plant she took no
+notice, save to laugh as Jim, catching him up, first kissed
+him, then gave him a shake and a small spank, and,
+thrusting a piece of currency into his hand, whisked him
+outside the door with a &quot;Come, shaver, decamp, and treat
+yourself to-day,&quot; and had it shut and fastened in a twinkling.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O Jim!&quot; she cried then, her soul in her handsome
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O Sallie!&quot;&mdash;and he had her fast and tight once more.</p>
+
+<p>An ineffable blank, punctuated liberally with sounding
+exclamation points, and strongly marked periods,&mdash;though
+how or why a blank should be punctuated at all,
+only blissful lovers could possibly define.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Jim, dear Jim!&quot; whispering it, and snuggling her
+blushing face closer to the faded blue, &quot;can you love me
+after all that has happened?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come now! <i>can</i> I love you, my beauty? Slightly, I
+should think. O, te, te, di di, idde i-dum,&quot;&mdash;singing
+Frank's little song with his big, gay voice,&mdash;&quot;I'm happy as
+a king.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Happy as a king, that was plain enough. And what shall
+be said of her, as he sat down, and, resting the wounded
+leg&mdash;stiff and sore yet,&mdash;held Sallie on his other knee,&mdash;then
+fell to admiring her while she stroked his mustache and
+his crisp, curling hair, looking at both and at him altogether
+with an expression of contented adoration in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Frank, tired of prowling round the door, candy in
+hand, here thrust his head in at the window, and,
+unfortunately for his plans, sneezed. &quot;Mutual-admiration society!&quot;
+he cried at that, seeing that he was detected in any case,
+and running away,&mdash;his run spoiled as soon as it began.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We are a handsome couple,&quot; laughed Jim, holding
+back her face between both hands,&mdash;&quot;ain't we, now?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Yes, they were,&mdash;no mistake about that, handsome as
+pictures.</p>
+
+<p>And merry as birds, through all of his short stay. They
+would see no danger in the future: Jim had been scathed in
+time past so often, yet come out safe and sound, that they
+would have no fear for what was to befall him in time to
+come. If they had, neither showed it to the other. Jim
+thought, &quot;Sallie would break her heart, if she knew just
+what is down there,&mdash;so it would be a pity to talk about
+it&quot;; and Sallie thought, &quot;It's right for Jim to go, and I won't
+say a word to keep him back, no matter how I feel.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The furlough was soon&mdash;ah! how soon&mdash;out, the days
+of happiness over; and Jim, holding her in a last close
+embrace, said his farewell: &quot;Come, Sallie, you're not to cry
+now, and make me a coward. It'll only be for a little while;
+the Rebs <i>can't</i> stand it much longer, and then&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, Jim! but if you should&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, but I sha'n't, you see; not a bit of it; don't you go
+to think it. 'I bear'&mdash;what is it? O&mdash;'a charmed life,' as Mr.
+Macbeth says, and you'll see me back right and tight, and
+up to time. One kiss more, dear. God bless you! good by!&quot;
+and he was gone.</p>
+
+<p>She leaned out of the window,&mdash;she smiled after him,
+kissed her hand, waved her handkerchief, so long as he
+could see them,&mdash;till he had turned a corner way down
+the street,&mdash;and smile, and hand, and handkerchief were
+lost to his sight; then flung herself on the floor, and cried
+as though her very heart would break. &quot;God send him
+home,&mdash;send him safe and soon home!&quot; she implored;
+entreaty made for how many loved ones, by how many
+aching hearts, that speedily lost the need of saying amen to
+any such petition,&mdash;the prayer for the living lost in
+mourning for the dead. Heaven grant that no soul that
+reads this ever may have the like cause to offer such prayer
+again!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+
+<p>
+&quot;<i>When we see the dishonor of a thing, then it is time to<br />
+renounce it.</i>&quot;<br />
+<br />
+PLUTARCH<br /><br /><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>A letter which Sallie wrote to Jim a few weeks
+after his departure tells its own story, and hence
+shall be repeated here.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Philadelphia, October 29, 1863.</p>
+
+<p>Dear Jim:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>I take my pen in hand this morning to write you a
+letter, and to tell you the news, though I don't know much
+of the last except about Frankie and myself. However, I
+suppose you will care more to hear that than any other, so
+I will begin.</p>
+
+<p>Maybe you will be surprised to hear that Frankie and
+I are at Mr. Ercildoune's. Well, we are,&mdash;and I will tell you
+how it came about. Not long after you went away, Frank
+began to pine, and look droopy. There wasn't any use in
+giving him medicine, for it didn't do him a bit of good.
+He couldn't eat, and he didn't sleep, and I was at my wits'
+ends to know what to do for him.</p>
+
+<p>One day Mrs. Lee,&mdash;that Mr. Ercildoune's
+housekeeper,&mdash;an old English lady she is, and she's lived with
+him ever since he was married, and before he came
+here,&mdash;a real lady, too,&mdash;came in with some sewing, some
+fine shirts for Mr. Robert Ercildoune. I asked after him,
+and you'll be glad to know that he's recovering. He didn't
+have to lose his leg, as they feared; and his arm is healing;
+and the wound in his breast getting well. Mrs. Lee says
+she's very sorry the stump isn't longer, so that he could
+wear a Palmer arm,&mdash;but she's got no complaints to make;
+they're only too glad and thankful to have him living at all,
+after such a dreadful time.</p>
+
+<p>While I was talking with her, Frankie called me from
+the next room, and began to cry. You wouldn't have
+known him,&mdash;he cried at everything, and was so fretful
+and cross I could scarcely get along at all. When I got him
+quiet, and came back, Mrs. Lee says, &quot;What's the matter
+with Frank?&quot; so I told her I didn't know,&mdash;but would she
+see him? Well, she saw him, and shook her head in a bad
+sort of way that scared me awfully, and I suppose she saw
+I was frightened, for she said, &quot;All he wants is plenty of
+fresh air, and good, wholesome country food and exercise.&quot;
+I can tell you, spite of that, she went away, leaving
+me with heavy enough a heart.</p>
+
+<p>The next day Mr. Ercildoune came in. How he is
+changed! I haven't seen him before since Mrs. Surrey died,
+and that of itself was enough to kill him, without this
+dreadful time about Mr. Robert.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good morning, Miss Sallie,&quot; says he, &quot;how are you?
+and I'm glad to see you looking so well.&quot; So I told him I
+was well, and then he asked for Frankie. &quot;Mrs. Lee tells
+me,&quot; he said, &quot;that your little brother is quite ill, and that
+he needs country air and exercise. He can have them both
+at The Oaks; so if you'll get him ready, the carriage will
+come for you at whatever time you appoint. Mrs. Lee can
+find you plenty of work as long as you care to stay.&quot; He
+looked as if he wanted to say something more, but didn't;
+and I was just as sure as sure could be that it was something
+about Miss Francesca, probably about her having me out
+there so much; for his face looked so sad, and his lips trembled
+so, I knew that must be in his mind. And when I
+thought of it, and of such an awful fate as it was for her,
+so young, and handsome, and happy, like the great baby I
+am, I just threw my apron over my head, and burst out
+crying.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't!&quot; he said,&mdash;&quot;don't!&quot; in O, such a voice! It was
+like a knife going through me; and he went quick out of
+the room, and downstairs, without even saying good by.</p>
+
+<p>Well, we came out the next day,&mdash;and I have plenty to
+do, and Frankie is getting real bright and strong. I can see
+Mr. Ercildoune likes to have us here, because of the connection
+with Miss Francesca. She was so interested in us,
+and so kind to us, and he knows I loved her so very
+dearly,&mdash;and if it's any comfort to him I'm sure I'm glad to
+be here, without taking Frankie into the account,&mdash;for the
+poor gentleman looks so bowed and heart-broken that it
+makes one's heart ache just to see him. Mr. Robert isn't
+well enough to be about yet, but he sits up for a while
+every day, and is getting on&mdash;the doctor says&mdash;nicely.
+They both talk about you often; and Mr. Ercildoune, I can
+see, thinks everything of you for that good, kind deed of
+yours, when you and Mr. Robert were on the transport
+together. Dear Jim, he don't know you as well as I do, or
+he'd know that you couldn't help doing such things,&mdash;not
+if you tried.</p>
+
+<p>I hope you'll like the box that comes with this. Mr.
+Robert had it packed for you in his own room, to see that
+everything went in that you'd like. Of course, as he's been
+a soldier himself, he knows better what they want than
+anybody else can.</p>
+
+<p>Dear Jim, do take care of yourself; don't go and get
+wounded; and don't get sick; and, whatever you do, don't
+let the rebels take you prisoner, unless you want to drive
+me frantic. I think about you pretty much all the time, and
+pray for you, as well as I know how, every night when I go
+to bed, and am always</p>
+
+<p>Your own loving</p>
+
+<p>Sallie.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>&quot;Wow!&quot; said Jim, as he read, &quot;she's in a good berth
+there.&quot; So she was,&mdash;and so she stayed. Frankie got quite
+well once more, and Sallie began to think of going, but
+Mr. Ercildoune evidently clung to her and to the sunshine
+which the bright little fellow cast through the house. Sallie
+was quite right in her supposition. Francesca had cared for
+this girl, had been kind to her and helped her,&mdash;and his
+heart went out to everything that reminded him of his
+dear, dead child. So it happened that autumn passed, and
+winter, and spring,&mdash;and still they stayed. In fact, she was
+domesticated in the house, and, for the first time in years,
+enjoyed the delightful sense of a home. Here, then, she set
+up her rest, and remained; here, when the &quot;cruel war was
+over,&quot; the armies disbanded, the last regiments discharged,
+and Jimmy &quot;came marching home,&quot; brown, handsome, and
+a captain, here he found her,&mdash;and from here he married
+and carried her away.</p>
+
+<p>It was a happy little wedding, though nobody was
+there beside the essentials, save the family and a dear friend
+of Robert's, who was with him at the time, as he had been
+before and would be often again,&mdash;none other than
+William Surrey's favorite cousin and friend, Tom Russell.</p>
+
+<p>The letter which Surrey had written never reached his
+hand till he lay almost dying from the effects of wounds
+and exposure, after he had been brought in safety to our
+lines by his faithful black friends, at Morris Island. Surrey
+had not mistaken his temper; gay, reckless fellow, as he was,
+he was a thorough gentleman, in whom could harbor no
+small spite, nor petty prejudice,&mdash;and without a mean fibre
+in his being. At a glance he took in the whole situation,
+and insisting upon being propped up in bed, with his own
+hand&mdash;though slowly, and as a work of magnitude&mdash;succeeded
+in writing a cordial letter of congratulation and
+affection, that would have been to Surrey like the grasp of
+a brother's hand in a strange and foreign country, had it
+ever reached his touch and eyes.</p>
+
+<p>But even while Tom lay writing his letter, occasionally
+muttering, &quot;They'll have a devilish hard time of it!&quot; or
+&quot;Poor young un!&quot; or &quot;She's one in a million!&quot; or some such
+sentence which marked his feeling and care,&mdash;these two of
+whom he thought, to whose future he looked with such
+loving anxiety, were beyond the reach of human help or
+hindrance,&mdash;done alike with the sorrows and joys of time.</p>
+
+<p>From a distance, with the help of a glass, and absorbing
+interest, he had followed the movements of the flag and its
+bearer, and had cheered, till he fainted from weakness and
+exhaustion, as he saw them safe at last. It was with delight
+that he found himself on the same transport with Ercildoune,
+and discovered in him the brother of the young girl
+for whom, in the past, he had had so pleasing and deep a
+regard, and whose present and future were so full of
+interest for him, in their new and nearer relations.</p>
+
+<p>These two young men, unlike as they were in most
+particulars, were drawn together by an irresistible attraction.
+They had that common bond, always felt and recognized
+by those who possess it, of the gentle blood,&mdash;tastes
+and instincts in common, and a fine, chivalrous sentiment
+which each felt and thoroughly appreciated in the other.
+The friendship thus begun grew with the passing years,
+and was intensified a hundred fold by a portion of the past
+to which they rarely referred, but which lay always at the
+bottom of their hearts. They had each for those two who
+had lain dead together in the streets of New York the
+strongest and tenderest love,&mdash;and though it was not a tie
+about which they could talk, it bound them together as
+with chains of steel.</p>
+
+<p>Russell was with Ercildoune at the time of the wedding,
+and entered into it heartily, as they all did. The result
+was, as has been written, the gayest and merriest of times.
+Sallies dress, which Robert had given her, was a sight to
+behold; and the pretty jewels, which were a part of his gift,
+and the long veil, made her look, as Jim declared, &quot;so
+handsome he didn't know her,&quot;&mdash;though that must have
+been one of Jim's stories, or else he was in the habit of
+making love to strange ladies with extraordinary ease and
+effrontery.</p>
+
+<p>The breakfast was another sight to behold. As Mary
+the cook said to Jane the housemaid, &quot;If they'd been born
+kings and queens, Mrs. Lee couldn't have laid herself out
+more; it's grand, so it is,&mdash;just you go and see;&quot; which Jane
+proceeded to do, and forthwith thereafter corroborated
+Mary's enthusiastic statement.</p>
+
+<p>There were plenty of presents, too: and when it was all
+over, and they were in the carriage, to be sent to the station,
+Mr. Ercildoune, holding Sallie's hand in farewell, left
+there a bit of paper, &quot;which is for you,&quot; he said. &quot;God protect,
+and keep you happy, my child!&quot; Then they were
+gone, with many kind adieus and good wishes called and
+sent after them. When they were seated in the cars, Sallie
+looked at her bit of paper, and read on its outer covering,
+&quot;A wedding-gift to Sallie Howard from my dear daughter
+Francesca,&quot; and found within the deed of a beautiful little
+home. God bless her! say we, with Mr. Ercildoune. God
+bless them both, and may they live long to enjoy it!</p>
+
+<p>That afternoon, as Tom and Robert were driving,
+Russell, noting the unwonted look of life and activity, and
+the gay flags flung to the breeze, demanded what it all
+meant. &quot;Why,&quot; said he, &quot;it is like a field day.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is so,&quot; answered Robert, &quot;or what is the same; it is
+election day.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bless my soul! so it is; and a soldier to be elected.
+Have you voted?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No? Here's a nice state of affairs! a fellow that'll get
+his arm blown off for a flag, but won't take the trouble to
+drop a scrap of paper for it. Come, I'll drive you over.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You forget, Russell!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Forget? Nonsense! This isn't 1860, but 1865. I don't
+forget; I remember. It is after the war now,&mdash;come.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As you please,&quot; said Robert. He knew the disappointment
+that awaited his friend, but he would not thwart him
+now.</p>
+
+<p>There was a great crowd about the polling-office, and
+they all looked on with curious interest as the two young
+men came up. No demonstration was made, though a half-dozen
+brutal fellows uttered some coarse remarks.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hear the damned Rebs talk!&quot; said a man in the army
+blue, who, with keen eyes, was observing the scene.
+&quot;They're the same sort of stuff we licked in Carolina.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ay,&quot; said another, &quot;but with a difference; blue led
+there; but gray'll come off winner here, or I'm mistaken.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Robert stood leaning upon his cane; a support which
+he would need for life, one empty sleeve pinned across his
+breast, over the scar from a deep and yet unhealed wound.
+The clear October sun shone down upon his form and
+face, upon the broad folds of the flag that waved in triumph
+above him, upon a country where wars and rumors
+of wars had ceased.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Courage, man! what ails you?&quot; whispered Russell, as
+he felt his comrade tremble; &quot;it's a ballot in place of a bayonet,
+and all for the same cause; lay it down.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Robert put out his hand.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Challenge the vote!&quot; &quot;Challenge the vote!&quot; &quot;No niggers
+here!&quot; sounded from all sides.</p>
+
+<p>The bit of paper which Ercildoune had placed on the
+window-ledge fluttered to the ground on the outer side,
+and, looking at Tom, Robert said quietly, &quot;1860 or
+1865?&mdash;is the war ended?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No!&quot; answered Tom, taking his arm, and walking away.
+&quot;No, my friend! so you and I will continue in the service.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not ended;&mdash;it is true! how and when will it be
+closed?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is for the loyal people of America to decide,&quot;
+said Russell, as they turned their faces towards home.</p>
+
+<p>How and when will it be closed? a question asked by
+the living and the dead,&mdash;to which America must respond.</p>
+
+<p>Among the living is a vast army: black and white,&mdash;shattered
+and maimed, and blind: and these say, &quot;Here we
+stand, shattered and maimed, that the body politic might
+be perfect! blind forever, that the glorious sun of liberty
+might shine abroad throughout the land, for all people,
+through all coming time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And the dead speak too. From their crowded graves
+come voices of thrilling and persistent pathos, whispering,
+&quot;Finish the work that has fallen from our nerveless hands.
+Let no weight of tyranny, nor taint of oppression, nor stain
+of wrong, cumber the soil nor darken the land we died to
+save.&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="NOTE" id="NOTE"></a>NOTE</h2>
+
+
+<p>Since it is impossible for any one memory to carry
+the entire record of the war, it is well to state, that
+almost every scene in this book is copied from life, and that
+the incidents of battle and camp are part of the history of
+the great contest.</p>
+
+<p>The story of Fort Wagner is one that needs no such
+emphasis, it is too thoroughly known; that of the Color-Sergeant,
+whose proper name is W.H. Carney, is taken
+from a letter written by General M.S. Littlefield to
+Colonel A.G. Browne, Secretary to Governor Andrew.</p>
+
+<p>From the <i>New York Tribune</i> and the <i>Providence Journal</i>
+were taken the accounts of the finding of Hunt, the
+coming of the slaves into a South Carolina camp, and the
+voluntary carrying, by black men, ere they were enlisted,
+of a schooner into the fight at Newbern. Than these two
+papers, none were considered more reliable and trustworthy
+in their war record.</p>
+
+<p>Almost every paper in the North published the narrative
+of the black man pushing off the boat, for which an
+official report is responsible. The boat was a flat-boat, with
+a company of soldiers on board; and the battery under the
+fire of which it fell was at Rodman's Point, North Carolina.
+In drawing the outlines of this, as of the others, I
+have necessarily used a somewhat free pencil, but the main
+incident of each has been faithfully preserved.</p>
+
+<p>The disabled black soldier my own eyes saw thrust
+from a car in Philadelphia.</p>
+
+<p>The portraits of Ercildoune and his children may seem
+to some exaggerated; those who have, as I, the rare pleasure
+of knowing the originals, will say, &quot;the half has not
+been told.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Every leading New York paper, Democratic and
+Republican, was gone over, ere the summary of the Riots
+was made; and I think the record will be found historically
+accurate. The <i>Anglo-African</i> gives the story of poor Abram
+Franklin; and the assault on Surrey has its likeness in the
+death of Colonel O'Brien.</p>
+
+<p>In a conversation between Surrey and Francesca, allusion
+is made to an act the existence of which I have frequently
+heard doubted. I therefore copy here a part of the
+&quot;Retaliatory Act,&quot; passed by the Rebel Government at
+Richmond, and approved by its head, May 1, 1863:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sec. 4. Every white person, being a commissioned
+officer, or acting as such, who, during the present war,
+shall command negroes or mulattoes in arms against the
+Confederate States, or who shall arm, train, organize, or
+prepare negroes or mulattoes for military service against
+the Confederate States, or who shall voluntarily aid
+negroes or mulattoes in any military enterprise, attack, or
+conflict in such service, shall be deemed as inciting servile
+insurrection; and shall, if captured, be put to death.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I have written this book, and send it to the consciences
+and the hearts of the American people. May God, for
+whose &quot;little ones&quot; I have here spoken, vivify its words.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of What Answer?, by Anna E. Dickinson
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of What Answer?, by Anna E. Dickinson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: What Answer?
+
+Author: Anna E. Dickinson
+
+Release Date: March 18, 2005 [EBook #15402]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT ANSWER? ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Josephine Paolucci and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHAT ANSWER?
+
+
+Anna E. Dickinson
+
+1868
+
+
+
+
+WHAT ANSWER?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+ "_In flower of youth and beauty's pride._"
+
+ DRYDEN
+
+
+A crowded New York street,--Fifth Avenue at the height of the afternoon;
+a gallant and brilliant throng. Looking over the glittering array, the
+purple and fine linen, the sweeping robes, the exquisite equipages, the
+stately houses; the faces, delicate and refined, proud, self-satisfied,
+that gazed out from their windows on the street, or that glanced from
+the street to the windows, or at one another,--looking over all this,
+being a part of it, one might well say, "This is existence, and beside
+it there is none other. Let us dress, dine, and be merry! Life is good,
+and love is sweet, and both shall endure! Let us forget that hunger and
+sin, sorrow and self-sacrifice, want, struggle, and pain, have place in
+the world." Yet, even with the words, "poverty, frost-nipped in a summer
+suit," here and there hurried by; and once and again through the
+restless tide the sorrowful procession of the tomb made way.
+
+More than one eye was lifted, and many a pleasant greeting passed
+between these selected few who filled the street and a young man who
+lounged by one of the overlooking windows; and many a comment was
+uttered upon him when the greeting was made:--
+
+"A most eligible _parti_!"
+
+"Handsome as a god!"
+
+"O, immensely rich, I assure you!"
+
+"_Isn't_ he a beauty!"
+
+"Pity he wasn't born poor!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"O, because they say he carried off all the honors at college and
+law-school, and is altogether overstocked with brains for a man who has
+no need to use them."
+
+"Will he practise?"
+
+"Doubtful. Why should he?"
+
+"Ambition, power,--gratify one, gain the other."
+
+"Nonsense! He'll probably go abroad and travel for a while, come back,
+marry, and enjoy life."
+
+"He does that now, I fancy."
+
+"Looks so."
+
+And indeed he did. There was not only vigor and manly beauty, splendid
+in its present, but the "possibility of more to be in the full process
+of his ripening days,"--a form alert and elegant, which had not yet all
+of a man's muscle and strength; a face delicate, yet strong,--refined,
+yet full of latent power; a mass of rippling hair like burnished gold,
+flung back on the one side, sweeping low across brow and cheek on the
+other; eyes
+
+ "Of a deep, soft, lucent hue,--
+ Eyes too expressive to be blue,
+ Too lovely to be gray."
+
+People involuntarily thought of the pink and flower of chivalry as they
+looked at him, or imagined, in some indistinct fashion, that they heard
+the old songs of Percy and Douglas, or the later lays of the cavaliers,
+as they heard his voice,--a voice that was just now humming one of these
+same lays:--
+
+ "Then mounte! then mounte, brave gallants, all,
+ And don your helmes amaine;
+ Death's couriers, Fame and Honor, call
+ Us to the field againe."
+
+"Stuff!" he cried impatiently, looking wistfully at the men's faces
+going by,--"stuff! _We_ look like gallants to ride a tilt at the world,
+and die for Honor and Fame,--we!"
+
+"I thank God, Willie, you are not called upon for any such sacrifice."
+
+"Ah, little mother, well you may!" he answered, smiling, and taking her
+hand,--"well you may, for I am afraid I should fall dreadfully short
+when the time came; and then how ashamed you'd be of your big boy, who
+took his ease at home, with the great drums beating and the trumpets
+blowing outside. And yet--I should like to be tried!"
+
+"See, mother!" he broke out again,--"see what a life it is, getting and
+spending, living handsomely and doing the proper thing towards society,
+and all that,--rubbing through the world in the old hereditary way;
+though I needn't growl at it, for I enjoy it enough, and find it a
+pleasant enough way, Heaven knows. Lazy idler! enjoying the sunshine
+with the rest. Heigh-ho!"
+
+"You have your profession, Willie. There's work there, and opportunity
+sufficient to help others and do for yourself."
+
+"Ay, and I'll _do_ it! But there is so much that is poor and mean, and
+base and tricky, in it all,--so much to disgust and tire one,--all the
+time, day after day, for years. Now if it were only a huge giant that
+stands in your way, you could out rapier and have at him at once, and
+there an end,--laid out or triumphant. That's worth while!"
+
+"O youth, eager and beautiful," thought the mother who listened, "that
+in this phase is so alike the world over,--so impatient to do, so ready
+to brave encounters, so willing to dare and die! May the doing be
+faithful, and the encounters be patiently as well as bravely fought, and
+the fancy of heroic death be a reality of noble and earnest life. God
+grant it! Amen."
+
+"Meanwhile," said the gay voice,--"meanwhile it's a pleasant world; let
+us enjoy it! and as to do this is within the compass of a man's wit,
+therefore will I attempt the doing."
+
+While he was talking he had once more come to the window, and, looking
+out, fastened his eyes unconsciously but intently upon the face of a
+young girl who was slowly passing by,--unconsciously, yet so intently
+that, as if suddenly magnetized, a flicker of feeling went over it; the
+mouth, set with a steady sweetness, quivered a little; the eyes--dark,
+beautiful eyes--were lifted to his an instant, that was all. The mother
+beside him did not see; but she heard a long breath, almost a sigh,
+break from him as he started, then flashed out of the room, snatching
+his hat in the hall, and so on to the street, and away.
+
+Away after her, through block after block, across the crowded avenue to
+Broadway. "Who is she? where did she come from? _I_ never saw her
+before. I wonder if Mrs. Russell knows her, or Clara, or anybody! I will
+know where she lives, or where she is going at least,--that will be some
+clew! There! she is stopping that stage. I'll help her in! no, I
+won't,--she will think I am chasing her. Nonsense! do you suppose she
+saw you at the window? Of course! No, she didn't; don't be a fool!
+There! I'll get into the next stage. Now I'll keep watch of that, and
+she'll not know. So--all right! Go ahead, driver." And happy with some
+new happiness, eager, bright, the handsome young fellow sat watching
+that other stage, and the stylish little lace bonnet that was all he
+could see of his magnet, through the interminable journey down Broadway.
+
+How clear the air seemed! and the sun, how splendidly it shone! and
+what a glad look was upon all the people's faces! He felt like breaking
+out into gay little snatches of song, and moved his foot to the waltz
+measure that beat time in his brain till the irate old gentleman
+opposite, whom nature had made of a sour complexion and art assisted to
+corns, broke out with an angry exclamation. That drew his attention for
+a moment. A slackening of speed, a halt, and the stage was wedged in one
+of the inextricable "jams" on Broadway. Vain the search for _her_ stage
+then; looking over the backs of the poor, tired horses, or from the
+sidewalk,--here, there, at this one and that one,--all for naught! Stage
+and passenger, eyes, little lace bonnet, and all, had vanished away, as
+William Surrey confessed, and confessed with reluctance and discontent.
+
+"No matter!" he said presently,--"no matter! I shall see her again. I
+know it! I feel it! It is written in the book of the Fates! So now I
+shall content me with something"--that looks like her he did not say
+definitely, but felt it none the less, as, going over to the
+flower-basket near by, he picked out a little nosegay of mignonette and
+geranium, with a tea-rosebud in its centre, and pinned it at his
+button-hole. "Delicate and fine!" he thought,--"delicate and fine!" and
+with the repetition he looked from it down the long street after the
+interminable line of stages; and somehow the faint, sweet perfume, and
+the fair flower, and the dainty lace bonnet, were mingled in wild and
+charming confusion in his brain, till he shook himself, and laughed at
+himself, and quoted Shakespeare to excuse himself,--"A mad world, my
+masters!"--seeing this poor old earth of ours, as people always do,
+through their own eyes.
+
+"God bless ye! and long life to yer honor! and may the blessed Virgin
+give ye the desire of yer heart!" called the Irishwoman after him, as he
+put back the change in her hand and went gayly up the street. "Sure,
+he's somebody's darlint, the beauty! the saints preserve him!" she said,
+as she looked from the gold piece in her palm to the fair, sunny head,
+watching it till it was lost in the crowd from her grateful eyes.
+
+Evidently this young man was a favorite, for, as he passed along, many a
+face, worn by business and care, brightened as he smiled and spoke; many
+a countenance stamped with the trade-mark, preoccupied and hard, relaxed
+in a kindly recognition as he bowed and went by; and more than one found
+time, even in that busy whirl, to glance for a moment after him, or to
+remember him with a pleasant feeling, at least till the pavement had
+been crossed on which they met,--a long space at that hour of the day,
+and with so much more important matters--Bull and Bear, rise and fall,
+stock and account--claiming their attention.
+
+Evidently a favorite, for, turning off into one of the side streets,
+coming into his father's huge foundry, faces heated and dusty, tired,
+stained, and smoke-begrimed, glanced up from their work, from forge and
+fire and engine, with an expression that invited a look or word,--and
+look and word were both ready.
+
+"The boss is out, sir," said one of the foremen, "and if you please,
+and have got the time to spare, I'd like to have a word with you before
+he comes in."
+
+"All right, Jim! say your say."
+
+"Well, sir, you'll likely think I'm sticking my nose into what doesn't
+concern me. 'Tain't a very nice thing I've got to say, but if I don't
+say it I don't know who in thunder will; and, as it's my private opinion
+that somebody ought to, I'll just pitch in."
+
+"Very good; pitch in."
+
+"Very good it is then. Only it ain't. Very bad, more like. It's a nasty
+mess, and no mistake! and there's the cause of it!" pointing his brawny
+hand towards the door, upon which was marked, "Office. Private," and
+sniffing as though he smelt something bad in the air.
+
+"You don't mean my father!" flame shooting from the clear eyes.
+
+"Be damned if I do. Beg pardon. Of course I don't. I mean the fellow as
+is perched up on a high stool in that there office, this very minute,
+poking into his books."
+
+"Franklin?"
+
+"You've hit it. Franklin,--Abe Franklin,--that's the ticket."
+
+"What's the matter with him? what has he done?"
+
+"Done? nothing! not as I know of, anyway, except what's right and
+proper. 'Tain't what he's done or's like to do. It's what he is."
+
+"And what may that be?"
+
+"Well, he's a nigger! there's the long and short of it. Nobody here'd
+object to his working in this place, providing he was a runner, or an
+errand-boy, or anything that it's right and proper for a nigger to be;
+but to have him sitting in that office, writing letters for the boss,
+and going over the books, and superintending the accounts of the
+fellows, so that he knows just what they get on Saturday nights, and
+being as fine as a fiddle, is what the boys won't stand; and they swear
+they'll leave, every man of 'em, unless he has his walking
+papers,--double-quick too."
+
+"Very well; let them. There are other workmen, good as they, in this
+city of New York."
+
+"Hold on, sir! let me say my say first. There are seven hundred men
+working in this place: the most of 'em have worked here a long while.
+Good work, good pay. There ain't a man of 'em but likes Mr. Surrey, and
+would be sorry to lose the place; so, if they won't bear it, there ain't
+any that will. Wait a bit! I ain't through yet."
+
+"Go on,"--quietly enough spoken, but the mouth shook under its silky
+fringe, and a fiery spot burned on either cheek.
+
+"All right. Well, sir, I know all about Franklin. He's a bright one,
+smart enough to stock a lot of us with brains and have some to spare; he
+don't interfere with us, and does his work well, too, I reckon,--though
+that's neither here nor there, nor none of our business if the boss is
+satisfied; and he looks like a gentleman, and acts like one, there's no
+denying that! and as for his skin,--well!" a smile breaking over his
+good-looking face, "his skin's quite as white as mine now, anyway,"
+smearing his red-flannel arm over his grimy phiz; "but then, sir, it
+won't rub off. He's a nigger, and there's no getting round it.
+
+"All right, sir! give you your chance directly. Don't speak yet,--ain't
+through, if _you_ please. Well, sir, it's agen nature,--you may talk
+agen it, and work agen it, and fight agen it till all's blue, and what
+good'll it do? You can't get an Irishman, and, what's more, a free-born
+American citizen, to put himself on a level with a nigger,--not by no
+manner of means. No, sir; you can turn out the whole lot, and get
+another after it, and another after that, and so on to the end of the
+chapter, and you can't find men among 'em all that'll stay and have him
+strutting through 'em, up to his stool and his books, grand as a
+peacock."
+
+"Would they work _with_ him?"
+
+"At the same engines, and the like, do you mean?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Nary time, so 'tain't likely they'll work under him. Now, sir, you see
+I know what I'm saying, and I'm saying it to _you_, Mr. Surrey, and not
+to your father, because he won't take a word from me nor nobody
+else,--and here's just the case. Now I ain't bullying, you understand,
+and I say it because somebody else'd say it, if I didn't, uglier and
+rougher. Abe Franklin'll have to go out of this shop in precious short
+order, or every man here'll bolt next Saturday night. There! now I've
+done, sir, and you can fire away."
+
+But as he showed no signs of "firing away," and stood still, pondering,
+Jim broke out again:--
+
+"Beg pardon, sir. If I've said anything you don't like, sorry for it.
+It's because Mr. Surrey is so good an employer, and, if you'll let me
+say so, because I like you so well," glancing over him
+admiringly,--"for, you see, a good engineer takes to a clean-built
+machine wherever he sees it,--it's just because of this I thought it was
+better to tell you, and get you to tell the boss, and to save any row;
+for I'd hate mortally to have it in this shop where I've worked, man and
+boy, so many years. Will you please to speak to him, sir? and I hope you
+understand."
+
+"Thank you, Jim. Yes, I understand; and I'll speak to him."
+
+Was it that the sun was going down, or that some clouds were in the sky,
+or had the air of the shop oppressed him? Whatever it was, as he came
+out he walked with a slower step from which some of the spring had gone,
+and the people's faces looked not so happy; and, glancing down at his
+rosebud, he saw that its fair petals had been soiled by the smoke and
+grime in which he had been standing; and, while he looked a dead march
+came solemnly sounding up the street, and a soldier's funeral went
+by,--rare enough, in that autumn of 1860, to draw a curious crowd on
+either side; rare enough to make him pause and survey it; and as the
+line turned into another street, and the music came softened to his ear,
+he once more hummed the words of the song which had been haunting him
+all the day:--
+
+ "Then mounte! then mounte, brave gallants, all,
+ And don your helmes amaine;
+ Death's couriers, Fame and Honor, call
+ Us to the field againe,"--
+
+sang them to himself, but not with the gay, bright spirit of the
+morning. Then he seemed to see the cavaliers, brilliant and brave,
+riding out to the encounter. Now, in the same dim and fanciful way, he
+beheld them stretched, still and dead, upon the plain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+ "_Thou--drugging pain by patience._"
+
+ Arnold
+
+
+"Laces cleaned, and fluting and ruffling done here,"--that was what the
+little sign swinging outside the little green door said. And, coming
+under it into the cosey little rooms, you felt this was just the place
+in which to leave things soiled and torn, and come back to find them, by
+some mysterious process, immaculate and whole.
+
+Two rooms, with folding-doors between, in which through the day stood a
+counter, cut up on the one side into divers pigeon-holes rilled with
+small boxes and bundles, carefully pinned and labelled,--owner's name,
+time left, time to be called for, money due; neat and nice as a new pin,
+as every one said who had any dealings there.
+
+The counter was pushed back now, as always after seven o'clock, for the
+people who came in the evening were few; and then, when that was out of
+the way, it seemed more home-like and less shoppy, as Mrs. Franklin said
+every night, as she straightened things out, and peered through the
+window or looked from the front door, and wondered if "Abram weren't
+later than usual," though she knew right well he was punctual as
+clock-work,--good clock-work too,--when he was going to his toil or
+hurrying back to his home.
+
+Pleasant little rooms, with the cleanest and brightest of rag carpets on
+the floor; a paper on the walls, cheap enough, but gay with scarlet
+rosebuds and green leaves, rivalled by the vines and berries on the
+pretty chintz curtains; chairs of a dozen ages and patterns, but all of
+them with open, inviting countenances and a hospitable air; a wood fire
+that _looked_ like a wood fire crackling and sparkling on the hearth,
+shining and dancing over the ceiling and the floor and the walls,
+cutting queer capers with the big rocking-chair,--which turned into a
+giant with long arms,--and with the little figures on the mantel-shelf,
+and the books in their cases, softening and glorifying the two grand
+faces hanging in their frames opposite, and giving just light enough
+below them to let you read "John Brown" and "Phillips," if you had any
+occasion to read, and did not know those whom the world knows; and first
+and last, and through all, as if it loved her, and was loath to part
+with her for a moment, whether she poked the flame, or straightened a
+chair, or went out towards the little kitchen to lift a lid and smell a
+most savory stew, or came back to the supper-table to arrange and
+rearrange what was already faultless in its cleanliness and simplicity,
+wherever she went and whatever she did, this firelight fell warm about a
+woman, large and comfortable and handsome, with a motherly look to her
+person, and an expression that was all kindness in her comely face and
+dark, soft eyes,--eyes and face and form, though, that might as well
+have had "Pariah" written all over them, and "leper" stamped on their
+front, for any good, or beauty, or grace, that people could find in
+them; for the comely face was a dark face, and the voice, singing an old
+Methodist hymn, was no Anglo-Saxon treble, but an Anglo-African voice,
+rich and mellow, with the touch of pathos or sorrow always heard in
+these tones.
+
+"There!" she said, "there he is!" as a step, hasty yet halting, was
+heard on the pavement; and, turning up the light, she ran quickly to
+open the door, which, to be sure, was unfastened, and to give the
+greeting to her "boy," which, through many a year, had never been
+omitted.
+
+_Her_ boy,--you would have known that as soon as you saw him,--the same
+eyes, same face, the same kindly look; but the face was thinner and
+finer, and the brow was a student's brow, full of thought and
+speculation; and, looking from her hearty, vigorous form, you saw that
+his was slight to attenuation.
+
+"Sit down, sonny, sit down and rest. There! how tired you look!"
+bustling round him, smoothing his thin face and rough hair. "Now don't
+do that! let your old mother do it!" It pleased her to call herself old,
+though she was but just in her prime. "You've done enough for one day,
+I'm sure, waiting on other people, and walking with your poor lame foot
+till you're all but beat out. You be quiet now, and let somebody else
+wait on you." And, going down on her knees, she took up the lame foot,
+and began to unlace the cork-soled, high-cut shoe, and, drawing it out,
+you saw that it was shrunken and small, and that the leg was shorter
+than its fellow.
+
+"Poor little foot!" rubbing it tenderly, smoothing the stocking over it,
+and chafing it to bring warmth and life to its surface. Her "baby," she
+called it, for it was no bigger than when he was a little fellow. "Poor,
+tired foot! ain't it a dreadful long walk, sonny?"
+
+"Pretty long, mother; but I'd take twice that to do such work at the
+end."
+
+"Yes, indeed, it's good work, and Mr. Surrey's a good man, and a kind
+one, that's sure! I only wish some others had a little of his spirit.
+Such a shame to have you dragging all the way up here, when any dirty
+fellow that wants to can ride. I don't mind for myself so much, for I
+can walk about spry enough yet, and don't thank them for their old
+omnibuses nor cars; but it's too bad for you, so it is,--too bad!"
+
+"Never mind, mother! keep a brave heart. 'There's a good time coming
+soon, a good time coming!' as I heard Mr. Hutchinson sing the other
+night,--and it's true as gospel."
+
+"Maybe it is, sonny!" dubiously, "but I don't see it,--not a sign of
+it,--no indeed, not one! It gets worse and worse all the time, and it
+takes a deal of faith to hold on; but the good Lord knows best, and
+it'll be right after a while, anyhow! And now _that's_ straight!"
+pulling a soft slipper on the lame foot, and putting its mate by his
+side; then going off to pour out the tea, and dish up the stew, and add
+a touch or two to the appetizing supper-table.
+
+"It's as good as a feast,"--taking a bite out of her nice home-made
+bread,--"better'n a feast, to think of you in that place; and I can't
+scarcely realize it yet. It seems too fine to be true."
+
+"That's the way I've felt all the month, mother! It has been just like a
+dream to me, and I keep thinking surely I'm asleep and will waken to
+find this is just an air-castle I've been building, or 'a vision of the
+night,' as the good book says."
+
+"Well, it's a blessed vision, sure enough! and I hope to the good Lord
+it'll last;--but you won't if you make a vision of your supper in that
+way. You just eat, Abram! and have done your talking till you're
+through, if you can't do both at once. Talking's good, but eating's
+better when you're hungry; and it's my opinion you ought to be hungry,
+if you ain't."
+
+So the teacups were filled and emptied, and the spoons clattered, and
+the stew was eaten, and the baked potatoes devoured, and the
+bread-and-butter assaulted vigorously, and general havoc made with the
+good things and substantial things before and between them; and then,
+this duty faithfully performed, the wreck speedily vanished away; and
+cups and forks, spoons and plates, knives and dishes, cleaned and
+cupboarded, Mrs. Franklin came, and, drawing away the book over which he
+was poring, said, while she smoothed face and hair once more, "Come,
+Abram, what is it?"
+
+"What's what, mother?" with a little laugh.
+
+"Something ails you, sonny. That's plain enough. I know when anything's
+gone wrong with ye, sure, and something's gone wrong to-day."
+
+"O mother! you worry about me too much, indeed you do. If I'm a little
+tired or out of sorts,--which I haven't any right to be, not here,--or
+quiet, or anything, you think somebody's been hurting me, or abusing me,
+or that everything's gone wrong with me, when I do well enough all the
+time."
+
+"Now, Abram, you can't deceive me,--not that way. My eyes is mother's
+eyes, and they see plain enough, where you're concerned, without
+spectacles. Who's been putting on you to-day? Somebody. You don't carry
+that down look in your face and your eyes for nothing, I found that out
+long ago, and you've got it on to-night."
+
+"O mother!"
+
+"Don't you 'O mother' me! I ain't going to be put off in that way,
+Abram, an' you needn't think it. Has Mr. Surrey been saying anything
+hard to you?"
+
+"No, indeed, mother; you needn't ask that."
+
+"Nor none of the foremen?"
+
+"None."
+
+"Has Snipe been round?"
+
+"Hasn't been near the office since Mr. Surrey dismissed him."
+
+"Met him anywhere?"
+
+"Nein!" laughing, "I haven't laid eyes on him."
+
+"Well, the men have been saying or doing something then."
+
+"N-no; why, what an inquisitor it is!"
+
+"'N-no.' You don't say that full and plain, Abram. Something _has_ been
+going wrong with the men. Now what is it? Come, out with it."
+
+"Well, mother, if you _will_ know, you will, I suppose; and, as you
+never get tired of the story, I'll go over the whole tale.
+
+"So long as I was Mr. Surrey's office-boy, to make his fires, and sweep
+and dust, and keep things in order, the men were all good enough to me
+after their fashion; and if some of them growled because they thought he
+favored me, Mr. Given, or some one said, 'O, you know his mother was a
+servant of Mrs. Surrey for no end of years, and of course Mr. Surrey has
+a kind of interest in him'; and that put everything straight again.
+
+"Well! you know how good Mr. Willie has been to me ever since we were
+little boys in the same house,--he in the parlor and I in the kitchen;
+the books he's given me, and the chances he's made me, and the way he's
+put me in of learning and knowing. And he's been twice as kind to me
+ever since I refused that offer of his."
+
+"Yes, I know, but tell me about it again."
+
+"Well, Mr. Surrey sent me up to the house one day, just while Mr. Willie
+was at home from college, and he stopped me and had a talk with me, and
+asked me in his pleasant way, not as if I were a 'nigger,' but just as
+he'd talk to one of his mates, ever so many questions about myself and
+my studies and my plans; and I told him what I wanted,--how hard you
+worked, and how I hoped to fit myself to go into some little business of
+my own, not a barber-shop, or any such thing, but something that'd
+support you and keep you like a lady after while, and that would help me
+and my people at the same time. For, of course," I said, "every one of
+us that does anything more than the world expects us to do, or better,
+makes the world think so much the more and better of us all."
+
+"What did he say to that?"
+
+"I wish you'd seen him! He pushed back that beautiful hair of his, and
+his eyes shone, and his mouth trembled, though I could see he tried hard
+to hold it still, and put up his hand to cover it; and he said, in a
+solemn sort of way, 'Franklin, you've opened a window for me, and I
+sha'n't forget what I see through it to-day.' And then he offered to set
+me up in some business at once, and urged hard when I declined."
+
+"Say it all over again, sonny; what was it you told him?"
+
+"I said that would do well enough for a white man; that he could help,
+and the white man be helped, just as people were being and doing all the
+time, and no one would think a thought about it. But, sir," I said,
+"everybody says we can do nothing alone; that we're a poor, shiftless
+set; and it will be just one of the master race helping a nigger to
+climb and to stand where he couldn't climb or stand alone, and I'd
+rather fight my battle alone."
+
+"Yes, yes! well, go on, go on. I like to hear what followed."
+
+"Well, there was just a word or two more, and then he put out his hand
+and shook mine, and said good by. It was the first time I ever shook
+hands with a white _gentleman_. Some white hands have shaken mine, but
+they always made me feel that they _were_ white and that mine was black,
+and that it was a condescension. I felt that, when they didn't mean I
+should. But there was nothing between us. I didn't think of his skin,
+and, for once in my life, I quite forgot I was black, and didn't
+remember it again till I got out on the street and heard a dirty little
+ragamuffin cry, 'Hi! hi! don't that nagur think himself foine?' I
+suspect, in spite of my lameness, I had been holding up my head and
+walking like a man."
+
+In spite of his lameness he was holding up his head and walking like a
+man now; up and down and across the little room, trembling, excited, the
+words rushing in an eager flow from his mouth. His mother sat quietly
+rocking herself and knitting. She knew in this mood there was nothing
+to be said to him; and, indeed, what had she to say save that which
+would add fuel to the flame?
+
+"Well!"--a long sigh,--"after that Mr. Surrey doubled my wages, and was
+kinder to me than ever, and watched me, as I saw, quite closely; and
+that was the way he found out about Mr. Snipe.
+
+"You see Mr. Snipe had been very careless about keeping the books; would
+come down late in the mornings, just before Mr. Surrey came in, and go
+away early in the afternoons, as soon as he had left. Of course, the
+books got behindhand every month, and Mr. Snipe didn't want to stay and
+work overhours to make them up. One day he found out, by something I
+said, that I understood bookkeeping, and tried me, and then got me to
+take them home at night and go over them. I didn't know then how bad he
+was doing, and that I had no business to shield him, and all went smooth
+enough till the day I was too sick to get down to the office, and two of
+the books were at home. Then Mr. Surrey discovered the whole thing.
+There was a great row, it seems; and Mr. Surrey examined the books, and
+found, as he was pleased to say, that I'd kept them in first-rate style;
+so he dismissed Mr. Snipe on the spot, with six months' pay,--for you
+know he never does anything by halves,--and put me in his place.
+
+"The men don't like it, I know, and haven't liked it, but of course they
+can't say anything to him, and they haven't said anything to me; but
+I've seen all along that they looked at me with no friendly eyes, and
+for the last day or two I've heard a word here and there which makes me
+think there's trouble brewing,--bad enough, I'm afraid; maybe to the
+losing of my place, though Mr. Surrey has said nothing about it to me."
+
+Just here the little green door opened, and the foreman whom we have
+before seen--James Given as the register had him entered, Jim Given as
+every one knew him--came in; no longer with grimy face and flannel
+sleeves, but brave in all his Sunday finery, and as handsome a b'hoy,
+they said, at his engine-house, as any that ran with the machine; having
+on his arm a young lady whom he apostrophized as Sallie, as handsome and
+brave as he.
+
+"Evening,"--a nod of the head accompanying. "Miss Howard's traps done?"
+
+"I wish you wouldn't say 'traps,' Jim," corrected Sallie, _sotto voce_:
+"it's not proper. It's for a collar and pair of cuffs, Mrs. Franklin,"
+she added aloud, putting down a little check.
+
+"Not proper! goodness gracious me! there spoke Snipe! Come, Sallie,
+you've pranced round with that stuck-up jackanapes till you're getting
+spoiled entirely, so you are, and I scarcely know you. Not proper,--O
+my!"
+
+"Spoiled, am I? Thank you, sir, for the compliment! And you don't know
+me at all,--don't you? Very well, then I'll say good night, and leave;
+for it wouldn't be proper to take a young lady you don't know to the
+theatre,--now, would it? Good by!"--making for the door.
+
+"Now don't, Sallie, please."
+
+"Don't what?"
+
+"Don't talk that way."
+
+"Don't yourself, more like. You're just as cross as cross can be, and
+disagreeable, and hateful,--all because I happen to know there's some
+other man in the world besides yourself, and smile at him now and then.
+'Don't,' indeed!"
+
+"Come, Sallie, you're too hard on a fellow. It's your own fault, you
+know well enough, if you will be so handsome. Now, if you were an ugly
+old girl, or I was certain of you, I shouldn't feel so bad, nor act so
+neither. But when there's a lot of hungry chaps round, all gaping to
+gobble you up, and even poor little Snipes trying to peck and bite at
+you, and you won't say 'yes' nor 'no' to me, how do you expect a man to
+keep cool? Can't do it, nohow, and you needn't ask it. Human nature's
+human nature, I suppose, and mine ain't a quiet nor a patient one, not
+by no manner of means. Come, Sallie, own up; you wouldn't like me so
+well as I hope you do if it was,--now, would you?"
+
+Mrs. Franklin smiled, though she had heard not a word of the lovers'
+quarrel, as she put a pin in the back of the ruffled collar which Sallie
+had come to reclaim. A quarrel it had evidently been, and as evidently
+the lady was mollified, for she said, "Don't be absurd, Jim!" and Jim
+laughed and responded, "All right, Sallie, you're an angel! But come, we
+must hurry, or the curtain'll be up,"--and away went the dashing and
+handsome couple.
+
+Abram, shutting in the shutters, and fastening the door, sat down to a
+quiet evening's reading, while his mother knitted and sewed,--an evening
+the likeness of a thousand others of which they never tired; for this
+mother and son, to whom fate had dealt so hard a measure, upon whom the
+world had so persistently frowned, were more to each other than most
+mothers and sons whose lines had fallen in pleasanter
+places,--compensation, as Mr. Emerson says, being the law of existence
+the world over.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+ "_Every one has his day, from which he dates._"
+
+ OLD PROVERB
+
+
+You see, Surrey, the school is something extra, and the performances,
+and it will please Clara no end; so I thought I'd run over, and
+inveigled you into going along for fear it should be stupid, and I would
+need some recreation."
+
+"Which I am to afford?"
+
+"Verily."
+
+"As clown or grindstone?--to make laugh, or sharpen your wits upon?"
+
+"Far be it from me to dictate. Whichever suits our character best. On
+the whole, I think the last would be the most appropriate; the first I
+can swear wouldn't!"
+
+"_Pourquoi_?"
+
+"O, a woman's reason,--because!"
+
+"Because why? Am I cross?"
+
+"Not exactly."
+
+"Rough?"
+
+"As usual,--like a May breeze."
+
+"Cynical?"
+
+"As Epicurus."
+
+"Irritable?"
+
+"'A countenance [and manner] more in sorrow than in anger.' Something's
+wrong with you; who is she?"
+
+"She!"
+
+"Ay,--she. That was a wise Eastern king who put at the bottom of every
+trouble and mischief a woman."
+
+"Fine estimate."
+
+"Correct one. Evidently he had studied the genus thoroughly, and had a
+poor opinion of it."
+
+"No wonder."
+
+"Amazing! _you_ say 'no wonder'! Astounding words! speak them again."
+
+"No wonder,--seeing that he had a mother, and that she had such a son.
+He must needs have been a bad fellow or a fool to have originated so
+base a philosophy, and how then could he respect the source of such a
+stream as himself?"
+
+"Sir Launcelot,--squire of dames!"
+
+"Not Sir Launcelot, but squire of dames, I hope."
+
+"There you go again! Now I shall query once more, who is she?"
+
+"No woman."
+
+"No?"
+
+"No, though by your smiling you would seem to say so!"
+
+"Nay, I believe you, and am vastly relieved in the believing. Take
+advice from ten years of superior age, and fifty of experience, and have
+naught to do with them. Dost hear?"
+
+"I do."
+
+"And will heed?"
+
+"Which?--the words or the acts of my counsellor? who, of a surety,
+preaches wisely and does foolishly, or who does wisely and preaches
+foolishly; for preaching and practice do not agree."
+
+"Nay, man, thou art unreasonable; to perform either well is beyond the
+capacity of most humans, and I desire not to be blessed above my
+betters. Then let my rash deeds and my prudent words both be teachers
+unto thee. But if it be true that no woman is responsible for your grave
+countenance this morning, then am I wasting words, and will return to
+our muttons. What ails you?"
+
+"I am belligerent."
+
+"I see,--that means quarrelsome."
+
+"And hopeless."
+
+"Bad,--very! belligerent and hopeless! When you go into a fight always
+expect to win; the thought is half the victory."
+
+"Suppose you are an atom against the universe?" "Don't fight, succumb.
+There's a proverb,--a wise one,--Napoleon's, 'God is on the side of the
+strongest battalions.'"
+
+"A lie,--exploded at Waterloo. There's another proverb, 'One on the side
+of God is a majority.' How about that?"
+
+"Transcendental humbug."
+
+"A truth demonstrated at Wittenberg."
+
+"Are you aching for the martyr's palm?"
+
+"I am afraid not. On the whole, I think I'd rather enjoy life than
+quarrel with it. But"--with a sudden blaze--"I feel to-day like fighting
+the world."
+
+"Hey, presto! what now, young'un?"
+
+"I don't wonder you stare"--a little laugh. "I'm talking like a fool,
+and, for aught I know, feeling like one, aching to fight, and knowing
+that I might as well quarrel with the winds, or stab that water as it
+flows by."
+
+"As with what?"
+
+"The fellow I've just been getting a good look at."
+
+"What manner of fellow?"
+
+"Ignorant, selfish, brutal, devilish."
+
+"Tremendous! why don't you bind him over to keep the peace?"
+
+"Because he is like the judge of old time, neither fears God nor
+respects his image,--when his image is carved in ebony, and not ivory."
+
+"What do you call this fellow?"
+
+"Public Opinion."
+
+"This big fellow is abusing and devouring a poor little chap, eh? and
+the chap's black?"
+
+"True."
+
+"And sometimes the giant is a gentleman in purple and fine linen,
+otherwise broadcloth; and sometimes in hodden gray, otherwise homespun
+or slop-shop; and sometimes he cuts the poor little chap with a silver
+knife, which is rhetoric, and sometimes with a wooden spoon, which is
+raw-hide. Am I stating it all correctly?"
+
+"All correctly."
+
+"And you've been watching this operation when you had better have been
+minding your own business, and getting excited when you had better have
+kept cool, and now want to rush into the fight, drums beating and colors
+flying, to the rescue of the small one. Don't deny it,--it's all written
+out in your eyes."
+
+"I sha'n't deny it, except about the business and the keeping cool. It's
+any gentleman's business to interfere between a bully and a weakling
+that he's abusing; and his blood must be water that does not boil while
+he 'watches the operation' as you say, and goes in."
+
+"To get well pommelled for his pains, and do no good to any one, himself
+included. Let the weakling alone. A fellow that can't save himself is
+not worth saving. If he can't swim nor walk, let him drop under or go to
+the wall; that's my theory."
+
+"Anglo-Saxon theory--and practice."
+
+"Good theory, excellent practice,--in the main. What special phase of it
+has been disturbing your equanimity?"
+
+"You know the Franklins?"
+
+"Of course: Aunt Mina's son--what's his name?--is a sort of _protege_
+of yours, I believe: what of him?"
+
+"He is cleanly?"
+
+"A nice question. Doubtless."
+
+"Respectable?"
+
+"What are you driving at?"
+
+"Intelligent?"
+
+"Most true."
+
+"Ambitious?"
+
+"Or his looks belie him."
+
+"Faithful, trusty, active, helpful, in every way devoted to my father's
+service and his work."
+
+"With Sancho, I believe it all because your worship says so."
+
+"Well, this man has just been discharged from my father's employ because
+seven hundred and forty-two other men gave notice to quit if he
+remained."
+
+"The reason?"
+
+"His skin."
+
+"The reason is not 'so deep as a well, nor so wide as a church-door, but
+it is enough.' Of course they wouldn't work with him, and my uncle
+Surrey, begging your pardon, should not have attempted anything so
+Quixotic."
+
+"His skin covering so many excellent qualities, and these qualities
+gaining recognition,--that was the cause. They worked with him so long
+as he was a servant of servants: so soon as he demonstrated that he
+could strike out strongly and swim, they knocked him under; and, proving
+that he could walk alone, they ran hastily to shove him to the wall."
+
+"What! quoting my own words against me?"
+
+"Anglo-Saxon says we are the masters: we monopolize the strength and
+courage, the beauty, intelligence, power. These creatures,--what are
+they? poor, worthless, lazy, ignorant, good for nothing but to be used
+as machines, to obey. When lo! one of these dumb machines suddenly
+starts forth with a man's face; this creature no longer obeys, but
+evinces a right to command; and Anglo-Saxon speedily breaks him in
+pieces."
+
+"Come, Willie, I hope you're not going to assert these people our
+equals,--that would be too much."
+
+"They have no intelligence, Anglo-Saxon declares,--then refuses them
+schools, while he takes of their money to help educate his own sons.
+They have no ambition,--then closes upon them every door of honorable
+advancement, and cries through the key-hole, Serve, or starve. They
+cannot stand alone, they have no faculty for rising,--then, if one of
+them finds foothold, the ground is undermined beneath him. If a head is
+seen above the crowd, the ladder is jerked away, and he is trampled into
+the dust where he is fallen. If he stays in the position to which
+Anglo-Saxon assigns him, he is a worthless nigger; if he protests
+against it, he is an insolent nigger; if he rises above it, he is a
+nigger not to be tolerated at all,--to be crushed and buried speedily."
+
+"Now, Willie, 'no more of this, an thou lovest me.' I came not out
+to-day to listen to an abolition harangue, nor a moral homily, but to
+have a good time, to be civil and merry withal, if you will allow it. Of
+course you don't like Franklin's discharge, and of course you have done
+something to compensate him. I know--you have found him another place.
+No,--you couldn't do that?
+
+"No, I couldn't."
+
+"Well, you've settled him somewhere,--confess."
+
+"He has some work for the present; some copying for me, and translating,
+for this unfortunate is a scholar, you know."
+
+"Very good; then let it rest. Granted the poor devils have a bad time of
+it, you're not bound to sacrifice yourself for them. If you go on at
+this pace, you'll bring up with the long-haired, bloomer reformers, and
+then--God help you. No, you needn't say another word,--I sha'n't
+listen,--not one; so. Here we are! school yonder,--well situated?"
+
+"Capitally."
+
+"Fine day."
+
+"Very."
+
+"Clara will be charmed to see you."
+
+"You flatter me. I hope so."
+
+"There, now you talk rationally. Don't relapse. We will go up and hear
+the pretty creatures read their little pieces, and sing their little
+songs, and see them take their nice blue-ribboned diplomas, and fall in
+love with their dear little faces, and flirt a bit this evening, and
+to-morrow I shall take Ma'm'selle Clara home to Mamma Russell, and you
+may go your ways."
+
+"The programme is satisfactory."
+
+"Good. Come on then."
+
+All Commencement days, at college or young ladies' school, if not twin
+brothers and sisters, are at least first cousins, with a strong family
+likeness. Who that has passed through one, or witnessed one, needs any
+description thereof to furbish up its memories. This of Professor Hale's
+belonged to the great tribe, and its form and features were of the old
+established type. The young ladies were charming; plenty of white gowns,
+plenty of flowers, plenty of smiles, blushes, tremors, hopes, and fears;
+little songs, little pieces, little addresses, to be sung, to be played,
+to be read, just as Tom Russell had foreshadowed, and proving to be--
+
+"Just the least of a bore!" as he added after listening awhile; "don't
+you think so, Surrey?"
+
+"Hush! don't talk."
+
+Tom stared; then followed his cousin's eye, fixed immovably upon one
+little spot on the platform. "By Jove!" he cried, "what a beauty! As
+Father Dryden would say, 'this is the porcelain clay of humankind.' No
+wonder you look. Who is she,--do you know?"
+
+"No."
+
+"No! short, clear, and decisive. Don't devour her, Will. Remember the
+sermon I preached you an hour ago. Come, look at this,"--thrusting a
+programme into his face,--"and stop staring. Why, boy, she has
+bewitched you,--or inspired you,"--surveying him sharply.
+
+And indeed it would seem so. Eyes, mouth, face, instinct with some
+subtle and thrilling emotion. As gay Tom Russell looked, he
+involuntarily stretched out his hand, as one would put it between
+another and some danger of which that other is unaware, and remembered
+what he had once said in talking of him,--"If Will Surrey's time does
+come, I hope the girl will be all right in every way, for he'll plunge
+headlong, and love like distraction itself,--no half-way; it will be a
+life-and-death affair for him." "Come, I must break in on this."
+
+"Surrey!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"There's a pretty girl."
+
+No answer.
+
+"There! over yonder. Third seat, second row. See her? Pretty?"
+
+"Very pretty."
+
+"Miss--Miss--what's her name? O, Miss Perry played that last thing very
+well for a school-girl, eh?"
+
+"Very well."
+
+"Admirable room this, for hearing; rare quality with chapels and halls;
+architects in planning generally tax ingenuity how to confuse sound. Now
+these girls don't make a great noise, yet you can distinguish every
+word,--can't you?"
+
+No response.
+
+"I say, can't you?"
+
+"Every word."
+
+Tom drew a long breath.
+
+"Professor Hale's a sensible old fellow; I like the way he conducts this
+school." (Mem. Tom didn't know a thing about it.) "Carries it on
+excellently." A pause.
+
+Silence.
+
+"Fine-looking, too. A man's physique has a deal to do with his success
+in the world. If he carries a letter of recommendation in his face,
+people take him on trust to begin with; and if he's a big fellow, like
+the Professor yonder, he imposes on folks awfully; they pop down on
+their knees to him, and clear the track for him, as if he had a right to
+it all. Bless me! I never thought of that before,--it's the reason you
+and I have got on so swimmingly,--is it not, now? Certainly. You think
+so? Of course."
+
+"Of course,"--sedately and gravely spoken.
+
+Tom groaned, for, with a face kind and bright, he was yet no beauty;
+while if Surrey had one crowning gift in this day of fast youths and
+self-satisfied Young America, it was that of modesty with regard to
+himself and any gifts and graces nature had blessed him withal.
+
+"Clara has a nice voice."
+
+"Very nice."
+
+"She is to sing, do you know?"
+
+"I know."
+
+"Do you know when?"
+
+No reply.
+
+"She sings the next piece. Are you ready to listen?"
+
+"Ready."
+
+"Good Lord!" cried Tom, in despair, "the fellow has lost his wits. He
+has turned parrot; he has done nothing but repeat my words for me since
+he sat here. He's an echo."
+
+"Echo of nothingness?" queried the parrot, smilingly.
+
+"Ah, you've come to yourself, have you? Capital! now stay awake. There's
+Clara to sing directly, and you are to cheer her, and look as if you
+enjoyed it, and throw her that bouquet when I tell you, and let her
+think it's a fine thing she has been doing; for this is a tremendous
+affair to her, poor child, of course."
+
+"How bright and happy she is! You will laugh at me, Tom, and indeed I
+don't know what has come over me, but somehow I feel quite sad, looking
+at those girls, and wondering what fate and time have in store for
+them."
+
+"Sunshine and bright hours."
+
+"The day cometh, and also the night,"--broke in the clear voice that was
+reading a selection from the Scriptures.
+
+Tom started, and Willie took from his button-hole just such a little
+nosegay as that he had bought on Broadway a fortnight before,--a
+geranium leaf, a bit of mignonette, and a delicate tea-rosebud, and,
+seeing it was drooping, laid it carefully upon the programme on his
+knee. "I don't want that to fade," he thought as he put it down, while
+he looked across the platform at the same face which he had so eagerly
+pursued through a labyrinth of carriages, stages, and people, and lost
+at last.
+
+"There! Clara is talking to your beauty. I wonder if she is to sing, or
+do anything. If she does, it will be something dainty and fine, I'll
+wager. Helloa! there's Clara up,--now for it."
+
+Clara's bright little voice suited her bright little face,--like her
+brother's, only a great deal prettier,--and the young men enjoyed both,
+aside from brotherly and cousinly feeling, cheered her "to the echo" as
+Willie said, threw their bouquets,--great, gorgeous things they had
+brought from the city to please her,--and wished there was more of it
+all when it was through.
+
+"What next?" said Willie.
+
+"Heaven preserve us! your favorite subject. Who would expect to tumble
+on such a theme here?--'Slavery; by Francesca Ercildoune.' Odd
+name,--and, by Jove! it's the beauty herself."
+
+They both leaned forward eagerly as she came from her seat; slender,
+shapely, every fibre fine and exquisite, no coarse graining from the
+dainty head to the dainty foot; the face, clear olive, delicate and
+beautiful,--
+
+ "The mouth with steady sweetness set,
+ And eyes conveying unaware
+ The distant hint of some regret
+ That harbored there,"--
+
+eyes deep, tender, and pathetic.
+
+"What's this?" said Tom. "Queer. It gives me a heartache to look at
+her."
+
+"A woman for whom to fight the world, or lose the world, and be
+compensated a million-fold if you died at her feet," thought Surrey, and
+said nothing.
+
+"What a strange subject for her to select!" broke in Tom.
+
+It was a strange one for the time and place, and she had been besought
+to drop it, and take another; but it should be that or nothing, she
+asserted,--so she was left to her own device.
+
+Oddly treated, too. Tom thought it would be a pretty lady-like essay,
+and said so; then sat astounded at what he saw and heard. Her face--this
+schoolgirl's face--grew pallid, her eyes mournful, her voice and manner
+sublime, as she summoned this Monster to the bar of God's justice and
+the humanity of the world; as she arraigned it; as she brought witness
+after witness to testify against it; as she proved its horrible
+atrocities and monstrous barbarities; as she went on to the close, and,
+lifting hand and face and voice together, thrilled out, "I look backward
+into the dim, distant past, but it is one night of oppression and
+despair; I turn to the present, but I hear naught save the mother's
+broken-hearted shriek, the infant's wail, the groan wrung from the
+strong man in agony; I look forward into the future, but the night grows
+darker, the shadows deeper and longer, the tempest wilder, and
+involuntarily I cry out, 'How long, O God, how long?'"
+
+"Heavens! what an actress she would make!" said somebody before them.
+
+"That's genius," said somebody behind them; "but what a subject to
+waste it upon!"
+
+"Very bad taste, I must say, to talk about such a thing here," said
+somebody beside them. "However, one can excuse a great deal to beauty
+like that."
+
+Surrey sat still, and felt as though he were on fire, filled with an
+insane desire to seize her in one arm like a knight of old, and hew his
+way through these beings, and out of this place, into some solitary spot
+where he could seat her and kneel at her feet, and die there if she
+refused to take him up; filled with all the sweet, extravagant,
+delicious pain that thrills the heart, full of passion and purity, of a
+young man who begins to love the first, overwhelming, only love of a
+lifetime.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+ "_'Tis an old tale, and often told._"
+
+ SIR WALTER SCOTT
+
+
+That evening some people who were near them were talking about it, and
+that made Tom ask Clara if her friend was in the habit of doing
+startling things.
+
+"Should you think so to look at her now?" queried Clara, looking across
+the room to where Miss Ercildoune stood.
+
+"Indeed I shouldn't," Tom replied; and indeed no one would who saw her
+then. "She's as sweet as a sugar-plum," he added, as he continued to
+look. "What does she mean by getting off such rampant discourses? She
+never wrote them herself,--don't tell _me_; at least somebody else put
+her up to it,--that strong-minded-looking teacher over yonder, for
+instance. _She_ looks capable of anything, and something worse, in the
+denouncing way; poor little beauty was her cat's-paw this morning."
+
+"O Tom, how you talk! She is nobody's cat's-paw. I can tell you she does
+her own thinking and acting too. If you'd just go and do something
+hateful, or impose on somebody,--one of the waiters, for
+instance,--you'd see her blaze up, fast enough."
+
+"Ah! philanthropic?"
+
+Clara looked puzzled. "I don't know; we have some girls here who are all
+the time talking about benevolence, and charity, and the like, and they
+have a little sewing-circle to make up things to be sold for the church
+mission, or something,--I don't know just what; but Francesca won't go
+near it."
+
+"Democratic, then, maybe."
+
+"No, she isn't, not a bit. She's a thorough little aristocrat: so
+exclusive she has nothing to say to the most of us. I wonder she ever
+took me for a friend, though I do love her dearly."
+
+Tom looked down at his bright little sister, and thought the wonder was
+not a very great one, but didn't say so; reserving his gallantries for
+somebody else's sister.
+
+"You seem greatly taken with her, Tom."
+
+"I own the soft impeachment."
+
+"Well, you'll have a fair chance, for she's coming home with me. I wrote
+to mamma, and she says, bring her by all means,--and Mr. Ercildoune
+gives his consent; so it is all settled."
+
+"Mr. Ercildoune! is there no Mrs. E.?"
+
+"None,--her mother died long ago; and her father has not been here, so I
+can't tell you anything about him. There: do you see that
+elegant-looking lady talking with Professor Hale? that is her aunt, Mrs.
+Lancaster. She is English, and is here only on a visit. She wants to
+take Francesca home with her in the spring, but I hope she won't."
+
+"Why, what is it to you?"
+
+"I am afraid she will stay, and then I shall never see her any more."
+
+"And why stay? do you fancy England so very fascinating?"
+
+"No, it is not that; but Francesca don't like America; she's forever
+saying something witty and sharp about our 'democratic institutions,' as
+she calls them; and, if you had looked this morning, you'd have seen
+that she didn't sing The Star-Spangled Banner with the rest of us. Her
+voice is splendid, and Professor Hale wanted her to lead, as she often
+does, but she wouldn't sing that, she said,--no, not for anything; and
+though we all begged, she refused,--flat."
+
+"Shocking! what total depravity! I wonder is she converting Surrey to
+her heresies."
+
+No, she wasn't; not unless silence is more potent than words; for after
+they had danced together Surrey brought her to one of the great windows
+facing towards the sea, and, leaning over her chair, there was stillness
+between them as their eyes went out into the night.
+
+A wild night! great clouds drifted across the moon, which shone out
+anon, with light intensified, defining the stripped trees and desolate
+landscape, and then the beach, and
+
+ "Marked with spray
+ The sunken reefs, and far away
+ The unquiet, bright Atlantic plain,"
+
+while through all sounded incessantly the mournful roar of buffeting
+wind and surging tide; and whether it was the scene, or the solemn
+undertone of the sea, the dance music, which a little while before had
+been so gay, sounded like a wail.
+
+How could it be otherwise? Passion is akin to pain. Love never yet
+penetrated an intense nature and made the heart light; sentiment has its
+smiles, its blushes, its brightness, its words of fancy and feeling,
+readily and at will; but when the internal sub-soiling is broken up, the
+heart swells with a steady and tremendous pressure till the breast feels
+like bursting; the lips are dumb, or open only to speak upon indifferent
+themes. Flowers may be played with, but one never yet cared to toy with
+flame.
+
+There are souls that are created for one another in the eternities,
+hearts that are predestined each to each, from the absolute necessities
+of their nature; and when this man and this woman come face to face,
+these hearts throb and are one; these souls recognize "my master!" "my
+mistress!" at the first glance, without words uttered or vows
+pronounced.
+
+These two young lives, so fresh, so beautiful; these beings, in many
+things such antipodes, so utterly dissimilar in person, so unlike, yet
+like; their whole acquaintance a glance on a crowded street and these
+few hours of meeting,--looked into one another's eyes, and felt their
+whole nature set each to each, as the vast tide "of the bright, rocking
+ocean sets to shore at the full moon."
+
+These things are possible. Friendship is excellent, and friendship may
+be called love; but it is not love. It may be more enduring and placidly
+satisfying in the end; it may be better, and wiser, and more prudent,
+for acquaintance to beget esteem, and esteem regard, and regard
+affection, and affection an interchange of peaceful vows: the result, a
+well-ordered life and home. All this is admirable, no doubt; an owl is a
+bird when you can get no other; but the love born of a moment, yet born
+of eternity, which comes but once in a lifetime, and to not one in a
+thousand lives, unquestioning, unthinking, investigating nothing,
+proving nothing, sufficient unto itself,--ah, that is divine; and this
+divine ecstasy filled these two souls.
+
+Unconsciously. They did not define nor comprehend. They listened to the
+sea where they sat, and felt tears start to their eyes, yet knew not
+why. They were silent, and thought they talked; or spoke, and said
+nothing. They danced; and as he held her hand and uttered a few words,
+almost whispered, the words sounded to the listening ear like a part of
+the music to which they kept time. They saw a multitude of people, and
+exchanged the compliments of the evening, yet these people made no more
+impression upon their thoughts than gossamer would have made upon their
+hands.
+
+"Come, Francesca!" said Clara Russell, breaking in upon this, "it is not
+fair for you to monopolize my cousin Will, who is the handsomest man in
+the room; and it isn't fair for Will to keep you all to himself in this
+fashion. Here is Tom, ready to scratch out his eyes with vexation
+because you won't dance with him; and here am I, dying to waltz with
+somebody who knows my step,--to say nothing of innumerable young ladies
+and gentlemen who have been casting indignant and beseeching glances
+this way: so, sir, face about, march!" and away the gay girl went with
+her prize, leaving Francesca to the tender mercies of half a dozen young
+men who crowded eagerly round her, and from whom Tom carried her off
+with triumph and rejoicing.
+
+The evening was over at last, and they were going away. Tom had said
+good night.
+
+"You are to be in New York, at my uncle's, Clara tells me."
+
+"It is true."
+
+"I may see you there?"
+
+For answer she put out her hand. He took it as he would have taken a
+delicate flower, laid his other hand softly, yet closely, over it, and,
+without any adieu spoken, went away.
+
+"Tom always declared Willie was a little queer, and I'm sure I begin to
+think so," said Clara, as she kissed her friend and departed to her
+room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+ "_A breathing sigh, a sigh for answer,
+ A little talking of outward things._"
+
+ JEAN INGELOW
+
+
+Ah, the weeks that followed! People ate and drank and slept, lived and
+loved and hated, were born and died,--the same world that it had been a
+little while before, yet not the same to them,--never to seem quite the
+same again. A little cloud had fallen between them and it, and changed
+to their eyes all its proportions and hues.
+
+They were incessantly together, riding, or driving, or walking, looking
+at pictures, dancing at parties, listening to opera or play.
+
+"It seems to me Will is going it at a pretty tremendous pace somewhere,"
+said Mr. Surrey to his wife, one morning, after this had endured for a
+space. "It would be well to look into it, and to know something of this
+girl."
+
+"You are right," she replied. "Yet I have such absolute faith in
+Willie's fine taste and sense that I feel no anxiety."
+
+"Nor I; yet I shall investigate a bit to-night at Augusta's."
+
+"Clara tells me that when Miss Ercildoune understood it was to be a
+great party, she insisted on ending her visit, or, at least, staying for
+a while with her aunt, but they would not hear of it."
+
+"Mrs. Lancaster goes back to England soon?"
+
+"Very soon."
+
+"Does any one know aught of Miss Ercildoune's family save that Mrs.
+Lancaster is her aunt?"
+
+"If 'any one' means me, I understand her father to be a gentleman of
+elegant leisure,--his home near Philadelphia; a widower, with one other
+child,--a son, I believe; that his wife was English, married abroad;
+that Mrs. Lancaster comes here with the best of letters, and, for
+herself, is most evidently a lady."
+
+"Good. Now I shall take a survey of the young lady herself."
+
+When night came, and with it a crowd to Mrs. Russell's rooms, the
+opportunity offered for the survey, and it was made scrutinizingly.
+Surrey was an only son, a well-beloved one, and what concerned him was
+investigated with utmost care.
+
+Scrutinizingly and satisfactorily. They were dancing, his sunny head
+bent till it almost touched the silky blackness of her hair. "Saxon and
+Norman," said somebody near who was watching them; "what a delicious
+contrast!"
+
+"They make an exquisite picture," thought the mother, as she looked
+with delight and dread: delight at the beauty; dread that fills the soul
+of any mother when she feels that she no longer holds her boy,--that his
+life has another keeper,--and queries, "What of the keeper?"
+
+"Well?" she said, looking up at her husband.
+
+"Well," he answered, with a tone that meant, well. "She's thorough-bred.
+Democratic or not, I will always insist, blood tells. Look at her: no
+one needs to ask _who_ she is. I'd take her on trust without a word."
+
+"So, then, you are not her critic, but her admirer."
+
+"Ah, my dear, criticism is lost in admiration, and I am glad to find it
+so."
+
+"And I. Willie saw with our eyes, as a boy; it is fortunate that we can
+see with his eyes, as a man."
+
+So, without any words spoken, after that night, both Mr. and Mrs. Surrey
+took this young girl into their hearts as they hoped soon to take her
+into their lives, and called her "daughter" in their thought, as a
+pleasant preparation for the uttered word by and by.
+
+Thus the weeks fled. No word had passed between these two to which the
+world might not have listened. Whatever language their hearts and their
+eyes spoke had not been interpreted by their lips. He had not yet
+touched her hand save as it met his, gloved or formal, or as it rested
+on his arm; and yet, as one walking through the dusk and stillness of a
+summer night feels a flower or falling leaf brush his check, and starts,
+shivering as from the touch of a disembodied soul, so this slight
+outward touch thrilled his inmost being; this hand, meeting his for an
+instant, shook his soul.
+
+Indefinite and undefined,--there was no thought beyond the moment; no
+wish to take this young girl into his arms and to call her "wife" had
+shaped itself in his brain. It was enough for both that they were in one
+another's presence, that they breathed the same air, that they could see
+each other as they raised their eyes, and exchange a word, a look, a
+smile. Whatever storm of emotion the future might hold for them was not
+manifest in this sunny and delightful present.
+
+Upon one subject alone did they disagree with feeling,--in other matters
+their very dissimilarity proving an added charm. This was a curious
+question to come between lovers. All his life Surrey had been a devotee
+of his country and its flag. While he was a boy Kossuth had come to
+these shores, and he yet remembered how he had cheered himself hoarse
+with pride and delight, as the eloquent voice and impassioned lips of
+the great Magyar sounded the praise of America, as the "refuge of the
+oppressed and the hope of the world." He yet remembered how when the
+hand, every gesture of which was instinct with power, was lifted to the
+flag,--the flag, stainless, spotless, without blemish or flaw; the flag
+which was "fair as the sun, clear as the moon," and to the oppressors of
+the earth "terrible as an army with banners,"--he yet remembered how, as
+this emblem of liberty was thus apostrophized and saluted, the tears
+had rushed to his boyish eyes, and his voice had said, for his heart,
+"Thank God, I am an American!"
+
+One day he made some such remark to her. She answered, "I, too, am an
+American, but I do not thank God for it."
+
+At another time he said, as some emigrants passed them in the street,
+"What a sense of pride it gives one in one's country, to see her so
+stretch out her arms to help and embrace the outcast and suffering of
+the whole world!"
+
+She smiled--bitterly, he thought; and replied, "O just and magnanimous
+country, to feed and clothe the stranger from without, while she
+outrages and destroys her children within!"
+
+"You do not love America," he said.
+
+"I do not love America," she responded.
+
+"And yet it is a wonderful country."
+
+"Ay," briefly, almost satirically, "a wonderful country, indeed!"
+
+"Still you stay here, live here."
+
+"Yes, it is my country. Whatever I think of it, I will not be driven
+away from it; it is my right to remain."
+
+"Her right to remain?" he thought; "what does she mean by that? she
+speaks as though conscience were involved in the thing. No matter; let
+us talk of something pleasanter."
+
+One day she gave him a clew. They were looking at the picture of a
+great statesman,--a man as famous for the grandeur of face and form as
+for the power and splendor of his intellect.
+
+"Unequalled! unapproachable!" exclaimed Surrey, at last.
+
+"I have seen its equal," she answered, very quietly, yet with a shiver
+of excitement in the tones.
+
+"When? where? how? I will take a journey to look at him. Who is he?
+where did he grow?"
+
+For response she put her hand into the pocket of her gown, and took out
+a velvet case. What could there be in that little blue thing to cause
+such emotion? As Surrey saw it in her hand, he grew hot, then cold, then
+fiery hot again. In an instant by this chill, this heat, this pain, his
+heart was laid bare to his own inspection. In an instant he knew that
+his arms would be empty did they hold a universe in which Francesca
+Ercildoune had no part, and that with her head on his heart the world
+might lapse from him unheeded; and, with this knowledge, she held
+tenderly and caressingly, as he saw, another man's picture in her hand.
+
+His own so shook that he could scarcely take the case from her, to open
+it; but, opened, his eyes devoured what was under them.
+
+A half-length,--the face and physique superb. Of what color were the
+hair and eyes the neutral tints of the picture gave no hint; the brow
+princely, breaking the perfect oval of the face; eyes piercing and full;
+the features rounded, yet clearly cut; the mouth with a curious
+combination of sadness and disdain. The face was not young, yet it was
+so instinct with magnificent vitality that even the picture impressed
+one more powerfully than most living men, and one involuntarily
+exclaimed on beholding it, "This man can never grow old, and death must
+here forego its claim!"
+
+Looking up from it with no admiration to express for the face, he saw
+Francesca's smiling on it with a sort of adoration, as she, reclaiming
+her property, said,--
+
+"My father's old friends have a great deal of enjoyment, and amusement
+too, from his beauty. One of them was the other day telling me of the
+excessive admiration people had always shown, and laughingly insisted
+that when papa was a young man, and appeared in public, in London or
+Paris, it was between two police officers to keep off the admiring
+crowd; and," laughing a gay little laugh herself, "of course I believed
+him! why shouldn't I?"
+
+He was looking at the picture again. "What an air of command he has!"
+
+"Yes. I remember hearing that when Daniel Webster was in London, and
+walked unattended through the streets, the coal-heavers and workmen took
+off their hats and stood bareheaded till he had gone by, thinking it was
+royalty that passed. I think they would do the same for papa."
+
+"If he looks like a king, I know somebody who looks like a princess,"
+thought the happy young fellow, gazing down upon the proud, dainty
+figure by his side; but he smiled as he said, "What a little aristocrat
+you are, Miss Ercildoune! what a pity you were born a Yankee!"
+
+"I am not a Yankee, Mr. Surrey," replied the little aristocrat, "if to
+be a Yankee is to be a native of America. I was born on the sea."
+
+"And your mother, I know, was English."
+
+"Yes, she was English."
+
+"Is it rude to ask if your father was the same?
+
+"No!" she answered emphatically, "my papa is a Virginian,--a Virginia
+gentleman,"--the last word spoken with an untransferable accent,--"there
+are few enough of them."
+
+"So, so!" thought Willie, "here my riddle is read.
+Southern--Virginia--gentleman. No wonder she has no love to spend on
+country or flag; no wonder we couldn't agree. And yet it can't be
+that,--what were the first words I ever heard from her mouth?" and,
+remembering that terrible denunciation of the "peculiar institution" of
+Virginia and of the South, he found himself puzzled the more.
+
+Just then there came into the picture-gallery, where they were wasting a
+pleasant morning, a young man to whom Surrey gave the slightest of
+recognitions,--well-dressed, booted, and gloved, yet lacking the
+nameless something which marks the gentleman. His glance, as it rested
+on Surrey, held no love, and, indeed, was rather malignant.
+
+"That fellow," said Surrey, indicating him, "has a queer story connected
+with him. He was discharged from my father's employ to give place to a
+man who could do his work better; and the strange part of it"--he
+watched her with an amused smile to see what effect the announcement
+would have upon her Virginia ladyship--"is that number two is a black
+man."
+
+A sudden heat flushed her cheeks: "Do you tell me your father made room
+for a black man in his employ, and at the expense of a white one?"
+
+"It is even so."
+
+"Is he there now?"
+
+Surrey's beautiful Saxon face crimsoned. "No: he is not," he said
+reluctantly.
+
+"Ah! did he, this black man,--did he not do his work well?"
+
+"Admirably."
+
+"Is it allowable, then, to ask why he was discarded?"
+
+"It is allowable, surely. He was dismissed because the choice lay
+between him and seven hundred men."
+
+"And you"--her face was very pale now, the flush all gone out of
+it--"you have nothing to do with your father's works, but you are his
+son,--did you do naught? protest, for instance?"
+
+"I protested--and yielded. The contest would have been not merely with
+seven hundred men, but with every machinist in the city. Justice
+_versus_ prejudice, and prejudice had it; as, indeed, I suppose it will
+for a good many generations to come: invincible it appears to be in the
+American mind."
+
+"Invincible! is it so?" She paused over the words, scrutinizing him
+meanwhile with an unconscious intensity.
+
+"And this black man,--what of him? He was flung out to starve and die;
+a proper fate, surely, for his presumption. Poor fool! how did he dare
+to think he could compete with his masters! You know nothing of _him _?"
+
+Surely he must be mistaken. What could this black man, or this matter,
+be to her? yet as he listened her voice sounded to his ear like that of
+one in mortal pain. What held him silent? Why did he not tell her, why
+did he not in some way make her comprehend, that he, delicate exclusive,
+and patrician, as the people of his set thought him, had gone to this
+man, had lifted him from his sorrow and despondency to courage and hope
+once more; had found him work; would see that the place he strove to
+fill in the world should be filled, could any help of his secure that
+end. Why did the modesty which was a part of him, and the high-bred
+reserve which shrank from letting his own mother know of the good deeds
+his life wrought, hold him silent now?
+
+In that silence something fell between them. What was it? But a moment,
+yet in that little space it seemed to him as though continents divided
+them, and seas rolled between. "Francesca!" he cried, under his
+breath,--he had never before called her by her Christian
+name,--"Francesca!" and stretched out his hand towards her, as a
+drowning man stretches forth his hand to life.
+
+"This room is stifling!" she said for answer; and her voice, dulled and
+unnatural, seemed to his strangely confused senses as though it came
+from a far distance,--"I am suffering: shall we go out to the air?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+ "_But more than loss about me clings._"
+
+ Jean Ingelow
+
+
+"No! no, I am mad to think it! I must have been dreaming! what could
+there have been in that talk to have such an effect as I have conjured
+up? She pitied Franklin! yes, she pities every one whom she thinks
+suffering or wronged. Dear little tender heart! of course it was the
+room,--didn't she say she was ill? it must have been awful; the heat and
+the closeness got into my head,--that's it. Bad air is as bad as whiskey
+on a man's brain. What a fool I made of myself! not even answering her
+questions. What did she think of me? Well."
+
+Surrey in despair pushed away the book over which he had been bending
+all the afternoon, seeing for every word Francesca, and on every page an
+image of her face. "I'll smoke myself into some sort of decent quiet,
+before I go up town, at least"; and taking his huge meerschaum,
+settling himself sedately, began his quieting operation with appalling
+energy. The soft rings, gray and delicate, taking curious and airy
+shapes, floated out and filled the room; but they were not soothing
+shapes, nor ministering spirits of comfort. They seemed filmy garments,
+and from their midst faces beautiful, yet faint and dim, looked at him,
+all of them like unto her face; but when he dropped his pipe and bent
+forward, the wreaths of smoke fell into lines that made the faces appear
+sad and bathed in tears, and the images faded from his sight.
+
+As the last one, with its visionary arms outstretched towards him,
+receded from him, and disappeared, he thought, "That is Francesca's
+spirit, bidding me an eternal adieu"--and, with the foolish thought, in
+spite of its foolishness, he shivered and stretched out his arms in
+return.
+
+"Of a verity," he then cried, "if nature failed to make me an idiot, I
+am doing my best to consummate that end, and become one of free choice.
+What folly possesses me? I will dissipate it at once,--I will see her in
+bodily shape,--that will put an end to such fancies,"--starting up, and
+beginning to pull on his gloves.
+
+"No! no, that will not do,"--pulling them off again. "She will think I
+am an uneasy ghost that pursues her. I must wait till this evening, but
+ah, what an age till evening!"
+
+Fortunately, all ages, even lovers' ages, have an end. The evening came;
+he was at the Fifth Avenue,--his card sent up,--his feet impatiently
+travelling to and fro upon the parlor carpet,--his heart beating with
+happiness and expectancy. A shadow darkened the door; he flew to meet
+the substance,--not a sweet face and graceful form, but a servant, big
+and commonplace, bringing him his own card and the announcement, "The
+ladies is both out, sir."
+
+"Impossible! take it up again."
+
+He said "impossible" because Francesca had that morning told him she
+would be at home in the evening.
+
+"All right, sir; but it's no use, for there's nobody there, I know"; and
+he vanished for a second attempt, unsuccessful as the first. Surrey went
+to the office, still determinedly incredulous.
+
+"Are Mrs. Lancaster and Miss Ercildoune not in?"
+
+"No, sir; both out. Keys here,"--showing them. "Left for one of the
+five-o'clock trains; rooms not given up; said they would be back in a
+few days."
+
+"From what depot did they leave?"
+
+"Don't know, sir. They didn't go in the coach; had a carriage, or I
+could tell you."
+
+"But they left a note, perhaps,--or some message?"
+
+"Nothing at all, sir; not a word, nor a scrap. Can I serve you in any
+way further?"
+
+"Thanks! not at all. Good evening."
+
+"Good evening, sir."
+
+That was all. What did it mean?--to vanish without a sign! an engagement
+for the evening, and not a line left in explanation or excuse! It was
+not like her. There must be something wrong, some mystery. He tormented
+himself with a thousand fancies and fears over what, he confessed, was
+probably a mere accident; wisely determined to do so no longer,--but
+did, spite of such excellent resolutions and intent.
+
+This took place on the evening of Saturday, the 13th of April, 1861. The
+events of the next few days doubtless augmented his anxiety and
+unhappiness. Sunday followed,--a day filled not with a Sabbath calm, but
+with the stillness felt in nature before some awful convulsion; the
+silence preceding earthquake, volcano, or blasting storm; a quiet broken
+from Maine to the Pacific slope when the next day shone, and men roused
+themselves from the sleep of a night to the duty of a day, from the
+sleep of generations, fast merging into death, at the trumpet-call to
+arms,--a cry which sounded through every State and every household in
+the land, which, more powerful than the old songs of Percy and Douglas,
+"brought children from their play, and old men from their
+chimney-corners," to emulate humanity in its strength and prime, and
+contest with it the opportunity to fight and die in a deathless cause.
+
+A cry which said, "There are wrongs to be redressed already long enough
+endured,--wrongs against the flag of the nation, against the integrity
+of the Union, against the life of the republic; wrongs against the cause
+of order, of law, of good government, against right, and justice, and
+liberty, against humanity and the world; not merely in the present, but
+in the great future, its countless ages and its generations yet unborn."
+
+To this cry there sounded one universal response, as men dropped their
+work at loom, or forge, or wheel, in counting-room, bank, and merchant's
+store, in pulpit, office, or platform, and with one accord rushed to
+arms, to save these rights so frightfully and arrogantly assailed.
+
+One voice that went to swell this chorus was Surrey's; one hand quick to
+grasp rifle and cartridge-box, one soul eager to fling its body into the
+breach at this majestic call, was his. He felt to the full all the
+divine frenzy and passion of those first days of the war, days
+unequalled in the history of nations and of the world. All the elegant
+dilettanteism, the delicious idleness, the luxurious ease, fell away,
+and were as though they had never been. All the airy dreams of a renewed
+chivalrous age, of courage, of heroism, of sublime daring and
+self-sacrifice, took substance and shape, and were for him no longer
+visions of the night, but realities of the day.
+
+Still, while flags waved, drums beat, and cannon thundered; while
+friends said, "Go!" the world stood ready to cheer him on, and fame and
+honor and greater things than these beckoned him to come; while he felt
+the whirl and excitement of it all,--his heart cried ceaselessly, "Only
+let me see her--once--if but for a moment, before I go!" It was so
+little he asked of fate, yet too much to be granted.
+
+In vain he went every day, and many times a day, in the brief space left
+him, to her hotel. In vain he once more questioned clerk and servants;
+in vain haunted the house of his aunt, with the dim hope that Clara
+might hear from her, or that in some undefined way he might learn of
+her whereabouts, and so accomplish his desire.
+
+But the days passed, too slowly for the ardent young patriot, all too
+rapidly for the unhappy lover. Friday came. Early in the day multitudes
+of people began to collect in the street, growing in numbers and
+enthusiasm as the hours wore on, till, in the afternoon, the splendid
+thoroughfare of New York from Fourth Street down to the Cortlandt
+Ferry--a stretch of miles--was a solid mass of humanity; thousands and
+tens of thousands, doubled, quadrupled, and multiplied again.
+
+Through the morning this crowd in squads and companies traversed the
+streets, collected on the corners, congregating chiefly about the armory
+of their pet regiment, the Seventh, on Lafayette Square,--one great mass
+gazing unweariedly at its windows and walls, then moving on to be
+replaced by another of the like kind, which, having gone through the
+same performance, gave way in turn to yet others, eager to take its
+place.
+
+So the fever burned; the excitement continued and augmented till,
+towards three o'clock in the afternoon, the mighty throng stood still,
+and waited. It was no ordinary multitude; the wealth, refinement,
+fashion, the greatness and goodness of a vast city were there, pressed
+close against its coarser and darker and homelier elements. Men and
+women stood alike in the crowd, dainty patrician and toil-stained
+laborer, all thrilled by a common emotion, all vivified--if in unequal
+degree--by the same sublime enthusiasm. Overhead, from every window and
+doorway and housetop, in every space and spot that could sustain one, on
+ropes, on staffs, in human hands, waved, and curled, and floated, flags
+that were in multitude like the swells of the sea; silk, and bunting,
+and painted calico, from the great banner spreading its folds with an
+indescribable majesty, to the tiny toy shaken in a baby hand. Under all
+this glad and gay and splendid show, the faces seemed, perhaps by
+contrast, not sad, but grave; not sorrowful, but intense, and luminously
+solemn.
+
+Gradually the men of the Seventh marched out of their armory. Hands had
+been wrung, adieus said, last fond embraces and farewells given. The
+regiment formed in the open square, the crowd about it so dense as to
+seem stifling, the windows of its building rilled with the sweetest and
+finest and fairest of faces,--the mothers, wives, and sweethearts of
+these young splendid fellows just ready to march away.
+
+Surrey from his station gazed and gazed at the window where stood his
+mother, so well beloved, his relations and friends, many of them near
+and dear to him,--some of them with clear, bright eyes that turned from
+the forms of brothers in the ranks to seek his, and linger upon it
+wistfully and tenderly; yet looking at all these, even his mother, he
+looked beyond, as though in the empty space a face would appear, eyes
+would meet his, arms be stretched towards him, lips whisper a fond
+adieu, as he, breaking from the ranks, would take her to his embrace,
+and speak, at the same time, his love and farewell. A fruitless
+longing.
+
+Four o'clock struck over the great city, and the line moved out of the
+square, through Fourth Street, to Broadway. Then began a march, which
+whoso witnessed, though but a little child, will remember to his dying
+day, the story of which he will repeat to his children, and his
+children's children, and, these dead, it will be read by eyes that shall
+shine centuries hence, as one of the most memorable scenes in the great
+struggle for freedom.
+
+Hands were stretched forth to touch the cloth of their uniforms, and
+kissed when they were drawn back. Mothers held up their little children
+to gain inspiration for a lifetime. A roar of voices, continuous,
+unbroken, rent the skies; while, through the deafening cheers, men and
+women, with eyes blinded by tears, repeated, a million times, "God
+bless--God bless and keep them!" And so, down the magnificent avenue,
+through the countless, shouting multitude, through the whirlwind of
+enthusiasm and adoration, under the glorious sweep of flags, the grand
+regiment moved from the beginning of its march to its close,--till it
+was swept away towards the capital, around which were soon to roll such
+bloody waves of death.
+
+Meanwhile, where was Miss Ercildoune? Surrey had thought her behavior
+strange the last morning they spent together. How much stranger, how
+unaccountable, indeed, would it have seemed to him, could he have seen
+her through the afternoon following!
+
+"What is wrong with you? are you ill, Francesca?" her aunt had inquired
+as she came in, pulling off her hat with the air of one stifling, and
+throwing herself into a chair.
+
+"Ill! O no!"--with a quick laugh,--"what could have made you think so? I
+am quite well, thank you; but I will go to my room for a little while
+and rest. I think I am tired."
+
+"Do, dear, for I want you to take a trip up the Hudson this afternoon. I
+have to see some English people who are living at a little village a
+score of miles out of town, and then I must go on to Albany before I
+take you home. It will be pleasant at Tanglewood over the
+Sabbath,--unless you have some engagements to keep you here?"
+
+"O Aunt Alice, how glad I am! I was going home this afternoon without
+you. I thought you would come when you were ready; but this will do just
+as well,--anything to get out of town."
+
+"Anything to get out of town? why, Francesca, is it so hateful to you?
+'Going home! and this do almost as well!'--what does the child mean? is
+she the least little bit mad? I'm afraid so. She evidently needs some
+fresh country air, and rest from excitement. Go, dear, and take your
+nap, and refresh yourself before five o'clock; that is the time we
+leave."
+
+As the door closed between them, she shook her head dubiously. '"Going
+home this afternoon!' what does that signify? Has she been quarrelling
+with that young lover of hers, or refusing him? I should not care to ask
+any questions till she herself speaks; but I fear me something is
+wrong."
+
+She would not have feared, but been certain, could she have looked then
+and there into the next room. She would have seen that the trouble was
+something deeper than she dreamed. Francesca was sitting, her hands
+supporting an aching head, her large eyes fixed mournfully and immovably
+upon something which she seemed to contemplate with a relentless
+earnestness, as though forcing herself to a distressing task. What was
+this something? An image, a shadow in the air, which she had not evoked
+from the empty atmosphere, but from the depths of her own nature and
+soul,--the life and fate of a young girl. Herself! what cause, then, for
+mournful scrutiny? She, so young, so brilliant, so beautiful, upon whom
+fate had so kindly smiled, admired by many, tenderly and passionately
+loved by at least one heart,--surely it was a delightful picture to
+contemplate,--this life and its future; a picture to bring smiles to the
+lips, rather than tears to the eyes.
+
+Though, in fact, there were none dimming hers,--hot, dry eyes, full of
+fever and pain. What visions passed before them? what shadows of the
+life she inspected darkened them? what sunshine now and then fell upon
+it, reflecting itself in them, as she leaned forward to scan these
+bright spots, holding them in her gaze after other and gloomier ones had
+taken their places, as one leans forth from window or doorway to behold,
+long as possible, the vanishing form of some dear friend.
+
+Looking at these, she cried out, "Fool! to have been so happy, and not
+to have known what the happiness meant, and that it was not for
+me,--never for me! to have walked to the verge of an abyss,--to have
+plunged in, thinking the path led to heaven. Heaven for me! ah,--I
+forgot,--I forgot. I let an unconscious bliss seize me, possess me,
+exclude memory and thought,--lived in it as though it would endure
+forever."
+
+She got up and moved restlessly to and fro across the room, but
+presently came back to the seat she had abandoned, and to the inspection
+which, while it tortured her, she yet evidently compelled herself to
+pursue.
+
+"Come," she then said, "let us ask ourself some questions, constitute
+ourself confessor and penitent, and see what the result will prove."
+
+"Did you think fate would be more merciful to you than to others?"
+
+"No, I thought nothing about fate."
+
+"Did you suppose that he loved you sufficiently to destroy 'an
+invincible barrier?'"
+
+"I did not think of his love. I remembered no barrier. I only knew I was
+in heaven, and cared for naught beyond."
+
+"Do you see the barrier now?"
+
+"I do--I do."
+
+"Did _he_ help you to behold it; to discover, or to remember it? did he,
+or did he not?"
+
+"He did. Too true,--he did."
+
+"Does he love you?"
+
+"I--how should I know? his looks, his acts--I never thought--O Willie,
+Willie!"--her voice going out in a little gasping sob.
+
+"Come,--none of that. No sentiment,--face the facts. Think over all that
+was said, every word. Have you done so?"
+
+"I have,--every word."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Ah, stop torturing me. Do not ask me any more questions. I am going
+away,--flying like a coward. I will not tempt further suffering. And
+yet--once more--only once? could that do harm? Ah, God, my God, be
+merciful!" she cried, clasping her hands and lifting them above her
+bowed head. Then remembering, in the midst of her anguish, some words
+she had been reading that morning, she repeated them with a bitter
+emphasis,--"What can wringing of the hands do, that which is ordained to
+alter?" As she did so she tore asunder her clasped hands, to drop them
+clinched by her side,--the gesture of despair substituted for that of
+hope.
+
+"It is not Heaven I am to besiege!" she exclaimed. "Will I never learn
+that? Its justice cannot overcome the injustice of man. My God!" she
+cried then, with a sudden, terrible energy, "our punishment should be
+light, our rest sure, our paradise safe, at the end, since we have to
+make now such awful atonement; since men compel us to endure the pangs
+of purgatory, the tortures of hell, here upon earth."
+
+After that she sat for a long while silent, evidently revolving a
+thousand thoughts of every shape and hue, judging from the myriads of
+lights and shadows that flitted over her face. At last, rousing herself,
+she perceived that she had no more time to spend in this sorrowful
+employment,--that she must prepare to go away from him, as her heart
+said, forever. "Forever!" it repeated. "This, then, is the close of it
+all,--the miserable end!" With that thought she shut her slender hand,
+and struck it down hard, the blood almost starting from the driven nails
+and bruised flesh, unheeding; though a little space thereafter she
+smiled, beholding it, and muttered, "So--the drop of savage blood is
+telling at last!"
+
+Presently she was gone. It was a pleasant spot to which her aunt took
+her,--one of the pretty little villages scattered up and down the long
+sweep of the Hudson. Pleasant people they were too,--these English
+friends of Mrs. Lancaster,--who made her welcome, but did not intrude
+upon the solitude which they saw she desired.
+
+Sabbath morning they all went to the little chapel, and left her, as she
+wished, alone. Being so alone, after hearing their adieus, she went up
+to her room and sat down to devote herself once again to sorrowful
+contemplation,--not because she would, but because she must.
+
+Poor girl! the bright spring sunshine streamed over her where she
+sat;--not a cloud in the sky, not a dimming of mist or vapor on all the
+hills, and the broad river-sweep which, placid and beautiful, rolled
+along; the cattle far off on the brown fields rubbed their silky sides
+softly together, and gazed through the clear atmosphere with a lazy
+content, as though they saw the waving of green grass, and heard the
+rustle of wind in the thick boughs, so soon to bear their leafy burden.
+Stillness everywhere,--the blessed calm that even nature seems to feel
+on a sunny Sabbath morn. Stillness scarcely broken by the voices,
+mellowed and softened ere they reached her ear, chanting in the village
+church, to some sweet and solemn music, words spoken in infinite
+tenderness long ago, and which, through all the centuries, come with
+healing balm to many a sore and saddened heart: "Come unto me," the
+voices sang,--"come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and
+I will give you rest."
+
+"Ah, rest," she murmured while she listened,--"rest"; and with the
+repetition of the word the fever died out of her eyes, leaving them
+filled with such a look, more pitiful than any tears, as would have made
+a kind heart ache even to look at them; while her figure, alert and
+proud no longer, bent on the window ledge in such lonely and weary
+fashion that a strong arm would have involuntarily stretched out to
+shield it from any hardness or blow that might threaten, though the
+owner thereof were a stranger.
+
+There was something indescribably appealing and pathetic in her whole
+look and air. Outside the window stood a slender little bird which had
+fluttered there, spent and worn, and did not try to flit away any
+further. Too early had it flown from its southern abode; too early
+abandoned the warm airs, the flowers and leafage, of a more hospitable
+region, to find its way to a northern home; too early ventured into a
+rigorous clime; and now, shivering, faint, near to death, drooped its
+wings and hung its weary head, waiting for the end of its brief life to
+come.
+
+Francesca, looking up with woeful eyes, beheld it, and, opening the
+window, softly took it in. "Poor birdie!" she whispered, striving to
+warm it in her gentle hand and against her delicate cheek,--"poor little
+wanderer!--didst thou think to find thy mate, and build thy tiny nest,
+and be a happy mother through the long bright summer-time? Ah, my pet,
+what a sad close is this to all these pleasant dreams!"
+
+The frail little creature could not eat even the bits of crumbs which
+she put into its mouth, nor taste a drop of water. All her soothing
+presses failed to bring warmth and life to the tiny frame that presently
+stretched itself out, dead,--all its sweet songs sung, its brief, bright
+existence ended forever. "Ah, my little birdie, it is all over,"
+whispered Francesca, as she laid it softly down, and unconsciously
+lifted her hand to her own head with a self-pitying gesture that was
+sorrowful to behold.
+
+"Like me," she did not say; yet a penetrating eye looking at them--the
+slight bird lying dead, its brilliant plumage already dimmed, the young
+girl gazing at it--would perceive that alike these two were fitted for
+the warmth and sunshine, would perceive that both had been thwarted and
+defrauded of their fair inheritance, would perceive that one lay spent
+and dead in its early spring. What of the other?
+
+"Aunt Alice," said Francesca a few days after that, "can you go to New
+York this afternoon or to-morrow morning?"
+
+"Certainly, dear. I purposed returning to-day or early in the morning to
+see the Seventh march away. Of course you would like to be there."
+
+"Yes." She spoke slowly, and with seeming indifference. It was because
+she could scarcely control her voice to speak at all. "I should like to
+be there."
+
+Francesca knew, what her aunt did not, that Surrey was a member of the
+Seventh, and that he would march away with it to danger,--perhaps to
+death.
+
+So they were there, in a window overlooking the great avenue,--Mrs.
+Lancaster, foreigner though she was, thrilled to the heart's core by the
+magnificent pageant; Francesca straining her eyes up the long street,
+through the vast sea of faces, to fasten them upon just one face that
+she knew would presently appear in the throng.
+
+"Ah, heavens!" cried Mrs. Lancaster, "what a sight! look at those young
+men; they are the choice and fine of the city. See, see! there is
+Hunter, and Winthrop, and Pursuivant, and Mortimer, and Shaw, and
+Russell, and, yes--no--it is, over there--your friend, Surrey, himself.
+Did you know, Francesca?"
+
+Francesca did not reply. Mrs. Lancaster turned to see her lying white
+and cold in her chair. Endurance had failed at last.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+ "_The plain, unvarnished tale of my whole course of love._"
+
+ Shakespeare
+
+
+"What a handsome girl that is who always waits on us!" Francesca had
+once said to Clara Russell, as they came out of Hyacinth's with some
+dainty laces in their hands.
+
+"Very," Clara had answered.
+
+The handsome girl was Sallie.
+
+At another time Francesca, admiring some particular specimen of the
+pomps and vanities with which the store was crowded, was about carrying
+it away, but first experimented as to its fit.
+
+"O dear!" she cried, in dismay, "it is too short, and"--rummaging
+through the box--"there is not another like it, and it is the only one I
+want."
+
+"How provoking!" sympathized Clara.
+
+"I could very easily alter that," said Sallie, who was behind the
+counter; "I make these up for the shop, and I'll be glad to fix this for
+you, if you like it so much."
+
+"Thanks. You are very kind. Can you send it up to-morrow?"
+
+"This evening, if you wish it."
+
+"Very good; I shall be your debtor."
+
+"Well!" exclaimed Clara, as they turned away, this is the first time in
+all my shopping I ever found a girl ready to put herself out to serve
+one. They usually act as if they were conferring the most overwhelming
+favor by condescending to wait upon you at all."
+
+"Why, Clara, I'm sure I always find them civil."
+
+"I know they seem devoted to you. I wonder why. Oh!"--laughing and
+looking at her friend with honest admiration,--"it must be because you
+are so pretty."
+
+"Excellent,--how discerning you are!" smiled Francesca, in return.
+
+If Clara had had a little more discernment, she would have discovered
+that what wrought this miracle was a friendly courtesy, that never
+failed to either equal or subordinate.
+
+Six weeks after the Seventh had marched out of New York, Francesca,
+sitting in her aunt's room, was roused from evidently painful thought by
+the entrance of a servant, who announced, "If you please, a young woman
+to see you."
+
+"Name?"
+
+"She gave none, miss."
+
+"Send her up."
+
+Sallie came in. "Bird of Paradise" Francesca had called her more than
+once, she was so dashing and handsome; but the title would scarcely fit
+now, for she looked poor, and sad, and woefully dispirited.
+
+"Ah, Miss Sallie, is it you? Good morning."
+
+"Good morning, Miss Ercildoune." She stood, and looked as though she had
+something important to say. Presently Francesca had drawn it from
+her,--a little story of her own sorrows and troubles.
+
+"The reason I have come to you, Miss Ercildoune, when you are so nearly
+a stranger, is because you have always been so kind and pleasant to me
+when I waited on you at the store, and I thought you'd anyway listen to
+what I have to say."
+
+"Speak on, Sallie."
+
+"I've been at Hyacinth's now, over four years, ever since I left school.
+It's a good place, and they paid me well, but I had to keep two people
+out of it, my little brother Frank and myself; Frank and I are orphans.
+And I'm very fond of dress; I may as well confess that at once. So the
+consequence is, I haven't saved a cent against a rainy day. Well,"
+blushing scarlet, "I had a lover,--the best heart that ever beat,--but I
+liked to flirt, and plague him a little, and make him jealous; and at
+last he got dreadfully so about a young gentleman,--a Mr. Snipe, who was
+very attentive to me,--and talked to me about it in a way I didn't
+like. That made me worse. I don't know what possessed me; but after that
+I went out with Mr. Snipe a great deal more, to the theatre and the
+like, and let him spend his money on me, and get things for me, as
+freely as he chose. I didn't mean any harm, indeed I didn't,--but I
+liked to go about and have a good time; and then it made Jim show how
+much he cared for me, which, you see, was a great thing to me; and so
+this went on for a while, till Jim gave me a real lecture, and I got
+angry and wouldn't listen to anything he had to say, and sent him away
+in a huff"--here she choked--"to fight; to the war; and O dear! O dear!"
+breaking down utterly, and hiding her face in her shawl, "he'll be
+killed,--I know he will; and oh! what shall I do? My heart will break, I
+am sure."
+
+Francesca came and stood by her side, put her hand gently on her
+shoulder, and stroked her beautiful hair. "Poor girl!" she said, softly,
+"poor girl!" and then, so low that even Sallie could not hear, "You
+suffer, too: do we all suffer, then?"
+
+Presently Sallie looked up, and continued: "Up to that time, Mr. Snipe
+hadn't said anything to me, except that he admired me very much, and
+that I was pretty, too pretty to work so hard, and that I ought to live
+like a lady, and a good deal more of that kind of talk that I was silly
+enough to listen to; but when he found Jim was gone, first, he made fun
+of him for 'being such a great fool as to go and be shot at for
+nothing,' and then he--O Miss Ercildoune, I can't tell you what he
+said; it makes me choke just to think of it. How dared he? what had I
+done that he should believe me such a thing as that? I don't know what
+words I used when I did find them, and I don't care, but they must have
+stung. I can't tell you how he looked, but it was dreadful; and he said,
+'I'll bring down that proud spirit of yours yet, my lady. I'm not
+through with you,--don't think it,--not by a good deal'; and then he
+made me a fine bow, and laughed, and went out of the room.
+
+"The next day Mr. Dodd--that's one of our firm--gave me a week's notice
+to quit: 'work was slack,' he said, 'and they didn't want so many
+girls.' But I'm just as sure as sure can be that Mr. Snipe's at the
+bottom of it, for I've been at the store, as I told you, four years and
+more, and they always reckoned me one of their best hands, and Mr. Dodd
+and Mr. Snipe are great friends. Since then I've done nothing but try to
+get work. I must have been into a thousand stores, but it's true work is
+slack; there's not a thing been doing since the war commenced, and I
+can't get any place. I've been to Miss Russell and some of the ladies
+who used to come to the store, to see if they'd give me some fine
+sewing; but they hadn't any for me, and I don't know what in the world
+to do, for I understand nothing very well but to sew, and to stand in a
+store. I've spent all my money, what little I had, and--and--I've even
+sold some of my clothes, and I can't go on this way much longer. I
+haven't a relative in the world; nor a home, except in a boarding-house;
+and the girls I know all treat me cool, as though I had done something
+bad, because I've lost my place, I suppose, and am poor.
+
+"All along, at times, Mr. Snipe has been sending me things,--bouquets,
+and baskets of fruit, and sometimes a note, and, though I won't speak to
+him when I meet him on the street, he always smiles and bows as if he
+were intimate; and last night, when I was coming home, tired enough from
+my long search, he passed me and said, with such a look, 'You've gone
+down a peg or two, haven't you, Sallie? Come, I guess we'll be friends
+again before long.' You think it's queer I'm telling you all this. I
+can't help it; there's something about you that draws it all out of me.
+I came to ask you for work, and here I've been talking all this while
+about myself. You must excuse me; I don't think I would have said so
+much, if you hadn't looked so kind and so interested"; and so she
+had,--kind as kind could be, and interested as though the girl who
+talked had been her own sister.
+
+"I am glad you came, Sallie, and glad that you told me all this, if it
+has been any relief to you. You may be sure I will do what I can for
+you, but I am afraid that will not be a great deal, here; for I am a
+stranger in New York, and know very few people. Perhaps--Would you go
+away from here?"
+
+"Would I?--O wouldn't I? and be glad of the chance. I'd give anything to
+go where I couldn't get sight or sound of that horrid Snipe. Can't I go
+with you, Miss Ercildoune?"
+
+"I have no counter behind which to station you," said Francesca,
+smiling.
+
+"No, I know,--of course; but"--looking at the daintily arrayed
+figure--"you have plenty of elegant things to make, and I can do pretty
+much anything with my needle, if you'd like to trust me with some work.
+And then--I'm ashamed to ask so much of you, but a few words from you to
+your friends, I'm sure, would send me all that I could do, and more."
+
+"You think so?" Miss Ercildoune inquired, with a curious intonation to
+her voice, and the strangest expression darkening her face. "Very well,
+it shall be tried."
+
+Sallie was nonplussed by the tone and look, but she comprehended the
+closing words fully and with delight. "You will take me with you," she
+cried. "O, how good, how kind you are! how shall I ever be able to thank
+you?"
+
+"Don't thank me at all," said Miss Ercildoune, "at least not now. Wait
+till I have done something to deserve your gratitude."
+
+But Sallie was not to be silenced in any such fashion, and said her say
+with warmth and meaning; then, after some further talk about time and
+plans, went away carrying a bit of work which Miss Ercildoune had found,
+or made, for her, and for which she had paid in advance.
+
+"God bless her!" thought Sallie; "how nice and how thoughtful she is!
+Most ladies, if they'd done anything for me, would have given me some
+money and made a beggar of me, and I should have felt as mean as
+dish-water. But now"--she patted her little bundle and walked down the
+street, elated and happy.
+
+Francesca watched her out of the door with eyes that presently filled
+with tears. "Poor girl!" she whispered; "poor Sallie! her lover has gone
+to the wars with a shadow between them. Ah, that must not be; I must try
+to bring them together again, if he loves her dearly and truly. He might
+die,"--she shuddered at that,--"die, as other men die, in the heat and
+flame of battle. My God! my God! how shall I bear it? Dead! and without
+a word! Gone, and he will never know how well I love him! O Willie,
+Willie! my life, my love, my darling, come back, come back to me."
+
+Vain cry!--he cannot hear. Vain lifting of an agonized face, beautiful
+in its agony!--he cannot see. Vain stretching forth of longing hands and
+empty arms!--he is not there to take them to his embrace. Carry thy
+burden as others have carried it before thee, and learn what multitudes,
+in times past and in time present, have learned,--the lesson of
+endurance when happiness is denied, and of patience and silence when joy
+has been withheld. Go thou thy way, sorrowful and suffering soul, alone;
+and if thy own heart bleeds, strive thou to soothe its pangs, by
+medicining the wounds and healing the hurts of another.
+
+A few days thereafter, when Miss Ercildoune went over to Philadelphia,
+Sallie and Frank bore her company. She had become as thoroughly
+interested in them as though she had known and cared for them for a long
+while; and as she was one who was incapable of doing in an imperfect or
+partial way aught she attempted, and whose friendship never stopped
+short with pleasant sounding words, this interest had already bloomed
+beautifully, and was fast ripening into solid fruit.
+
+She had written in advance to desire that certain preparations should be
+made for her _proteges_,--preparations which had been faithfully
+attended to; and thus, reaching a strange city, they felt themselves not
+strangers, since they had a home ready to receive them, and this
+excellent friend by their side.
+
+The home consisted of two rooms, neat, cheerful, high up,--"the airier
+and healthier for that," as Sallie decided when she saw them.
+
+"I believe everything is in order," said the good-natured-looking old
+lady, the mistress of the establishment. "My lodgers are all gentlemen
+who take their meals out, and I shall be glad of some company. Any one
+whom Friend Comstock recommends will be all right, I know."
+
+As Mrs. Healey's style of designation indicated, Friend Comstock was a
+Quakeress, well known, greatly esteemed, an old friend of Miss
+Ercildoune, and of Miss Ercildoune's father. She it was to whom
+Francesca had written, and who had found this domicile for the
+wanderers, and who at the outset furnished Sallie with an abundance of
+fine and dainty sewing. Indeed, without giving the matter special
+thought, she was surprised to discover that, with one or two exceptions,
+the people Miss Ercildoune sent her were of the peaceful and quiet
+sect. This bird of brilliant plumage seemed ill assorted with the
+sober-hued flock.
+
+She found in this same bird a helper in more ways than one. It was not
+alone that she gave her employment and paid her well, nor that she sent
+her others able and willing to do the same. She found Frankie a good
+school, and saw him properly installed. She never came to them
+empty-handed; through the long, hot summer-time she brought them fruit
+and flowers from her home out of town; and when she came not herself, if
+the carriage was in the city it stopped with these same delightful
+burdens. Sallie declared her an angel, and Frank, with his mouth stuffed
+full, stood ready to echo the assertion.
+
+So the heated term wore away,--before it ended, telling heavily on
+Sallie. Her anxiety about Jim, her close confinement and constant work,
+the fever everywhere in the spiritual air through that first terrible
+summer of the war, bore her down.
+
+"You need rest," said Miss Ercildoune to her one day, looking at her
+with kindly solicitude,--"rest, and change, and fresh air, and freedom
+from care. I can't give you the last, but I can the first if you will
+accept them. You need some country living."
+
+"O Miss Ercildoune, will you let me do your work at your own home? I
+know it would do me good just to be under the same roof with you, and
+then I should have all the things you speak of combined and another one
+added. If you only will!"
+
+This was not the plan Francesca had proposed to herself. She had
+intended sending Sallie away to some pleasant country or seaside place,
+till she was refreshed and ready to come to her work once more. Sallie
+did not know what to make of the expression of the face that watched
+her, nor of the exclamation, "Why not? let me try her." But she had not
+long to consider, for Miss Ercildoune added, "Be it so. I will send in
+for you to-morrow, and you shall stay till you are better and stronger,
+or--till you please to come home,"--the last words spoken in a bitter
+and sorrowful tone.
+
+The next day Sallie found her way to the superb home of her employer.
+Superb it was, in every sense. Never before had she been in such a
+delightful region, never before realized how absolutely perfect breeding
+sets at ease all who come within the charm of its magic
+sphere,--employed, acquaintance, or friend.
+
+There was a shadow, however, in this house,--a shadow, the premonition
+of which she had seen more than once on the face of its mistress ere she
+ever beheld her home; a shadow to which, for a few days, she had no
+clew, but which was suddenly explained by the arrival of the master of
+this beautiful habitation; a shadow from which most people would have
+fled as from the breath of a pestilence, or the shade of the tomb; nay,
+one from which, but a few short months before, Sallie herself would have
+sped with feet from which she would have shaken the very dust of the
+threshold when she was beyond its doors,--but not now. Now, as she
+beheld it, she sat still to survey it, with surprise that deepened into
+indignation and compassion, that many a time filled her eyes with tears,
+and brought an added expression of respect to her voice when she spoke
+to these people who seemed to have all the good things that this world
+can offer, upon whom fortune had expended her treasures, yet--
+
+Whatever it was, Sallie came from that home with many an old senseless
+prejudice destroyed forever, with a new thought implanted in her soul,
+the blossoming of which was a noxious vapor in the nostrils of some who
+were compelled to inhale it, but as a sweet-smelling savor to more than
+one weary wayfarer, and to that God to whom the darkness and the light
+are alike, and who, we are told by His own word, is no respecter of
+persons.
+
+"Poor, dear Miss Ercildoune!" half sobbed, half scolded Sallie, as she
+sat at her work, blooming and, fresh, the day after her return. "What a
+tangled thread it is, to be sure," jerking at her knotty needleful.
+"Well, I know what I'll do,--I'll treat her as if she was a queen born
+and crowned, just so long as I have anything to do with her,--so I
+will." And she did.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+ "_For hearts of truest mettle
+ Absence doth join, and time doth settle._"
+
+ Anonymous
+
+
+It were a vain endeavor to attempt the telling of what filled the heart
+and soul of Surrey, as he marched away that day from New York, and
+through the days and weeks and months that followed. Fired by a sublime
+enthusiasm for his country; thirsting to drink of any cup her hand might
+present, that thus he might display his absolute devotion to her cause;
+burning with indignation at the wrongs she had suffered; thrilled with
+an adoring love for the idea she embodied; eager to make manifest this
+love at whatever cost of pain and sorrow and suffering to
+himself,--through all this the man never once was steeped in
+forgetfulness in the soldier; the divine passion of patriotism never
+once dulled the ache, or satisfied the desire, or answered the prayer,
+or filled the longing heart, that through the day marches and the night
+watches cried, and would not be appeased, for his darling.
+
+"Surely," he thought as he went down Broadway, as he reflected, as he
+considered the matter a thousand times thereafter,--"surely I was a fool
+not to have spoken to her then; not to have seen her, have devised, have
+forced some way to reach her, not to have met her face to face, and told
+her all the love with which she had filled my heart and possessed my
+soul. And then to have been such a coward when I did write to her, to
+have so said a say which was nothing"; and he groaned impatiently as he
+thought of the scene in his room and the letter which was its final
+result.
+
+How he had written once, and again, and yet again, letters short and
+long, letters short and burning, or lengthy and filled almost to the
+final line with delicate fancies and airy sentiment, ere he ventured to
+tell that of which all this was but the prelude; how, at the conclusion
+of each attempt, he had watched these luminous effusions blaze and burn
+as he regularly committed them to the flames; how he found it difficult
+to decide which he enjoyed the most,--writing them out, or seeing them
+burn; how at last he had put upon paper some such words as these:--
+
+"After these delightful weeks and months of intercourse, I am to go away
+from you, then, without a single word of parting, or a solitary sentence
+of adieu. Need I tell you how this pains me? I have in vain besieged the
+house that has held you; in vain made a thousand inquiries, a thousand
+efforts to discover your retreat and to reach your side, that I might
+once more see your face and take your hand ere I went from the sight and
+touch of both, perchance forever. This I find may not be. The hour
+strikes, and in a little space I shall march away from the city to which
+my heart clings with infinite fondness, since it is filled with
+associations of you. I have again and again striven to write that which
+will be worthy the eyes that are to read, and striven in vain. 'Tis a
+fine art to which I do not pretend. Then, in homely phrase, good by.
+Give me thy spiritual hand, and keep me, if thou wilt, in thy gentle
+remembrance. Adieu! a kind adieu, my friend; may the brighter stars
+smile on thee, and the better angels guard thy footsteps wherever thou
+mayst wander, keep thy heart and spirit bright, and let thy thoughts
+turn kindly back to me, I pray very, very often. And so, once more,
+farewell."
+
+Remembering all this, thinking what he would do and say were the doing
+and saying yet possible in an untried future, the time sped by. He
+waited and waited in vain. He looked, yet was gratified by no sight for
+which his eyes longed. He hoped, till hope gave place to despondency and
+almost despair: not a word came to him, not a line of answer or
+remembrance. This long silence was all the more intolerable, since the
+time that intervened did but the more vividly stamp upon his memory the
+delights of the past, and color with softer and more exquisite tints the
+recollection of vanished hours,--hours spent in galloping gayly by her
+side in the early morning, or idly and deliciously lounged away in
+picture-galleries or concert-rooms, or in a conversation carried on in
+some curious and subtle shape between two hearts and spirits with the
+help of very few uttered words; hours in which he had whirled her
+through many a fairy maze and turn of captivating dance-music, or in
+some less heated and crowded room, or cool conservatory, listened to the
+voice of the siren who walked by his side, "while the sweet wind did
+gently kiss the flowers and make no noise," and the strains of "flute,
+violin, bassoon," and the sounds of the "dancers dancing in tune,"
+coming to them on the still air of night, seemed like the sounds from
+another and a far-off world,--listened, listened, listened, while his
+silver-tongued enchantress builded castles in the air, or beguiled his
+thought, enthralled his heart, his soul and fancy, through many a golden
+hour.
+
+Thinking of all this, his heart well found expression for its feelings
+in the half-pleasing, half-sorrowful lines which almost unconsciously
+repeated themselves again and again in his brain:--
+
+ "Still o'er those scenes my memory wakes,
+ And fondly broods with miser care;
+ Time but the impression deeper makes,
+ As streams their channels deeper wear."
+
+Thinking of all this, he took comfort in spite of his trouble.
+"Perhaps," he said to himself, "he was mistaken. Perhaps"--O happy
+thought!--it was but make-believe displeasure which had so tortured
+him. Perhaps--yes, he would believe it--she had never received his
+letter; they had been careless, they had failed to give it her or to
+send it aright. He would write her once again, in language which would
+relieve his heart, and which she must comprehend. He loved her; perhaps,
+ah, perhaps she loved him a little in return: he would believe so till
+he was undeceived, and be infinitely happy in the belief.
+
+Is it not wondrous how even the tiniest grain of love will permeate the
+saddest and sorest recesses of the heart, and instantly cause it to
+pulsate with thoughts and emotions the sweetest and dearest in life? O
+Love, thou sweet, thou young and rose lipped cherubim, how does thy
+smile illuminate the universe! how does thy slightest touch electrify
+the soul! how gently and tenderly dost thou lead us up to heaven!
+
+With Surrey, to decide was to act. The second letter, full of sweetest
+yet intensest love,--his heart laid bare to her,--was written; was sent,
+enclosed in one to his aunt. Tom was away in another section, fighting
+manfully for the dear old flag, or the precious missive would have been
+intrusted to his care. He sent it thus that it might reach her sooner.
+Now that he had a fresh hope, he could not wait to write for her
+address, and forward it himself to her hands; he must adopt the
+speediest method of putting it in her possession.
+
+In a little space came answer from Mrs. Russell, enclosing the letter he
+had sent: a kindly epistle it was. He was a sort of idol with this same
+aunt, so she had put many things on paper that were steeped in
+gentleness and affection ere she said at the end, "I re-enclose your
+letter. I have seen Miss Ercildoune. She restores it to you; she
+implores you never to write her again,--to forget her. I add my
+entreaties to hers. She begs of me to beseech you not to try her by any
+further appeals, as she will but return them unopened." That was all.
+
+What could it mean? He loved her so absolutely, he had such exalted
+faith in her kindness, her gentleness, her fairness and superiority,--in
+_her_,--that he could not believe she would so thrust back his love,
+purely and chivalrously offered, with something that seemed like
+ignominy, unless she had a sufficient reason--or one she deemed
+such--for treating so cruelly him and the offering he laid at her feet.
+
+But she had spoken. It was for him, then, when she bade silence, to keep
+it; when she refused his gift, to refrain from thrusting it upon her
+attention and heart. But ah, the silence and the refraining! Ah, the
+time--the weary, sore, intolerable time--that followed! Summer, and
+autumn, and winter, and the seasons repeated once again, he tramped
+across the soil of Virginia, already wet with rebel and patriot blood;
+he felt the shame and agony of Bull Run; he was in the night struggle at
+Ball's Bluff, where those wondrous Harvard boys found it "sweet to die
+for their country," and discovered, for them, "death to be but one step
+onward in life." He lay in camp, chafing with impatience and
+indignation as the long months wore away, and the thousands of graves
+about Washington, filled by disease and inaction, made "all quiet along
+the Potomac." He went down to Yorktown; was in the sweat and fury of the
+seven days' fight; away in the far South, where fever and pestilence
+stood guard to seize those who were spared by the bullet and bayonet;
+and on many a field well lost or won. Through it all marching or
+fighting, sick, wounded thrice and again; praised, admired, heroic,
+promoted,--from private soldier to general,--through two years and more
+of such fiery experience, no part of the tender love was burned away,
+tarnished, or dimmed.
+
+Sometimes, indeed, he even smiled at himself for the constant thought,
+and felt that he must certainly be demented on this one point at least,
+since it colored every impression of his life, and, in some shape,
+thrust itself upon him at the most unseemly and foreign times.
+
+One evening, when the mail for the division came in, looking over the
+pile of letters, his eye was caught by one addressed to James Given. The
+name was familiar,--that of his father's old foreman, whom he knew to be
+somewhere in the army; doubtless the same man. Unquestionably, he
+thought, that was the reason he was so attracted to it; but why he
+should take up the delicate little missive, scan it again and again,
+hold it in his hand with the same touch with which he would have pressed
+a rare flower, and lay it down as reluctantly as he would have yielded a
+known and visible treasure,--that was the mystery. He had never seen
+Francesca's writing, but he stood possessed, almost assured, of the
+belief that this letter was penned by her hand; and at last parted with
+it slowly and unwillingly, as though it were the dear hand of which he
+mused; then took himself to task for this boyish weakness and folly.
+Nevertheless, he went in pursuit of Jim, not to question him,--he was
+too thorough a gentleman for that,--but led on partly by his desire to
+see a familiar face, partly by this folly, as he called it with a sort
+of amused disdain.
+
+Folly, however, it was not, save in such measure as the subtle
+telegraphings between spirit and spirit can be thus called. Unjustly so
+called they are, constantly; it being the habit of most people to
+denounce as heresy or ridicule as madness things too high for their
+sight or too deep for their comprehension. As these people would say,
+"oddly enough," or "by an extraordinary coincidence," this very letter
+was from Miss Ercildoune,--a letter which she wrote as she purposed, and
+as she well knew how to write, in behalf of Sallie. It was ostensibly on
+quite another theme; asking some information in regard to a comrade, but
+so cunningly devised and executed as to tell him in few words, and
+unsuspiciously, some news of Sallie,--news which she knew would delight
+his heart, and overthrow the little barrier which had stood between
+them, making both miserable, but which he would not, and she could not,
+clamber over or destroy. It did its work effectually, and made two
+hearts thoroughly happy,--this letter which had so strangely bewitched
+Surrey; which, in his heart, spite of the ridicule of his reason, he
+was so sure was hers; and which, indeed, was hers, though he knew not
+that till long afterward.
+
+"So," he thought, as he went through the camp, "Given is here, and near.
+I shall be glad to see a face from home, whatever kind of a face it may
+be, and Given's is a good one; it will be a pleasant rememberance."
+
+"Whither away?" called a voice behind him.
+
+"To the 29th," he answered the questioner, one of his officers and
+friends, who, coming up, took his arm,--"in pursuit of a man."
+
+"What's his name?"
+
+"Given,--christened James. What are you laughing at? do you know him?"
+
+"No, I don't know him, but I've heard some funny stories about him; he's
+a queer stick, I should think."
+
+"Something in that way.--Helloa! Brooks, back again?" to a fine,
+frank-looking young fellow,--"and were you successful?"
+
+"Yes, to both your questions. In addition I'll say, for your rejoicing,
+that I give in, cave, subside, have nothing more to say against your pet
+theory,--from this moment swear myself a rank abolitionist, or anything
+else you please, now and forever,--so help me all ye black gods and
+goddesses!"
+
+"Phew! what's all this?" cried Whittlesly, from the other side of his
+Colonel; "what are you driving at? I'll defy anybody to make head or
+tail of that answer."
+
+"Surrey understands."
+
+"Not I; your riddle's too much for me."
+
+"Didn't you go in pursuit of a dead man?" queried Whittlesly.
+
+"Just that."
+
+"Did the dead man convert you?"
+
+"No, Colonel, not precisely. And yet yes, too; that is, I suppose I
+shouldn't have been converted if he hadn't died, and I gone in search of
+him."
+
+"I believe it; you're such an obstinate case that you need one raised
+from the dead to have any effect on you."
+
+"Obstinate! O, hear the pig-headed fellow talk! You're a beauty to
+discourse on that point, aren't you!"
+
+"Surrey laughed, and stopped at the call of one of his men, who hailed
+him as he went by. Evidently a favorite here as in New York, in camp as
+at home; for in a moment he was surrounded by the men, who crowded about
+him, each with a question, or remark, to draw special attention to
+himself, and a word or smile from his commander. Whatever complaint they
+had to enter, or petition to make, or favor to beg, or wish to urge,
+whatever help they wanted or information they desired, was brought to
+him to solve or to grant, and--never being repulsed by their
+officer--they speedily knew and loved their friend. Thus it was that the
+two men standing at a little distance, watching the proceeding, were
+greatly amused at the motley drafts made upon his attention in the shape
+of tents, shoes, coats, letters to be sent or received, books borrowed
+and lent, a man sick, or a chicken captured. They brought their
+interests and cares to him,--these big, brown fellows,--as though they
+were children, and he a parent well beloved.
+
+"One might think him the father of the regiment," said Brooks, with a
+smile.
+
+"The mother, more like: it must be the woman element in him these
+fellows feel and love so."
+
+"Perhaps; but it would have another effect on them, if, for instance, he
+didn't carry that sabre-slash on his hand. They've seen him under steel
+and fire, and know where he's led them."
+
+"What is this you were joking about with him, a while ago?"
+
+"What! about turning abolitionist?"
+
+"Precisely."
+
+"O, you know he's rampant on the slavery question. I believe it's the
+only thing he ever loses his temper over, and he has lost it with me
+more than once. I've always been a rank heretic with regard to Cuffee,
+and the result was, we disagreed."
+
+"Yes, I know. But what connection has that with your expedition?"
+
+"Just what I want to know," added Surrey, coming up at the moment.
+
+"Ah! you're in time to hear the confession, are you?"
+
+"'An honest confession--'You know what the wise man says."
+
+"Come, don't flatter yourself we will think you so because you quote
+him. Be quiet, both of you, and let me go on to tell my tale."
+
+"Attention!"
+
+"Proceed!"
+
+"Thus, then. You understand what my errand was?"
+
+"Not exactly; Lieutenant Hunt was drowned somewhere, wasn't he?"
+
+"Yes: fell overboard from a tug; the men on board tried to save him, and
+then to recover his body, and couldn't do either. Some of his people
+came down here in pursuit of it, and I was detailed with a squad to help
+them in their search.
+
+"Well, the naval officers gave us every facility in their power; the
+river was dragged twice over, and the woods along-shore ransacked,
+hoping it might have been washed in and, maybe, buried; but there wasn't
+sight or trace of it. While we were hunting round we stumbled on a
+couple of darkies, who told us, after a bit of questioning, that darky
+number three, somewhere about, had found the body of a Federal officer
+on the river bank, and buried it. On that hint we acted, posted over to
+the fellow's shanty, and found, not him, but his wife, who was ready
+enough to tell us all she knew. She showed us some traps of the buried
+officer, among them a pair of spurs, which his brother recognized
+directly. When she was quite sure that we were all correct, and that the
+thing had fallen into the right hands, she fished out of some safe
+corner his wallet, with fifty-seven dollars in it. I confess I stared,
+for they were slaves, both of them, and evidently poor as Job's turkey,
+and it has always been one of my theories that a nigger invariably
+steals when he gets a chance. However, I wasn't going to give in at
+that."
+
+"Of course you weren't," said the Colonel. "Did you ever read about the
+man who was told that the facts did not sustain his theory, and of his
+sublime answer? 'Very well,' said he, 'so much the worse for the
+facts!'"
+
+"Come, Colonel, you talk too much. How am I ever to get on with my
+narrative, if you keep interrupting me in this style? Be quiet."
+
+"Word of command. Quiet. Quiet it is. Continue."
+
+"No, I said, of course they expect some reward,--that's it."
+
+"What an ass you must be!" broke in Whittlesly.
+
+"Hadn't you sense enough to see they could keep the whole of it, and
+nobody the wiser? and of course they couldn't have supposed any one was
+coming after it,--could they?
+
+"How am I to know what they thought? If you don't stop your comments,
+I'll stop the story; take your choice."
+
+"All right: go ahead."
+
+"While I was considering the case, in came the master of the mansion,--a
+thin, stooped, tired-looking little fellow,--'Sam,' he told us, was his
+name; then proceeded to narrate how he had found the body, and knew the
+uniform, and was kind and tender with it because of its dress, 'for you
+see, sah, we darkies is all Union folks'; how he had brought it up in
+the night, for fear of his Secesh master, and made a coffin for it, and
+buried it decently. After that he took us out to a little spot of fresh
+earth, covered with leaves and twigs, and, digging down, we came to a
+rough pine box made as well as the poor fellow knew how to put it
+together. Opening it, we found all that was left of poor Hunt,
+respectably clad in a coarse, clean white garment which Sam's wife had
+made as nicely as she could out of her one pair of sheets. 'It wa'n't
+much,' said the good soul, with tears in her eyes, 'it wa'n't much we's
+could do for him, but I washed him, and dressed him, peart as I could,
+and Sam and me, we buried him. We wished, both on us, that we could have
+done heaps more for him, but we did all that we could,'--which, indeed,
+was plain enough to be seen.
+
+"Before we went away, Sam brought from a little hole, which he burrowed
+in the floor of his cabin, a something, done up in dirty old rags; and
+when we opened it, what under the heavens do you suppose we found?
+You'll never guess. Three hundred dollars in bank-bills, and some
+important papers, which he had taken and hid,--concealed them even from
+his wife, because, he said, the guerillas often came round, and they
+might frighten her into giving them up if she knew they were there.
+
+"I collapsed at that, and stood with open mouth, watching for the next
+proceeding. I knew there was to be some more of it, and there was.
+Hunt's brother offered back half the money; _offered_ it! why, he tried
+to force it on the fellow, and couldn't. His master wouldn't let him
+buy himself and his wife,--I suspect, out of sheer cussedness,--and he
+hadn't any other use for money, he said. Besides, he didn't want to
+take, and wouldn't take, anything that looked like pay for doing aught
+for a 'Linkum sojer,' alive or dead.
+
+"'They'se going to make us all free, sometime,' he said, 'that's enough.
+Don't look like it, jest yet, I knows; but I lives in faith; it'll come
+byumby' When the fellow said that, I declare to you, Surrey, I felt like
+hiding my face. At last I began to comprehend what your indignation
+meant against the order forbidding slaves coming into our lines, and
+commanding their return when they succeed in entering. Just then we all
+seemed to me meaner than dirt."
+
+"As we are; and, as dirt, deserve to be trampled underfoot, beaten,
+defeated, till we're ready to stand up and fight like men in this
+struggle."
+
+"Amen to that, Colonel," added Whittlesly.
+
+"Well, I'm pretty nearly ready to say so myself," finished Brooks, half
+reluctantly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+ "_The best-laid schemes o' mice and men
+ Gang aft agley._"
+
+ BURNS
+
+
+They didn't find Jim in the camp of his regiment, so went up to
+head-quarters to institute inquiries.
+
+"Given?" a little thought and investigation. "Oh! Given is out on picket
+duty."
+
+"Whereabouts?"
+
+The direction indicated. "Thanks! we'll find him."
+
+Having commenced the search, Surrey was determined to end it ere he
+turned back, and his two friends bore him company. As they came down the
+road, they saw in the distance a great stalwart fellow, red-shirted and
+conspicuous, evidently absorbed in some singular task,--what they did
+not perceive, till, coming to closer quarters, they discovered, perched
+by his side, a tin cup filled with soap-suds, a pipe in his mouth, and
+that by the help of the two he was regaling himself with the pastime of
+blowing bubbles.
+
+"I'll wager that's Jim," said Surrey, before he saw his face.
+
+"It's like him, certainly: from what I've heard of him, I think he would
+die outright if he couldn't amuse himself in some shape."
+
+"Why, the fellow must be a curiosity worth coming here to see."
+
+"Pretty nearly."
+
+Surrey walked on a little in advance, and tapped him on the shoulder.
+Down came the pipe, up went the hand in a respectful military salute,
+but before it was finished he saw who was before him.
+
+"Wow!" he exclaimed, "if it ain't Mr. Willie Surrey. My! Ain't I glad to
+see you? How _do_ you do? The sight of you is as good as a month's pay."
+
+"Come, Given, don't stun me with compliments," cried Surrey, laughing
+and putting out his hand to grasp the big, red paw that came to meet it,
+and shake it heartily. "If I'd known you were over here, I'd have found
+you before, though my regiment hasn't been down here long."
+
+Jim at that looked sharply at the "eagles," and then over the alert,
+graceful person, finishing his inspection with an approving nod, and the
+emphatic declaration, "Well, if I know what's what, and I rayther reckon
+I do, you're about the right figger for an officer, and on the whole I'd
+sooner pull off my cap to you than any other fellow I've seen
+round,"--bringing his hand once more to the salute.
+
+"Why, Jim, you have turned courtier; army life is spoiling you,"
+protested the inspected one; protesting,--yet pleased, as any one might
+have been, at the evidently sincere admiration.
+
+"Nary time," Jim strenuously denied; and, these little courtesies being
+ended, they talked about enlistment, and home, and camp, and a score of
+things that interested officer and man alike. In the midst of the confab
+a dust was seen up the road, coming nearer, and presently out of it
+appeared a family carriage somewhat dilapidated and worse for wear, but
+still quite magnificent; enthroned on the back seat a fullblown F.F.V.
+with rather more than the ordinary measure of superciliousness belonging
+to his race; driven, of course, by his colored servant. Jim made for the
+middle of the road, and, holding his bayonet in such wise as to threaten
+at one charge horse, negro, and chivalry, roared out, "Tickets!"
+
+At such an extraordinary and unceremonious demand the knight flushed
+angrily, frowned, made an expressive gesture with his lips and his nose
+which suggestively indicated that there was something offensive in the
+air between the wind and his gentility, ending the pantomime by finding
+a pass and handing it over to his "nigger," then--not deigning to
+speak--motioned him and it to the threatening figure. As this black man
+came forward, Brooks, looking at him a moment, cried excitedly, "By
+Jove! it's Sam."
+
+"No? Hunt's Sam?"
+
+"Yes, the very same; and I suppose that's his cantankerous old master."
+
+Surrey ran forward to Jim, for the three had fallen back when the
+carriage came near, and said a few sentences to him quickly and
+earnestly.
+
+"All right, Colonel! just as you please," he replied. "You leave it to
+me; I'll fix him." Then, turning to Sam, who stood waiting, demanded,
+"Well, have you got it?"
+
+"Yes, massa."
+
+"Fork over,"--and looking at it a moment pronounced "All right! Move
+on!" elucidating the remark by a jerk at the coat-collar of the
+unsuspecting Sam, which sent him whirling up the road at a fine but
+uncomfortable rate of speed.
+
+"Now, sir, what do you want?" addressing the astounded chevalier, who
+sat speechlessly observant of this unlooked-for proceeding.
+
+"Want?" cried the irate Virginian, his anger loosening his tongue,
+"want? I want to go on, of course; that was my pass."
+
+"Was it now? I want to know! that's singular! Why didn't you offer it
+yourself then?"
+
+"Because I thought my nigger a fitter person to parley with a Lincoln
+vandal," loftily responded his eminence.
+
+"That's kind of you, I'm sure. Sorry I can't oblige you in
+return,--very; but you'll just have to turn tail and drive back again.
+That bit of paper says 'Pass the bearer,' and the bearer's already
+passed. You can't get two men through this picket on one man's pass, not
+if one is a nigger and t'other a skunk; so, sir, face about, march!"
+
+This was an unprepared-for dilemma. Mr. V. looked at the face of the
+"Lincoln vandal," but saw there no sign of relenting; then into the
+distance whither he was anxiously desirous to tend; glanced reflectively
+at the bayonet in the centre and the narrow space on either side the
+road; and finally called to his black man to come back.
+
+Sam approached with reluctance, and fell back with alacrity when the
+glittering steel was brandished towards his own breast.
+
+"Where's your pass, sirrah?" demanded Jim, with asperity.
+
+"Here, massa," said the chattel, presenting the same one which had
+already been examined.
+
+"Won't do," said Jim. "Can't come that game over this child. That passes
+you to Fairfax,--can't get any one from Fairfax on that ticket. Come,"
+flourishing the shooting-stick once more, "move along"; which Sam
+proceeded to do with extraordinary readiness.
+
+"Now, sir," turning to the again speechless chevalier, "if you stay here
+any longer, I shall take you under arrest to head-quarters:
+consequently, you'd better accept the advice of a disinterested friend,
+and make tracks, lively."
+
+By this time the scion of a latter-day chivalry seemed to comprehend the
+situation, seized his lines, wheeled about, and went off at a spanking
+trot over the "sacred soil,"--Jim shouting after him, "I say, Mr.
+F.F.V. if you meet any 'Lincoln vandals,' just give them my respects,
+will you?" to which as the knight gave no answer, we are left in doubt
+to this day whether Given's commission was ever executed.
+
+"There! my mind's relieved on that point," announced Jim, wiping his
+face with one hand and shaking the other after the retreating dust.
+"Mean old scoot! I'll teach him to insult one of our boys,--'Lincoln
+vandals' indeed! I'd like to have whanged him!" with a final shake and a
+final explosion, cooling off as rapidly as he had heated, and continuing
+the interrupted conversation with recovered temper and _sangfroid_.
+
+He was delighted at meeting Surrey, and Surrey was equally glad to see
+once more his old favorite, for Jim and he had been great friends when
+he was a little boy and had watched the big boy at work in his father's
+foundry,--a favoritism which, spite of years and changes, and wide
+distinctions of social position, had never altered nor cooled, and which
+showed itself now in many a pleasant shape and fashion so long as they
+were near together.
+
+They aided and abetted one another in more ways than one. Jim at
+Surrey's request, and by a plan of his proposing, succeeded in getting
+Sam's wife away from her home,--not from any liking for the expedition,
+or interest in either of the "niggers," as he stoutly asserted, but
+solely to please the Colonel. If that, indeed, were his only purpose, he
+succeeded to a charm, for when Surrey saw the two reunited, safe from
+the awful clutch of slavery, supplied with ample means for the journey
+and the settlement thereafter, and on their way to a good Northern home,
+he was more than pleased,--he was rejoiced, and said, "Thank God!" with
+all his heart, and reverently, as he watched them away.
+
+Before the summer ended Jim was down with what he called "a scratch"; a
+pretty ugly wound, the surgeon thought it, and the Colonel remembered
+and looked after him with unflagging interest and zeal. Many a book and
+paper, many a cooling drink and bit of fruit delicious to the parched
+throat and fevered lips, found their way to the little table by his
+side. Surrey was never too busy by reason of his duties, or among his
+own sick and wounded men, to find time for a chat, or a scrap of
+reading, or to write a letter for the prostrate and helpless fellow, who
+suffered without complaining, as, indeed, they did all about him, only
+relieving himself now and then by a suppressed growl.
+
+And so, with occasional episodes of individual interest, with marches
+and fightings, with extremes of heat and cold, of triumph and defeat,
+the long months wore away. These men were soldiers, each in his place in
+the great war with the record of which all the world is familiar, a tale
+written in blood, and flame, and tears,--terrible, yet heroic; ghastly,
+yet sublime. As soldiers in such a conflict, they did their duty and
+noble endeavor,--Jim, a nameless private in the ranks,--Surrey, not
+braver perchance, but so conspicuous with all the elements which fit for
+splendid command, so fortunate in opportunities for their display, so
+eminent in seizing them and using them to their fullest extent,
+regardless of danger and death, as to make his name known and honored by
+all who watched the progress of the fight, read its record with
+interest, and knew its heroes and leaders with pride and love.
+
+In the winter of '63 Jim's regiment was ordered away to South Carolina;
+and he who at parting looked with keen regret on the face of the man who
+had been so faithful and well tried a friend, would have looked upon it
+with something deeper and sadder, could he at the same time have gazed a
+little way into the future, and seen what it held in store for him.
+
+Four months after he marched away, Surrey's brigade was in that awful
+fight and carnage of Chancellorsville, where men fought like gods to
+counteract the blunders, and retrieve the disaster, induced by a stunned
+and helpless brain. There was he stricken down, at the head of his
+command, covered with dust and smoke; twice wounded, yet refusing to
+leave the field,--his head bound with a handkerchief, his eyes blazing
+like stars beneath its stained folds, his voice cheering on his men;
+three horses shot under him; on foot then; contending for every inch of
+the ground he was compelled to yield; giving way only as he was forced
+at the point of the bayonet; his men eager to emulate him, to follow him
+into the jaws of death, to fall by his side,--thus was he prostrated;
+not dead, as they thought and feared when they seized him and bore him
+at last from the field, but insensible, bleeding with frightful
+abundance, his right arm shattered to fragments; not dead, yet at
+death's door--and looking in.
+
+May blossoms had dropped, and June harvests were ripe on all the fields,
+ere he could take advantage of the unsolicited leave, and go home.
+Home--for which his heart longed!
+
+He was not, however, in too great haste to stop by the way, to pause in
+Washington, and do what he had sooner intended to accomplish,--solicit,
+as a special favor to himself, as an honor justly won by the man for
+whom he entreated it, a promotion for Jim. "It is impossible now," he
+was informed, "but the case should be noted and remembered. If anything
+could certainly secure the man an advance, it was the advocacy of
+General Surrey"; and so, not quite content, but still satisfied that
+Jim's time was in the near future, he went on his way.
+
+As the cars approached Philadelphia his heart beat so fast that it
+almost stifled him, and he leaned against the window heavily for air and
+support. It was useless to reason with himself, vain to call good
+judgment to his counsels and summon wisdom to his aid. This was her
+home. Somewhere in this city to which he was so rapidly hastening, she
+was moving up and down, had her being, was living and loving. After
+these long years his eyes so ached to see her, his heart was so hungry
+for her presence, that it seemed to him as though the sheer longing
+would call her out of her retreat, on to the streets through which he
+must pass, across his path, into the sight of his eyes and reach of his
+hand. He had thought that he felt all this before. He found, as the
+space diminished between them,--as, perchance, she was but a stone's
+throw from his side,--that the pain, and the longing, and the
+intolerable desire to behold her once again, increased a hundred-fold.
+
+Eager as he had been a little while before to reach his home, he was
+content to remain quietly here now. He laughed at himself as he stepped
+into a carriage, and, tired as he was,--for his amputated arm, not yet
+thoroughly healed, made him weak and worn,--drove through all the
+afternoon and evening, across miles and miles of heated, wearisome
+stones, possessed by the idea that somewhere, somehow, he should see
+her, he would find her before his quest was done.
+
+After that last painful rebuff, he did not dare to go to her home, could
+he find it, till he had secured from her, in some fashion, a word or
+sign. "This," he said, "is certainly doubly absurd, since she does not
+live in the city; but she is here to-day, I know,--she must be here";
+and persisted in his endeavor,--persisted, naturally, in vain; and went
+to bed, at last, exhausted; determined that to-morrow should find him on
+his journey farther north, whatever wish might plead for delay, yet with
+a final cry for her from the depths of his soul, as he stretched out his
+solitary arm, ere sinking to restless sleep, and dreams of battle and
+death--sleep unrefreshing, and dreams ill-omened; as he thought, again
+and again, rousing himself from their hold, and looking out to the
+night, impatient for the break of day.
+
+When day broke he was unable to rise with its dawn. The effect of all
+this tension on his already overtaxed nerves was to induce a fever in
+the unhealed arm, which, though not painful, was yet sufficient to hold
+him close prisoner for several days; a delay which chafed him, and which
+filled his family at home with an intolerable anxiety, not that they
+knew its cause,--_that_ would have been a relief,--but that they
+conjectured another, to them infinitely worse than sickness or
+suffering, bad and sorrowful as were these.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+ "_Gentlemen, let not prejudice prepossess you._"
+
+ Izaak Walton
+
+
+Car No. 14, Fifth Street line, Philadelphia, was crowded. Travelling
+bags, shawls, and dusters marked that people were making for the 11 A.M.
+New York train, Kensington depot. One pleasant-looking old gentleman
+whose face shone under a broad brim, and whose cleanly drabs were
+brought into distasteful proximity with the garments of a drunken
+coal-heaver, after a vain effort to edge away, relieved his mind by
+turning to his neighbor with the statement, "Consistency is a jewel."
+
+"Undoubtedly true, Mr. Greenleaf," answered the neighbor, "but what
+caused the remark?"
+
+"That,"--looking with mild disgust at the dirty and ragged leg sitting
+by his own. "Here's this filthy fellow, a nuisance to everybody near
+him, can ride in these cars, and a nice, respectable colored person
+can't. So I couldn't help thinking, and saying, that consistency is a
+jewel."
+
+"Well, it's a shame,--that's a fact; but of course nobody can interfere
+if the companies don't choose to let them ride; it's their concern, not
+ours."
+
+"There's a fine specimen now, out there on the sidewalk." The fine
+specimen was a large, powerfully made man, black as ebony, dressed in
+army blouse and trousers, one leg gone,--evidently very tired, for he
+leaned heavily on his crutches. The conductor, a kindly-faced young
+fellow, pulled the strap, and helped him on to the platform with a
+peremptory "Move up front, there!" to the people standing inside.
+
+"Why!" exclaimed the old Friend,--"do my eyes deceive me?" Then getting
+up, and taking the man by the arm, he seated him in his own place: "Thou
+art less able to stand than I."
+
+Tears rushed to his eyes as he said, "Thank you, sir! you are too kind."
+Evidently he was weak, and as evidently unaccustomed to find any one
+"too kind."
+
+"Thee has on the army blue; has thee been fighting any?"
+
+"Yes, sir!" he answered, promptly.
+
+"I didn't know black men were in the army; yet thee has lost a leg.
+Where did that go?"
+
+"At Newbern, sir."
+
+"At Newbern,--ah! long ago? and how did it happen?"
+
+"Fourteenth of March, sir. There was a land fight, and the gunboats
+came up to the rescue. Some of us black men were upon board a little
+schooner that carried one gun. 'Twasn't a great deal we could do with
+that, but we did the best we could; and got well peppered in return.
+This is what it did for me,"--looking down at the stump.
+
+"I guess thee is sorry now that thee didn't keep out of it, isn't thee?"
+
+"No, sir; no indeed, sir. If I had five hundred legs and fifty lives,
+I'd be glad to give them all in such a war as this."
+
+Here somebody got out; the old Friend sat down; and the coal-heaver,
+roused by the stir, lifted himself from his drunken sleep, and, looking
+round, saw who was beside him.
+
+A vile oath, an angry stare from his bloodshot eyes.
+
+"Ye ----, what are ye doin' here? out wid ye, quick!"
+
+"What's the matter?" queried the conductor, who was collecting
+somebody's fare.
+
+"The matther, is it? matther enough! what's this nasty nagur doin' here?
+Put him out, can't ye?"
+
+The conductor took no notice.
+
+"Conductor!" spoke up a well-dressed man, with the air and manner of a
+gentleman, "what does that card say?"
+
+The conductor looked at the card indicated, upon which was printed
+"Colored people not allowed in this car," legible enough to require less
+study than he saw fit to give it. "Well!" he said.
+
+"Well," was the answer,--"your duty is plain. Put that fellow out."
+
+The conductor hesitated,--looked round the car. Nobody spoke.
+
+"I'm sorry, my man! I hoped there would be no objection when I let you
+in; but our orders are strict, and, as the passengers ain't willing,
+you'll have to get off,"--jerking angrily at the bell.
+
+As the car slackened speed, a young officer, whom nobody noticed, got
+on.
+
+There was a moment's pause as the black man gathered up his crutches,
+and raised himself painfully. "Stop!" cried a thrilling and passionate
+voice,--"stand still! Of what stuff are you made to sit here and see a
+man, mangled and maimed in _your_ cause and for _your_ defence, insulted
+and outraged at the bidding of a drunken boor and a cowardly traitor?"
+The voice, the beautiful face, the intensity burning through both,
+electrified every soul to which she appealed. Hands were stretched out
+to draw back the crippled soldier; eyes that a moment before were turned
+away looked kindly at him; a Babel of voices broke out, "No, no," "let
+him stay," "it's a shame," "let him alone, conductor," "we ain't so bad
+as that," with more of the same kind; those who chose not to join in the
+chorus discreetly held their peace, and made no attempt to sing out of
+time and tune.
+
+The car started again. The _gentleman_, furious at the turn of the tide,
+cried out, "Ho, ho! here's a pretty preacher of the gospel of equality!
+why, ladies and gentlemen, this high-flyer, who presumes to lecture us,
+is nothing but a"--
+
+The sentence was cut short in mid-career, the insolent sneer dashed out
+of his face,--face and form prone on the floor of the car,--while over
+him bent and blazed the young officer, whose entrance, a little while
+before, nobody had heeded.
+
+Spurning the prostrate body at his feet, he turned to Francesca, for it
+was she, and stretched out his hand,--his left hand,--his only one. It
+was time; all the heat, and passion, and color, had died out, and she
+stood there shivering, a look of suffering in her face.
+
+"Miss Ercildoune! you are ill,--you need the air,--allow me!" drawing
+her hand through his arm, and taking her out with infinite deference and
+care.
+
+"Thank you! a moment's faintness,--it is over now," as they reached the
+sidewalk.
+
+"No, no, you are too ill to walk,--let me get you a carriage."
+
+Hailing one that was passing by, he put her in, his hand lingering on
+hers, lingering on the folds of her dress as he bent to arrange it; his
+eyes clinging to her face with a passionate, woeful tenderness. "It is
+two years since I saw you, since I have heard from you," he said, his
+voice hoarse with the effort to speak quietly.
+
+"Yes," she answered, "it is two years." Stooping her head to write upon
+a card, her lips moved as if they said something,--something that
+seemed like "I must! only once!" but of course that could not be. "It is
+my address," she then said, putting the card in his hand. "I shall be
+happy to see you in my own home."
+
+"This afternoon?" eagerly.
+
+She hesitated. "Whenever you may call. I thank you again,--and good
+morning."
+
+Meanwhile the car had moved on its course: outwardly, peaceful enough;
+inwardly, full of commotion. The conservative gentleman, gathering
+himself up from his prone estate, white with passion and chagrin, saw
+about him everywhere looks of scorn, and smiles of derision and
+contempt, and fled incontinently from the sight.
+
+His coal-heaving _confrere_, left to do battle alone, came to the charge
+valiant and unterrified. Another outbreak of blasphemy and obscenity
+were the weapons of assault; the ladies looked shocked, the gentlemen
+indignant and disgusted.
+
+"Friend," called the non-resistant broad-brim, beckoning peremptorily to
+the conductor,--"friend, come here."
+
+The conductor came.
+
+"If colored persons are not permitted to ride, I suppose it is equally
+against the rules of the company to allow nuisances in their cars. Isn't
+it?"
+
+"You are right, sir," assented the conductor, upon whose face a smile of
+comprehension began to beam.
+
+"Well, I don't know what thee thinks, or what these other people think,
+but I know of no worse nuisance than a filthy, blasphemous drunkard.
+There he sits,--remove him."
+
+There was a perfect shout of laughter and delight; and before the irate
+"citizen" comprehended what was intended, or could throw himself into a
+pugilistic attitude, he was seized, _sans_ ceremony, and ignominiously
+pushed and hustled from the car; the people therein, black soldier and
+all, drawing a long breath of relief, and going on their way rejoicing.
+Everybody's eyes were brighter; hearts beat faster, blood moved more
+quickly; everybody felt a sense of elation, and a kindness towards their
+neighbor and all the world. A cruel and senseless prejudice had been
+lost in an impulse, generous and just; and for a moment the sentiment
+which exalted their humanity, vivified and gladdened their souls.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+ "_The future seemed barred
+ By the corpse of a dead hope._"
+
+ OWEN MEREDITH
+
+
+So, then, after these long years he had seen her again. Having seen her,
+he wondered how he had lived without her. If the wearisome months seemed
+endless in passing, the morning hours were an eternity. "This
+afternoon?" he had said. "Be it so," she had answered. He did not dare
+to go till then.
+
+Thinking over the scene of the morning, he scarcely dared go at all. She
+had not offered her hand; she had expressed no pleasure, either by look
+or word, at meeting him again. He had forced her to say, "Come": she
+could do no less when he had just interfered to save her insult, and had
+begged the boon.
+
+"Insult!" his arm ached to strike another blow, as he remembered the
+sentence it had cut short. Of course the fellow had been drinking, but
+outrage of her was intolerable, whatever madness prompted it. The very
+sun must shine more brightly, and the wind blow softly, when she passed
+by. Ah me! were the whole world what an ardent lover prays for his
+mistress, there were no need of death to enjoy the bliss of heaven.
+
+What could he say? what do? how find words to speak the measured
+feelings of a friend? how control the beatings of his heart, the passion
+of his soul, that no sign should escape to wound or offend her? She had
+bade him to silence: was he sufficiently master of himself to strike the
+lighter keys without sounding some deep chords that would jar upon her
+ear?
+
+He tried to picture the scene of their second meeting. He repeated again
+and again her formal title, Miss Ercildoune, that he might familiarize
+his tongue and his ear to the sound, and not be on the instant betrayed
+into calling the name which he so often uttered in his thoughts. He said
+over some civil, kindly words of greeting, and endeavored to call up,
+and arrange in order, a theme upon which he should converse. "I shall
+not dare to be silent," he thought, "for if I am, my silence will tell
+the tale; and if that do not, she will hear it from the throbbings of my
+heart. I don't know though,"--he laughed a little, as he spoke
+aloud,--bitterly it would have been, had his voice been capable of
+bitterness,--"perhaps she will think the organism of the poor thing has
+become diseased in camp and fightings,"--putting his hand up to his
+throat and holding the swollen veins, where the blood was beating
+furiously.
+
+Presently he went down stairs and out to the street, in pursuit of some
+cut flowers which he found in a little cellar, a stone's throw from his
+hotel,--a fresh, damp little cellar, which smelt, he could not help
+thinking, like a grave. Coming out to the sunshine, he shook himself
+with disgust. "Faugh!" he thought, "what sick fancies and sentimental
+nonsense possess me? I am growing unwholesome. My dreams of the other
+night have come back to torment me in the day. These must put them to
+flight."
+
+The fancy which had sent him in pursuit of these flowers he confessed to
+be a childish one, but none the less soothing for that. He had
+remembered that the first day he beheld her a nosegay had decorated his
+button-hole; a fair, sweet-scented thing which seemed, in some subtle
+way, like her. He wanted now just such another,--some mignonette, and
+geranium, and a single tea-rosebud. Here they were,--the very
+counterparts of those which he had worn on a brighter and happier day.
+How like they were! how changed was he! In some moods he would have
+smiled at this bit of girlish folly as he fastened the little thing over
+his heart; now, something sounded in his throat that was pitifully like
+a sob. Don't smile at him! he was so young; so impassioned, yet gentle;
+and then he loved so utterly with the whole of his great, sore heart.
+
+By and by the time came to go, and eager, yet fearful, he went. It was
+a fresh, beautiful day in early June; and when the city, with its heat,
+and dust, and noise, was left behind, and all the leafy greenness--the
+soothing quiet of country sights and country sounds--met his ear and
+eye, a curious peace took possession of his soul. It was less the
+whisper of hope than the calm of assured reality. For the moment,
+unreasonable as it seemed, something made him blissfully sure of her
+love, spite of the rebuffs and coldness she had compelled him to endure.
+
+"This is the place, sir!" suddenly called his driver, stopping the
+horses in front of a stately avenue of trees, and jumping down to open
+the gates.
+
+"You need not drive in; you may wait here."
+
+This, then, was her home. He took in the exquisite beauty of the place
+with a keen pleasure. It was right that all things sweet and fine should
+be about her; he had before known that they were, but it delighted him
+to see them with his own eyes. Walking slowly towards the
+house,--slowly, for he was both impelled and retarded by the conflicting
+feelings that mastered him,--he heard her voice at a little distance,
+singing; and directly she came out of a by-path, and faced him. He need
+not have feared the meeting; at least, any display of emotion; she gave
+no opportunity for any such thing.
+
+A frankly extended hand,--an easy "Good afternoon, Mr. Surrey!" That was
+all. It was a cool, beautiful room into which she ushered him; a room
+filled with an atmosphere of peace, but which was anything but peaceful
+to him. He was restless, nervous; eager and excited, or absent and
+still. He determined to master his emotion, and give no outward sign of
+the tempest raging within.
+
+At the instant of this conclusion his eye was caught by an exquisite
+portrait miniature upon an easel near him. Bending over it, taking it
+into his hands, his eyes went to and fro from the pictured face to the
+human one, tracing the likeness in each. Marking his interest, Francesca
+said, "It is my mother."
+
+"If the eyes were dark, this would be your veritable image."
+
+"Or, if mine were blue, I should be a portrait of mamma, which would be
+better."
+
+"Better?"
+
+"Yes." She was looking at the picture with weary eyes, which he could
+not see. "I had rather be the shadow of her than the reality of myself:
+an absurd fancy!" she added, with a smile, suddenly remembering herself.
+
+"I would it were true!" he exclaimed.
+
+She looked a surprised inquiry. His thought was, "for then I should
+steal you, and wear you always on my heart." But of course he could
+speak no such lover's nonsense; so he said, "Because of the fitness of
+things; you wished to be a shadow, which is immaterial, and hence of the
+substance of angels."
+
+Truly he was improving. His effort to betray no love had led him into a
+ridiculous compliment. "What an idiot she will think me to say anything
+so silly!" he reflected; while Francesca was thinking, "He has ceased
+to love me, or he would not resort to flattery. It is well!" but the
+pang that shot through her heart belied the closing thought, and,
+glancing at him, the first was denied by the unconscious expression of
+his eyes. Seeing that, she directly took alarm, and commenced to talk
+upon a score of indifferent themes.
+
+He had never seen her in such a mood: gay, witty, brilliant,--full of a
+restless sparkle and fire; she would not speak an earnest word, nor hear
+one. She flung about bonmots, and chatted airy persiflage till his heart
+ached. At another time, in another condition, he would have been
+delighted, dazzled, at this strange display; but not now.
+
+In some careless fashion the war had been alluded to, and she spoke of
+Chancellorsville. "It was there you were last wounded?"
+
+"Yes," he answered, not even looking down at the empty sleeve.
+
+"It was there you lost your arm?"
+
+"Yes," he answered again, "I am sorry it was my sword-arm."
+
+"It was frightful,"--holding her breath. "Do you know you were reported
+mortally wounded? worse?"
+
+"I have heard that I was sent up with the slain," he replied,
+half-smiling.
+
+"It is true. I looked for your name in the columns of 'wounded' and
+'missing,' and read it at last in the list of 'killed.'"
+
+"For the sake of old times, I trust you were a little sorry to so read
+it," he said, sadly, for the tone hurt him.
+
+"Sorry? yes, I was sorry. Who, indeed, of your friends would not be?"
+
+"Who, indeed?" he repeated: "I am afraid the one whose regret I should
+most desire would sorrow the least."
+
+"It is very like," she answered, with seeming
+carelessness,--"disappointment is the rule of life."
+
+This would not do. He was getting upon dangerous ground. He would change
+the theme, and prevent any farther speech till he was better master of
+it. He begged for some music. She sat down at once and played for him;
+then sang at his desire. Rich as she was in the gifts of nature, her
+voice was the chief,--thrilling, flexible, with a sympathetic quality
+that in singing pathetic music brought tears, though the hearer
+understood not a word of the language in which she sang. In the old time
+he had never wearied listening, and now he besought her to repeat for
+him some of the dear, familiar songs. If these held for her any
+associations, he did not know it; she gave no outward sign,--sang to him
+as sweetly and calmly as to the veriest stranger. What else had he
+expected? Nothing; yet, with the unreasonableness of a lover, was
+disappointed that nothing appeared.
+
+Taking up a piece at random, without pausing to remember the words, he
+said, spreading it before her, "May I tax you a little farther? I am
+greedy, I know, but then how can I help it?"
+
+It was the song of the Princess.
+
+She hesitated a moment, and half closed the book. Had he been standing
+where he could see her face, he would have been shocked by its pallor.
+It was over directly: she recovered herself, and, opening the music with
+a resolute air, began to sing:--
+
+ "Ask me no more: the moon may draw the sea;
+ The cloud may stoop from heaven and take the shape,
+ With fold to fold, of mountain and of cape;
+ But, O too fond, when have I answered thee?
+ Ask me no more.
+
+ "Ask me no more: what answer should I give?
+ I love not hollow cheek or faded eye;
+ Yet, O my friend, I will not have thee die!
+ Ask me no more, lest I should bid thee live:
+ Ask me no more."
+
+She sang thus far with a clear, untrembling voice,--so clear and
+untrembling as to be almost metallic,--the restraint she had put upon
+herself making it unnatural. At the commencement she had estimated her
+strength, and said, "It is sufficient!" but she had overtaxed it, as she
+found in singing the last verse:--
+
+ "Ask me no more: thy fate and mine are sealed;
+ I strove against the stream and all in vain;
+ Let the great river take me to the main;
+ No more, dear love, for at a touch I yield:
+ Ask me no more."
+
+All the longing, the passion, the prayer of which a human soul is
+capable found expression in her voice. It broke through the affected
+coldness and calm, as the ocean breaks through its puny barriers when,
+after wind and tempest, all its mighty floods are out. Surrey had
+changed his place, and stood fronting her. As the last word fell, she
+looked at him, and the two faces saw in each but a reflection of the
+same passion and pain: pallid, with eyes burning from an inward
+fire,--swayed by the same emotion,--she bent forward as he, stretching
+forth his arms, in a stifling voice cried, "Come!"
+
+Bent, but for an instant; then, by a superhuman effort, turned from him,
+and put out her hand with a gesture of dissent, though she could not
+control her voice to speak a word.
+
+At that he came close to her, not touching her hand or even her dress,
+but looking into her face with imploring eyes, and whispering,
+"Francesca, my darling, speak to me! say that you love me! one word! You
+are breaking my heart!"
+
+Not a word.
+
+"Francesca!"
+
+She had mastered her voice. "Go!" she then said, beseechingly. "Oh, why
+did you ask me? why did I let you come?"
+
+"No, no," he answered. "I cannot go,--not till you answer me."
+
+"Ah!" she entreated, "do not ask! I can give no such answer as you
+desire. It is all wrong,--all a mistake. You do not comprehend."
+
+"Make me, then."
+
+She was silent.
+
+"Forgive me. I am rude: I cannot help it. I will not go unless you say,
+'I do not love you.' Nothing but this shall drive me away."
+
+Francesca's training in her childhood had been by a Catholic governess;
+she never quite lost its effect. Now she raised her hand to a little
+gold cross that hung at her neck, her fingers closing on it with a
+despairing clasp. "Ah, Christ, have pity!" her heart cried. "Blessed
+Mother of God, forgive me! have mercy upon me!"
+
+Her face was frightfully pale, but her voice did not tremble as she gave
+him her hand, and said gently, "Go, then, my friend. I do not love you."
+
+He took her hand, held it close for a moment, and then, without another
+look or word, put it tenderly down, and was gone.
+
+So absorbed was he in painful thought that, passing down the long avenue
+with bent head, he did not notice, nor even see, a gentleman who, coming
+from the opposite direction, looked at him at first carelessly, and then
+searchingly, as he went by.
+
+This gentleman, a man in the prime of life, handsome, stately, and
+evidently at home here, scrutinized the stranger with a singular
+intensity,--made a movement as though he would speak to him,--and then,
+drawing back, went with hasty steps towards the house.
+
+Had Willie looked up, beheld this face and its expression, returned the
+scrutiny of the one, and comprehended the meaning of the other, while
+memory recalled a picture once held in his hands, some things now
+obscured would have been revealed to him, and a problem been solved. As
+it was, he saw nothing, moved mechanically onward to the carriage,
+seated himself and said, "Home!"
+
+This young man was neither presumptuous nor vain. He had been once
+repulsed and but now utterly rejected. He had no reason to hope, and
+yet--perhaps it was his poetical and imaginative temperament--he could
+not resign himself to despair.
+
+Suddenly he started with an exclamation that was almost a cry. What was
+it? He remembered that, more than two years ago, on the last day he had
+been with her, he had begged the copy of a duet which they sometimes
+sang. It was in manuscript, and he desired to have it written out by her
+own hand. He had before petitioned, and she promised it; and when he
+thus again spoke of it, she laughed, and said, "What a memory it is, to
+be sure! I shall have to tie a bit of string on my finger to refresh
+it."
+
+"Is that efficacious?" he had asked.
+
+"Doubtless," she had replied, searching in her pocket for a scrap of
+anything that would serve.
+
+"Will this do?" he then queried, bringing forth a coil of gold wire
+which he had been commissioned to buy for some fanciful work of his
+mother.
+
+"Finely," she declared; "it is durable, it will give me a wide margin,
+it will be long in wearing out."
+
+"Nay, then, you must have something more fragile," he had objected.
+
+At that they both laughed, as he twisted a fragment of it on the little
+finger of her right hand. "There it is to stay," he asserted, "till your
+promise is redeemed." That was the last time he had seen her till
+to-day.
+
+Now, sitting, thinking of the interview just passed, suddenly he
+remembered, as one often recalls the vision of something seemingly
+unnoticed at the time, that, upon her right hand, the little finger of
+the right hand, there was a delicate ring,--a mere thread,--in fact, a
+wire of gold; the very one himself had tied there two years ago.
+
+In an instant, by one of those inexplicable connections of the brain or
+soul, he found himself living over an experience of his college youth.
+
+He had been spending the day in Boston with a dear friend, some score of
+years his senior; a man of the rarest culture, and of a most sweet and
+gentle nature withal; and when evening came they had drifted naturally
+to the theatre,--the fool's paradise it may be sometimes, but to them on
+that occasion a real paradise.
+
+He remembered well the play. It was Scott's _Bride of Lammermoor_. He
+had never read it, but, before the curtain rose, his friend had
+unfolded the story in so kind and skilful a manner as to have imbued him
+as fully with the spirit of the tale as though he had studied the book.
+
+What he chiefly recalled in the play was the scene in which Ravenswood
+comes back to Emily long after they had been plighted,--long after he
+had supposed her faithless,--long after he had been tossed on a sea of
+troubles, touching the seeming decay in her affections. Just as she is
+about to be enveloped in the toils which were spread for her,--just as
+she is about to surrender herself to the hated nuptials, and submit to
+the embrace of one whom she loathed more than she dreaded
+death,--Ravenswood, the man whom Heaven had made for her, presents
+himself.
+
+What followed was quiet, yet intensely dramatic. Ravenswood, wrought to
+the verge of despair, bursts upon the scene at the critical moment,
+detaches Emily from her party, and leads her slowly forward. He is
+unutterably sad. He questions her very tenderly; asks her whether she is
+not enforced; whether she is taking this step of her own free will and
+accord; whether she has indeed dismissed the dear, old fond love for him
+from her heart forever? He must hear it from her own lips. When timidly
+and feebly informed that such is indeed the case, he requests her to
+return a certain memento,--a silver trinket which had been given her as
+the symbol of his love on the occasion of their betrothal. Raising her
+hand to her throat she essays to draw it from her bosom. Her fingers
+rest upon the chain which binds it to her neck, but the o'erfraught
+heart is still,--the troubled, but unconscious head droops upon his
+shoulder,--he lifts the chain from its resting-place, and withdraws the
+token from her heart.
+
+Supporting her with one hand and holding this badge of a lost love with
+the other, he says, looking down upon her with a face of anguish, and in
+a voice of despair, "_And she could wear it thus!_"
+
+As this scene rose and lived before him, Surrey exclaimed, "Surely that
+must have been the perfection of art, to have produced an effect so
+lasting and profound,--'and she could wear it thus!'--ah," he said, as
+in response to some unexpressed thought, "but Emily loved Ravenswood.
+Why--?" Evidently he was endeavoring to answer a question that baffled
+him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+ "_And down on aching heart and brain
+ Blow after blow unbroken falls._"
+
+ BOKER
+
+
+"A letter for you, sir," said the clerk, as Surrey stopped at the desk
+for his key. It was a bulky epistle, addressed in his aunt Russell's
+hand, and he carried it off, wondering what she could have to say at
+such length.
+
+He was in no mood to read or to enjoy; but, nevertheless, tore open the
+cover, finding within it a double letter. Taking the envelope of one
+from the folds of the other, his eye fell first upon his mother's
+writing; a short note and a puzzling one.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"My dear Willie:--
+
+"I have tried to write you a letter, but cannot. I never wounded you if
+I could avoid it, and I do not wish to begin now. Augusta and I had a
+talk about you yesterday which crazed me with anxiety. She told me it
+was my place to write you what ought to be said under these trying
+circumstances, for we are sure you have remained in Philadelphia to see
+Miss Ercildoune. At first I said I would, and then my heart failed me. I
+was sure, too, that she could write, as she always does, much better
+than I; so I begged her to say all that was necessary, and I would send
+her this note to enclose with her letter. Read it, I entreat you, and
+then hasten, I pray you, hasten to us at once.
+
+"Take care of your arm, do not hurt yourself by any excitement; and,
+with dear love from your father, which he would send did he know I was
+writing, believe me always your devoted
+
+"MOTHER."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"'Trying circumstances!'--'Miss Ercildoune!'--what does it mean?" he
+cried, bewildered. "Come, let us see."
+
+The letter which he now opened was an old and much-fingered one,
+written--as he saw at the first glance--by his aunt to his mother. Why
+it was sent to him he could not conjecture; and, without attempting to
+so do, at once plunged into its pages:--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "CONTINENTAL HOTEL,
+ PHILADELPHIA, JUNE 27, 1861
+
+ "MY DEAR LAURA:--
+
+"I can readily understand with what astonishment you will read this
+letter, from the amazement I have experienced in collecting its details.
+I will not weary you with any personal narration, but tell my tale at
+once.
+
+"Miss Ercildoune, as you know, was my daughter's intimate at school,--a
+school, the admittance to which was of itself a guarantee of
+respectability. Of course I knew nothing of her family, nor of
+her,--save as Clara wrote me of her beauty and her accomplishments, and,
+above all, of her style,--till I met Mrs. Lancaster. Of her it is
+needless for me to speak. As you know, she is irreproachable, and her
+position is of the best. Consequently when Clara wrote me that her
+friend was to come to New York to her aunt, and begged to entertain her
+for a while, I added my request to her entreaty, and Miss Ercildoune
+came. Ill-fated visit! would it had never been made!
+
+"It is useless now to deny her gifts and graces. They are, reluctantly I
+confess, so rare and so conspicuous--have so many times been seen, and
+known, and praised by us all,--that it would put me in the most foolish
+of attitudes should I attempt to reconsider a verdict so frequently
+pronounced, or to eat my own words, uttered a thousand times.
+
+"It is also, I presume, useless to deny that we were well pleased--nay,
+delighted--with Willie's evident sentiment for her. Indeed, so
+thoroughly did she charm me, that, had I not seen how absolutely his
+heart was enlisted in her pursuit, she is the very girl whom I should
+have selected, could I have so done, as a wife for Tom and a daughter
+for myself.
+
+"I knew full well how deep was this feeling for her when he marched
+away, on that day so full of supreme splendor and pain, unable to see
+her and to say adieu. His eyes, his face, his manner, his very voice,
+marked his restlessness, his longing, and disappointment. I was
+positively angry with the girl for thwarting and hurting him so, and,
+whatever her excuse might be, for her absence at such a time. How
+constantly are we quarrelling with our best fates!
+
+"She remained in New York, as you know, for some weeks after the 19th;
+in fact, has been at home but for a little while. Once or twice, so
+provoked with her was I for disappointing our pet, I could not resist
+the temptation of saying some words about him which, if she cared for
+him, I knew would wound her: and, indeed, they did,--wounded her so
+deeply, as was manifest in her manner and her face, that I had not the
+heart to repeat the experiment.
+
+"One week ago I had a letter from Willie, enclosing another to her, and
+an entreaty, as he had written one which he was sure had miscarried,
+that I would see that this reached her hands in safety. So anxious was I
+to fulfil his request in its word and its spirit, and so certain that I
+could further his cause,--for I was sure this letter was a
+love-letter,--that I did not forward it by post, but, being compelled
+to come to Burlington, I determined to go on to Philadelphia, drive out
+to her home, and myself deliver the missive into her very hands. A most
+fortunate conclusion, as you will presently decide.
+
+"Last evening I reached the city,--rested, slept here,--and this morning
+was driven to her father's place. For all our sakes, I was somewhat
+anxious, under the circumstances, that this should be quite the thing;
+and I confess myself, on the instant of its sight, more than satisfied.
+It is really superb!--the grounds extensive, and laid out with the most
+absolute taste. The house, large and substantial, looks very like an
+English mansion; with a certain quaint style and antique elegance,
+refreshing to contemplate, after the crude newness and ostentatious
+vulgarity of almost everything one sees here in America. It is within as
+it is without. Although a great many lovely things are scattered about
+of recent make, the wood-work and the heavy furniture are aristocratic
+from their very age, and in their way, literally perfection.
+
+"Miss Ercildoune met me with not quite her usual grace and ease. She
+was, no doubt, surprised at my unexpected appearance, and--I then
+thought, as a consequence--slightly embarrassed. I soon afterwards
+discovered the constraint in her manner sprang from another cause.
+
+"I had reached the house just at lunch-time, and she would take me out
+to the table to eat something with her. I had hoped to see her father,
+and was disappointed when she informed me he was in the city. All I saw
+charmed me. The appointments of the table were like those of the house:
+everything exquisitely fine, and the silver massive and old,--not a new
+piece among it,--and marked with a monogram and crest.
+
+"I write you all this that you may the more thoroughly appreciate my
+absolute horror at the final _denouement_, and share my astonishment at
+the presumption of these people in daring to maintain such style.
+
+"I had given her Willie's letter before we left the parlor, with a
+significant word and smile, and was piqued to see that she did not
+blush,--in fact, became excessively white as she glanced at the writing,
+and with an unsteady hand put it into her pocket. After lunch she made
+no motion to look at it, and as I had my own reasons for desiring her to
+peruse it, I said, 'Miss Francesca, will you not read your letter? that
+I may know if there is any later news from our soldier.'
+
+"She hesitated a moment, and then said, with what I thought an unnatural
+manner, 'Certainly, if you so desire,' and, taking it out, broke the
+seal. 'Allow me,' she added, going towards a window,--as though she
+desired more light, but in reality, I knew, to turn her back upon
+me,--forgetting that a mirror, hanging opposite, would reveal her face
+with distinctness to my gaze.
+
+"It was pale to ghastliness, with a drawn, haggard look about the mouth
+and eyes that shocked as much as it amazed me; and before commencing to
+read she crushed the letter in her hands, pressing it to her heart with
+a gesture which was less of a caress than of a spasm.
+
+"However, as she read, all this changed; and before she finished said,
+'Ah, Willie, it is clear your cause needs no advocate.' Positively, I
+did not know a human countenance could express such happiness; there was
+something in it absolutely dazzling. And evidently entirely forgetful of
+me, she raised the paper to her mouth, and kissed it again and again,
+pressing her lips upon it with such clinging and passionate fondness as
+would have imbued it with life were that possible."
+
+Here Willie flung down his aunt's epistle and tore from his pocket this
+self-same letter. He had kept it,--carried it about with him,--for two
+reasons: because it was _hers_, he said,--this avowal of his love was
+hers, whether she refused it or no, and he had no right to destroy her
+property; and because, as he had nothing else she had worn or touched,
+he cherished this sacredly since it had been in her dear hands.
+
+Now he took it into his clasp as tenderly as though it were Francesca's
+face, and kissed it with the self-same clinging and passionate fondness
+as this of which he had just read. Here had her lips rested,--here; he
+felt their fragrance and softness thrilling him under the cold, dead
+paper, and pressed it to his heart while he continued to read:--
+
+"Before she turned, I walked to another window,--wishing to give her
+time to recover calmness, or at least self-control, and was at once
+absorbed in contemplating a gentleman whom I felt assured to be Mr.
+Ercildoune. He stood with his back to me, apparently giving some order
+to the coachman: thus I could not see his face, but I never before was
+so impressed with, so to speak, the personality of a man. His physique
+was grand, and his air and bearing magnificent, and I watched him with
+admiration as he walked slowly away. I presume he passed the window at
+which she was standing, for she called, 'Papa!' 'In a moment, dear,' he
+answered, and in a moment entered, and was presented; and I, raising my
+eyes to his face,--ah, how can I tell you what sight they beheld!
+
+"Self-possessed as I think I am, and as I certainly ought to be, I
+started back with an involuntary exclamation, a mingling doubtless of
+incredulity and disgust. This man, who stood before me with all the ease
+and self-assertion of a gentleman, was--you will never believe it, I
+fear--_a mulatto_!
+
+"Whatever effect my manner had on him was not perceptible. He had not
+seated himself, and, with a smile that was actually satirical, he bowed,
+uttered a few words of greeting, and went out of the room.
+
+"'How dared you?' I then cried, for astonishment had given place to
+rage, 'how dared you deceive me--deceive us all--so? how dared you palm
+yourself off as white and respectable, and thus be admitted to Mr.
+Hale's school and to the society and companionship of his pupils?' I
+could scarcely control myself when I thought of how shamefully we had
+all been cozened.
+
+"'Pardon me, madam,' she answered with effrontery,--effrontery under the
+circumstances,--'you forget yourself, and what is due from one lady to
+another.' (Did you ever hear of such presumption!) 'I practised no
+deceit upon Professor Hale. He knew papa well,--was his intimate friend
+at college, in England,--and was perfectly aware who was Mr.
+Ercildoune's daughter when she was admitted to his school. For myself, I
+had no confessions to make, and made none. I was your daughter's friend;
+as such, went to her house, and invited her here. I trust you have seen
+in me nothing unbecoming a gentlewoman, as, _up to this time_, I have
+beheld in you naught save the attributes of a lady. If we are to have
+any farther conversation, it must be conducted on the old plan, and not
+the extraordinary one you have just adopted; else I shall be compelled,
+in self-respect, to leave you alone in my own parlor.'
+
+"Imagine if you can the effect of this speech upon me. I assure you I
+was composed enough outwardly, if not inwardly, ere she ended her
+sentence. Having finished, I said, 'Pardon me, Miss Ercildoune, for any
+words which may have offended your dignity. I will confine myself for
+the rest of our interview to your own rules!'
+
+"'It is well,' she responded. I had spoken satirically, and expected to
+see her shrink under it, but she answered with perfect coolness and
+_sang froid_. I continued, 'You will not deny that you are a negro, at
+least a mulatto.'
+
+"'Pardon me, madam,' she replied; 'my father is a mulatto, my mother was
+an Englishwoman. Thus, to give you accurate information upon the
+subject, I am a quadroon.'
+
+"'Quadroon be it!' I answered, angrily again, I fear. 'Quadroon,
+mulatto, or negro, it is all one. I have no desire to split hairs of
+definition. You could not be more obnoxious were you black as Erebus. I
+have no farther words to pass upon the past or the present, but
+something to say of the future. You hold in your hands a letter--a
+love-letter, I am sure--a declaration, as I fear--from my nephew, Mr.
+Surrey. You will oblige me by at once sitting down, writing a peremptory
+and unqualified refusal to his proposal, if he has made you one,--a
+refusal that will admit of no hope and no double interpretation,--and
+give it into my keeping before I leave this room.'
+
+"When I first alluded to Willie's letter she had crimsoned, but before I
+closed she was so white I should have thought her fainting, but for the
+fire in her eyes. However, she spoke up clear enough when she said, 'And
+what, madam, if I deny your right to dictate any action whatever to me,
+however insignificant, and utterly refuse to obey your command?'
+
+"'At your peril do so,' I exclaimed. 'Refuse, and I will write the whole
+shameful story, with my own comments; and you may judge for yourself of
+the effect it will produce.'
+
+"At that she smiled,--an indescribable sort of smile,--and shut her
+fingers on the letter she held,--I could not help thinking as though it
+were a human hand. 'Very well, madam, write it. He has already told
+me'--
+
+"'That he loves you,' I broke in. 'Do you think he would continue to do
+so if he knew what you are?'
+
+"'He knows me as well now,' she answered, 'as he will after reading any
+letter of yours.'
+
+"'Incredible!' I exclaimed. 'When he wrote you that, he did not know, he
+could not have known, your birth, your race, the taint in your blood. I
+will never believe it.'
+
+"'No,' she said, 'I did not say he did. I said he knew _me_; so well, I
+think, judging from this,'--clasping his letter with the same curious
+pressure I had before noticed,--'that you could scarcely enlighten him
+farther. He knows my heart, and soul, and brain,--as I said, he knows
+_me_.'
+
+"'O, yes,' I answered,--or rather sneered, for I was uncontrollably
+indignant through all this,--'if you mean _that_, very likely. I am not
+talking lovers' metaphysics, but practical common-sense. He does not
+know the one thing at present essential for him to know; and he will
+abandon you, spurn you,--his love turned to scorn, his passion to
+contempt,--when he reads what I shall write him if you refuse to do what
+I demand!'
+
+"I expected to see her cower before me. Conceive, then, if you can, my
+sensations when she cried, 'Stop, madam! Say what you will to me;
+insult, outrage me, if you please, and have not the good breeding and
+dignity to forbear; but do not presume to so slander him. Do not presume
+to accuse him, who is all nobility and greatness of soul, of a
+sentiment so base, a prejudice so infamous. Study him, madam, know him
+better, ere you attempt to be his mouth-piece.'
+
+"As she uttered these words, a horrible foreboding seized me, or, to
+speak more truthfully, I so felt the certainty of what she spoke, that a
+shudder of terror ran over me. I thought of him, of his character, of
+his principles, of his insane sense of honor, of his terrible will under
+all that soft exterior,--the hand of steel under the silken glove; I saw
+that if I persisted and she still refused to yield I should lose all. On
+the instant I changed my attack.
+
+"'It is true,' I said, 'having asked you to become his wife, he will
+marry you; he will redeem his pledge though it ruin his life and blast
+his career, to say nothing of the effect an unending series of outrages
+and mortifications will have upon his temper and his heart. A pretty
+love, truly, yours must be,--whatever his is,--to condemn him to so
+terrible an ordeal, so frightful a fate.'
+
+"She shivered at that, and I went on,--blaming my folly in not
+remembering, being a woman, that it was with a woman and her weakness I
+had to deal.
+
+"'He is young,' I continued; 'he has probably a long life before him.
+Rich, handsome, brilliant,--a magnificent career opening to
+him,--position, ease, troops of friends,--you will ruthlessly ruin all
+this. Married to you, white as you are, the peculiarity of your birth
+would in some way be speedily known. His father would disinherit him (it
+was not necessary to tell her he has a fortune in his own right), his
+family disown him, his friends abandon him, society close its doors upon
+him, business refuse to seek him, honor and riches elude his grasp. If
+you do not know the strength of this prejudice, which you call infamous,
+pre-eminently in the circle to which he belongs, I cannot tell it you.
+Taking all this from him, what will you give him in return? Ruining his
+life, can your affection make amends? Blasting his career, will your
+love fill the gap? Do you flatter yourself by the supposition that you
+can be father, mother, relatives, friends, society, wealth, position,
+honor, career,--all,--to him? Your people are cursed in America, and
+they transfer their curse to any one mad enough, or generous enough
+(that was a diplomatic turn), to connect his fate with yours.'
+
+"Before I was through, I saw that I had carried my point. All the fine
+airs went out of my lady, and she looked broken and humbled enough. I
+might have said less, but I ached to say more to the insolent.
+
+"'Enough, madam,' she gasped, 'stop.' And then said, more to herself
+than to me, 'I could give heaven for him,'--the rest I rather guessed
+from the motion of her lips than from any sound,--'but I cannot ask him
+to give the world for me.'
+
+"'Will you write the letter?' I asked.
+
+"'No.'--She said the word with evident effort, and then, still more
+slowly, 'I will give you a message. Say "I implore you never to write me
+again,--to forget me. I beseech of you not to try me by any farther
+appeals, as I shall but return them unopened."' I wrote down the words
+as she spoke them. 'This is well,' I said when she finished; 'but it is
+not enough. I must have the letter.'
+
+"'The letter?' she said. 'What need of a letter? surely that is
+sufficient.'
+
+"'I do not mean your letter. I mean his,--the one which you hold in your
+hands.'
+
+"'This?' she queried, looking down on it,--'this?'
+
+"I thought the repetition senseless and affected, but I answered,
+'Yes,--that. He will not believe you are in earnest if you keep his
+avowal of love. You must give him up entirely. If you let me send that
+back, with your words, he shall never--at least from me--have clew or
+reason for your conduct. That will close the whole affair.'
+
+"'Close the whole affair,' she repeated after me, mechanically,--'close
+the whole affair.'
+
+"I was getting heartily tired of this, and had no desire to listen to an
+echo conversation; so, without answering, I stretched out my hand for
+it. She held it towards me, then drew it back and raised it to her heart
+with the same gesture I had marked when she first opened it,--a gesture
+as I said, of that, which was less of a caress than a spasm. Indeed, I
+think now that it was wholly physical and involuntary. Then she handed
+it to me, and, motioning towards the door, said, 'Go!'
+
+"I rose, and, infamous as I thought her past deceit, wearied as I was
+with the interview, small claim as she had upon me for the slightest
+consideration, I said 'You have done well, Miss Ercildoune! I commend
+you for your sensible decision, and for your ability, if late, to
+appreciate the situation. I wish you all success in life, I am sure;
+and, permit me to add, a future union with one of your own race, if that
+will bring you happiness.'
+
+"Heavens! what a face and what eyes she turned upon me as, rising, she
+once more pointed to the door, and cried, 'Go!' And indeed I went,--the
+girl actually frightened me.
+
+"When I got on to the lawn, I missed my bag and parasol, and had to
+return for them. I opened the door with some slight trepidation, but had
+no need for fear. She was lying prostrate upon the floor, as I saw on
+coming near, in a dead faint. She had evidently fallen so suddenly and
+with such force as to have hurt herself; her head had struck against an
+ornament of the bookcase, near which she had been standing; and a little
+stream of blood was trickling from her temple. It made me sick to behold
+it. As I looked at her where she lay, I could not but pity her a little,
+and think what a merciful fate it would be for her, and such as she, if
+they could all die,--and so put an end to what, I presume, though I
+never before thought of it, is really a very hard existence.
+
+"It was no time, however, to sentimentalize. I rang for a servant, and,
+having waited till one came, took my leave.
+
+"Of course all this is very shocking and painful, but I am glad I came.
+The matter is ended now in a satisfactory manner. I think it has been
+well done. Let us both keep our counsel, and the affair will soon
+become a memory with us, as it is nothing with every one else.
+
+ "Always your loving sister,
+
+ "AUGUSTA."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is better to be silent upon some themes than to say too little. Words
+would fail to express the emotions with which Willie read this history:
+let silence and imagination tell the tale.
+
+Flinging down the paper with a passionate cry, he saw yet another
+letter,--the one in which these had been enfolded,--a letter written to
+him, and by Mrs. Russell. As by a flash, he perceived that there had
+been some blunder here, by which he was the gainer; and, partly at
+least, comprehended it.
+
+These two, mother and aunt, fearing the old fire had not yet burned to
+ashes,--nay, from their knowledge of him, sure of it,--hearing naught of
+his illness, for he did not care to distress them by any account
+thereof, were satisfied that he had either met, or was remaining to
+compass a meeting, with Miss Ercildoune. His mother had not the courage,
+or the baseness, to write such a letter as that to which Mrs. Russell
+urged her,--a letter which should degrade his love in his own eyes, and
+recall him from an unworthy pursuit. "Very well!" Mrs. Russell had then
+said, "It will be better from you; it will look more like unwarranted
+interference from me; but I will write, and you shall send an
+accompanying line. Let me have it to-morrow."
+
+The next morning Mrs. Surrey was not well enough to drive out, and thus
+sent her note by a servant, enclosing with it the letter of June
+27th,--thinking that her sister might want it for reference. When it
+reached Mrs. Russell, it was almost mail-time, and with the simple
+thought, "So,--Laura has written it, after all," she enclosed it in her
+own, and sent it off, post-haste; not even looking at the unsealed
+envelope, as Mrs. Surrey had taken for granted she would, and thus
+failing to know of its double contents.
+
+Thus the very letter which they would have compassed land and sea to
+have prevented coming under his eyes, unwisely yet most fortunately kept
+in existence, was sent by themselves to his hands.
+
+Without pausing to read a line of that which his aunt had written him,
+he tore it into fragments, flung it into the empty grate; and, bounding
+down the stairs and on to the street, plunged into a carriage and was
+whirled away, all too slowly, to the home he had left but a little space
+before with such widely, such painfully different emotions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+ "_I could not love thee, dear, so much,
+ Loved I not honor more._"
+
+ LOVELACE
+
+
+Just after Surrey, for the third time, had passed through the avenue of
+trees, two men appeared in it, earnestly conversing. One, the older, was
+the same who had met Willie as he was going out, and had examined him
+with such curious interest. The other, in feature, form, and bearing,
+was so absolutely the counterpart of his companion that it was easy to
+recognize in them father and son,--a father and son whom it would be
+hard to match. "The finest type of the Anglo-Saxon race I have seen from
+America," was the verdict pronounced upon Mr. Ercildoune, when he was a
+young man studying abroad, by an enthusiastic and nationally ignorant
+Englishman; "but then, sir," he added, "what very dark complexions you
+Americans have! Is it universal?"
+
+"By no means, sir," was Mr. Ercildoune's reply. "There are some
+exceedingly fine ones among my countrymen. I come from the South: that
+is a bad climate for the tint of the skin."
+
+"Is it so?" exclaimed John Bull,--"worse than the North?"
+
+"Very much worse, sir, in more ways than one."
+
+Perhaps Robert Ercildoune was a trifle fairer than his father, but there
+was still perceptible the shade which marked him as effectually an
+outcast from the freedom of American society, and the rights of American
+citizenship, as though it had been the badge of crime or the strait
+jacket of a madman. Something of this was manifested in the conversation
+in which the two were engaged.
+
+"It is folly, Robert, for you to carry your refinement and culture into
+the ranks as a common soldier, to fight and to die, without thanks. You
+are made of too good stuff to serve simply as food for powder."
+
+"Better men than I, father, have gone there, and are there to-day; men
+in every way superior to me."
+
+"Perhaps,--yes, if you will have it so. But what are they? white men,
+fighting for their own country and flag, for their own rights of manhood
+and citizenship, for a present for themselves and a future for their
+children, for honor and fame. What is there for you?"
+
+"For one thing, just that of which you spoke. Perhaps not a present for
+me, but certainly a future for those that come after."
+
+"A future! How are you to know? what warrant or guarantee have you for
+any such future? Do you judge by the past? by the signs of to-day? I
+tell you this American nation will resort to any means--will pledge
+anything, by word or implication--to secure the end for which it fights;
+and will break its pledges just so soon as it can, and with whomsoever
+it can with impunity. You, and your children, and your children's
+children after you, will go to the wall unless it has need of you in the
+arena."
+
+"I do not think so. This whole nation is learning, through pain and
+loss, the lesson of justice; of expediency, doubtless, but still of
+justice; and I do not think it will be forgotten when the war is ended.
+This is our time to wipe off a thousand stigmas of contempt and
+reproach: this"--
+
+"Who is responsible for them? ourselves? What cast them there? our own
+actions? I trow not. Mark the facts. I pay taxes to support the public
+schools, and am compelled to have my children educated at home. I pay
+taxes to support the government, and am denied any representation or any
+voice in regard to the manner in which these taxes shall be expended. I
+hail a car on the street, and am laughed to scorn by the conductor,--or,
+admitted, at the order of the passengers am ignominiously expelled. I
+offer my money at the door of any place of public amusement, and it is
+flung back to me with an oath. I enter a train to New York, and am
+banished to the rear seat or the 'negro car.' I go to a hotel, open for
+the accommodation of the public, and am denied access; or am requested
+to keep my room, and not show myself in parlor, office, or at table. I
+come within a church, to worship the good God who is no respecter of
+persons, and am shown out of the door by one of his insolent creatures.
+I carry my intelligence to the polls on election morning, and am elbowed
+aside by an American boor or a foreign drunkard, and, with opprobrious
+epithets by law officers and rabble, am driven away. All this in the
+North; all this without excuse of slavery and of the feeling it
+engenders; all this from arrogant hatred and devilish malignity. At
+last, the country which has disowned me, the government which has never
+recognized save to outrage me, the flag which has refused to cover or to
+protect me, are in direct need and utmost extremity. Then do they cry
+for me and mine to come up to their help ere they perish. At least, they
+hold forth a bribe to secure me? at least, if they make no apology for
+the past, they offer compensation for the future? at least, they bid
+high for the services they desire? Not at all!
+
+"They say to one man, 'Here is twelve hundred dollars bounty with which
+to begin; here is sixteen dollars a month for pay; here is the law
+passed, and the money pledged, to secure you in comfort for the rest of
+life, if wounded or disabled, or help for your family, if killed. Here
+is every door set wide for you to rise, from post to post; money yours,
+advancement yours, honor, and fame, and glory yours; the love of a
+grateful country, the applause of an admiring world.'
+
+"They say to another man,--you, or me, or Sam out there in the
+field,--'There is no bounty for you, not a cent; there is pay for you,
+twelve dollars a month, the hire of a servant; there is no pension for
+you, or your family, if you be sent back from the front, wounded or
+dead; if you are taken prisoner you can be murdered with impunity, or be
+sold as a slave, without interference on our part. Fight like a lion! do
+acts of courage and splendor! and you shall never rise above the rank of
+a private soldier. For you there is neither money nor honor, rights
+secured, nor fame gained. Dying, you fall into a nameless grave: living,
+you come back to your old estate of insult and wrong. If you refuse
+these tempting offers, we brand you cowards. If, under these infamous
+restraints and disadvantages, you fail to equal the white troops by your
+side, you are written down--inferiors. If you equal them, you are still
+inferiors. If you perform miracles, and surpass them, you are, in a
+measure, worthy commendation at last; we consent to see in you human
+beings, fit for mention and admiration,--not as types of your color and
+of what you intrinsically are, but as exceptions; made such by the habit
+of association, and the force of surrounding circumstances.'
+
+"These are the terms the American people offer you, these the terms
+which you stoop to accept, these the proofs that they are learning a
+lesson of justice! So be it! there is need. Let them learn it to the
+full! let this war go on 'until the cities be wasted without inhabitant,
+and the houses without man, and the land be utterly destroyed.' Do not
+you interfere. Leave them to the teachings and the judgments of God."
+
+Ercildoune had spoken with such impassioned feeling, with such fire in
+his eyes, such terrible earnestness in his voice, that Robert could not,
+if he would, interrupt him; and, in the silence, found no words for the
+instant at his command. Ere he summoned them they saw some one
+approaching.
+
+"A fine looking fellow! fighting has been no child's play for him," said
+Robert, looking, as he spoke, at the empty sleeve.
+
+Mr. Ercildoune advanced to meet the stranger, and Surrey beheld the same
+face upon whose pictured semblance he had once gazed with such intense
+feelings, first of jealousy, and then of relief and admiration; the same
+splendor of life, and beauty, and vitality. Surrey knew him at once,
+knew that it was Francesca's father, and went up to him with extended
+hand. Mr. Ercildoune took the proffered hand, and shook it warmly. "I am
+happy to meet you, Mr. Surrey."
+
+"You know me?" said he with surprise. "I thought to present myself."
+
+"I have seen your picture."
+
+"And I yours. They must have held the mirror up to nature, for the
+originals to be so easily known. But may I ask where you saw mine?
+_yours_ was in Miss Ercildoune's possession."
+
+"As was yours," was answered after a moment's hesitation,--Surrey
+thought, with visible reluctance. His heart flew into his throat. "She
+has my picture,--she has spoken of me," he said to himself. "I wonder
+what her father will think,--what he will do. Come, I will to the point
+immediately."
+
+"Mr. Ercildoune," said he, aloud, "you know something of me? of my
+position and prospects?"
+
+"A great deal."
+
+"I trust, nothing disparaging or ignoble."
+
+"I know nothing for which any one could desire oblivion."
+
+"Thanks. Let me speak to you, then, of a matter which should have been
+long since proposed to you had I been permitted the opportunity. I love
+your daughter. I cannot speak about that, but you will understand all
+that I wish to say. I have twice--once by letter, once by speech--let
+her know this and my desire to call her wife. She has twice
+refused,--absolutely. You think this should cut off all hope?"
+
+Ercildoune had been watching him closely. "If she does not love you," he
+answered, at the pause.
+
+"I do not know. I went away from here a little while ago with her
+peremptory command not to return. I should not have dared disobey it had
+I not learned--thought--in fact, but for some circumstances--I beg your
+pardon--I do not know what I am saying. I believed if I saw her once
+more I could change her determination,--could induce her to give me
+another response,--and came with that hope."
+
+"Which has failed?"
+
+"Which has thus far failed that she will not at all see me; will hold no
+communication with me. I should be a ruffian did I force myself on her
+thus without excuse or reason. My own love would be no apology did I not
+think, did I not dare to hope, that it is not aversion to me that
+induces her to act as she has done. Believing so, may I beg a favor of
+you? may I entreat that you will induce her to see me, if only for a
+little while?"
+
+Ercildoune smiled a sad, bitter smile, as he answered, "Mr. Surrey, if
+my daughter does not love you, it would be hopeless for you or for me to
+assail her refusal. If she does, she has doubtless rejected you for a
+reason which you can read by simply looking into my face. No words of
+mine can destroy or do that away."
+
+"There is nothing to destroy; there is nothing to do away. Thank you for
+speaking of it, and making the way easy. There is nothing in all the
+wide world between us,--there can be nothing between us,--if she loves
+me; nothing to keep us apart save her indifference or lack of regard for
+me. I want to say so to her if she will give me the chance. Will you not
+help me to it?"
+
+"You comprehend all that I mean?"
+
+"I do. It is, as I have said, nothing. That love would not be worth the
+telling that considered extraneous circumstances, and not the object
+itself."
+
+"You have counted all the consequences? I think not. How, indeed, should
+you be able? Come with me a moment." The two went up to the house,
+across the wide veranda, into a room half library, half lounging-room,
+which, from a score of evidences strewn around, was plainly the special
+resort of the master. Over the mantel hung the life-size portrait of an
+excessively beautiful woman. A fine, _spirituelle_ face, with proud
+lines around the mouth and delicate nostrils, but with a tender,
+appealing look in the eyes, that claimed gentle treatment. This face
+said, "I was made for sunshine and balmy airs, but, if darkness and
+storm assail, I can walk through them unflinching, though the progress
+be short; I can die, and give no sign." Willie went hastily up to this,
+and stood, absorbed, before it. "Francesca is very like her mother,"
+said Ercildoune, coming to his side. It was his own thought, but he made
+no answer.
+
+"I will tell you something of her and myself; a very little story; you
+can draw the moral. My father, who was a Virginian, sent my brother and
+me to England when we were mere boys, to be trained and educated. After
+his fashion, doubtless, he loved us; for he saw that we had every
+advantage that wealth, and taste, and care could provide; and though he
+never sent for us, nor came to us, in all the years after we left his
+house,--and though we had no legal claim upon him,--he acknowledged us
+his children, and left us the entire proceeds of his immense estates,
+unincumbered. We were so young when we went abroad, had been so tenderly
+treated at home, had seen and known so absolutely nothing of the society
+about us, that we were ignorant as Arabs of the state of feeling and
+prejudice in America against such as we, who carried any trace of negro
+blood. Our treatment in England did but increase this oblivion.
+
+"We graduated at Oxford; my brother, who was two years older than I,
+waiting upon me that we might go together through Europe; and together
+we had three of the happiest years of life. On the Continent I met
+_her_. You see what she is; you know Francesca: it is useless for me to
+attempt to describe her. I loved her,--she loved me,--it was confessed.
+In a little while I called her wife; I would, if I could, tell you of
+the time that followed: I cannot. We had a beautiful home, youth,
+health, riches, friends, happiness, two noble boys. At last an evil fate
+brought us to America. I was to look after some business affairs which,
+my agent said, needed personal supervision. My brother, whose health had
+failed, was advised to try a sea-voyage, and change of scene and
+climate. My wife was enthusiastic about the glorious Republic,--the
+great, free America,--the land of my birth. We came, carrying with us
+letters from friends in England, that were an open sesame to the most
+jealously barred doors. They flew wide at our approach, but to be shut
+with speed when my face was seen; hands were cordially extended, and
+drawn back as from a loathsome contact when mine went to meet them. In
+brief, we were outlawed, ostracised, sacrificed on the altar of this
+devilish American prejudice,--wholly American, for it is found nowhere
+else in the world,--I for my color, she for connecting her fate with
+mine.
+
+"I was so held as to be unable to return at once, and she would not
+leave me. Then my brother drooped more and more. His disease needed the
+brightest and most cheerful influences. The social and moral atmosphere
+stifled him. He died; and we, with grief intensified by bitterness, laid
+him in the soil of his own country as though it had been that of the
+stranger and enemy.
+
+"At this time the anti-slavery movement was provoking profound thought
+and feeling in America. I at once identified myself with it; not because
+I was connected with the hated and despised race, but because I loathed
+all forms of tyranny, and fought against them with what measure of
+strength I possessed. Doubtless this made me a more conspicuous mark for
+the shafts of malice and cruelty, and as I could nowhere be hurt as
+through her, malignity exhausted its devices there. She was hooted at
+when she appeared with me on the streets; she was inundated with
+infamous letters; she was dragged before a court of _justice_ upon the
+plea that she had defied the law of the state against amalgamation,
+forbidding the marriage of white and colored; though at the time it was
+known that she was English, that we were married in England and by
+English law. One night, in the midst of the riots which in 1838
+disgraced this city, our house was surrounded by a mob, burned over us;
+and I, with a few faithful friends, barely succeeded in carrying her to
+a place of safety,--uncovered, save by her delicate night-robe and a
+shawl, hastily caught up as we hurried her away. The yelling fiends, the
+burning house, the awful horror of fright and danger, the shock to her
+health and strength, the storm,--for the night was a wild and
+tempestuous one, which drenched her to the skin,--from all these she
+might have recovered, had not her boy, her first-born, been carried into
+her, bruised and dead,--dead, through an accident of burning rafters and
+falling stones; an accident, they said; yet as really murdered as though
+they had wilfully and brutally stricken him down.
+
+"After that I saw that she, too, would die, were she not taken back to
+our old home. The preparations were hastily made; we turned our faces
+towards England; we hoped to reach it at least before another pair of
+eyes saw the light, but hoped in vain. There on the broad sea Francesca
+was born. There her mother died. There was she buried."
+
+It was with extreme difficulty Ercildoune had controlled his face and
+voice, through the last of this distressing recital, and with the final
+word he bowed his forehead on the picture-frame,--convulsed with
+agony,--while voiceless sobs, like spasms, shook his form. Surrey
+realized that no words were to be said here, and stood by, awed and
+silent. What hand, however tender, could be laid on such a wound as
+this?
+
+Presently he looked up, and continued: "I came back here, because, I
+said, here was my place. I had wealth, education, a thousand advantages
+which are denied the masses of people who are, like me, of mixed race. I
+came here to identify my fate with theirs; to work with and for them; to
+fight, till I died, against the cruel and merciless prejudice which
+grinds them down. I have a son, who has just entered the service of this
+country, perhaps to die under its flag. I have a daughter,"--Willie
+flushed and started forward;--"I asked you when I began this recital, if
+you had counted all the consequences. You know my story; you see with
+what fate you link yours; reflect! Francesca carries no mark of her
+birth; her father or brother could not come inside her home without
+shocking society by the scandal, were not the story earlier known. The
+man whom you struck down this morning is one of our neighbors; you saw
+and heard his brutal assault: are you ready to face more of the like
+kind? Better than you I know what sentence will be passed upon
+you,--what measure awarded. It is for your own sake I say these things;
+consider them. I have finished."
+
+Surrey had made to speak a half score of times, and as often checked
+himself,--partly that he should not interrupt his companion; partly that
+he might be master of his emotions, and say what he had to utter without
+heat or excitement.
+
+"Mr. Ercildoune," he now said, "listen to me. I should despise myself
+were I guilty of the wicked and vulgar prejudice universal in America. I
+should be beneath contempt did I submit or consent to it. Two years ago
+I loved Miss Ercildoune without knowing aught of her birth. She is the
+same now as then; should I love her the less? If anything hard or cruel
+is in her fate that love can soften, it shall be done. If any painful
+burdens have been thrown upon her life, I can carry, if not the whole,
+then a part of them. If I cannot put her into a safe shelter where no
+ill will befall her, I can at least take her into my arms and go with
+her through the world. It will be easier for us, I think,--I hope,--to
+face any fate if we are together. Ah, sir, do not prevent it; do not
+deny me this happiness. Be my ambassador, since she will not let me
+speak for myself, and plead my own cause."
+
+In his earnestness he had come close to Mr. Ercildoune, putting out his
+one hand with a gesture of entreaty, with a tone in his voice, and a
+look in his face, irresistible to hear and behold. Ercildoune took the
+hand, and held it in a close, firm grasp. Some strong emotion shook him.
+The expression, a combination of sadness and scorn, which commonly held
+possession of his eyes, went out of them, leaving them radiant. "No," he
+said, "I will say nothing for you. I would not for worlds spoil your
+plea; prevent her hearing, from your own mouth, what you have to say. I
+will send her to you,"--and, going to a door, gave the order to a
+servant, "Desire Miss Francesca to come to the parlor." Then, motioning
+Surrey to the room, he went away, buried in thought.
+
+Standing in the parlor, for he was too restless to sit, he tried to plan
+how he should meet her; to think of a sentence which at the outset
+should disarm her indignation at being thus thrust upon him, and convey
+in some measure the thought of which his heart was full, without
+trespassing on her reserve, or telling her of the letter which he had
+read. Then another fear seized him; it was two years since he had
+written,--two years since that painful and terrible scene had been
+enacted in the very room where he stood,--two years since she had
+confessed by deed and look that she loved him. Might she not have
+changed? might she not have struggled for the mastery of this feeling
+with only too certain success? might she not have learned to regard him
+with esteem, perchance,--with friendship,--sentiment,--anything but that
+which he desired or would claim at her hands? Silence and absence and
+time are pitiless destructives. Might they not? Aye, might they not? He
+paced to and fro, with quick, restless tread, at the thought. All his
+love and his longing cried out against such a cruel supposition. He
+stopped by the side of the bookcase against which she had fallen in that
+merciless and suffering struggle, and put his hand down on the little
+projection, which he knew had once cut and wounded her, with a strong,
+passionate clasp, as though it were herself he held. Just then he heard
+a step,--her step, yet how unlike!--coming down the stairs. Where he
+stood he could see her as she crossed the hall, coming unconsciously to
+meet him. All the brightness and airy grace seemed to have been drawn
+quite out of her. The alert, slender figure drooped as if it carried
+some palpable weight, and moved with a step slow and unsteady as that of
+sickness or age. Her face was pathetic in its sad pallor, and blue,
+sorrowful circles were drawn under the deep eyes, heavy and dim with
+the shedding of unnumbered tears. It almost broke his heart to look at
+her. A feeling, pitiful as a mother would have for her suffering baby,
+took possession of his soul,--a longing to shield and protect her. Tears
+blinded him; a great sob swelled in his throat; he made a step forward
+as she came into the room. "Papa," she said, without looking up, "you
+wanted me?" There was no response. "Papa!" In an instant an arm enfolded
+her; a presence, tender and strong, bent above her; a voice, husky with
+crowding emotions, yet sweet with all the sweetness of love, breathed,
+"My darling! my darling!" as _his_ fair, sunny hair swept her face.
+
+Even then she remembered another scene, remembered her promise; even
+then she thought of him, of his future, and struggled to release herself
+from his embrace.
+
+What did he say? what could he say? Where were the arguments he had
+planned, the entreaties he had purposed? where the words with which he
+was to tell his tale, combat her refusal, win her to a willing and happy
+assent? All gone.
+
+There was nothing but his heart and its caresses to speak for him.
+Silent, with the ineffable stillness he kissed her eyes, her mouth, held
+her to his breast with a passionate fondness,--a tender, yet masterful
+hold, which said, "Nothing shall separate us now." She felt it,
+recognized it, yielded without power to longer contend, clasped her arms
+about his neck, met his eyes, and dropped her face upon his heart with a
+long, tremulous sigh which confessed that heaven was won.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+ "_The golden hours, on angel wings,
+ Flew o'er me and my dearie._"
+
+ BURNS
+
+
+The evening that followed was of the brightest and happiest; even the
+adieus spoken to the soldier who was just leaving his home did not
+sadden it. They were in such a state of exaltation as to see everything
+with courageous and hopeful eyes, and sent Robert off with the feeling
+that all these horrible realities they had known so long were but bogies
+to frighten foolish children, and that he would come back to them
+wearing, at the very least, the stars of a major-general. Whatever
+sombre and painful thoughts filled Ercildoune's heart he held there,
+that no gloom might fall from him upon these fresh young lives, nor
+sadden the cheery expectancy of his son.
+
+Surrey, having carried the first line of defence, prepared for a
+vigorous assault upon the second. Like all eager lovers, his primary
+anxiety was to hear "Yes"; afterwards, the day. To that end he was
+pleading with every resource that love and impatience could lend; but
+Francesca shook her head, and smiled, and said that was a long way
+off,--that was not to be thought of, at least till the war was over, and
+her soldier safe at home; but he insisted that this was the flimsiest,
+and poorest of excuses; nay, that it was the very reverse of the true
+and sensible idea, which was of course wholly on his side. He had these
+few weeks at home, and then must away once more to chances of battle and
+death. He did not say this till he had exhausted every other entreaty;
+but at last, gathering her close to him with his one loving arm,--"how
+fortunate," he had before said, "that it is the left arm, because if it
+were the other I could not hold you so near my heart!"--so holding her,
+he glanced down at the empty sleeve, and whispered, "My darling! who
+knows? I have been wounded so often, and am now only a piece of a fellow
+to come to you. It may be something more next time, and then I shall
+never call you wife. It would make no difference hereafter, I know: we
+belong to each other for time and eternity. But then I should like to
+feel that we were something more to one another than even betrothed
+lovers, before the end comes, if come it does, untimely. Be generous,
+dearie, and say yes."
+
+He did not give utterance to another fear, which was that by some device
+she might again be taken away from him; that some cruel plan might be
+put in execution to separate them once more. He would not take the
+risk; he would bind her to him so securely that no device, however
+cunning,--no plan, however hard and shrewd,--could again divide them.
+
+She hesitated long; was long entreated; but the result was sure, since
+her own heart seconded every prayer he uttered. At last she consented;
+but insisted that he should go home at once, see the mother and father
+who were waiting for him with such anxious hearts, give to them--as was
+their due--at least a part of the time, and then, when her hasty
+bride-preparations were made, come back and take her wholly to himself.
+Thus it was arranged, and he left her.
+
+Into the mysteries which followed--the mysteries of hemming and
+stitching, of tucking and trimming, ruffling, embroidering, of all the
+hurry and delicious confusion of an elegant yet hasty bridal
+trousseau--let us not attempt to investigate.
+
+Doubtless through those days, through this sweet and happy whirl of
+emotion, Francesca had many anxious and painful hours: hours in which
+she looked at the future--for him more than for herself--with sorrowful
+anticipations and forebodings. But with each evening came a letter,
+written in the morning by his dear hand; a letter so full of happy,
+hopeful love, of resolute, manly spirit, that her cares and anxieties
+all took flight, and were but as a tale that is told, or as a dream of
+darkness when the sun shines upon a blessed reality.
+
+He wrote her that he had told his parents of his wishes and plans; and
+that, as he had known before, they were opposed, and opposed most
+bitterly; but he was sure that time would soften, and knowledge destroy
+this prejudice utterly. He wrote as he believed. They were so fond of
+him, so devoted to him who was their only child, that he was assured
+they would not and could not cast him off, nor hate that which he loved.
+He did not know that his father, who had never before been guilty of a
+base action,--his mother, who was fine to daintiness,--were both so
+warped by this senseless and cruel feeling--having seen Francesca and
+known all her beautiful and noble elements of personal character--as to
+have written her a letter which only a losel should have penned and an
+outcast read. She did not tell him. Being satisfied that they two
+belonged to one another; that if they were separated it would be as the
+tearing asunder of a perfect whole, leaving the parts rent and
+bleeding,--she would not listen to any voice that attempted, nor heed
+any hand that strove to drive an entering wedge, or to divide them. Why,
+then, should she trouble him by the knowledge that this effort had again
+been made, and by those he trusted and honored. Let it pass. The future
+must decide what the future must be, meanwhile, they were to live in a
+happy present.
+
+He learned of it, however, before he left his home. Finding that neither
+persuasions, threats, nor prayers could move him,--that he would be true
+to honor and love,--they told him of what they had done; laid bare the
+whole intensity of their feeling; and putting her on the one side,
+placing themselves on the other, said, "Choose,--this wife, or those who
+have loved you for a lifetime. Cleave to her, and your father disowns
+you, your mother renounces, your home shuts its doors upon you, never to
+open. With the world and its judgment we have nothing to do; that is
+between it and you; but no judgment of indifferent strangers shall be
+more severe than ours."
+
+A painful position; a cruel alternative; but not for an instant did he
+hesitate. Taking the two hands of father and mother into his solitary
+one, he said,--"Father, I have always found you a gentleman; mother, you
+have shown all the graces of the Christian character which you profess;
+yet in this you are supporting the most dishonorable sentiment, the most
+infidel unbelief, with which the age is shamed. You are defying the
+dictates of justice and the teachings of God. When you ask me to rank
+myself on your side, I cannot do it. Were my heart less wholly enlisted
+in this matter, my reason and sense of right would rebel. Here, then,
+for the present at least, we must say farewell." And so, with many a
+heart-ache and many a pang, he went away.
+
+As true love always grows with passing time, so his increased with the
+days, and intensified by the cruel heat which was poured upon it. He
+realized the torture to which, in a thousand ways, this darling of his
+heart had for a lifetime been subjected; and his tenderness and love--in
+which was an element of indignation and pathos--deepened with every
+fresh revelation of the passing hours. When he came back to her he had
+few words to speak, and no airy grace of sentence or caress to bestow;
+he followed her about in a curious, shadow-like way, with such a strain
+on his heart as made him many a time lift his hand to it, as if to check
+physical pain. For her, she was as one who had found a beloved master,
+able and willing to lighten all her burdens; a physician, whose
+slightest touch brought balm and healing to every aching wound. And so
+these two when the time came, spite of the absence of friends who should
+have been there, spite of warnings and denunciations and evil
+prophecies, stood up and said to those who listened what their hearts
+had long before confessed, that they were one for time and eternity;
+then, hand in hand, went out into the world.
+
+For the present it was a pleasant enough world to them. Surrey had a
+lovely little place on the Hudson to which he would carry her, and
+pleased himself by fitting it up with every convenience and beauty that
+taste could devise and wealth supply.
+
+How happy they were there! To be sure, nobody came to see them, but then
+they wished to see nobody; so every one was well satisfied. The
+delicious lovers' life of two years before was renewed, but with how
+much richer and deeper delights and blissfulness! They galloped on many
+a pleasant morning across miles and miles of country, down rocky slopes,
+and through wild and romantic glens. They drove lazily, on summer noons,
+through leafy fastnesses and cool forest paths; or sat idly by some
+little stream on the fresh, green moss, with a line dancing on the
+crystal water, amusing themselves by the fiction that it was fishing
+upon which they were intent, and not the dear delight of watching one
+another's faces reflected from the placid stream. They spent hours at
+home, reading bits of poems, or singing scraps of love-songs, talking a
+little, and then falling away into silence; or she sat perched on his
+knee or the elbow of his chair, smoothing his sunny hair, stroking his
+long, silky mustache, or looking into his answering eyes, till the world
+lapsed quite away from them, and they thought themselves in heaven.
+
+An idle, happy time! a time to make a worker sigh only to behold, and a
+Benthamite lift his hands in deprecation and despair. A time which would
+not last, because it could not, any more than apple-blossoms and May
+flowers, but which was sweet and fragrant past all describing while it
+endured.
+
+Some _kindly_ disposed person sent Surrey a city paper with an item
+marked in such wise as to make him understand its unpleasant import
+without the reading. "Come," he said, "we will have none of this; this
+owl does not belong to our sunshine,"--and so destroyed and forgot it.
+Others, however, saw that which he scorned to read. He had not been into
+the city since he called at his father's house, and walked into the
+reception room of his aunt, and been refused interview or speech at
+either place. "Very well," he thought, "I will go from this painful
+inhospitality and coldness to my Paradise"; and he went, and remained.
+
+The only letter he wrote was to his old friend and favorite cousin, Tom
+Russell,--who was away somewhere in the far South, and from whom he had
+not heard for many a day,--and hoped that he, at least, would not
+disappoint him; would not disappoint the hearty trust he had in his
+breadth of nature and manly sensibility.
+
+And so, with clouds doubtless in the sky, but which they did not
+see,--the sun shone so bright for them; and some discords in the minor
+keys which they did not heed,--the major music was so sweet and
+intoxicating,--the brief, glad hours wore away, and the time for
+parting, with hasty steps, had almost reached and faced them. Meanwhile,
+what was occurring to others, in other scenes and among other
+surroundings?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+ "_There are some deeds so grand
+ That their mighty doers stand
+ Ennobled, in a moment, more than kings._"
+
+ BOKER
+
+
+It was towards the evening of a blazing July day on Morris Island. The
+mail had just come in and been distributed. Jim, with some papers and a
+precious missive from Sallie in one hand, his supper in the other,
+betook himself to a cool spot by the river,--if, indeed, any spot could
+be called cool in that fiery sand,--and proceeded to devour the letter
+with wonderful avidity while the "grub," properly enough, stood
+unnoticed and uncared for. Presently he stopped, rubbed his eyes, and
+re-read a paragraph in the epistle before him, then re-rubbed, and read
+it again; and then, laying it down, gave utterance to a long whistle,
+expressive of unbounded astonishment, if not incredulity.
+
+The whistle was answered by its counterpart, and Jim, looking up,
+beheld his captain,--Coolidge by name,--a fast, bright New York boy,
+standing at a little distance, and staring with amazed eyes at a paper
+he held in his hands. Glancing from this to Jim, encountering his look,
+he burst out laughing and came towards him.
+
+"Helloa, Given!" he called: Jim was a favorite with him, as indeed with
+pretty much every one with whom he came in contact, officers and
+men,--"you, too, seem put out. I wonder if you've read anything as queer
+as that," handing him the paper and striking his finger down on an item;
+"read it." Jim read:--
+
+"MISCEGENATION. DISGRACEFUL FREAK IN HIGH LIFE. FRUIT OF AN ABOLITION
+WAR.--We are credibly informed that a young man belonging to one of the
+first families in the city, Mr. W.A.S.,--we spare his name for the sake
+of his relatives,--who has been engaged since its outset in this
+fratricidal war, has just given evidence of its legitimate effect by
+taking to his bosom a nigger wench as _his wife_. Of course he is
+disowned by his family, and spurned by his friends, even radical
+fanaticism not being yet ready for such a dose as this. However--" Jim
+did not finish the homily of which this was the presage, but, throwing
+the paper on the ground, indignantly drove his heel through it, tearing
+and soiling it, and then viciously kicked it into the river.
+
+Said the Captain when this operation was completed, having watched it
+with curious eyes, "Well, my man, are you aware of the fact that that is
+_my_ paper?"
+
+"Don't care if it is. What in thunder did you bring the damned
+Copperhead sheet to me for, if you didn't want it smashed? Ain't you
+ashamed of yourself having such a thing round? How'd you feel if you
+were picked up dead by a reb, with that stuff in your pocket? Say now!"
+
+Coolidge laughed,--he was always ready to laugh: that was probably why
+the men liked him so well, and stood in awe of him not a bit. "Feel?
+horridly, of course. Bad enough, being dead, to yet speak, and tell 'em
+that paper didn't represent my politics: 'd that do?"
+
+Jim shook his head dubiously.
+
+"What are you making such a devil of a row for, I'd like to know? it's
+too hot to get excited. 'Tain't likely you know anything about Willie
+Surrey."
+
+"O ho! it is Mr. Will, then, is it? Know him,--don't I, though? Like a
+book. Known him ever since he was knee-height of a grasshopper. I'd like
+to have that fellow"--shaking his fist toward the floating
+paper--"within arm's reach. Wouldn't I pummel him some? O no, of course
+not,--not at all. Only, if he wants a sound skin, I'd advise him, as a
+friend, to be scarce when I'm round, because it'd very likely be
+damaged."
+
+"You think it's all a Copperhead lie, then! I should have thought so, at
+first, only I know Surrey's capable of doing any Quixotic thing if he
+once gets his mind fixed on it."
+
+"I know what I know," Jim answered, slowly folding and unfolding
+Sallie's letter, which he still held in his hand. "I know all about that
+young lady he's been marrying. She's young, and she's
+handsome--handsome as a picture--and rich, and as good as an angel;
+that's about what she is, if Sallie Howard and I know B from a bull's
+foot."
+
+"Who is Sallie Howard?" queried the Captain.
+
+"She? O,"--very red in the face,--"she's a friend of mine, and she's
+Miss Ercildoune's seamstress."
+
+"Ercildoune? good name! Is she the _lady_ upon whom Surrey has been
+bestowing his--?"
+
+"Yes, she is; and here's her photograph. Sallie begged it of her, and
+sent it to me, once after she had done a kind thing by both of us. Looks
+like a 'nigger wench,' don't she?"
+
+The Captain seized the picture, and, having once fastened his eyes upon
+it, seemed incapable of removing them. "This? this her?" he cried.
+"Great Caesar! I should think Surrey would have the fellow out at twenty
+paces in no time. Heavens, what a beauty!"
+
+Jim grinned sardonically: "She is rather pretty, now,--ain't she?"
+
+"Pretty! ugh, what an expression! pretty, indeed! I never saw anything
+so beautiful. But what a sad face it is!"
+
+"Sad! well, 'tain't much wonder. I guess her life's been sad enough, in
+spite of her youth, and her beauty, and her riches, and all the rest."
+
+"Why, how should that be?"
+
+"Suppose you take another squint at that face."
+
+"Well."
+
+"See anything peculiar about it?"
+
+"Nothing except its beauty."
+
+"Not about the eyes?"
+
+"No,--only I believe it is they that make the face so sorrowful."
+
+"Very like. You generally see just such big mournful-looking eyes in the
+faces of people that are called--octoroons."
+
+"What?" cried the Captain, dropping the picture in his surprise.
+
+"Just so," Jim answered, picking it up and dusting it carefully before
+restoring it to its place in his pocket-book.
+
+"So, then, it is part true, after all."
+
+"True!" exclaimed Jim, angrily,--"don't make an ass of yourself,
+Captain."
+
+"Why, Given, didn't you say yourself that she was an octoroon, or some
+such thing?"
+
+"Suppose I did,--what then?"
+
+"I should say, then, that Surrey has disgraced himself forever. He has
+not only outraged his family and his friends, and scandalized society,
+but he has run against nature itself. It's very plain God Almighty never
+intended the two races to come together."
+
+"O, he didn't, hey? Had a special despatch from him, that you know all
+about it? I've heard just such talk before from people who seemed to be
+pretty well posted about his intentions,--in this particular
+matter,--though I generally noticed they weren't chaps who were very
+intimate with him in any other way."
+
+The Captain laughed. "Thank you, Jim, for the compliment; but come, you
+aren't going to say that nature hasn't placed a barrier between these
+people and us? an instinct that repels an Anglo-Saxon from a negro
+always and everywhere?"
+
+"Ho, ho! that's good! why, Captain, if you keep on, you'll make me talk
+myself into a regular abolitionist. Instinct, hey? I'd like to know,
+then, where all the mulattoes, and the quadroons, and the octoroons come
+from,--the yellow-skins and brown-skins and skins so nigh white you
+can't tell 'em with your spectacles on! The darkies must have bleached
+out amazingly here in America, for you'd have to hunt with a long pole
+and a telescope to boot to find a straight-out black one anywhere
+round,--leastwise that's my observation."
+
+"That was slavery."
+
+"Yes 'twas,--and then the damned rascals talk about the
+amalgamationists, and all that, up North. 'Twan't the abolitionists;
+'twas the slaveholders and their friends that made a race of half-breeds
+all over the country; but, slavery or no slavery, they showed nature
+hadn't put any barriers between them,--and it seems to me an enough
+sight decenter and more respectable plan to marry fair and square than
+to sell your own children and the mother that bore them. Come, now,
+ain't it?"
+
+"Well, yes, if you come to that, I suppose it is!"
+
+"You _suppose_ it is! See here,--I've found out something since I've
+been down here, and have had time to think; 'tain't the living together
+that troubles squeamish stomachs; it's the marrying. That's what's the
+matter!"
+
+"Just about!" assented the Captain, with an amused look, "and here's a
+case in point. Surrey ought to have been shot for marrying one of that
+degraded race."
+
+"Bah! he married one of his own race, if I know how to calculate."
+
+"There, Jim, don't be a fool! If she's got any negro blood in her veins
+she's a nigger, and all your talk won't make her anything else."
+
+"I say, Captain, I've heard that some of your ancestors were Indians: is
+that so?"
+
+"Yes: my great-grandmother was an Indian chief's daughter,--so they say;
+and you might as well claim royalty when you have the chance."
+
+"Bless me! your great-grandmother, eh? Come, now, what do you call
+yourself,--an Injun?"
+
+"No, I don't. I call myself an Anglo-Saxon."
+
+"What, not call yourself an Injun,--when your great-grandmother was one?
+Here's a pretty go!"
+
+"Nonsense! 'tisn't likely that filtered Indian blood can take precedence
+and mastery of all the Anglo-Saxon material it's run through since
+then."
+
+"Hurray! now you've said it. Lookee here, Captain. You say the
+Anglo-Saxon's the master race of the world."
+
+"Of course I do."
+
+"Of course you do,--being a sensible fellow. So do I; and you say the
+negro blood is mighty poor stuff, and the race a long way behind ours."
+
+"Of course, again."
+
+"Now, Captain, just take a sober squint at your own logic. You back
+Anglo-Saxon against the field; very well! here's Miss Ercildoune, we'll
+say, one eighth negro, seven eighths Anglo-Saxon. You make that one
+eighth stronger than all the other seven eighths: you make that little
+bit of negro master of all the lot of Anglo-Saxon. Now I have such a
+good opinion of my own race that if it were t'other way about, I'd think
+the one eighth Saxon strong enough to beat the seven eighths nigger.
+That's sound, isn't it? consequently, I call anybody that's got any
+mixture at all, and that knows anything, and keeps a clean face,--and
+ain't a rebel, nor yet a Copperhead,--I call him, if it's a him, and
+her, if it's a she, one of us. And I mean to say to any such from
+henceforth, 'Here's your chance,--go in, and win, if you can,--and
+anybody be damn'd that stops you!'"
+
+"Blow away, Jim," laughed the Captain, "I like to hear you; and it's
+good talk if you don't mean it."
+
+"I'll be blamed if I don't."
+
+"Come, you're talking now,--you're saying a lot more than you'll live up
+to,--you know that as well as I. People always do when they're gassing."
+
+"Well, blow or no blow, it's truth, whether I live up to it or not." And
+he, evidently with not all the steam worked off, began to gather sticks
+and build a fire to fry his bit of pork and warm the cold coffee.
+
+Just then they heard the plash of oars keeping time to the cadence of a
+plantation hymn, which came floating solemn and clear through the
+night:--
+
+ "My brudder sittin' on de tree ob life,
+ An' he yearde when Jordan roll.
+ Roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll,
+ Roll Jordan, roll!"
+
+They both paused to listen as the refrain was again and again repeated.
+
+"There's nigger for you," broke out Jim, "what'n thunder'd they mean by
+such gibberish as that?"
+
+The Captain laughed. "Come, Given, don't quarrel with what's above your
+comprehension. Doubtless there's a spiritual meaning hidden away
+somewhere, which your unsanctified ears can't interpret."
+
+"Spiritual fiddlestick!"
+
+"Worse and worse! what a heathen you're demonstrating yourself! Violins
+are no part of the heavenly chorus."
+
+"Much you know about it! Hark,--they're at it again"; and again the
+voices and break of oars came through the night:--
+
+ "O march, de angel march! O march, de angel march!
+ O my soul arise in heaven, Lord, for to yearde when Jordan roll!
+ Roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll."
+
+"Well, I confess that's a little bit above my comprehension,--that is.
+Spiritual or something else. Lazy vermin! they'll paddle round in them
+boats, or lie about in the sun, and hoot all day and all night about
+'de good Lord' and 'de day ob jubilee,'--and think God Almighty is going
+to interfere in their special behalf, and do big things for them
+generally."
+
+"It's a fact; they do all seem to be waiting for something."
+
+"Well, I reckon they needn't wait any longer. The day of miracles is
+gone by, for such as them, anyway. They ain't worth the salt that feeds
+them, so far as I can discover."
+
+Through the wash of the waters they could hear from the voices, as they
+sang, that their possessors were evidently drawing nearer.
+
+"Sense or not," said the Captain, "I never listen to them without a
+queer feeling. What they sing is generally ridiculous enough, but their
+voices are the most pathetic things in the world."
+
+Here the hymn stopped; a boat was pulled up, and presently they saw two
+men coming from the sands and into the light of their fire,--ragged,
+dirty; one shabby old garment--a pair of tow pantaloons--on each;
+bareheaded, barefooted,--great, clumsy feet, stupid and heavy-looking
+heads; slouching walk, stooping shoulders; something eager yet
+deprecating in their black faces.
+
+"Look at 'em, Captain; now you just take a fair look at 'em; and then
+say that Mr. Surrey's wife belongs to the same family,--own kith and
+kin,--you ca-a-n't do it."
+
+"Faugh! for heaven's sake, shut up! of course, when it comes to this, I
+can't say anything of the kind."
+
+"'Nuff said. You see, I believe in Mr. Surrey, and what's more, I
+believe in Miss Ercildoune,--have reason to; and when I hear anybody
+mixing her up with these onry, good-for-nothing niggers, it's more'n I
+can stand, so don't let's have any more of it"; and turning with an air
+which said that subject was ended, Jim took up his forgotten coffee,
+pulled apart some brands and put the big tin cup on the coals, and then
+bent over it absorbed, sniffing the savory steam which presently came up
+from it. Meanwhile the two men were skulking about among the trees,
+watching, yet not coming near,--"at their usual work of waiting," as the
+Captain said.
+
+"Proper enough, too, let 'em wait. Waiting's their business. Now,"
+taking off his tin and looking towards them, "what d'ye s'pose those
+anemiles want? Pity the boat hadn't tipped over before they got here.
+Camp's overrun now with just such scoots. Here, you!" he called.
+
+The men came near. "Where'd you come from?"
+
+One of them pointed back to the boat, seen dimly on the sand.
+
+"Was that you howling a while ago, 'Roll Jordan,' or something?"
+
+"Yes, massa."
+
+"And where did you come from?--no, you needn't look back there again,--I
+mean, where did you and the boat too come from?"
+
+"Come from Mass' George Wingate's place, massa."
+
+"Far from here?"
+
+"Big way, massa."
+
+"What brought you here? what did you come for?"
+
+"If you please, massa, 'cause the Linkum sojers was yere, an' de big
+guns, an' we yearde dat all our people's free when dey gets yere."
+
+"Free! what'll such fellows as you do with freedom, hey?"
+
+The two looked at their interrogator, then at one another, opened their
+mouths as to speak, and shut them hopelessly,--unable to put into words
+that which was struggling in their darkened brains,--and then with a
+laugh, a laugh that sounded woefully like a sob, answered, "Dunno,
+massa."
+
+"What fools!" cried Jim, angrily; but the Captain, who was watching them
+keenly, thought of a line he had once read, "There is a laughter sadder
+than tears." "True enough,--poor devils!" he added to himself.
+
+"Are you hungry?" Jim proceeded.
+
+"I hope massa don't think we's come yere for to git suthin' to eat,"
+said the smaller of the two, a little, thin, haggard-looking
+fellow,--"we's no beggars. Some ob de darkies is, but we's not dem
+kind,--Jim an' me,--we's willin' to work, ain't we, Jim?"
+
+"Jim!" soliloquized Given,--"my name, hey? we'll take a squint at this
+fellow."
+
+The squint showed two impoverished-looking wretches, with a starved look
+in their eyes, which he did not comprehend, and a starved look in their
+faces and forms, which he did.
+
+"Come, now, are you hungry?" he queried once more.
+
+"If ye please, massa," began the little one who was spokesman,--'little
+folks always are gas-bags,' Jim was fond of saying from his six feet of
+height,--"if ye please, massa, we's had nothin' to eat but berries an'
+roots an' sich like truck for long while."
+
+"Well, why by the devil haven't you had something else then? what've you
+been doing with yourselves for 'long while'? what d'ye mean, coming here
+starved to death, making a fellow sick to look at you? Hold your gab,
+and eat up that pork," pushing over his tin plate, "'n' that bread,"
+sending it after, "'n' that hard tack,--'tain't very good, but it's
+better'n roots, I reckon, or berries either,--'n' gobble up that coffee,
+double-quick, mind; and don't you open your heads to talk till the
+grub's gone, slick and clean. Ugh!" he said to the Captain,--"sight o'
+them fellows just took my appetite away; couldn't eat to save my soul;
+lucky they came to devour the rations; pity to throw them away." The
+Captain smiled,--he knew Jim. "Poor cusses!" he added presently, "eat
+like cannibals, don't they? hope they enjoy it. Had enough?" seeing they
+had devoured everything put before them.
+
+"Thankee, massa. Yes, massa. Bery kind, massa. Had quite 'nuff."
+
+"Well, now, you, sir!" looking at the little one,--"by the way, what's
+your name?"
+
+"'Bijah, if ye please, massa."
+
+"'Bijah? Abijah, hey? well, I don't please; however, it's none of my
+name. Well, 'Bijah, how came you two to be looking like a couple of
+animated skeletons? that's the next question."
+
+"Yes, massa."
+
+"I say, how came you to be starved? Hai'n't they nothing but roots and
+berries up your way? Mass' George Wingate must have a jolly time,
+feasting, in that case. Come, what's your story? Out with the whole pack
+of lies at once."
+
+"I hope massa thinks we wouldn't tell nuffin but de truf," said Jim, who
+had not before spoken save to say, "Thankee,"--"cause if he don't bleeve
+us, ain't no use in talkin'."
+
+"You shut up! I ain't conversing with you, rawbones! Speak when you're
+spoken to! Come, 'Bijah, fire away."
+
+"Bery good, massa. Ye see I'se Mass' George Wingate's boy. Mass' George
+he lives in de back country, good long way from de coast,--over a
+hundred miles, Jim calklates,--an' Jim's smart at calklating; well,
+Mass' George he's not berry good to his people; never was, an' he's been
+wuss'n ever since the Linkum sojers cum round his way, 'cause it's made
+feed scurce ye see, an' a lot of de boys dey tuck to runnin' away,--so
+what wid one ting an' anoder, his temper got spiled, an' he was mighty
+hard on us all de time.
+
+"At las' I got tired of bein' cuffed an' knocked round, an' den I yearde
+dat if our people, any of dem, got to de Fedral lines dey was free, so I
+said, 'Cum, 'Bijah,--freedom's wuth tryin' for'; an' one dark night I
+did up some hoe-cake an' a piece of pork an' started. I trabbeled
+hard's I could all night,--'bout fifteen mile, I reckon,--an' den as
+'twas gittin' toward mornin' I hid away in a swamp. Ye see I felt
+drefful bad, for I could year way off, but plain enuff, de bayin' of de
+hounds, an' I knew dat de men an' de guns an' de dogs was all after me;
+but de day passed an' dey didn't come. So de next night I started off
+agen, an' run an' walked hard all night, an' towards mornin' I went up
+to a little house standen off from de road, thinking it was a nigger
+house, an' jest as I got up to it out walked a white woman scarin' me
+awfully, an' de fust ting she axed me was what I wanted."
+
+"Tight slave!" interrupted Jim,--"what d'ye do then?"
+
+"Well, massa, ye see I saw mighty quick I was in for a lie anyhow, so I
+said, 'Is massa at home?' 'Yes,' says she,--an' sure nuff, he cum right
+out. 'Hello, nigger!' he said when he seed me, 'whar you cum from? so I
+tells him from Pocotaligo, an' before he could ax any more queshuns, I
+went on an' tole him we cotched fifty Yankees down dere yesterday, an'
+massa he was so tickled dat he let me go to Barnwells to see my family,
+an' den I said I'd got off de track an' was dead beat an' drefful
+hungry, an' would he please to sell me suthin to eat. At dat de woman
+streaked right into de house, an' got me some bread an' meat, an' tole
+me to eat it up an' not talk about payin,'--'we don't charge good,
+faithful niggers nothin',' she said,--so I thanked her an' eat it all
+up, an' den, when de man had tole me how to go, I went right long till I
+got out ob sight ob de little house, an' den I got into de woods, an'
+turned right round de oder way an' made tracks fast as I could in dat
+direcshun."
+
+"Ho! ho! you're about what I call a 'cute nigger," laughed Jim. "Come,
+go on,--this gets interesting."
+
+"Well, directly I yearde de dogs. Dere was a pond little way off; so I
+tuck to it, an' waded out till I could just touch my toes an' keep my
+nose above water so's to breathe. Presently dey all cum down, an' I
+yearde Mass' George say, 'I'll hunt dat nigger till I find him if takes
+a month. I'se goin' to make a zample of him,'--so I shook some at dat,
+for I know'd what Mass' George's zamples was. Arter while one ob de men
+says, 'He ain't yere,--he'd shown hisself before dis, if he was,' an' I
+spose I would, for I was pretty nearly choked, only I said to myself
+when I went in, 'I'll go to de bottom before I'll come up to be tuck,'
+so I jest held on by my toes an' waited.
+
+"I didn't dare to cum out when dey rode away to try a new scent, an'
+when I did I jest skulked round de edge ob de pond, ready to take to it
+agen if I yearde dem, an' when night cum I started off an' run an'
+walked agen hard's I could, an' den at day-dawn I tuck to anoder pond,
+an' went on a log dat was stickin' in de water, and broke down some
+rushes an' bushes enuf to lie down on an' cover me up, an' den I slept
+all day, for I was drefful tired an' most starved too. Next evenin' when
+it got dark, I went on agen, an' trabblin through de woods I seed a
+little light, an' sartin dis time dat it was a darkey's cabin, I made
+for it, an' it was. It was his'n,"--pointing to the big fellow who
+stood beside him, and who nodded his head in assent.
+
+"I had a palaver before he'd let me in, but when I was in I seed what de
+matter was. He had a sojer dere, a Linkum sojer, bad wounded, what he'd
+found in de woods,--he was a runaway hisself, ye see, like me,--an' he'd
+tuck him to dis ole cabin an'd been nussin him on for good while. When I
+seed dat I felt drefful bad, for I knowed dey was a huntin for me yet,
+an' I tought if de dogs got on de trail dey'd get to dis cabin, sure:
+an' den dey'd both be tuck. So I up an' tole dem, an' de sojer he says,
+'Come, Jim, you've done quite enuff fur me, my boy. If you're in danger
+now, be off with you fast as you can,--an' God reward you, for I never
+can, for all you've done for me.'
+
+"'No,' says Jim, 'Capen, ye needn't talk in dat way, for I'se not goin
+to budge widout you. You got wounded fur me an' my people, an' now I'll
+stick by you an' face any thing fur you if it's Death hisself!' That's
+just what Jim said; an' de sojer he put his hand up to his face, an' I
+seed it tremble bad,--he was weak, you see,--an' some big tears cum out
+troo his fingers onto de back ob it.
+
+"Den Jim says, 'Dis isn't a safe place for any on us, an' we'll have to
+take to our heels agen, an' so de sooner we's off de better.' So he did
+up some vittels,--all he had dere,--an' gave 'em to me to tote,--an' den
+before de Capen could sneeze he had him up on his back, an' we was off.
+
+"It was pretty hard work I kin tell you, strong as Jim was, an' we'd
+have to stop an' rest putty ofen; an' den, Jim an' I, we'd tote him
+atween us on some boughs; an' den we had to lie by, some days, all
+day,--an' we trabbled putty slow, cause we'd lost our bearing an' was in
+a secesh country, we knowed,--an' we had nudin but berries an' sich to
+eat, an' got nigh starved.
+
+"One night we cum onto half a dozen fellows skulkin' in de woods, an' at
+fust dey made fight, but d'rectly dey know'd we was friends, fur dey was
+some more Linkum sojers, an' dey'd lost dere way, or ruther, dey know'd
+where dey was, but dey didn't know how to git way from dere. Dey was
+'scaped pris'ners, dey told us; when I yearde where 'twas I know'd de
+way to de coast, an' said I'd show 'em de way if dey'd cum long wid us,
+so dey did; an' we got 'long all right till we got to de ribber up by
+Mass' Rhett's place."
+
+"Yes, I know where it is," said the Captain.
+
+"Den what to do was de puzzle. De country was all full ob secesh
+pickets, an' dere was de ribber, an' we had no boat,--so Jim, he says,
+'I know what to do; fust I'll hide you yere,' an' he did all safe in de
+woods; 'an' den I'll git ye suthin to eat from de niggers round,' an' he
+did dat too, do he couldn't git much, for fear he'd be seen; an' den we,
+he and I, made some ropes out ob de tall grass like dat we'd ofen made
+fur mats, an' tied dem together wid some oder grass, an' stuck a board
+in, an' den made fur de Yankee camp, an' yere we is."
+
+"Yes," said the black man Jim, here,--breaking silence,--"we'll show you
+de way back if you kin go up in a boat dey can rest in, fur dey's most
+all clean done out, an' de capen's wound is awful bad yit."
+
+"This captain,--what's his name?" inquired Coolidge.
+
+"His name is here," said Jim, carefully drawing forth a paper from his
+rags,--"he has on dis some figgers an' a map of de country he took
+before he got wounded, an' some words he writ wid a bit of burnt stick
+just before we cum away,--an' he giv it to me, an' tole me to bring it
+to camp, fur fear something might happen to him while we was away."
+
+"My God!" cried Coolidge when he had opened the paper, and with hasty
+eyes scanned its contents, "it's Tom Russell; I know him well. This must
+be sent up to head-quarters, and I'll get an order, and a boat, and some
+men, to go for them at once." All of which was promptly done.
+
+"See here! I speak to be one of the fellows what goes," Jim emphatically
+announced.
+
+"All right. I reckon we'll both go, Given, if the General will let
+us,--and I think he will,"--which was a safe guess and a true one. The
+boat was soon ready and manned. 'Bijah, too weak to pull an oar, was
+left behind; and Jim, really not fit to do aught save guide them, still
+insisted on taking his share of work. They found the place at last, and
+the men; and taking them on board,--Russell having to be moved slowly
+and carefully,--they began to pull for home.
+
+The tide was going out, and the river low: that, with the heavy laden
+boat, made their progress lingering; a fact which distressed them all,
+as they knew the night to be almost spent, and that the shores were so
+lined with batteries, open and masked, and the country about so scoured
+by rebels, as to make it almost sure death to them if they were not
+beyond the lines before the morning broke.
+
+The water was steadily and perceptibly ebbing,--the rowing growing more
+and more insecure,--the danger becoming imminent.
+
+"Ease her off, there! ease her off!" cried the Captain,--as a harsh,
+gravelly sound smote on his ear, and at the same moment a shot whizzed
+past them, showing that they were discovered,--"ease her off, there! or
+we're stuck!"
+
+The warning came too late,--indeed, could not have been obeyed, had it
+come earlier. The boat struck; her bottom grating hard on the wet sand.
+
+"Great God! she's on a bar," cried Coolidge, "and the tide's running
+out, fast."
+
+"Yes, and them damned rebs are safe enough from _our_ fire," said one of
+the men.
+
+A few scattering shot fell about them.
+
+"They're going to make their mark on us, anyway," put in another.
+
+"And we can't send 'em anything in return, blast 'em!" growled a third.
+
+"That's the worst of it," broke out a fourth, "to be shot at like a rat
+in a hole."
+
+All said in a breath, and the balls by this time falling thick and
+fast,--a fiery, awful rain of death. The men were no cowards, and the
+captain was brave enough; but what could they do? To stand up was but to
+make figure-heads at which the concealed enemy could fire with ghastly
+certainty; to fire in return was to waste their ammunition in the air.
+The men flung themselves face foremost on the deck, silent and watchful.
+
+Through it all Jim had been sitting crouched over his oar. He, unarmed,
+could not have fought had the chance offered; breaking out, once and
+again, into the solemn-sounding chant which he had been singing when he
+came up in his boat the evening before:--
+
+ "O my soul arise in heaven, Lord, for to yearde when
+ Jordan roll,
+ Roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll Jordan, roll,"--
+
+the words falling in with the sound of the water as it lapsed from them.
+
+"Stop that infernal noise, will you?" cried one of the men, impatiently.
+The noise stopped.
+
+"Hush, Harry,--don't swear!" expostulated another, beside whom was lying
+a man mortally wounded. "This is awful! 'tain't like going in fair and
+square, on your chance."
+
+"That's so,--it's enough to make a fellow pray," was the answer.
+
+Here Russell, putting up his hand, took hold of Jim's brawny black one
+with a gesture gentle as a woman's. It hurt him to hear his faithful
+friend even spoken to harshly. All this, while the hideous shower of
+death was dropping about them; the water was ebbing, ebbing,--falling
+and running out fast to sea, leaving them higher and drier on the sands;
+the gray dawn was steadily brightening into day.
+
+At this fearful pass a sublime scene was enacted. "Sirs!" said a
+voice,--it was Jim's voice, and in it sounded something so earnest and
+strange, that the men involuntarily turned their heads to look at him.
+Then this man stood up,--a black man,--a little while before a
+slave,--the great muscles swollen and gnarled with unpaid toil, the
+marks of the lash and the branding-iron yet plain upon his person, the
+shadows of a lifetime of wrongs and sufferings looking out of his eyes.
+"Sirs!" he said, simply, "somebody's got to die to get us out of dis,
+and it may as well be me,"--plunged overboard, put his toil-hardened
+shoulders to the boat; a struggle, a gasp, a mighty wrench,--pushed it
+off clear; then fell, face foremost, pierced by a dozen bullets. Free at
+last!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+ "_Ye died to live._"
+
+ BOKER
+
+
+The next day Jim was recounting this scene to some men in camp,
+describing it with feeling and earnestness, and winding up the narration
+by the declaration, "and the first man that says a nigger ain't as good
+as a white man, and a damn'd sight better'n those graybacks over yonder,
+well"--
+
+"Well, suppose he does?"--interrupted one of the men.
+
+"O, nothing, Billy Dodge,--only he and I'll have a few words to pass on
+the subject, that's all"; doubling up his fist and examining the big
+cords and muscles on it with curious and well-satisfied interest.
+
+"See here, Billy!" put in one of his comrades, "don't you go to having
+any argument with Jim,--he's a dabster with his tongue, Jim is."
+
+"Yes, and a devil with his fist," growled a sullen-looking fellow.
+
+"Just so,"--assented Jim,--"when a blackguard's round to feel it."
+
+"Well, Given, do you like the darkies well enough to take off your cap
+to them?" queried a sergeant standing near.
+
+"What are you driving at now, hey?"
+
+"O, not much; but you'll have to play second fiddle to them to-night.
+The General thinks they're as good as the rest of us, and a little bit
+better, and has sent over for the Fifty-fourth to lead the charge this
+evening. What have you got to say to that?"
+
+"Bull, for them! that's what I've got to say. Any objection?" looking
+round him.
+
+"Nary objec!" "They deserve it!" "They fought like tigers over on James
+Island!" "I hope they'll pepper the rebs well!"--"It ought to be a free
+fight, and no quarter, with them!" "Yes, for they get none if they're
+taken!" "Go in, Fifty-fourth!" These and the like exclamations broke
+from the men on all sides, with absolute heartiness and good will.
+
+"It seems to me," sneered a dapper little officer who had been looking
+and listening, "that the niggers have plenty of advocates here."
+
+Two or three of the men looked at Jim. "You may bet your pile on that,
+Major!" said he, with becoming gravity; "we love our friends, and we
+hate our enemies, and it's the dark-complected fellows that are the
+first down this way."
+
+"Pretty-looking set of friends!"
+
+"Well, they ain't much to look at, that's a fact; but I never heard of
+anybody saying you was to turn a cold shoulder on a helper because he
+was homely, except,"--this as the Major was walking away, "except a
+secesh, or a fool, or one of little Mac's staff officers."
+
+"Homely? what are you gassing about?" objected a little fellow from
+Massachusetts; "the Fifty-fourth is as fine-looking a set of men as
+shoulder rifles anywhere in the army."
+
+"Jack's sensitive about the credit of his State," chaffed a big Ohioan.
+"He wants to crack up these fellows, seeing they're his comrades. I say,
+Johnny, are all the white men down your way such little shavers as you?"
+
+"For a fellow that's all legs and no brains, you talk too much,"
+answered Johnny. "Have any of you seen the Fifty-fourth?"
+
+"I haven't." "Nor I." "Yes, I saw them at Port Royal." "And I." "And I."
+
+"Well, the Twenty-third was at Beaufort while they were there, and I
+used to go over to their camp and talk with them. I never saw fellows so
+in earnest; they seemed ready to die on the instant, if they could help
+their people, or walk into the slaveholders any, first. They were just
+full of it; and yet it seemed absurd to call 'em a black regiment; they
+were pretty much all colors, and some of 'em as white as I am."
+
+"Lord," said Jim, "that's not saying much, you've got a smutty face."
+
+The men laughed, Jack with the rest, as he dabbed at his heated,
+powder-stained countenance. "Come," said he, "that's no fair,--they're
+as white as I am, then, when I've just scrubbed; and some of them are
+first-raters, too; none of your rag, tag, and bobtail. There's one I
+remember, a man from Philadelphia, who walks round like a prince. He's a
+gentleman, every inch,--and he's rich,--and about the handsomest-looking
+specimen of humanity I've set eyes upon for an age."
+
+"Rich, is he? how do you know he's rich?"
+
+"I was over one night with Captain Ware, and he and this man got to
+talking about the pay for the Fifty-fourth. The government promised them
+regular pay, you see, and then when it got 'em refused to stick to its
+agreement, and they would take no less, so they haven't seen a dime
+since they enlisted; and it's a darned mean piece of business, that's my
+opinion of the matter, and I don't care who knows it," looking round
+belligerently.
+
+"Come, Bantam, don't crow so loud," interrupted the big Ohioan;
+"nobody's going to fight you on that statement; it's a shame, and no
+mistake. But what about your paragon?"
+
+"I'll tell you. The Captain was trying to convince him that they had
+better take what they could get till they got the whole, and that, after
+all, it was but a paltry difference. 'But,' said the man, 'it's not the
+money, though plenty of us are poor enough to make that an item. It's
+the badge of disgrace, the stigma attached, the dishonor to the
+government. If it were only two cents we wouldn't submit to it, for the
+difference would be made because we are colored, and we're not going to
+help degrade our own people, not if we starve for it. Besides, it's our
+flag, and our government now, and we've got to defend the honor of both
+against any assailants, North or South,--whether they're Republican
+Congressmen or rebel soldiers.' The Captain looked puzzled at that, and
+asked what he meant. 'Why,' said he, 'the United States government
+enlisted us as soldiers. Being such, we don't intend to disgrace the
+service by accepting the pay of servants.'"
+
+"That's the kind of talk," bawled Jim from a fence-rail upon which he
+was balancing. "I'd like to have a shake of that fellow's paw. What's
+his name, d'ye know?"
+
+"Ercildoune."
+
+"Hey?"
+
+"Ercildoune."
+
+"Jemime! Ercildoune,--from Philadelphia, you say?"
+
+"Yes,--do you know him?"
+
+"Well, no,--I don't exactly know him, but I think I know something about
+him. His pa's rich as a nob, if it's the one I mean,"--and then finished
+sotto voce, "it's Mrs. Surrey's brother, sure as a gun!"
+
+"Well, he ought to be rich, if he ain't. As we, that's the Captain and
+me, were walking away, the Captain said to one of the officers of the
+Fifty-fourth who'd been listening to the talk, 'It's easy for that man
+to preach self-denial for a principle. He's rich, I've heard. It don't
+hurt him any; but it's rather selfish to hold some of the rest up to
+his standard; and I presume that such a man as he has no end of
+influence with them!'
+
+"'As he should,' said his officer. 'Ercildoune has brains enough to
+stock a regiment, and refinement, and genius, and cultivation that would
+assure him the highest position in society or professional life anywhere
+out of America. He won't leave it though; for in spite of its wrongs to
+him he sees its greatness and goodness,--says that it is _his_, and that
+it is to be saved, it and all its benefits, for Americans,--no matter
+what the color of their skin,--of whom he is one. He sees plain enough
+that this war is going to break the slave's chain, and ultimately the
+stronger chain of prejudice that binds his people to the grindstone, and
+he's full of enthusiasm for it, accordingly; though I'm free to confess,
+the magnanimity of these colored men from the North who fight, on faith,
+for the government, is to me something amazing.'"
+
+"'Why,' said the Captain,--'why, any more from the North than from the
+South?'"
+
+"Why? the blacks down here can at least fight their ex-masters, and pay
+off some old scores; but for a man from the North who is free already,
+and so has nothing to gain in that way,--whose rights as a man and a
+citizen are denied,--for such a man to enlist and to fight, without
+bounty, pay, honor, or promotion,--without the promise of gaining
+anything whatever for himself,--condemned to a thankless task on the one
+side,--to a merciless death or even worse fate on the other,--facing
+all this because he has faith that the great republic will ultimately be
+redeemed; that some hands will gather in the harvest of this bloody
+sowing, though he be lying dead under it,--I tell you, the more I see of
+these men, the more I know of them, the more am I filled with admiration
+and astonishment.
+
+"Now here's this one of whom we are talking, Ercildoune, born with a
+silver spoon in his mouth: instead of eating with it, in peace and
+elegance, in some European home, look at him here. You said something
+about his lack of self-sacrifice. He's doing 'what he is from a
+principle; and beyond that, it's no wonder the men care for him: he has
+spent a small fortune on the most needy of them since they
+enlisted,--finding out which of them have families, or any one dependent
+on them, and helping them in the finest and most delicate way possible.
+There are others like him here, and it's a fortunate circumstance, for
+there's not a man but would suffer, himself,--and, what's more, let his
+family suffer at home,--before he'd give up the idea for which they are
+contending now."
+
+"'Well, good luck to them!' said the Captain as we came away; and so say
+I," finished Jack.
+
+"And I,"--"And I," responded some of the men. "We must see this man when
+they come over here."
+
+"I'll bet you a shilling," said Jim, pulling out a bit of currency,
+"that he'll make his mark to-night."
+
+"Lend us the change, Given, and I'll take you up," said one of the men.
+
+The others laughed. "He don't mean it," said Jim: which, indeed, he
+didn't. Nobody seemed inclined to run any risks by betting on the other
+side of so likely a proposition.
+
+This talk took place late in the afternoon, near the head-quarters of
+the commanding General; and the men directly scattered to prepare for
+the work of the evening: some to clean a bayonet, or furbish up a rifle;
+others to chat and laugh over the chances and to lay plans for the
+morrow,--the morrow which was for them never to dawn on earth; and yet
+others to sit down in their tents and write letters to the dear ones at
+home, making what might, they knew, be a final-farewell,--for the fight
+impending was to be a fierce one,--or to read a chapter in a little book
+carried from some quiet fireside, balancing accounts perchance, in
+anticipation of the call of the Great Captain to come up higher.
+
+Through the whole afternoon there had been a tremendous cannonading of
+the fort from the gunboats and the land forces: the smooth, regular
+engineer lines were broken, and the fresh-sodded embankments torn and
+roughened by the unceasing rain of shot and shell.
+
+About six o'clock there came moving up the island, over the burning
+sands and under the burning sky, a stalwart, splendid-appearing set of
+men, who looked equal to any daring, and capable of any heroism; men
+whom nothing could daunt and few things subdue. Now, weary,
+travel-stained, with the mire and the rain of a two days' tramp;
+weakened by the incessant strain and lack of food, having taken nothing
+for forty-eight hours save some crackers and cold coffee; with gaps in
+their ranks made by the death of comrades who had fallen in battle but a
+little time before,--under all these disadvantages, it was plain to be
+seen of what stuff these men were made, and for what work they were
+ready.
+
+As this regiment, the famous Fifty-fourth, came up the island to take
+its place at the head of the storming party in the assault on Wagner, it
+was cheered from all sides by the white soldiers, who recognized and
+honored the heroism which it had already shown, and of which it was soon
+to give such new and sublime proof.
+
+The evening, or rather the afternoon, was a lurid and sultry one. Great
+masses of clouds, heavy and black, were piled in the western sky,
+fringed here and there by an angry red, and torn by vivid streams of
+lightning. Not a breath of wind shook the leaves or stirred the high,
+rank grass by the water-side; a portentous and awful stillness filled
+the air,--the stillness felt by nature before a devastating storm.
+Quiet, with the like awful and portentous calm, the black regiment,
+headed by its young, fair-haired, knightly colonel, marched to its
+destined place and action.
+
+When within about six hundred yards of the fort it was halted at the
+head of the regiments already stationed, and the line of battle formed.
+The prospect was such as might daunt the courage of old and well-tried
+veterans, but these soldiers of a few weeks seemed but impatient to take
+the odds, and to make light of impossibilities. A slightly rising
+ground, raked by a murderous fire, to within a little distance of the
+battery; a ditch holding three feet of water; a straight lift of
+parapet, thirty feet high; an impregnable position, held by a desperate
+and invincible foe.
+
+Here the men were addressed in a few brief and burning words by their
+heroic commander. Here they were besought to glorify their whole race by
+the lustre of their deeds; here their faces shone with a look which
+said, "Though men, we are ready to do deeds, to achieve triumphs, worthy
+the gods!" here the word of command was given:--
+
+"We are ordered and expected to take Battery Wagner at the point of the
+bayonet. Are you ready?"
+
+"Ay, ay, sir! ready!" was the answer.
+
+And the order went pealing down the line, "Ready! Close ranks! Charge
+bayonets! Forward! Double-quick, march!"--and away they went, under a
+scattering fire, in one compact line till within one hundred feet of the
+fort, when the storm of death broke upon them. Every gun belched forth
+its great shot and shell; every rifle whizzed out its sharp-singing,
+death-freighted messenger. The men wavered not for an
+instant;--forward,--forward they went; plunged into the ditch; waded
+through the deep water, no longer of muddy hue, but stained crimson with
+their blood; and commenced to climb the parapet. The foremost line fell,
+and then the next, and the next. The ground was strewn with the wrecks
+of humanity, scattered prostrate, silent, where they fell,--or rolling
+under the very feet of the living comrades who swept onward to fill
+their places. On, over the piled-up mounds of dead and dying, of wounded
+and slain, to the mouth of the battery; seizing the guns; bayoneting the
+gunners at their posts; planting their flag and struggling around it;
+their leader on the walls, sword in hand, his blue eyes blazing, his
+fair face aflame, his clear voice calling out, "Forward, my brave
+boys!"--then plunging into the hell of battle before him. Forward it
+was. They followed him, gathered about him, gained an angle of the fort,
+and fought where he fell, around his prostrate body, over his peaceful
+heart,--shielding its dead silence by their living, pulsating
+ones,--till they, too, were stricken down; then hacked, hewn, battered,
+mangled, heroic, yet overcome, the remnant was beaten back.
+
+Ably sustained by their supporters, Anglo-African and Anglo-Saxon vied
+together to carry off the palm of courage and glory. All the world knows
+the last fought with heroism sublime: all the world forgets this and
+them in contemplating the deeds and the death of their compatriots. Said
+Napoleon at Austerlitz to a young Russian officer, overwhelmed with
+shame at yielding his sword, "Young man, be consoled: those who are
+conquered by my soldiers may still have titles to glory." To say that on
+that memorable night the last were surpassed by the first is still to
+leave ample margin on which to write in glowing characters the record of
+their deeds.
+
+As the men were clambering up the parapet their color-sergeant was shot
+dead, the colors trailing stained and wet in the dust beside him.
+Ercildoune, who was just behind, sprang forward, seized the staff from
+his dying hand, and mounted with it upward. A ball struck his right arm,
+yet ere it could fall shattered by his side, his left hand caught the
+flag and carried it onward. Even in the mad sweep of assault and death
+the men around him found breath and time to hurrah, and those behind him
+pressed more gallantly forward to follow such a lead. He kept in his
+place, the colors flying,--though faint with loss of blood and wrung
+with agony,--up the slippery steep; up to the walls of the fort; on the
+wall itself, planting the flag where the men made that brief, splendid
+stand, and melted away like snow before furnace-heat. Here a bayonet
+thrust met him and brought him down, a great wound in his brave breast,
+but he did not yield; dropping to his knees, pressing his unbroken arm
+upon the gaping wound,--bracing himself against a dead comrade,--the
+colors still flew; an inspiration to the men about him; a defiance to
+the foe.
+
+At last when the shattered ranks fell back, sullenly and slowly
+retreating, it was seen by those who watched him,--men lying for three
+hundred rods around in every form of wounded suffering,--that he was
+painfully working his way downward, still holding aloft the flag, bent
+evidently on saving it, and saving it as flag had rarely, if ever, been
+saved before.
+
+Some of the men had crawled, some had been carried, some hastily caught
+up and helped by comrades to a sheltered tent out of range of the fire;
+a hospital tent, they called it, if anything could bear that name which
+was but a place where men could lie to suffer and expire, without a
+bandage, a surgeon, or even a drop of cooling water to moisten parched
+and dying lips. Among these was Jim. He had a small field-glass in his
+pocket, and forgot or ignored his pain in his eager interest of watching
+through this the progress of the man and the flag, and reporting
+accounts to his no less eager companions. Black soldiers and white were
+alike mad with excitement over the deed; and fear lest the colors which
+had not yet dipped should at last bite the ground.
+
+Now and then he paused at some impediment: it was where the dead and
+dying were piled so thickly as to compel him to make a detour. Now and
+then he rested a moment to press his arm tighter against his torn and
+open breast. The rain fell in such torrents, the evening shadows were
+gathering so thickly, that they could scarcely trace his course, long
+before it was ended.
+
+Slowly, painfully, he dragged himself onward,--step by step down the
+hill, inch by inch across the ground,--to the door of the hospital; and
+then, while dying eyes brightened,--dying hands and even shattered
+stumps were thrown into the air,--in brief, while dying men held back
+their souls from the eternities to cheer him,--gasped out, "I did--but
+do--my duty, boys,--and the dear--old flag--never once--touched the
+ground,"--and then, away from the reach and sight of its foes, in the
+midst of its defenders, who loved and were dying for it, the flag at
+last fell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Meanwhile, other troops had gone up to the encounter; other regiments
+strove to win what these men had failed to gain; and through the night,
+and the storm, and the terrific reception, did their gallant
+endeavor--in vain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The next day a flag of truce went up to beg the body of the heroic young
+chief who had so led that marvellous assault. It came back without him.
+A ditch, deep and wide, had been dug; his body, and those of twenty-two
+of his men found dead upon and about him, flung into it in one common
+heap and the word sent back was, "We have buried him with his niggers."
+
+It was well done. The fair, sweet face and gallant breast lie peacefully
+enough under their stately monument of ebony.
+
+It was well done. What more fitting close of such a life,--what fate
+more welcome to him who had fought with them, had loved, and believed in
+them, had led them to death,--than to lie with them when they died?
+
+It was well done. Slavery buried these men, black and white,
+together,--black and white in a common grave. Let Liberty see to it,
+then, that black and white be raised together in a life better than the
+old.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+ "_Spirits are not finely touched
+ But to fine issues._"
+
+ SHAKESPEARE
+
+
+Surrey was to depart for his command on Monday night, and as there were
+various matters which demanded his attention in town ere leaving, he
+drove Francesca to the city on the preceding Sunday,--a soft clear
+summer evening, full of pleasant sights and sounds. They scarcely spoke
+as, hand in hand, they sat drinking in the scene whilst the old gray,
+for they wished no high-stepping prancers for this ride, jogged on the
+even tenor of his way. Above them, the blue of the sky never before
+seemed so deep and tender, while in it floated fleecy clouds of delicate
+amber, rose, and gold, like gossamer robes of happy spirits invisible to
+human eyes. The leaves and grass just stirred in the breeze, making a
+slight, musical murmur, and across them fell long shadows cast by the
+westering sun. A sentiment so sweet and pleasurable as to be tinged with
+pain, took possession of these young, susceptible souls, as the
+influences of the time closed about them. In our happiest moments, our
+moments of utmost exaltation, it is always thus:--when earth most nearly
+approaches the beatitudes of heaven, and the spirit stretches forward
+with a vain longing for the far off, which seems but a little way
+beyond; the unattained and dim, which for a space come near.
+
+"Darling!" said Surrey softly, "does it not seem easy now to die?"
+
+"Yes, Willie," she whispered, "I feel as though it would be stepping
+over a very little stream to some new and beautiful shore."
+
+Doubtless, when a pure and great soul is close to eternity, ministering
+angels draw nigh to one soon to be of their number, and cast something
+of the peace and glory of their presence on the spirit yet held by its
+cerements of clay.
+
+At last the ride and the evening had an end. The country and its dear
+delights were mere memories,--fresh, it is true, but memories still, and
+no longer realities,--in the luxurious rooms of their hotel.
+
+Evidently Surrey had something to say, which he hesitated and feared to
+utter. Again and again, when Francesca was talking of his plans and
+purposes, trusting and hoping that he might see no hard service, nor be
+called upon for any exposing duty, "not yet awhile," she prayed, at
+least,--again and again he made as if to speak, and then, ere she could
+notice the movement, shook his head with a gesture of silence, or--she
+seeing it, and asking what it was he had to say--found ready utterance
+for some other thought, and whispered to himself, "not yet; not quite
+yet. Let her rest in peace a little space longer."
+
+They sat talking far into the night, this last night that they could
+spend together in so long a time,--how long, God, with whom are hid the
+secrets of the future, could alone tell. They talked of what had passed,
+which was ended,--and of what was to come, which was not sure but full
+of hope,--but of both with a feeling that quickened their heart-throbs,
+and brought happy tears to their eyes.
+
+Twice or thrice a sound from some far distance, undecided, yet full of a
+solemn melody, came through the open window, borne to their ears on the
+still air of night,--something so undefined as not consciously to arrest
+their attention, yet still penetrating their nerves and affecting some
+fine, inner sense of feeling, for both shivered as though a chill wind
+had blown across them, and Surrey--half ashamed of the confession--said,
+"I don't know what possesses me, but I hear dead marches as plainly as
+though I were following a soldier's funeral."
+
+Francesca at that grew white, crept closer to his breast, and spread out
+her arms as if to defend him by that slight shield from some impending
+danger; then both laughed at these foolish and superstitious fancies,
+and went on with their cheerful and tender talk.
+
+Whatever the sound was, it grew plainer and came nearer; and, pausing to
+listen, they discovered it was a mighty swell of human voices and the
+marching of many feet.
+
+"A regiment going through," said they, and ran to the window to see if
+it passed their way, looking for it up the long street, which lay solemn
+and still in the moonlight. On either side the palace-like houses stood
+stately and dark, like giant sentinels guarding the magnificent avenue,
+from whence was banished every sight and sound of the busy life of day;
+not a noise, not a footfall, not a solitary soul abroad, not a wave nor
+a vestige of the great restless sea of humanity which a little space
+before surged through it, and which, in a little while to come, would
+rise and swell to its full, and then ebb, and fall, and drop away once
+more into silence and nothingness.
+
+Through this white stillness there came marching a regiment of men,
+without fife or drum, moving to the music of a refrain which lifted and
+fell on the quiet air. It was the Battle Hymn of the Republic,--and the
+two listeners presently distinguished the words,--
+
+ "In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea,
+ With a glory in his bosom that transfigures you and me;
+ As he died to make men holy, let us die to make men free,
+ While God is marching on."
+
+The effect of this; the thousand voices which sang; the marching of
+twice one thousand feet; the majesty of the words; the deserted street;
+the clear moonlight streaming over the men, reflected from their
+gleaming bayonets, brightening the faded blue of their uniforms,
+illumining their faces which, one and all, seemed to wear--and probably
+_did_ wear--a look more solemn and earnest than that of common life and
+feeling,--the combined effect of it all was something indescribably
+impressive:--inspiring, yet solemn.
+
+They stood watching and listening till the pageant had vanished, and
+then turned back into their room, Francesca taking up the refrain and
+singing the line,
+
+ "As he died to make men holy, let us die to make men free,
+ While God is marching on."
+
+Surrey's face brightened at the rapt expression of hers. "Sing it again,
+dearie!" he said. She sang it again. "Do you mean it?" he asked then.
+"Can you sing it, and mean it with all your heart, for me?"
+
+She looked at him with an expression of anxiety and pain. "What are you
+asking, Willie?"
+
+He sat down; taking her upon his knee, and with the old fond gesture,
+holding her head to his heart,--"I should have told you before, dearie,
+but I did not wish to throw any shadow on the happy days we have been
+spending together; they were few and brief enough without marring them;
+and I was certain of the effect it would have upon you, by your
+incessant anxiety for Robert."
+
+She drew a long, gasping sigh, and started away from his hold: "O
+Willie, you are not going to--"
+
+His arm drew her back to her resting-place. "I do not return to my
+command, darling. I am to raise a black brigade."
+
+"Freedmen?"
+
+"Yes, dearie."
+
+"O Willie,--and that act just passed!"
+
+"It is true; yet, after all, it is but one risk more."
+
+"One? O Willie, it is a thousand. You had that many chances of escape
+where you were; you might be wounded and captured a score of times, and
+come home safe at last; but this!"
+
+"I know."
+
+"To go into every battle with the sentence of death hanging over you; to
+know that if you are anywhere captured, anyhow made prisoner, you are
+condemned to die,--O Willie, I can't bear it; I can't bear it! I shall
+die, or go mad, to carry such a thought all the time."
+
+For answer he only held her close, with his face resting upon her hair,
+and in the stillness they could hear each other's heart beat.
+
+"It is God's service," he said, at last.
+
+"I know."
+
+"It will end slavery and the war more effectually than aught else."
+
+"I know."
+
+"It will make these freedmen, wherever they fight, free men. It will
+give them and their people a sense of dignity and power that might
+otherwise take generations to secure."
+
+"I know."
+
+"And I. Both feeling and knowing this, who so fit to yield and to do for
+such a cause? If those who see do not advance, the blind will never
+walk."
+
+Silence for a space again fell between them. Francesca moved in his arm.
+
+"Dearie." She looked up. "I want to do no half service. I go into this
+heart and soul, but I do not wish to go alone. It will be so much to me
+to know that you are quite willing, and bade me go. Think what it is."
+
+She did. For an instant all sacrifices appeared easy, all burdens light.
+She could send him out to death unfaltering. One of those sublime moods
+in which martyrdom seems glorious filled and possessed her. She took
+away her clinging arms from his neck, and said, "Go,--whether it be for
+life or for death; whether you come back to me or go up to God; I am
+willing--glad--to yield you to such a cause."
+
+It was finished. There was nothing more to be said. Both had climbed the
+mount of sacrifice, and sat still with God.
+
+After a while the cool gray dawn stole into their room. The night had
+passed in this communion, and another day come.
+
+There were many "last things" which claimed Surrey's attention; and he,
+wishing to get through them early so as to have the afternoon and
+evening undisturbed with Francesca, plunged into a stinging bath to
+refresh him for the day, breakfasted, and was gone.
+
+He attended to his business, came across many an old acquaintance and
+friend, some of whom greeted him coldly; a few cut him dead; whilst
+others put out their hands with cordial frankness, and one or two
+congratulated him heartily upon his new condition and happiness. These
+last gave him fresh courage for the task which he had set himself. If
+friends regarded the matter thus, surely they--his father and
+mother--would relent, when he came to say what might be a final adieu.
+
+He ran up the steps, rang the bell, and, speaking a pleasant word to the
+old servant, went directly to his mother's room. His father had not yet
+gone down town; thus he found them together. They started at seeing him,
+and his mother, forgetting for the instant all her pride, chagrin, and
+anger, had her arms about his neck, with the cry, "O Willie, Willie,"
+which came from the depths of her heart; then seeing her husband's face,
+and recovering herself, sat down cold and still.
+
+It was a painful interview. He could not leave without seeing them once
+more; he longed for a loving good by; but after that first outburst he
+almost wished he had not forced the meeting. He did not speak of his
+wife, nor did they; but a barrier as of adamant was raised between them,
+and he felt as though congealing in the breath of an iceberg. At length
+he rose to go.
+
+"Father!" he said then, "perhaps you will care to know that I do not
+return to my old command, but have been commissioned to raise a brigade
+from the freedmen."
+
+Both father and mother knew the awful peril of this service, and both
+cried, half in suffering, half in anger, "This is your wife's work!"
+while his father added, with a passionate exclamation, "It is right,
+quite right, that you should identify yourself with her people. Well, go
+your way. You have made your bed; lie in it."
+
+The blood flushed into Surrey's face. He opened his lips, and shut them
+again. At last he said, "Father, will you never forego this cruel
+prejudice?"
+
+"Never!" answered his mother, quickly. "Never!" repeated his father,
+with bitter emphasis. "It is a feeling that will never die out, and
+ought never to die out, so long as any of the race remain in America.
+She belongs to it, that is enough."
+
+Surrey urged no further; but with few words, constrained on their
+part,--though under its covering of pride the mother's heart was
+bleeding for him,--sad and earnest on his, the farewell was spoken, and
+they watched him out of the room. How and when would they see him again?
+
+There was one other call upon his time. The day was wearing into the
+afternoon, but he would not neglect it. This was to see his old
+_protege_, Abram Franklin, in whom he had never lost interest, and for
+whose welfare he had cared, though he had not seen him in more than two
+years. He knew that Abram was ill, had been so for a long time, and
+wished to see him and speak to him a few friendly and cheering
+words,--sure, from what the boy's own hand had written, that this would
+be his last opportunity upon earth to so do.
+
+Thus he went on from his father's stately palace up Fifth Avenue, turned
+into the quiet side street, and knocked at the little green door. Mrs.
+Franklin came to open it, her handsome face thinner and sadder than of
+old. She caught Surrey's hand between both of hers with a delighted cry:
+"Is it you, Mr. Willie? How glad I am to see you! How glad Abram will
+be! How good of you to come!" And, holding his hand as she used when he
+was a boy, she led him up stairs to the sick-room. This room was even
+cosier than the two below; its curtains and paper cheerfuller; its
+furniture of quainter and more hospitable aspect; its windows letting in
+more light and air; everything clean and homely, and pleasant for weary,
+suffering eyes to look upon.
+
+Abram was propped up in bed, his dark, intelligent face worn to a
+shadow, fiery spots breaking through the tawny hue upon cheeks and lips,
+his eyes bright with fever. Surrey saw, as he came and sat beside him,
+that for him earthly sorrow and toil were almost ended.
+
+He had brought some fruit and flowers, and a little book. This last
+Abram, having thanked him eagerly for all, stretched out his hand to
+examine.
+
+"You see, Mr. Willie, I have not gotten over my old love," he said, as
+his fingers closed upon it. "Whittier? 'In War-Time'? That is fine. I
+can read about it, if I can't do anything in it," and he lay for a while
+quietly turning over the pages. Mrs. Franklin had gone out to do an
+errand, and the two were alone.
+
+"Do you know, Mr. Willie," said Abram, putting his finger upon the
+titles of two successive poems, "The Waiting," and "The Summons," "I had
+hard work to submit to this sickness a few months ago? I fought against
+it strong; do you know why?"
+
+"Not your special reason. What was it?"
+
+"I had waited so long, you see,--I, and my people,--for a chance. It
+made me quite wild to watch this big fight go on, and know that it was
+all about us, and not be allowed to participate; and at last when the
+chance came, and the summons, and the way was opened, I couldn't answer,
+nor go. It's not the dying I care for; I'd be willing to die the first
+battle I was in; but I want to do something for the cause before death
+comes."
+
+The book was lying open where it had fallen from his hand, and Surrey,
+glancing down at the very poem of which he spoke, said gently, "Here is
+your answer, Franklin, better than any I can make; it ought to comfort
+you; listen, it is God's truth!
+
+ 'O power to do! O baffled will!
+ O prayer and action! ye are one;
+ Who may not strive may yet fulfil
+ The harder task of standing still,
+ And good but wished with God is done!'"
+
+"It is so," said Abram. "You act and I pray, and you act for me and
+mine. I'd like to be under you when you get the troops you were telling
+me about; but--God knows best."
+
+Surrey sat gazing earnestly into space, crowded by emotions called up by
+these last words, whilst Abram lay watching him with admiring and loving
+eyes. "For me and mine," he repeated softly, his look fastening on the
+blue sleeve, which hung, limp and empty, near his hand. This he put out
+cautiously, but drew it back at some slight movement from his companion;
+then, seeing that he was still absorbed, advanced it, once more, and
+slowly, timidly, gently, lifted it to his mouth, pressing his lips upon
+it as upon a shrine. "For me and mine!" he whispered,--"for me and
+mine!" tears dimming the pathetic, dying eyes.
+
+The peaceful quiet was broken by a tempest of awful sound,--groans and
+shrieks and yells mingled in horrible discord, blended with the
+trampling of many feet,--noises which seemed to their startled and
+excited fancies like those of hell itself. The next moment a door was
+flung open; and Mrs. Franklin, bruised, lame, her garments torn, blood
+flowing from a cut on her head, staggered into the room. "O Lord! O Lord
+Jesus!" she cried, "the day of wrath has come!" and fell, shuddering and
+crying, on the floor.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+ "_Will the future come? It seems that we may almost ask
+ this question, when we see such terrible shadow._"
+
+ VICTOR HUGO
+
+
+Here it will be necessary to consider some facts which, while they are
+rather in the domain of the grave recorder of historical events, than in
+that of the narrator of personal experiences, are yet essential to the
+comprehension of the scenes in which Surrey and Francesca took such
+tragic parts.
+
+Following the proclamation for a draft in the city of New York, there
+had been heard on all sides from the newspaper press which sympathized
+with and aided the rebellion, premonitions of the coming storm;
+denunciations of the war, the government, the soldiers, of the harmless
+and inoffensive negroes; angry incitings of the poor man to hatred
+against the rich, since the rich man could save himself from the
+necessity of serving in the ranks by the payment of three hundred
+dollars of commutation money; incendiary appeals to the worst passions
+of the most ignorant portion of the community; and open calls to
+insurrection and arms to resist the peaceable enforcement of a law
+enacted in furtherance of the defence of the nation's life.
+
+Doubtless this outbreak had been intended at the time of the darkest and
+most disastrous days of the Republic; when the often-defeated and sorely
+dispirited Army of the Potomac was marching northward to cover
+Washington and Baltimore, and the victorious legions of traitors under
+Lee were swelling across the border, into a loyal State; when Grant
+stood in seemingly hopeless waiting before Vicksburg, and Banks before
+Port Hudson; and the whole people of the North, depressed and
+disheartened by the continued series of defeats to our arms, were
+beginning to look each at his neighbor, and whisper with white lips,
+"Perhaps, after all, this struggle is to be in vain."
+
+Had it been attempted at this precise time, it would, without question,
+have been, not a riot, but an insurrection,--would have been a portion
+of the army of rebellion, organized and effective for the prosecution of
+the war, and not a mob, hideous and devilish in its work of destruction,
+yet still a mob; and as such to be beaten down and dispersed in a
+comparatively short space of time.
+
+On the morning of Monday, the thirteenth of July, began this outbreak,
+unparalleled in atrocities by anything in American history, and
+equalled only by the horrors of the worst days of the French Revolution.
+Gangs of men and boys, composed of railroad _employees_, workers in
+machine-shops, and a vast crowd of those who lived by preying upon
+others, thieves, pimps, professional ruffians,--the scum of the
+city,--jail-birds, or those who were running with swift feet to enter
+the prison-doors, began to gather on the corners, and in streets and
+alleys where they lived; from thence issuing forth they visited the
+great establishments on the line of their advance, commanding their
+instant close and the companionship of the workmen,--many of them
+peaceful and orderly men,--on pain of the destruction of one and a
+murderous assault upon the other, did not their orders meet with instant
+compliance.
+
+A body of these, five or six hundred strong, gathered about one of the
+enrolling-offices in the upper part of the city, where the draft was
+quietly proceeding, and opened the assault upon it by a shower of clubs,
+bricks, and paving-stones torn from the streets, following it up by a
+furious rush into the office. Lists, records, books, the drafting-wheel,
+every article of furniture or work in the room was rent in pieces, and
+strewn about the floor or flung into the street; while the law officers,
+the newspaper reporters,--who are expected to be everywhere,--and the
+few peaceable spectators, were compelled to make a hasty retreat through
+an opportune rear exit, accelerated by the curses and blows of the
+assailants.
+
+A safe in the room, which contained some of the hated records, was
+fallen upon by the men, who strove to wrench open its impregnable lock
+with their naked hands, and, baffled, beat them on its iron doors and
+sides till they were stained with blood, in a mad frenzy of senseless
+hate and fury. And then, finding every portable article
+destroyed,--their thirst for ruin growing by the little drink it had
+had,--and believing, or rather hoping, that the officers had taken
+refuge in the upper rooms, set fire to the house, and stood watching the
+slow and steady lift of the flames, filling the air with demoniac
+shrieks and yells, while they waited for the prey to escape from some
+door or window, from the merciless fire to their merciless hands. One of
+these, who was on the other side of the street, courageously stepped
+forward, and, telling them that they had utterly demolished all they
+came to seek, informed them that helpless women and little children were
+in the house, and besought them to extinguish the flames and leave the
+ruined premises; to disperse, or at least to seek some other scene.
+
+By his dress recognizing in him a government official, so far from
+hearing or heeding his humane appeal, they set upon him with sticks and
+clubs, and beat him till his eyes were blind with blood, and he--bruised
+and mangled--succeeded in escaping to the handful of police who stood
+helpless before this howling crew, now increased to thousands. With
+difficulty and pain the inoffensive tenants escaped from the rapidly
+spreading fire, which, having devoured the house originally lighted,
+swept across the neighboring buildings till the whole block stood a mass
+of burning flames. The firemen came up tardily and reluctantly, many of
+them of the same class as the miscreants who surrounded them, and who
+cheered at their approach, but either made no attempt to perform their
+duty, or so feeble and farcical a one, as to bring disgrace upon a
+service they so generally honor and ennoble.
+
+At last, when there was here nothing more to accomplish, the mob,
+swollen to a frightful size, including myriads of wretched, drunken
+women, and the half-grown, vagabond boys of the pavements, rushed
+through the intervening streets, stopping cars and insulting peaceable
+citizens on their way, to an armory where were manufactured and stored
+carbines and guns for the government. In anticipation of the attack,
+this, earlier in the day, had been fortified by a police squad capable
+of coping with an ordinary crowd of ruffians, but as chaff before fire
+in the presence of these murderous thousands. Here, as before, the
+attack was begun by a rain of missiles gathered from the streets; less
+fatal, doubtless, than more civilized arms, but frightful in the ghastly
+wounds and injuries they inflicted. Of this no notice was taken by those
+who were stationed within; it was repeated. At last, finding they were
+treated with contemptuous silence, and that no sign of surrender was
+offered, the crowd swayed back,--then forward,--in a combined attempt to
+force the wide entrance-doors. Heavy hammers and sledges, which had been
+brought from forges and workshops, caught up hastily as they gathered
+the mechanics into their ranks, were used with frightful violence to
+beat them in,--at last successfully. The foremost assailants began to
+climb the stairs, but were checked, and for the moment driven back by
+the fire of the officers, who at last had been commanded to resort to
+their revolvers. A half-score fell wounded; and one, who had been acting
+in some sort as their leader,--a big, brutal, Irish ruffian,--dropped
+dead.
+
+The pause was but for an instant. As the smoke cleared away there was a
+general and ferocious onslaught upon the armory; curses, oaths,
+revilings, hideous and obscene blasphemy, with terrible yells and cries,
+filled the air in every accent of the English tongue save that spoken by
+a native American. Such were there mingled with the sea of sound, but
+they were so few and weak as to be unnoticeable in the roar of voices.
+The paving stones flew like hail, until the street was torn into gaps
+and ruts, and every window-pane, and sash, and doorway, was smashed or
+broken. Meanwhile, divers attempts were made to fire the building, but
+failed through haste or ineffectual materials, or the vigilant
+watchfulness of the besieged. In the midst of this gallant defence, word
+was brought to the defenders from head-quarters that nothing could be
+done for their support; and that, if they would save their lives, they
+must make a quick and orderly retreat. Fortunately, there was a side
+passage with which the mob was unacquainted, and, one by one they
+succeeded in gaining this, and vanishing. A few, too faithful or too
+plucky to retreat before such a foe, persisted in remaining at their
+posts till the fire, which had at last been communicated to the
+building, crept unpleasantly near; then, by dropping from sill to sill
+of the broken windows, or sliding by their hands and feet down the rough
+pipes and stones, reached the pavement,--but not without injuries and
+blows, and broken bones, which disabled for a lifetime, if indeed they
+did not die in the hospitals to which a few of the more mercifully
+disposed carried them.
+
+The work thus begun, continued,--gathering in force and fury as the day
+wore on. Police stations, enrolling-offices, rooms or buildings used in
+any way by government authority, or obnoxious as representing the
+dignity of law, were gutted, destroyed, then left to the mercy of the
+flames. Newspaper offices, whose issues had been a fire in the rear of
+the nation's armies by extenuating and defending treason, and through
+violent and incendiary appeals stirring up "lewd fellows of the baser
+sort" to this very carnival of ruin and blood, were cheered as the crowd
+went by. Those that had been faithful to loyalty and law were hooted,
+stoned, and even stormed by the army of miscreants who were only driven
+off by the gallant and determined charge of the police, and in one place
+by the equally gallant, and certainly unique defence, which came from
+turning the boiling water from the engines upon the howling wretches,
+who, unprepared for any such warm reception as this, beat a precipitate
+and general retreat. Before night fell it was no longer one vast crowd
+collected in a single section, but great numbers of gatherings,
+scattered over the whole length and breadth of the city,--some of them
+engaged in actual work of demolition and ruin; others with clubs and
+weapons in their hands, prowling round apparently with no definite
+atrocity to perpetrate, but ready for any iniquity that might
+offer,--and, by way of pastime, chasing every stray police officer, or
+solitary soldier, or inoffensive negro, who crossed the line of their
+vision; these three objects--the badge of a defender of the law,--the
+uniform of the Union army,--the skin of a helpless and outraged
+race--acted upon these madmen as water acts upon a rabid dog.
+
+Late in the afternoon a crowd which could have numbered not less than
+ten thousand, the majority of whom were ragged, frowzy, drunken women,
+gathered about the Orphan Asylum for Colored Children,--a large and
+beautiful building, and one of the most admirable and noble charities of
+the city. When it became evident, from the menacing cries and groans of
+the multitude, that danger, if not destruction, was meditated to the
+harmless and inoffensive inmates, a flag of truce appeared, and an
+appeal was made in their behalf, by the principal, to every sentiment of
+humanity which these beings might possess,--a vain appeal! Whatever
+human feeling had ever, if ever, filled these souls was utterly drowned
+and washed away in the tide of rapine and blood in which they had been
+steeping themselves. The few officers who stood guard over the doors,
+and manfully faced these demoniac legions, were beaten down and flung
+to one side, helpless and stunned whilst the vast crowd rushed in. All
+the articles upon which they could seize--beds, bedding, carpets,
+furniture,--the very garments of the fleeing inmates, some of these torn
+from their persons as they sped by--were carried into the streets, and
+hurried off by the women and children who stood ready to receive the
+goods which their husbands, sons, and fathers flung to their care. The
+little ones, many of them, assailed and beaten; all,--orphans and
+caretakers,--exposed to every indignity and every danger, driven on to
+the street,--the building was fired. This had been attempted whilst the
+helpless children--some of them scarce more than babies--were still in
+their rooms; but this devilish consummation was prevented by the heroism
+of one man. He, the Chief of the Fire Department, strove by voice and
+arm to stay the endeavor; and when, overcome by superior numbers, the
+brands had been lit and piled, with naked hands, and in the face of
+threatened death, he tore asunder the glowing embers, and trod them
+under foot. Again the effort was made, and again failed through the
+determined and heroic opposition of this solitary soul. Then, on the
+front steps, in the midst of these drunken and infuriate thousands, he
+stood up and besought them, if they cared nothing for themselves nor for
+these hapless orphans, that they would not bring lasting disgrace upon
+the city by destroying one of its noblest charities, which had for its
+object nothing but good.
+
+He was answered on all sides by yells and execrations, and frenzied
+shrieks of "Down with the nagurs!" coupled with every oath and every
+curse that malignant hate of the blacks could devise, and drunken, Irish
+tongues could speak. It had been decreed that this building was to be
+razed to the ground. The house was fired in a thousand places, and in
+less than two hours the walls crashed in,--a mass of smoking, blackened
+ruins; whilst the children wandered through the streets, a prey to
+beings who were wild beasts in everything save the superior ingenuity of
+man to agonize and torture his victims.
+
+Frightful as the day had been, the night was yet more hideous; since to
+the horrors which were seen was added the greater horror of deeds which
+might be committed in the darkness; or, if they were seen, it was by the
+lurid glare of burning buildings,--the red flames of which--flung upon
+the stained and brutal faces, the torn and tattered garments, of men and
+women who danced and howled around the scene of ruin they had
+caused--made the whole aspect of affairs seem more like a gathering of
+fiends rejoicing in Pandemonium than aught with which creatures of flesh
+and blood had to do.
+
+Standing on some elevated point, looking over the great city, which
+presented, as usual, at night, a solemn and impressive show, the
+spectator was thrilled with a fearful admiration by the sights and
+sounds which gave to it a mysterious and awful interest. A thousand
+fires streamed up against the sky, making darkness visible; and from all
+sides came a combination of noises such as might be heard from an
+asylum in which were gathered the madmen of the world.
+
+The next morning's sun rose on a city which was ruled by a reign of
+terror. Had the police possessed the heads of Hydra and the arms of
+Briareus, and had these heads all seen, these arms all fought, they
+would have been powerless against the multitude of opposers. Outbreaks
+were made, crowds gathered, houses burned, streets barricaded, fights
+enacted, in a score of places at once. Where the officers appeared they
+were irretrievably beaten and overcome; their stand, were it ever so
+short, but inflaming the passions of the mob to fresh deeds of violence.
+Stores were closed; the business portion of the city deserted; the large
+works and factories emptied of men, who had been sent home by their
+employers, or were swept into the ranks of the marauding bands. The city
+cars, omnibuses, hacks, were unable to run, and remained under shelter.
+Every telegraph wire was cut, the posts torn up, the operators driven
+from their offices. The mayor, seeing that civil power was helpless to
+stem this tide, desired to call the military to his aid, and place the
+city under martial law, but was opposed by the Governor,--a governor,
+who, but a few days before, had pronounced the war a failure; and not
+only predicted, but encouraged this mob rule, which was now crushing
+everything beneath its heavy and ensanguined feet. This man, through
+almost two days of these awful scenes, remained at a quiet seaside
+retreat but a few miles from the city. Coming to it on the afternoon of
+the second day,--instead of ordering cannon planted in the streets,
+giving these creatures opportunity to retire to their homes, and, in the
+event of refusal, blowing them there by powder and ball,--he first went
+to the point where was collected the chiefest mob, and proceeded to
+address them. Before him stood incendiaries, thieves, and murderers, who
+even then were sacking dwelling-houses, and butchering powerless and
+inoffensive beings. These wretches he apostrophized as "My friends,"
+repeating the title again and again in the course of his harangue,
+assuring them that he was there as a proof of his friendship,--which he
+had demonstrated by "sending his adjutant-general to Washington, to have
+the draft stopped"; begging them to "wait for his return"; "to separate
+now as good citizens"; with the promise that they "might assemble again
+whenever they wished to so do"; meanwhile, he would "take care of their
+rights." This model speech was incessantly interrupted by tremendous
+cheering and frantic demonstrations of delight,--one great fellow almost
+crushing the Governor in his enthusiastic embrace. This ended, he
+entered a carriage, and was driven through the blackened, smoking scenes
+of Monday's devastations; through fresh vistas of outrage, of the day's
+execution; bland, gracious, smiling. Wherever he appeared, cheer upon
+cheer rent the air from these crowds of drunken blasphemers; and in one
+place the carriage in which he sat was actually lifted from the ground,
+and carried some rods, by hands yet red with deeds of arson and murder;
+while from all sides voices cried out, "Will ye stop the draft,
+Gov'nur?" "Bully boy!" "Ye're the man for us!" "Hooray for Gov'nur
+Saymoor!" Thus, through the midst of this admiring and applauding crowd,
+this high officer of the law, sworn to maintain public peace, moved to
+his hotel, where he was met by a despatch from Washington, informing him
+that five regiments were under arms and on their way to put an end to
+this bloody assistance to the Southern war.
+
+His allies in newspaper offices attempted to throw the blame upon the
+loyal press and portion of the community. This was but a repetition of
+the cry, raised by traitors in arms, that the government, struggling for
+life in their deadly hold, was responsible for the war: "If thou wouldst
+but consent to be murdered peaceably, there could be no strife."
+
+These editors outraged common sense, truth, and decency, by speaking of
+the riots as an "uprising of the people to defend their liberties,"--"an
+opposition on the part of the workingmen to an unjust and oppressive
+law, enacted in favor of the men of wealth and standing." As though the
+_people_ of the great metropolis were incendiaries, robbers, and
+assassins; as though the poor were to demonstrate their indignation
+against the rich by hunting and stoning defenceless women and children;
+torturing and murdering men whose only offence was the color God gave
+them, or men wearing the self-same uniform as that which they declared
+was to be thrust upon them at the behest of the rich and the great.
+
+It was absurd and futile to characterize this new Reign of Terror as
+anything but an effort on the part of Northern rebels to help Southern
+ones, at the most critical moment of the war,--with the State militia
+and available troops absent in a neighboring Commonwealth,--and the
+loyal people unprepared. These editors and their coadjutors, men of
+brains and ability, were of that most poisonous growth,--traitors to the
+Government and the flag of their country,--renegade Americans. Let it,
+however, be written plainly and graven deeply, that the tribes of
+savages--the hordes of ruffians--found ready to do their loathsome
+bidding, were not of native growth, nor American born.
+
+While it is true that there were some glib-tongued fellows who spoke the
+language without foreign accent, all of them of the lowest order of
+Democratic ward-politicians, of creatures skulking from the outstretched
+arm of avenging law; while the most degraded of the German population
+were represented; while it is also true that there were Irish, and
+Catholic Irish too,--industrious, sober, intelligent people,--who
+indignantly refused participation in these outrages, and mourned over
+the barbarities which were disgracing their national name; it is
+pre-eminently true,--proven by thousands of witnesses, and testified to
+by numberless tongues,--that the masses, the rank and file, the almost
+entire body of rioters, were the worst classes of Irish emigrants,
+infuriated by artful appeals, and maddened by the atrocious whiskey of
+thousands of grog-shops.
+
+By far the most infamous part of these cruelties was that which wreaked
+every species of torture and lingering death upon the colored people of
+the city,--men, women, and children, old and young, strong and feeble
+alike. Hundreds of these fell victims to the prejudice fostered by
+public opinion, incorporated in our statute-books, sanctioned by our
+laws, which here and thus found legitimate outgrowth and action. The
+horrors which blanched the face of Christendom were but the bloody
+harvest of fields sown by society, by cultured men and women, by speech,
+and book, and press, by professions and politics, nay, by the pulpit
+itself, and the men who there make God's truth a lie,--garbling or
+denying the inspired declaration that "He has made of one blood all
+people to dwell upon the face of the earth"; and that he, the All-Just
+and Merciful One, "is no respecter of persons."
+
+This riot, begun ostensibly to oppose the enforcement of a single law,
+developed itself into a burning and pillaging assault upon the homes and
+property of peaceful citizens. To realize this, it was only necessary to
+walk the streets, if that were possible, through those days of riot and
+conflagration, observe the materials gathered into the vast, moving
+multitudes, and scrutinize the faces of those of whom they were
+composed,--deformed, idiotic, drunken, imbecile, poverty-stricken;
+seamed with every line which wretchedness could draw or vicious habits
+and associations delve. To walk these streets and look upon these faces
+was like a fearful witnessing in perspective of the last day, when the
+secrets of life, more loathsome than those of death, shall be laid bare
+in all their hideous deformity and ghastly shame.
+
+The knowledge of these people and their deeds was sufficient to create a
+paralysis of fear, even where they were not seen. Indeed, there was
+terror everywhere. High and low, rich and poor, cultured and ignorant,
+all shivered in its awful grasp. Upon stately avenues and noisome alleys
+it fell with the like blackness of darkness. Women cried aloud to God
+with the same agonized entreaty from knees bent on velvet carpets or
+bare and dingy floors. Men wandered up and down, prisoners in their own
+homes, and cursed or prayed with equal fury or intensity whether the
+homes were simple or splendid. Here one surveyed all his costly store of
+rare and exquisite surroundings, and shook his head as he gazed, ominous
+and foreboding. There, another of darker hue peered out from garret
+casement, or cellar light, or broken window-pane, and, shuddering,
+watched some woman stoned and beaten till she died; some child shot
+down, while thousands of heavy, brutal feet trod over it till the hard
+stones were red with its blood, and the little prostrate form, yet warm,
+lost every likeness of humanity, and lay there, a sickening mass of
+mangled flesh and bones; some man assaulted, clubbed, overborne, left
+wounded or dying or dead, as he fell, or tied to some convenient tree or
+lamp-post to be hacked and hewn, or flayed and roasted, yet living,
+where he hung,--and watching this, and cowering as he watched, held his
+breath, and waited his own turn, not knowing when it might come.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+ "_In breathless quiet, after all their ills._"
+
+ ARNOLD
+
+
+A body of these wretches, fresh from some act of rapine and pillage, had
+seen Mrs. Franklin, hastening home, and, opening the hue and cry, had
+started in full chase after her. Struck by sticks and stones that
+darkened the air, twice down, fleeing as those only do who flee for
+life, she gained her own house, thinking there to find security. Vain
+hope! the door was battered in, the windows demolished, the puny
+barriers between the room in which they were gathered and the creatures
+in pursuit, speedily destroyed,--and these three turned to face death.
+
+By chance, Surrey had his sword at his side, and, tearing this from its
+scabbard, sprang to the defence,--a gallant intent, but what could one
+weapon and one arm do against such odds as these? He was speedily beaten
+down and flung aside by the miscreants who swarmed into the room. It
+was marvellous they did not kill him outright. Doubtless they would have
+done so but for the face propped against the pillows, which caught their
+hungry eyes. Soldier and woman were alike forgotten at sight of this
+dying boy. Here was a foeman worthy their steel. They gathered about
+him, and with savage hands struck at him and the bed upon which he lay.
+
+A pause for a moment to hold consultation, crowded with oaths and jeers
+and curses; obscenity and blasphemy too hideous to read or record,--then
+the cruel hands tore him from his bed, dragged him over the prostrate
+body of his mother, past the senseless form of his brave young defender,
+out to the street. Here they propped him against a tree, to mock and
+torment him; to prick him, wound him, torture him; to task endurance to
+its utmost limit, but not to extinguish life. These savages had no such
+mercy as this in their souls; and when, once or twice he fell away into
+insensibility, a cut or blow administered with devilish skill or
+strength, restored him to anguish and to life.
+
+Surrey, bewildered and dizzy, had recovered consciousness, and sat
+gazing vacantly around him, till the cries and yells without, the
+agonized face within, thrilled every nerve into feeling. Starting up, he
+rushed to the window, but recoiled at the awful sight. Here, he saw,
+there was no human power within reach or call that could interfere. The
+whole block, from street to street, was crowded with men and boys, armed
+with the armory of the street, and rejoicing like veritable fiends of
+hell over the pangs of their victim.
+
+Even in the moment he stood there he beheld that which would haunt his
+memory, did it endure for a century. At last, tired of their sport, some
+of those who were just about Abram had tied a rope about his body, and
+raised him to the nearest branch of an overhanging tree; then, heaping
+under him the sticks and clubs which were flung them from all sides, set
+fire to the dry, inflammable pile, and watched, for the moment silent,
+to see it burn.
+
+Surrey fled to the other side of the room, and, cowering down, buried
+his head in his arm to shut out the awful sight and sounds. But his
+mother,--O marvellous, inscrutable mystery of mother-love!--his mother
+knelt by the open window, near which hung her boy, and prayed aloud,
+that he might hear, for the wrung body and passing soul. Great God! that
+such things were possible, and thy heavens fell not! Through the sound
+of falling blows, reviling oaths, and hideous blasphemy, through the
+crackling of burning fagots and lifting flames, there went out no cry
+for mercy, no shriek of pain, no wail of despair. But when the torture
+was almost ended, and nature had yielded to this work of fiends, the
+dying face was turned towards his mother,--the eyes, dim with the veil
+that falls between time and eternity, seeking her eyes with their latest
+glance,--the voice, not weak, but clear and thrilling even in death,
+cried for her ear, "Be of good cheer, mother! they may kill the body,
+but they cannot touch the soul!" and even with the words the great soul
+walked with God.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After a while the mob melted out of the street to seek new scenes of
+ravage and death; not, however, till they had marked the house, as those
+within learned, for the purpose of returning, if it should so please
+them, at some future time.
+
+When they were all gone, and the way was clear, these two--the mother
+that bore him, the elegant patrician who instinctively shrank from all
+unpleasant and painful things--took down the poor charred body, and
+carrying it carefully and tenderly into the house of a trembling
+neighbor, who yet opened her doors and bade them in, composed it
+decently for its final rest.
+
+It was drawing towards evening, and Surrey was eager to get away from
+this terrible region,--both to take the heart-stricken woman, thus
+thrown upon his care, to some place of rest and safety, and to reassure
+Francesca, who, he knew, would be filled with maddening anxiety and fear
+at his long absence.
+
+At length they ventured forth: no one was in the square;--turned at
+Fortieth Street,--all clear;--went on with hasty steps to the
+Avenue,--not a soul in sight. "Safe,--thank God!" exclaimed Surrey, as
+he hurried his companion onward. Half the space to their destination had
+been crossed, when a band of rioters, rushing down the street from the
+sack and burning of the Orphan Asylum, came upon them. Defence seemed
+utterly vain. Every house was shut; its windows closed and barred; its
+inmates gathered in some rear room. Escape and hope appeared alike
+impossible; but Surrey, flinging his charge behind him, with drawn
+sword, face to the on-sweeping hordes, backed down the street. The
+combination--a negro woman, a soldier's uniform--intensified the mad
+fury of the mob, which was nevertheless held at bay by the heroic front
+and gleaming steel of their single adversary. Only for a moment! Then,
+not venturing near him, a shower of bricks and stones hurtled through
+the air, falling about and upon him.
+
+At this instant a voice called, "This way! this way! For God's sake!
+quick! quick!" and he saw a friendly black face and hand thrust from an
+area window. Still covering with his body his defenceless charge, he
+moved rapidly towards this refuge. Rapid as was the motion, it was not
+speedy enough; he reached the railing, caught her with his one powerful
+arm, imbued now with a giant's strength, flung her over to the waiting
+hands that seized and dragged her in, pausing for an instant, ere he
+leaped himself, to beat back a half-dozen of the foremost miscreants,
+who would else have captured their prey, just vanishing from sight.
+Sublime, yet fatal delay! but an instant, yet in that instant a thousand
+forms surrounded him, disarmed him, overcame him, and beat him down.
+
+Meanwhile what of Francesca? The morning passed, and with its passing
+came terrible rumors of assault and death. The afternoon began, wore
+on,--the rumors deepened to details of awful facts and realities; and
+he--he, with his courage, his fatal dress--was absent, was on those
+death-crowded streets. She wandered from room to room, forgetting her
+reserve, and accosting every soul she met for later news,--for
+information which, received, did but torture her with more intolerable
+pangs, and send her to her knees; though, kneeling, she could not pray,
+only cry out in some dumb, inarticulate fashion, "God be merciful!"
+
+The afternoon was spent; the day gone; the summet twilight deepening
+into night; and still he did not come. She had caught up her hat and
+mantle with some insane intention of rushing into the wide, wild city,
+on a frenzied search, when two gentlemen passing by her door, talking of
+the all-absorbing theme, arrested her ear and attention.
+
+"The house ought to be guarded! These devils will be here
+presently,--they are on the Avenue now."
+
+"Good God! are you certain?"
+
+"Certain."
+
+"You may well be," said a third voice, as another step joined theirs.
+"They are just above Thirtieth Street. I was coming down the Avenue, and
+saw them myself. I don't know what my fate would have been in this
+dress,"--Francesca knew from this that he who talked was of the police
+or soldiery,--"but they were engaged in fighting a young officer, who
+made a splendid defence before they cut him down; his courage was
+magnificent. It makes my blood curdle to think of it. A fair-haired,
+gallant-looking fellow, with only one arm. I could do nothing for him,
+of course, and should have been killed had I stayed; so I ran for life.
+But I don't think I'll ever quite forgive myself for not rushing to the
+rescue, and taking my chance with him."
+
+She did not stay to hear the closing words. Out of the room, past them,
+like a spirit,--through the broad halls,--down the wide stairways,--on
+to the street,--up the long street, deserted here, but O, with what a
+crowd beyond!
+
+A company of soldiers, paltry in number, yet each with loaded rifle and
+bayonet set, charged past her at double-quick upon this crowd, which
+gave way slowly and sullenly at its approach, holding with desperate
+ferocity and determination to whatever ghastly work had been employing
+their hands,--dropped at last,--left on the stones,--the soldiers
+between it and the mob,--silent, motionless,--she saw it, and knew it
+where it lay. O woful sight and knowledge for loving eyes and bursting
+heart!
+
+Ere she reached it some last stones were flung by the retreating crowd,
+a last shot fired in the air,--fired at random, but speeding with as
+unerring aim to her aching, anguished breast, death-freighted and
+life-destroying,--but not till she had reached her destined point and
+end; not till her feet failed close to that bruised and silent form; not
+till she had sunk beside it, gathered it in her fair young arms, and
+pillowed its beautiful head--from which streamed golden hair, dabbled
+and blood-bestained--upon her faithful heart.
+
+There it stirred; the eyes unclosed to meet hers, a gleam of divine love
+shining through their fading fire; the battered, stiffened arm lifted,
+as to fold her in the old familiar caress. "Darling--die--to
+make--free"--came in gasps from the sweet, yet whitening lips. Then she
+lay still. Where his breath blew across her hair it waved, and her bosom
+moved above the slow and labored beating of his heart; but, save for
+this, she was as quiet as the peaceful dead within their graves,--and,
+like them, done with the noise and strife of time forever.
+
+For him,--the shadows deepened where he lay,--the stars came out one by
+one, looking down with clear and solemn eyes upon this wreck of fair and
+beautiful things, wrought by earthly hate and the awful passions of
+men,--then veiled their light in heavy and sombre clouds. The rain fell
+upon the noble face and floating, sunny hair,--washing them free of
+soil, and dark and fearful stains; moistening the fevered, burning lips,
+and cooling the bruised and aching frame. How passed the long night with
+that half-insensible soul? God knoweth. The secrets of that are hidden
+in the eternity to which it now belongs. Questionless, ministering
+spirits drew near, freighted with balm and inspiration; for when the
+shadows fled, and the next morning's sun shone upon these silent forms,
+it revealed faces radiant as with some celestial fire, and beatified as
+reflecting the smile of God.
+
+The inmates of the house before which lay this solemn mystery, rising to
+face a new-made day, looking out from their windows to mark what traces
+were left of last night's devastations, beheld this awful yet sublime
+sight.
+
+"A prejudice which, I trust, will never end," had Mr. Surrey said, in
+bidding adieu to his son but a few short hours before. This prejudice,
+living and active, had now thus brought death and desolation to his own
+doors. "How unsearchable are the judgments of God, and his ways past
+finding out!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+ "_Drink,--for thy necessity is yet greater than mine._"
+
+ Sir Philip Sidney
+
+
+The hospital boat, going out of Beaufort, was a sad, yet great sight. It
+was but necessary to look around it to see that the men here gathered
+had stood on the slippery battle-sod, and scorned to flinch. You heard
+no cries, scarcely a groan; whatever anguish wrung them as they were
+lifted into their berths, or were turned or raised for comfort, found
+little outward sign,--a long, gasping breath now and then; a suppressed
+exclamation; sometimes a laugh, to cover what would else be a cry of
+mortal agony; almost no swearing; these men had been too near the awful
+realities of death and eternity, some of them were still too near, to
+make a mock at either. Having demonstrated themselves heroes in action,
+they would, one and all, be equally heroes in the hour of suffering, or
+on the bed of lingering death.
+
+Jim, so wounded as to make every movement a pang, had been carefully
+carried in on a stretcher, and as carefully lifted into a middle berth.
+
+"Good," said one of the men, as he eased him down on his pillow.
+
+"What's good?" queried Jim.
+
+"The berth; middle berth. Put you in as easy as into the lowest one: bad
+lifting such a leg as yours into the top one, and it's the comfortablest
+of the three when you're in."
+
+"O, that's it, is it? all right; glad I'm here then; getting in didn't
+hurt more than a flea-bite,"--saying which Jim turned his face away to
+put his teeth down hard on a lip already bleeding. The wrench to his
+shattered leg was excruciating, "But then," as he announced to himself,
+"no snivelling, James; you're not going to make a spooney of yourself."
+Presently he moved, and lay quietly watching the others they were
+bringing in.
+
+"Why!" he called, "that's Bertie Curtis, ain't it?" as a slight,
+beautiful-faced boy was carried past him, and raised to his place.
+
+"Yes, it is," answered one of the men, shortly, to cover some strong
+feeling.
+
+Jim leaned out of his berth, regardless of his protesting leg, canteen
+in hand. "Here, Bertie!" he called, "my canteen's full of fresh water,
+just filled. I know it'll taste good to you."
+
+The boy's fine face flushed. "O, thank you, Given, it would taste
+deliriously, but I can't take it,"--glancing down. Jim followed the
+look, to see that both arms were gone, close to the graceful, boyish
+form; seeing which his face twitched painfully,--not with his own
+suffering,--and for a moment words failed him. Just then came up one of
+the sanitary nurses with some cooling drink, and fresh, wet bandages for
+the fevered stumps.
+
+Great drops were standing on Bertie's forehead, and ominous gray shadows
+had already settled about the mouth, and under the long, shut lashes.
+Looking at the face, so young, so refined, some mother's pride and
+darling, the nurse brushed back tenderly the fair hair, murmuring, "Poor
+fellow!"
+
+The eyes unclosed quickly: "There are no poor fellows here, sir!" he
+said.
+
+"Well, brave fellow, then!"
+
+"I did but do my duty,"--a smile breaking through the gathering mists.
+
+Here some poor fellow,--poor indeed,--delirious with fever, called out,
+"Mother! mother! I want to see my mother!"
+
+Tears rushed to the clear, steady eyes, dimmed them, dropped down
+unchecked upon the face. The nurse, with a sob choking in his throat,
+softly raised his hand to brush them away. "Mother," Bertie
+whispered,--"mother!" and was gone where God wipes away the tears from
+all eyes.
+
+For the space of five minutes, as Jim said afterwards, in telling about
+it, "that boat was like a meeting-house." Used as they were to death in
+all forms, more than one brave fellow's eye was dim as the silent shape
+was carried away to make place for the stricken living,--one of whom was
+directly brought in, and the stretcher put down near Jim.
+
+"What's up?" he called, for the man's face was turned from him, and his
+wounded body so covered as to give no clew to its condition. "What's
+wrong?" seeing the bearers did not offer to lift him, and that they were
+anxiously scanning the long rows of berths.
+
+"Berth's wrong," one of them answered.
+
+"What's the matter with the berth?"
+
+"Matter enough! not a middle one nor a lower one empty."
+
+"Well," called a wounded boy from the third tier, "plenty of room up
+here; sky-parlor,--airy lodgings,--all fine,--I see a lot of empty
+houses that'll take him in."
+
+"Like enough,--but he's about blown to pieces," said the bearer in a low
+voice, "and it'll be aw--ful putting him up there; however,"--commencing
+to take off the light cover.
+
+"Helloa!" cried Jim, "that's a dilapidated-looking leg,"--his head out,
+looking at it. "Stop a bit!"--body half after the head,--"you just stop
+that, and come here and catch hold of a fellow; now put me up there. I
+reckon I'll bear hoisting better'n he will, anyway. Ugh! ah! um! owh!
+here we are! bully!"
+
+If Jim had been of the fainting or praying order he would certainly have
+fainted or prayed; as it was, he said "Bully!" but lay for a while
+thereafter still as a mouse.
+
+"Given, you're a brick!" one of the boys was apostrophizing him. Jim
+took no notice. "And your man's in, safe and sound"; he turned at that,
+and leaned forward, as well as he could, to look at the occupant of his
+late bed.
+
+"Jemime!" he cried, when he saw the face. "I say, boys! it's
+Ercildoune--Robert--flag--Wagner--hurray--let's give three cheers for
+the color-sergeant,--long may he wave!"
+
+The men, propped up or lying down, gave the three cheers with a will,
+and then three more; and then, delighted with their performance, three
+more after that, Jim winding up the whole with an "a-a-ah,--Tiger!" that
+made them all laugh; then relapsing into silence and a hard battle with
+pain.
+
+A weary voyage,--a weary journey thereafter to the Northern
+hospitals,--some dying by the way, and lowered through the shifting,
+restless waves, or buried with hasty yet kindly hands in alien
+soil,--accounted strangers and foemen in the land of their birth. God
+grant that no tread of rebellion in the years to come, nor thunder of
+contending armies, may disturb their peace!
+
+Some stopped in the heat and dust of Washington to be nursed and tended
+in the great barracks of hospitals,--uncomfortable-looking without,
+clean and spacious and admirable within; some to their homes, on
+long-desired and eagerly welcomed furloughs, there to be cured speedily,
+the body swayed by the mind; some to suffer and die; some to struggle
+against winds and tides of mortality and conquer,--yet scarred and
+maimed; some to go out, as giants refreshed with new wine, to take their
+places once more in the great conflict, and fight there faithfully to
+the end.
+
+Among these last was Jim; but not till after many a hard battle, and
+buffet, and back-set did life triumph and strength prevail. One thing
+which sadly retarded his recovery was his incessant anxiety about
+Sallie, and his longing to see her once more. He had himself, after his
+first hurt, written her that he was slightly wounded; but when he
+reached Washington, and the surgeon, looking at his shattered leg,
+talked about amputation and death, Jim decided that Sallie should not
+know a word of all this till something definite was pronounced.
+
+"She oughtn't to have an ugly, one-legged fellow," he said, "to drag
+round with her; and, if she knows how bad it is, she'll post straight
+down here, to nurse and look after me,--I know her! and she'll have me
+in the end, out of sheer pity; and I ain't going to take any such mean
+advantage of her: no, sir-ee, not if I know myself. If I get well, safe
+and sound, I'll go to her; and, if I'm going to die, I'll send for her;
+so I'll wait,"--which he did.
+
+He found, however, that it was a great deal easier making the decision,
+than keeping it when made. Sallie, hearing nothing from him,--supposing
+him still in the South,--fearful as she had all along been that she
+stood on uncertain ground,--Mrs. Surrey away in New York,--and Robert
+Ercildoune, as the papers asserted in their published lists, mortally
+wounded,--having no indirect means of communication with him, and
+fearing to write again without some sign from him,--was sorrowing in
+silence at home.
+
+The silence reacted on him; not realizing its cause he grew fretful and
+impatient, and the fretfulness and impatience told on his leg,
+intensified his fever, and put the day of recovery--if recovery it was
+to be--farther into the future.
+
+"See here, my man,"--said the quick little surgeon one day, "you're
+worrying about something. This'll never do; if you don't stop it, you'll
+die, as sure as fate; and you might as well make up your mind to it at
+once,--so, now!"
+
+"Well, sir," answered Jim, "it's as good a time to die now, I reckon, as
+often happens; but I ain't dead yet, not by a long shot; and I ain't
+going to die neither; so, now, yourself!"
+
+The doctor laughed. "All right; if you'll get up that spirit, and keep
+it, I'll bet my pile on your recovery,--but you'll have to stop
+fretting. You've got something on your mind that's troubling you; and
+the sooner you get rid of it, if you can, the better. That's all I've
+got to say." And he marched off.
+
+"Get rid of it," mused Jim, "how in thunder'll I get rid of it if I
+don't hear from Sallie? Let me see--ah! I have it!" and looking more
+cheerful on the instant he lay still, watching for the doctor to come
+down the ward once more. "Helloa!" he called, then. "Helloa!" responded
+the doctor, coming over to him, "what's the go now? you're improved
+already."
+
+"Got any objection to telling a lie?"--this might be called coming to
+the point.
+
+"That depends--" said the doctor.
+
+"Well, all's fair in love and war, they say. This is for love. Help a
+fellow?"
+
+"Of course,--if I can,--and the fellow's a good one, like Jim Given.
+What is it you want?"
+
+"Well, I want a letter written, and I can't do it myself, you
+know,"--looking down at his still bandaged arm,--"likewise I want a lie
+told in it, and these ladies here are all angels, and of course you
+can't ask an angel to tell a lie,--no offence to you; so if you can take
+the time, and'll do it, I'll stand your everlasting debtor, and shoulder
+the responsibility if you're afraid of the weight."
+
+"What sort of a lie?"
+
+"A capital one; listen. I want a young lady to know that I'm wounded in
+the arm,--you see? not bad; nor nothing over which she need worry, and
+nothing that hurts me much; and I ain't damaged in any other way; legs
+not mentioned in this concern,--you understand?" The doctor nodded. "But
+it's tied up my hand, so that I have to get you to say all this for me.
+I'll be well pretty soon; and, if I can get a furlough, I'll be up in
+Philadelphia in a jiffy,--so she can just prepare for the infliction,
+&c. Comprendy? And'll you do it?"
+
+"Of course I will, if you don't want the truth told, and the fib'll do
+you any good; and, upon my word, the way you're looking I really think
+it will. So now for it."
+
+Thus the letter was written, and read, and re-read, to make sure that
+there was nothing in it to alarm Sallie; and, being satisfactory on that
+head, was finally sent away, to rejoice the poor girl who had waited,
+and watched, and hoped for it through such a weary time. When she
+answered it, her letter was so full of happiness and solicitude, and a
+love that, in spite of herself, spoke out in every line, that Jim
+furtively kissed it, and read it into tatters in the first few hours of
+its possession; then tucking it away in his hospital shirt, over his
+heart, proceeded to get well as fast as fast could be.
+
+"Well," said the doctor, a few weeks afterwards, as Jim was going home
+on his coveted sick-leave, "Mr. Thomas Carlyle calls fibs wind-bags. If
+that singular remedy would work to such a charm with all my men, I'd
+tell lies with impunity. Good by, Jim, and the best of good luck to
+you."
+
+"The same to you, Doctor, and I hope you may always find a friend in
+need, to lie for you. Good by, and God bless you!" wringing his hand
+hard,--"and now, hurrah for home!"
+
+"Hurrah it is!" cried the little surgeon after him, as, happy and proud,
+he limped down the ward, and turned his face towards home.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+ "_Youth on the prow, and Pleasure at the helm._"
+
+ Gray
+
+
+Jim scarcely felt the jolting of the ambulance over the city stones, and
+his impatience and eagerness to get across the intervening space made
+dust, and heat, and weariness of travel seem but as feather weights, not
+to be cared for, nor indeed considered at all; though, in fact, his arm
+complained, and his leg ached distressingly, and he was faint and weak
+without confessing it long before the tiresome journey reached its end.
+
+"No matter," he said to himself; "it'll be all well, or forgotten, at
+least, when I see Sallie once more; and so, what odds?"
+
+The end was gained at last, and he would have gone to her fast as
+certain Rosinantes, yclept hackhorses, could carry him, but, stopping
+for a moment to consider, he thought, "No, that will never do! Go to
+her looking like such a guy? Nary time. I'll get scrubbed, and put on a
+clean shirt, and make myself decent, before she sees me. She always used
+to look nice as a new pin, and she liked me to look so too; so I'd
+better put my best foot foremost when she hasn't laid eyes on me for
+such an age. I'm fright enough, anyway, goodness knows, with my
+thinness, and my old lame leg; so--" sticking his head out of the
+window, and using his lungs with astonishing vigor--"Driver! streak like
+lightning, will you, to the 'Merchants'? and you shall have extra fare."
+
+"Hold your blab there," growled the driver; "I ain't such a pig yet as
+to take double fare from a wounded soldier. You'll pay me well at
+half-price,--when we get where you want to go,"--which they did soon.
+
+"No!" said Jehu, thrusting back part of the money, "I ain't agoin' to
+take it, so you needn't poke it out at me. I'm all right; or, if I
+ain't, I'll make it up on the next broadcloth or officer I carry; never
+you fear! us fellows knows how to take care of ourselves, you'd better
+believe!" which statement Jim would have known to be truth, without the
+necessity of repetition, had he been one of the aforesaid "broadcloths,"
+or "officers," and thus better acquainted with the genus hack-driver in
+the ordinary exercise of its profession.
+
+As it was; he shook hands with the fellow, pocketed the surplus change,
+made his way into the hotel, was in his room, in his bath, under the
+barber's hands, cleaned, shaved, brushed, polished, shining,--as he
+himself would have declared, "in a jiffy" Then, deciding himself to be
+presentable to the lady of his heart, took his crutch and sallied forth,
+as good-looking a young fellow, spite of the wooden appendage, as any
+the sun shone upon in all the big city, and as happy, as it was bright.
+
+He knew where to go, and, by help of street-cars and other legs than his
+own, he was there speedily. He knew the very room towards which to turn;
+and, reaching it, paused to look in through the half-open
+door,--delighted thus to watch and listen for a little space unseen.
+
+Sallie was sitting, her handsome head bent over her sewing,--Frankie
+gambolling about the floor.
+
+"O sis, _don't_ you wish Jim would come home?" queried the youngster. "I
+do,--I wish he'd come right straight away."
+
+"Right straight away? What do _you_ want to see Jim for?"
+
+"O, 'cause he's nice; and 'cause he'll take me to the Theayter; and
+'cause he'll treat,--apples, and peanuts, and candy, you know,
+and--and--ice-cream," wiping the beads from his little red face,--the
+last desideratum evidently suggested by the fiery summer heat. "I say,
+Sallie!"--a pause--"won't you get me some ice-cream this evening?"
+
+"Yes, Bobbity, if you'll be a good boy."
+
+Frankie looked dubious over that proposition. Jim never made any such
+stipulations: so, after another pause, in which he was probably
+considering the whole subject with due and becoming gravity,--evidently
+desiring to hear his own wish propped up by somebody else's
+seconding,--he broke out again, "Now, Sallie, don't you just wish Jim
+would come home?"
+
+"O Frankie, don't I?" cried the girl, dropping her work, and stretching
+out her empty arms as though she would clasp some shape in the air.
+
+Frankie, poor child! innocently imagining the proffered embrace was for
+him, ran forward, for he was an affectionate little soul, to give Sallie
+a good hug, but found himself literally left out in the cold; no arms to
+meet, and no Sallie, indeed, to touch him. Something big, burly, and
+blue loomed up on his sight,--something that was doing its best to crush
+Sallie bodily, and to devour what was not crushed; something that could
+say nothing by reason of its lips being so much more pleasantly engaged,
+and whose face was invisible through its extraordinary proximity to
+somebody else's face and hair.
+
+Frankie, finding he could gain neither sight nor sound of notice, began
+to howl. But as neither of the hard-hearted creatures seemed to care for
+the poor little chap's howling, he fell upon the coat-tails of the big
+blue obstruction, and pulled at them lustily,--not to say
+viciously,--till their owner turned, and beheld him panting and fiery.
+
+"Helloa, youngster! what's to pay now?"
+
+"Wow! if 'tain't Jim. Hooray!" screeched the youngster, first embracing
+the blue legs, and then proceeding to execute a dance upon his head.
+"Te, te, di di, idde i-dum," he sang, coming feet down, finally.
+
+Evidently the bad boy's language had been corrupted by his street
+_confreres_; it was a missionary ground upon which Sallie entered, more
+or less faithfully, every day to hoe and weed; but of this last
+specimen-plant she took no notice, save to laugh as Jim, catching him
+up, first kissed him, then gave him a shake and a small spank, and,
+thrusting a piece of currency into his hand, whisked him outside the
+door with a "Come, shaver, decamp, and treat yourself to-day," and had
+it shut and fastened in a twinkling.
+
+"O Jim!" she cried then, her soul in her handsome eyes.
+
+"O Sallie!"--and he had her fast and tight once more.
+
+An ineffable blank, punctuated liberally with sounding exclamation
+points, and strongly marked periods,--though how or why a blank should
+be punctuated at all, only blissful lovers could possibly define.
+
+"Jim, dear Jim!" whispering it, and snuggling her blushing face closer
+to the faded blue, "can you love me after all that has happened?"
+
+"Come now! _can_ I love you, my beauty? Slightly, I should think. O, te,
+te, di di, idde i-dum,"--singing Frank's little song with his big, gay
+voice,--"I'm happy as a king."
+
+Happy as a king, that was plain enough. And what shall be said of her,
+as he sat down, and, resting the wounded leg--stiff and sore yet,--held
+Sallie on his other knee,--then fell to admiring her while she stroked
+his mustache and his crisp, curling hair, looking at both and at him
+altogether with an expression of contented adoration in her eyes.
+
+Frank, tired of prowling round the door, candy in hand, here thrust his
+head in at the window, and, unfortunately for his plans, sneezed.
+"Mutual-admiration society!" he cried at that, seeing that he was
+detected in any case, and running away,--his run spoiled as soon as it
+began.
+
+"We are a handsome couple," laughed Jim, holding back her face between
+both hands,--"ain't we, now?"
+
+Yes, they were,--no mistake about that, handsome as pictures.
+
+And merry as birds, through all of his short stay. They would see no
+danger in the future: Jim had been scathed in time past so often, yet
+come out safe and sound, that they would have no fear for what was to
+befall him in time to come. If they had, neither showed it to the other.
+Jim thought, "Sallie would break her heart, if she knew just what is
+down there,--so it would be a pity to talk about it"; and Sallie
+thought, "It's right for Jim to go, and I won't say a word to keep him
+back, no matter how I feel."
+
+The furlough was soon--ah! how soon--out, the days of happiness over;
+and Jim, holding her in a last close embrace, said his farewell: "Come,
+Sallie, you're not to cry now, and make me a coward. It'll only be for a
+little while; the Rebs _can't_ stand it much longer, and then--"
+
+"Ah, Jim! but if you should--"
+
+"Yes, but I sha'n't, you see; not a bit of it; don't you go to think it.
+'I bear'--what is it? O--'a charmed life,' as Mr. Macbeth says, and
+you'll see me back right and tight, and up to time. One kiss more, dear.
+God bless you! good by!" and he was gone.
+
+She leaned out of the window,--she smiled after him, kissed her hand,
+waved her handkerchief, so long as he could see them,--till he had
+turned a corner way down the street,--and smile, and hand, and
+handkerchief were lost to his sight; then flung herself on the floor,
+and cried as though her very heart would break. "God send him
+home,--send him safe and soon home!" she implored; entreaty made for how
+many loved ones, by how many aching hearts, that speedily lost the need
+of saying amen to any such petition,--the prayer for the living lost in
+mourning for the dead. Heaven grant that no soul that reads this ever
+may have the like cause to offer such prayer again!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+ "_When we see the dishonor of a thing, then it is time to
+ renounce it._"
+
+ Plutarch
+
+
+A letter which Sallie wrote to Jim a few weeks after his departure tells
+its own story, and hence shall be repeated here.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Philadelphia, October 29, 1863.
+
+Dear Jim:--
+
+I take my pen in hand this morning to write you a letter, and to tell
+you the news, though I don't know much of the last except about Frankie
+and myself. However, I suppose you will care more to hear that than any
+other, so I will begin.
+
+Maybe you will be surprised to hear that Frankie and I are at Mr.
+Ercildoune's. Well, we are,--and I will tell you how it came about. Not
+long after you went away, Frank began to pine, and look droopy. There
+wasn't any use in giving him medicine, for it didn't do him a bit of
+good. He couldn't eat, and he didn't sleep, and I was at my wits' ends
+to know what to do for him.
+
+One day Mrs. Lee,--that Mr. Ercildoune's housekeeper,--an old English
+lady she is, and she's lived with him ever since he was married, and
+before he came here,--a real lady, too,--came in with some sewing, some
+fine shirts for Mr. Robert Ercildoune. I asked after him, and you'll be
+glad to know that he's recovering. He didn't have to lose his leg, as
+they feared; and his arm is healing; and the wound in his breast getting
+well. Mrs. Lee says she's very sorry the stump isn't longer, so that he
+could wear a Palmer arm,--but she's got no complaints to make; they're
+only too glad and thankful to have him living at all, after such a
+dreadful time.
+
+While I was talking with her, Frankie called me from the next room, and
+began to cry. You wouldn't have known him,--he cried at everything, and
+was so fretful and cross I could scarcely get along at all. When I got
+him quiet, and came back, Mrs. Lee says, "What's the matter with Frank?"
+so I told her I didn't know,--but would she see him? Well, she saw him,
+and shook her head in a bad sort of way that scared me awfully, and I
+suppose she saw I was frightened, for she said, "All he wants is plenty
+of fresh air, and good, wholesome country food and exercise." I can
+tell you, spite of that, she went away, leaving me with heavy enough a
+heart.
+
+The next day Mr. Ercildoune came in. How he is changed! I haven't seen
+him before since Mrs. Surrey died, and that of itself was enough to kill
+him, without this dreadful time about Mr. Robert.
+
+"Good morning, Miss Sallie," says he, "how are you? and I'm glad to see
+you looking so well." So I told him I was well, and then he asked for
+Frankie. "Mrs. Lee tells me," he said, "that your little brother is
+quite ill, and that he needs country air and exercise. He can have them
+both at The Oaks; so if you'll get him ready, the carriage will come for
+you at whatever time you appoint. Mrs. Lee can find you plenty of work
+as long as you care to stay." He looked as if he wanted to say something
+more, but didn't; and I was just as sure as sure could be that it was
+something about Miss Francesca, probably about her having me out there
+so much; for his face looked so sad, and his lips trembled so, I knew
+that must be in his mind. And when I thought of it, and of such an awful
+fate as it was for her, so young, and handsome, and happy, like the
+great baby I am, I just threw my apron over my head, and burst out
+crying.
+
+"Don't!" he said,--"don't!" in O, such a voice! It was like a knife
+going through me; and he went quick out of the room, and downstairs,
+without even saying good by.
+
+Well, we came out the next day,--and I have plenty to do, and Frankie is
+getting real bright and strong. I can see Mr. Ercildoune likes to have
+us here, because of the connection with Miss Francesca. She was so
+interested in us, and so kind to us, and he knows I loved her so very
+dearly,--and if it's any comfort to him I'm sure I'm glad to be here,
+without taking Frankie into the account,--for the poor gentleman looks
+so bowed and heart-broken that it makes one's heart ache just to see
+him. Mr. Robert isn't well enough to be about yet, but he sits up for a
+while every day, and is getting on--the doctor says--nicely. They both
+talk about you often; and Mr. Ercildoune, I can see, thinks everything
+of you for that good, kind deed of yours, when you and Mr. Robert were
+on the transport together. Dear Jim, he don't know you as well as I do,
+or he'd know that you couldn't help doing such things,--not if you
+tried.
+
+I hope you'll like the box that comes with this. Mr. Robert had it
+packed for you in his own room, to see that everything went in that
+you'd like. Of course, as he's been a soldier himself, he knows better
+what they want than anybody else can.
+
+Dear Jim, do take care of yourself; don't go and get wounded; and don't
+get sick; and, whatever you do, don't let the rebels take you prisoner,
+unless you want to drive me frantic. I think about you pretty much all
+the time, and pray for you, as well as I know how, every night when I go
+to bed, and am always
+
+Your own loving
+
+Sallie.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Wow!" said Jim, as he read, "she's in a good berth there." So she
+was,--and so she stayed. Frankie got quite well once more, and Sallie
+began to think of going, but Mr. Ercildoune evidently clung to her and
+to the sunshine which the bright little fellow cast through the house.
+Sallie was quite right in her supposition. Francesca had cared for this
+girl, had been kind to her and helped her,--and his heart went out to
+everything that reminded him of his dear, dead child. So it happened
+that autumn passed, and winter, and spring,--and still they stayed. In
+fact, she was domesticated in the house, and, for the first time in
+years, enjoyed the delightful sense of a home. Here, then, she set up
+her rest, and remained; here, when the "cruel war was over," the armies
+disbanded, the last regiments discharged, and Jimmy "came marching
+home," brown, handsome, and a captain, here he found her,--and from here
+he married and carried her away.
+
+It was a happy little wedding, though nobody was there beside the
+essentials, save the family and a dear friend of Robert's, who was with
+him at the time, as he had been before and would be often again,--none
+other than William Surrey's favorite cousin and friend, Tom Russell.
+
+The letter which Surrey had written never reached his hand till he lay
+almost dying from the effects of wounds and exposure, after he had been
+brought in safety to our lines by his faithful black friends, at Morris
+Island. Surrey had not mistaken his temper; gay, reckless fellow, as he
+was, he was a thorough gentleman, in whom could harbor no small spite,
+nor petty prejudice,--and without a mean fibre in his being. At a glance
+he took in the whole situation, and insisting upon being propped up in
+bed, with his own hand--though slowly, and as a work of
+magnitude--succeeded in writing a cordial letter of congratulation and
+affection, that would have been to Surrey like the grasp of a brother's
+hand in a strange and foreign country, had it ever reached his touch and
+eyes.
+
+But even while Tom lay writing his letter, occasionally muttering,
+"They'll have a devilish hard time of it!" or "Poor young un!" or "She's
+one in a million!" or some such sentence which marked his feeling and
+care,--these two of whom he thought, to whose future he looked with such
+loving anxiety, were beyond the reach of human help or hindrance,--done
+alike with the sorrows and joys of time.
+
+From a distance, with the help of a glass, and absorbing interest, he
+had followed the movements of the flag and its bearer, and had cheered,
+till he fainted from weakness and exhaustion, as he saw them safe at
+last. It was with delight that he found himself on the same transport
+with Ercildoune, and discovered in him the brother of the young girl for
+whom, in the past, he had had so pleasing and deep a regard, and whose
+present and future were so full of interest for him, in their new and
+nearer relations.
+
+These two young men, unlike as they were in most particulars, were drawn
+together by an irresistible attraction. They had that common bond,
+always felt and recognized by those who possess it, of the gentle
+blood,--tastes and instincts in common, and a fine, chivalrous
+sentiment which each felt and thoroughly appreciated in the other. The
+friendship thus begun grew with the passing years, and was intensified a
+hundred fold by a portion of the past to which they rarely referred, but
+which lay always at the bottom of their hearts. They had each for those
+two who had lain dead together in the streets of New York the strongest
+and tenderest love,--and though it was not a tie about which they could
+talk, it bound them together as with chains of steel.
+
+Russell was with Ercildoune at the time of the wedding, and entered into
+it heartily, as they all did. The result was, as has been written, the
+gayest and merriest of times. Sallies dress, which Robert had given her,
+was a sight to behold; and the pretty jewels, which were a part of his
+gift, and the long veil, made her look, as Jim declared, "so handsome he
+didn't know her,"--though that must have been one of Jim's stories, or
+else he was in the habit of making love to strange ladies with
+extraordinary ease and effrontery.
+
+The breakfast was another sight to behold. As Mary the cook said to Jane
+the housemaid, "If they'd been born kings and queens, Mrs. Lee couldn't
+have laid herself out more; it's grand, so it is,--just you go and see;"
+which Jane proceeded to do, and forthwith thereafter corroborated Mary's
+enthusiastic statement.
+
+There were plenty of presents, too: and when it was all over, and they
+were in the carriage, to be sent to the station, Mr. Ercildoune,
+holding Sallie's hand in farewell, left there a bit of paper, "which is
+for you," he said. "God protect, and keep you happy, my child!" Then
+they were gone, with many kind adieus and good wishes called and sent
+after them. When they were seated in the cars, Sallie looked at her bit
+of paper, and read on its outer covering, "A wedding-gift to Sallie
+Howard from my dear daughter Francesca," and found within the deed of a
+beautiful little home. God bless her! say we, with Mr. Ercildoune. God
+bless them both, and may they live long to enjoy it!
+
+That afternoon, as Tom and Robert were driving, Russell, noting the
+unwonted look of life and activity, and the gay flags flung to the
+breeze, demanded what it all meant. "Why," said he, "it is like a field
+day."
+
+"It is so," answered Robert, "or what is the same; it is election day."
+
+"Bless my soul! so it is; and a soldier to be elected. Have you voted?"
+
+"No!"
+
+"No? Here's a nice state of affairs! a fellow that'll get his arm blown
+off for a flag, but won't take the trouble to drop a scrap of paper for
+it. Come, I'll drive you over."
+
+"You forget, Russell!"
+
+"Forget? Nonsense! This isn't 1860, but 1865. I don't forget; I
+remember. It is after the war now,--come."
+
+"As you please," said Robert. He knew the disappointment that awaited
+his friend, but he would not thwart him now.
+
+There was a great crowd about the polling-office, and they all looked on
+with curious interest as the two young men came up. No demonstration was
+made, though a half-dozen brutal fellows uttered some coarse remarks.
+
+"Hear the damned Rebs talk!" said a man in the army blue, who, with keen
+eyes, was observing the scene. "They're the same sort of stuff we licked
+in Carolina."
+
+"Ay," said another, "but with a difference; blue led there; but gray'll
+come off winner here, or I'm mistaken."
+
+Robert stood leaning upon his cane; a support which he would need for
+life, one empty sleeve pinned across his breast, over the scar from a
+deep and yet unhealed wound. The clear October sun shone down upon his
+form and face, upon the broad folds of the flag that waved in triumph
+above him, upon a country where wars and rumors of wars had ceased.
+
+"Courage, man! what ails you?" whispered Russell, as he felt his comrade
+tremble; "it's a ballot in place of a bayonet, and all for the same
+cause; lay it down."
+
+Robert put out his hand.
+
+"Challenge the vote!" "Challenge the vote!" "No niggers here!" sounded
+from all sides.
+
+The bit of paper which Ercildoune had placed on the window-ledge
+fluttered to the ground on the outer side, and, looking at Tom, Robert
+said quietly, "1860 or 1865?--is the war ended?"
+
+"No!" answered Tom, taking his arm, and walking away. "No, my friend! so
+you and I will continue in the service."
+
+"Not ended;--it is true! how and when will it be closed?"
+
+"That is for the loyal people of America to decide," said Russell, as
+they turned their faces towards home.
+
+How and when will it be closed? a question asked by the living and the
+dead,--to which America must respond.
+
+Among the living is a vast army: black and white,--shattered and maimed,
+and blind: and these say, "Here we stand, shattered and maimed, that the
+body politic might be perfect! blind forever, that the glorious sun of
+liberty might shine abroad throughout the land, for all people, through
+all coming time."
+
+And the dead speak too. From their crowded graves come voices of
+thrilling and persistent pathos, whispering, "Finish the work that has
+fallen from our nerveless hands. Let no weight of tyranny, nor taint of
+oppression, nor stain of wrong, cumber the soil nor darken the land we
+died to save."
+
+
+
+
+NOTE
+
+
+Since it is impossible for any one memory to carry the entire record of
+the war, it is well to state, that almost every scene in this book is
+copied from life, and that the incidents of battle and camp are part of
+the history of the great contest.
+
+The story of Fort Wagner is one that needs no such emphasis, it is too
+thoroughly known; that of the Color-Sergeant, whose proper name is W.H.
+Carney, is taken from a letter written by General M.S. Littlefield to
+Colonel A.G. Browne, Secretary to Governor Andrew.
+
+From the _New York Tribune_ and the _Providence Journal_ were taken the
+accounts of the finding of Hunt, the coming of the slaves into a South
+Carolina camp, and the voluntary carrying, by black men, ere they were
+enlisted, of a schooner into the fight at Newbern. Than these two
+papers, none were considered more reliable and trustworthy in their war
+record.
+
+Almost every paper in the North published the narrative of the black man
+pushing off the boat, for which an official report is responsible. The
+boat was a flat-boat, with a company of soldiers on board; and the
+battery under the fire of which it fell was at Rodman's Point, North
+Carolina. In drawing the outlines of this, as of the others, I have
+necessarily used a somewhat free pencil, but the main incident of each
+has been faithfully preserved.
+
+The disabled black soldier my own eyes saw thrust from a car in
+Philadelphia.
+
+The portraits of Ercildoune and his children may seem to some
+exaggerated; those who have, as I, the rare pleasure of knowing the
+originals, will say, "the half has not been told."
+
+Every leading New York paper, Democratic and Republican, was gone over,
+ere the summary of the Riots was made; and I think the record will be
+found historically accurate. The _Anglo-African_ gives the story of poor
+Abram Franklin; and the assault on Surrey has its likeness in the death
+of Colonel O'Brien.
+
+In a conversation between Surrey and Francesca, allusion is made to an
+act the existence of which I have frequently heard doubted. I therefore
+copy here a part of the "Retaliatory Act," passed by the Rebel
+Government at Richmond, and approved by its head, May 1, 1863:--
+
+"Sec. 4. Every white person, being a commissioned officer, or acting as
+such, who, during the present war, shall command negroes or mulattoes in
+arms against the Confederate States, or who shall arm, train, organize,
+or prepare negroes or mulattoes for military service against the
+Confederate States, or who shall voluntarily aid negroes or mulattoes in
+any military enterprise, attack, or conflict in such service, shall be
+deemed as inciting servile insurrection; and shall, if captured, be put
+to death."
+
+I have written this book, and send it to the consciences and the hearts
+of the American people. May God, for whose "little ones" I have here
+spoken, vivify its words.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of What Answer?, by Anna E. Dickinson
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